Word: salaam
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...Kerstin Cameron's supporters, the judge at a pre-trial hearing last December told the defense that he had read the case file four times and saw nothing to support a murder charge. The prosecution acknowledges that the remark was made, say German embassy officials in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania's main city. Nevertheless, prosecutors insisted on forging ahead. Cameron is due to face trial later this year...
...sale. Since 1995, Tanzanians have been putting this right. But 20 years of lost income cannot be reversed overnight. Certainly Africa's reforms have had painful side effects. But why focus on the chemotherapy rather than the original cancer? JAMES W. ADAMS, COUNTRY DIRECTOR World Bank Dar es Salaam, Tanzania...
...extended the __ -tax moratorium for five years 32. Rodriguez, the president of 8-Across 33. He quipped to Ford, "You dead yet?" 35. Break ground, in a way 36. __ the Dog 37. Oklahoma! character __ Annie 38. Sierra __, which is edging toward civil war 40. Credit-checking org. 41. __ es Salaam, Tanzania 42. Source of Italian bubbly 45. J. Fred Muggs, for one 47. Finn's transport 51. South Carolina's House voted to remove it 52. Meth. or Luth. 53. Natural emollient 54. Croupier's need 55. Kind of fingerprinting 56. O'Hara spread 57. [see other side] 58. Sloppy...
...President Benjamin Mkapa, Tanzania has "made great progress in getting its macroeconomic situation in order," says James Adams, the World Bank director for the country. Inflation has fallen below 7%, and the GDP is growing 4% a year; European sedans glide through the streets of the capital, Dar es Salaam, and imported goods fill the shops. Mining and cash-crop exports are up. R.J. Reynolds refurbished an old cigarette factory. The country established a stock exchange. "There's no question that opening up trade has transformed Tanzania," Adams says...
...response, 70% of the people consult faith healers (this in a country with an HIV epidemic), and school enrollment has fallen from 93% in 1993 to 66% today. "The data are very clear," says I.F. Shao, director of the Institute of Development Studies at the University of Dar es Salaam. "A small number of people are doing very well indeed, but the vast majority are suffering more than ever. There are wonderful things in the shops now, but who can buy them?" Adams agrees that "we need to get the income gains into the rural areas," but defends the reforms...