Nyerere Archive
Azimio la Arusha ni tamko rasmi la
kisiasa lilikosudiwa kuongoza Tanzania katika njia ya ujamaa kadiri ya maelekezo hasa ya Julius Kambarage
Nyerere.
Jina la azimio linatokana na mji wa Arusha lilipitishwa tarehe 26-29 Januari 1967.Tarehe 5 Februari 1967 Mwalimu Nyerere
alilitangaza huko Dar es Salaam kama uamuzi wa
Watanzania wa kuondoaunyonge wao. Tamko la Arusha lina sehemu tano: Itikadi ya chama cha TANU; Siasa ya ujamaa; Siasa ya kujitegemea; Uanachama wa TANU; na Azimio
la Arusha.
Kiini chake ni hiki: "Tumeonewa kiasi cha kutosha,
tumenyonywa kiasi cha kutosha, tumepuuzwa kiasi cha kutosha. Unyonge wetu ndio
uliotufanya tuonewe, tunyonywe na kupuuzwa. Sasa tunataka mapinduzi,
mapinduzi ya kuondoa unyonge ili tusionewe tena, tusinyonywe tena na tusipuuzwe
tena".
5 February 1967
The
Arusha Declaration
Written: for Tanganyika
African National Union by Julius Nyerere, 1967; Transcribed by: Ayanda Madyibi. The Declaration was discussed and
then published in Swahili. This revised English Translation clarifies
ambiguities which existed in the translation originally issued.
The Arusha Declaration
and TANU’s Policy on Socialism and Self-Reliance
PART ONE
The TANU Creed
The TANU Creed
The
policy of TANU is to build a socialist state. The principles of socialism are
laid down in the TANU Constitution and they are as follows:
WHEREAS
TANU believes:
(a) That
all human beings are equal;
(b) That
every individual has a right to dignity and respect;
(c) That
every citizen is an integral part of the nation and has the right to take an
equal part in Government at local, regional and national level;
(d) That
every citizen has the right to freedom of expression, of movement, of religious
belief and of association within the context of the law;
(e) That
every individual has the right to receive from society protection of his life
and of property held according to law;
(f) That
every individual has the right to receive a just return for his labour;
(g) That
all citizens together possess all the natural resources of the country in trust
for their descendants;
(h) That
in order to ensure economic justice the state must have effective control over
the principal means of production; and
(i) That
it is the responsibility of the state to intervene actively in the economic
life of the nation so as to ensure the well-being of all citizens, and so as to
prevent the exploitation of one person by another or one group by another, and
so as to prevent the accumulation of wealth to an extent which is inconsistent
with the existence of a classless society.
NOW,
THEREFORE, the principal aims and objects of TANU shall be as follows:
(a) To
consolidate and maintain the independence of this country and the freedom of
its people;
(b) To
safeguard the inherent dignity of the individual in accordance with the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights;
(c) To
ensure that this country shall be governed by a democratic socialist government
of the people;
(d) To
co-operate with all political parties in Africa engaged in the liberation of
all Africa;
(e) To
see that the Government mobilizes all the resources of this country towards the
elimination of poverty, ignorance and disease;
(f) To
see that the Government actively assists in the formation and maintenance of
co-operative organizations;
(g) to
see that wherever possible the Government itself directly participates in the
economic development of this country;
(h) To
see that the Government gives equal opportunity to all men and women
irrespective of race, religion or status;
(i) To
see that the Government eradicates all types of exploitation, intimidation,
discrimination, bribery and corruption;
(j) To
see that the Government exercises effective control over the principal means of
production and pursues policies which facilitate the way to collective
ownership of the resources of this country;
(k) To
see that the Government co-operates with other states in Africa in bringing
about African unity;
(l) To
see that Government works tirelessly towards world peace and security through
the United Nations Organization.
PART TWO
The Policy of Socialism
The Policy of Socialism
(a)
Absence of Exploitation
A truly.
socialist state is one in which all people are workers and in which neither
capitalism nor feudalism exists. It does not have two classes of people, a
lower class composed of people who work for their living, and an upper class of
people who live on the work of others. In a really socialist country no person
exploits another; everyone who is physically able to work does so; every worker
obtains a just return for the labour he performs; and the incomes derived from
different types of work are not grossly divergent. In a socialist country, the
only people who live on the work of others, and who have the right to be
dependent upon their fellows, are small children, people who are too old to
support themselves, the crippled, and those whom the state at any one time
cannot provide with an opportunity to work for their living.
Tanzania
is a nation of peasants but is not yet a socialist society. It still contains
elements of feudalism and capitalism--with their temptations. These feudalistic
and capitalistic features of our society could spread and entrench themselves.
(b) The
Major Means of Production and Exchange are under the Control of the Peasants
and Workers.
To Build
and maintain socialism it is essential that all the major means of production
and exchange in the nation are controlled and owned by the peasants through the
machinery of their Government and their co-operatives. Further, it is essential
that the ruling Party should be a Party of peasants and workers.
The major
means of production and exchange are such things as: land; forests;
minerals;water; oil and electricity; news media; communications; banks,
insurance, import ;and export trade, wholesale trade ; iron and steel, machine
tool, arms, motor-car, cement, fertilizer, and textile industries; and any big
factory on which a large section of the people depend for their living, or
which provides essential components of other industries; large plantations, and
especially those which provide raw materials essential to important industries.
Some of
the instruments of production and exchange which have been listed here are
already owned or controlled by the people’s Government of Tanzania.
(c) The
Existence of Democracy
A state
is not socialist simply because its means of production and exchange are
controlled or owned by the government, either wholly or in large part. If a
country to be socialist, it is essential that its government is chosen and led
by the peasants and workers themsclvcs. If the minority governments of Rhodesia
or South Africa controlled or owned the entire economies of these respective
countries, the result would be a strengthening of oppression, not the building
of socialism. True socialism cannot exist without democracy also existing in
the society.
(d)
Socialism is a Belief
Socialism
is a way of life, and a socialist society cannot simply come into existence. A
socialist society can only be built by those who believe in, and who themselves
practice, the principles of socialism. A committed member of TANU will be a
socialist, and his fellow socialist – that is, his fellow believers in this
political and economic system – are all those in Africa or elsewhere in the
world who fight for the rights of peasants and workers. The first duty of a
TANU member, and especially of a TANU leader, is to accept these socialist
principles, and to live his own life in accordance with them. In particular, a
genuine TANU leader will not live off the sweat of another man, nor commit any
feudalistic or capitalistic actions.
The
successful implementation of .socialist objectives depends very much up the
leaders, because socialism is a belief in a particular system of living, and it
is difficult for leaders to promote its growth if they do not themselves accept
it.
PART THREE
The Policy of Self-Reliance
The Policy of Self-Reliance
We are at
War
TANU is
involved in a war against poverty and oppression in our country; the struggle
is aimed at moving the people of Tanzania (and the people of Africa as a whole)
from a state of poverty to a State of prosperity.
We have
been oppressed a great deal, we have been exploited a great deal and we have
been disregarded a great deal. It is our weakness that has led to our being
oppressed, exploited and disregarded. Now we want a revolution – a revolution
which brings an end to our weakness, so that we are never again exploited,
oppressed, or humiliated.
A Poor
Man does not use Money as a Weapon
But it is
obvious that in the past we have chosen the wrong weapon for our struggle,
because we chose money as our weapon. We are trying to overcome our economic
weakness by using the weapons or the economically strong – weapons which in
fact we do not possess. By our thoughts, words and actions it appears as if we
have come to the conclusion that without money we cannot bring about the
revolution we are aiming at. It is as if we have said, ‘Money is the basis of
development. Without money there can be no development.’
That is
what we believe at present. TANU leaders, and Government leaders and officials,
all put great emphasis and dependence on money. The people’s leaders, and the
people themselves, in TANU, NUTA, Parliament, UWT, the co-operatives, TAPA, and
in other national institutions think, hope and pray for MONEY. It is as if we
had all agreed to speak with one voice, saying, ‘If we get money we shall
develop, without money we cannot develop.
In brief,
our Five-Year Development Plan aims at more food, more education, and better
health; but the weapon we have put emphasis upon is money. It is as if we said,
‘In the next five years we want to have more food, more education, and better
health, and in order to achieve these things we shall spend £250,000,000’. We
think and speak as if the most important thing to depend upon is MONEY and
anything else we intend to use in our struggle is of minor importance.
When a
member of Parliament says that there is a shortage of water in his constituency
; and he asks the Government how it intends to deal with the problem, he
expects the Government to reply that it is planning to remove the shortage of
water in his constituency – with MONEY.
When
another Member of Parliament asks what the Government is doing about the
shortage of roads, schools or hospitals in his constituency, he also expects
the Government to tell him that it has specific plans to build roads, schools
and hospitals in his constituency – with MONEY.
When a
NUTA official asks the Government about its plans to deal with the low wages
and poor housing of the workers, he expects the Government to inform him that
the minimum wage will be increased and that better houses will be provided for
the workers – WITH MONEY.
When a
TAPA official asks the Government what plans it has to give assistance to the
many TAPA schools which do not get Government aid, he expects the Government to
state that it is ready the following morning to give the required assistance –
WITH MONEY.
When an
official of the co-operative movement mentions any problem facing the farmer,
he expects to hear that the Government will solve the farmer’s problems – WITH
MONEY in short, for every problem facing our nation, the solution that is in
everybody’s mind is MONEY.
Each
year, each Ministry of Government makes its estimates of expenditure, i.e. the
amount of money it will require in the coming year to meet recurrent and
development expenses. Only one Minister and his Ministry make estimates of
revenue. This is the Minister for Finance.
Every
Ministry puts forward very good development plans. When the Ministry presents
its estimates, it believes that the money is there for the asking but that the
Minister for Finance are being obstructive. And regularly each year the
Minister of Finance has to tell his fellow Ministers that there is no money.
And each year the Ministers complain about the Ministry of Finance when it
trims down their estimates.
Similarly,
when Members of Parliament and other leaders demand that the Government should
carry out a certain development, they believe that there is a lot of money to
spend on such projects, but that the Government is the stumbling block. Yet
such belief on the part of Ministries, Members of Parliament and other leaders
does not alter the stark truth, which is that Government has no money.
When it
is said that Government has no money, what does this mean? It means that the
people of Tanzania have insufficient money The people pay taxes out of the very
little wealth they have; it is from these taxes that the Government meets its
recurrent and development expenditure. When we call on the Government to spend
more money on development projects, we are asking the Government to use more
money. and if the Government does not have any more, the only way it can do
this is to increase its revenue through extra taxation.
If one
calls on the Government to spend more, one is in effect calling on the
Government to increase taxes. Calling on the Government to spend more without
raising taxes is like demanding that the Government should perform miracles; it
is equivalent to asking for more milk from a cow while insisting that the cow should
not be milked again. But our refusal to admit the calling on the Government to
spend more is the same as calling on the Government to raise taxes shows that
we fully realize the difficulties of increasing taxes. We realize that the cow
has no more milk – that is, that the people find it difficult to pay more
taxes. We know that the cow would like to have more milk herself, so that her
calves could drink it, or that she would like more milk which could be sold to
provide more comfort for herself or her calves. But knowing all the things
which could be done with more milk does not alter the fact that the cow has no
more milk!
WHAT OF EXTERNAL AID?
One
method we use to try and avoid a recognition of the need to increase taxes if
we want to have more money for development, is to think in terms of getting the
extra money from outside Tanzania. Such external finance falls into three main
categories.
(a)
Gifts: This means that another government gives our Government a sum of money
as a free gift for a particular development scheme. Sometimes it may be that an
institution in another country gives our Government, or an institution in our
country, financial help for development programmes.
(b)
Loans: The greater portion of financial help we expect to get from outside is
not in the form of gifts or charity, but in the form of loans. A foreign
government or a foreign institution, such as a bank, lends our Government money
for the purposes of development. Such a loan has repayment conditions attached
to it, covering such factors as the time period for which it is available and
the rate of interest.
(c)
Private Investment: The third category of financial help is also greater than
the first. This takes the form of investment in our country by individuals or
companies from outside. The important condition which such private investors
have in mind is that the enterprise into which they put their money should
bring them profit and that our Government should permit them to repatriate
these profits. They also prefer to invest in a country whose policies they
agree with and which will safeguard their economic interests.
These
three are the main categories of external finance. And there is in Tanzania a
fantastic amount of talk about getting money from outside. Our Government, and different
groups of our leaders, never stop thinking about methods of getting finance
from abroad. And if we get some money or even if we just get a promise of it,
our newspapers, our radio, and our leaders, all advertise the fact in order
that every person shall know that salvation is coming, or is on the way. If we
receive a girt we announce it, if we receive a loan we announce it, if we get a
new factory we announce it – and always loudly. In the same way, when we get a
promise of a gift, a loan, or a new industry, we make an announcement of the
promise. Even when we have merely started discussions with a foreign government
or institution for a gift, a loan, or a new industry, we make an announcement –
even though we do not know the outcome of the discussions. Why do we do all
this? Because we want people to know that we have started discussions which
will bring prosperity.
DO NOT LET US DEPEND UPON MONEY FOR DEVELOPMENT
It is
stupid to rely on money as the major instrument of development when we know
only too well that our country is poor. It is equally stupid, indeed it is even
more stupid, for us to imagine that we shall rid ourselves of our poverty
through foreign financial assistance rather than our own financial resources.
It is stupid for two reasons.
Firstly,
we shall not get the money. It is true that there are countries which can, and
which would like to, help us. But there is no country in the world which is
prepared to give us gifts or loans, or establish industries, to the extent that
we would be able to achieve all our development targets. There are many needy
countries in the world. And even if all the prosperous nations were willing to
help the needy countries, the assistance would still not suffice. But in any
case the prosperous nations have not accepted a responsibility to fight world
poverty. Even within their own borders poverty still exists, and the rich
individuals do not willingly give money to the government to help their poor
fellow citizens.
It is
only through taxation, which people have to pay whether they want to or not,
that money can be extracted from the rich in order to help the masses. Even
then there would not be enough money. However heavily we taxed the citizens of
Tanzania and the aliens living here, the resulting revenue would not be enough
to meet the costs of the development we want. And there is no World Government
which can tax the prosperous nations in order to help the poor nations; nor if
one did exist could it raise enough revenue to do all that is needed in the
world. But in fact, such a World Government does not exist. Such money as the
rich nations offer to the poor nations is given voluntarily, either through
their own goodness, or for their own benefit. All this means that it is
impossible for Tanzania to obtain from overseas enough money to develop our
economy.
GIFTS AND LOANS WILL ENDANGER OUR INDEPENDENCE
Secondly,
even if it were possible for us to get enough money for our needs from external
sources, is this what we really want? Independence means self-reliance.
Independence cannot be real if a nation depends upon gifts and loans from
another for Its development. Even if there was a nation, or nations, prepared
to give us all the money we need for our development, it would be improper for
us to accept such assistance without asking ourselves how this would effect our
independence and our very survival as a nation. Gifts which increase, or act as
a catalyst, to our own efforts are valuable. Gifts which could have the effect
of weakening or distorting our own efforts should not be accepted until we have
asked ourselves a number of questions.
The same
applies to loans. It is true that loans are better than ‘free’ gifts. A loan is
intended to increase our efforts or make those fruitful. One condition of a
loan is that you show how you are going to repay it. This means you have to
show that you intend to use the loan profitably and will therefore be able to
repay it.
But even
loans have their limitations. You have to give consideration to the ability to
repay. When we borrow money from other countries it is the Tanzanian who pays
it back. And as we have already stated, Tanzania’s are poor people. To burden
the people with big loans, the repayment of which will be beyond their means,
is not to help them but to make them suffer. It is even worse when the loans
they are asked to repay have not benefited the majority of the people but have
only benefited a small minority.
How about
the enterprises of foreign investors ? It is true we need these enterprises. We
have even passed an Act of Parliament protecting foreign investments in this
country. Our aim is to make foreign investors feel that Tanzania is a good
place in which to invest because investments would be safe and profitable, and
the profits can be taken out of the country without difficulty. We expect to
get money through this method. But we cannot get enough. And even if we were
able to convince foreign investors and foreign firms to undertake all the
projects and programmes of economic development that we need, is that what we
actually want to happen ?
Had we
been able to attract investors from America and Europe to come and start all
the industries and all the projects of economic development that we need in
this country, could we do so without questioning ourselves?
Could we
agree to leave the economy of our country in the hands of foreigners who would
take the profits back to their countries? Or supposing they did not insist upon
taking their profits away, but decided to reinvest them in Tanzania; could we
really accept this situation without asking ourselves what disadvantages our
nation would suffer? Would this allow the socialism we have said it is our
objective to build ?
How can
we depend upon gifts, loans, and investments from foreign countries and foreign
companies without endangering our independence? The English people have a
proverb which says, ‘He who pays the piper calls the tune’. How can we depend
upon foreign governments and companies for the major part of our development
without giving to those governments and countries a great part of our freedom
to act as we please ? The truth is that we cannot.
Let us
repeat. We made a mistake in choosing money – something we do not have – to be
the big instrument of our development. We are making a mistake to think that we
shall get the money from other countries; first, because in fact we shall not
be able to get sufficient money for our economic development; and secondly,
because even if we could get all that we need, such dependence upon others
would endanger our independence and our ability to choose our own political
policies.
WE HAVE PUT TOO MUCH EMPHASIS ON INDUSTRIES
Because
of our emphasis on money, we have made another big mistake. We have put too
much emphasis on industries. Just as we have said , ‘Without money there can be
no development’, we also seem to say, ‘Industries arc the basis of development,
without industries there is no development’. This is true The day when we have
lots of money we shall be able to say we are a developed country. We shall be
able to say, When we began our development plans we did not have enough money
and this situation made it difficult for us to develop as fast as we wanted.
Today we are developed and we have enough money. That is to say, our money has
been brought by development. Similarly, the day we become industrialized we
shall be able to say we are developed. Development would have us to have
industries. The mistake we are making is to think that development begins with
industries. It is a mistake because we do not have the means to establish many
modern industries in our country. We do not have either the necessary finances
or the technical know-how. It is not enough to say that we shall borrow the
finances and the technicians from other countries to come and start the
industries. The answer to this is the same one we gave earlier, that we cannot
get enough money and borrow enough technicians to start all the industries we
need. And even if we could get the necessary assistance, dependence on it could
interfere with our policy on socialism. The policy of inviting a chain of
capitalists to come and establish industries in our country might succeed in
giving us all the industries we need but it would also succeed in preventing
the establishment of socialism unless we believe that without first building
capitalism, we cannot build socialism.
LET US PRAY AND HEED TO THE PEASANT
Our
emphasis on money and industries has made us concentrate on urban development.
We recognize that we do not have enough money to bring the kind of development
to each village which would benefit everybody. We also know that we cannot
establish an industry in each village and through this means erect a rise in
the real incomes of the people. For these reasons we spend most of our money in
the urban areas and our industries are established in the towns.
Yet the
greater part of this money that we spend in the towns comes from loans. Whether
it is use it to build schools, hospitals, houses or factories, etc., it still
has to be repaid. But it is obvious that it cannot be repaid just out of money
obtained from urban and industrial development. To repay the loans we have to
use foreign currency which is obtained from the sale of our exports. But we do
not now sell our industrial products in foreign markets, and indeed it is
likely to be a long time before our industries produce for export. The main aim
of our new industries is ‘import substitution’ – that is, to produce things
which up to now we have had to import from foreign countries.
It is
therefore obvious that the foreign currency we shall use to pay back the loans
used in the development Or the urban areas will not come from the towns or the
industries. Where, then, shall we get it from? We shall get it from the
villages and from agriculture. What does this mean? It means that the people
who benefit directly from development which is brought about by borrowed money
are not the ones who will repay the loans. The largest proportion of the loans
will be spent in, or for, the urban areas, but the largest proportion of the
repayment will be made through the efforts of the farmers.
This fact
should always be borne in mind, for there are various forms of exploitation. We
must not forget that people who live in towns can possibly become the
exploiters of those who live in the rural areas. All our big hospitals are in
towns and they benefit only a small section of the people of Tanzania. Yet if
we had built them with loans from outside Tanzania, it is the overseas sale of
the peasants’ produce which provides the foreign exchanges for repayment. Those
who do not get the benefit of the hospital thus carry the major responsibility
for paying for them. Tarmac roads, too, are mostly found in towns and are of
especial value to the motor-car owners. Yet if we have built those roads with
loans, it is again the farmer who produces the goods which will pay for them.
What is more, the foreign exchange with which the car was bought also came from
the sale of the farmers’ produce. Again, electric lights, water pipes, hotels
and other aspects of modern development are mostly found in towns. Most of them
have been built with loans, and most of them do not benefit the farmer
directly, although they will be paid for by the foreign exchange earned by the
sale of his produce. We should always bear this in mind.
Although
when we talk of exploitation we usually think of capitalists, we should not
forget that there are many fish in the sea. They eat each other. The large ones
eat the small ones, and small ones eat those who are even smaller. There are
two possible ways of dividing the people in our country. We can put the
capitalists and feudalists on one side, and the farmers and workers on the
other. But we can also divide the people into urban dwellers on one side and
those who live in the rural areas on the other. If we are not careful we might
get to the position where the real exploitation in Tanzania is that of the town
dwellers exploiting the peasants.
THE PEOPLE AND AGRICULTURE
The
development of a country is brought about by people, not by money. Money, and
the wealth it represents, is the result and not the basis of development. The
four prerequisites of development are different; they are (i) People; (ii)
Land; (iii) Good Policies; (iv) Good Leadership. Our country has more than ten
million people1 and is are; is more than 362,000 square miles.
AGRICULTURE IS THE BASIS OF DEVELOPMENT
A great
part of Tanzania’s land is fertile and gets sufficient rain. Our country can
produce various crops for home consumption and for export.
We can
produce food crops (which can be exported if we produce in large quantities)
such as maize, rice, wheat, beans, groundnuts, etc. And we can produce such
cash crops as sisal, cotton, coffee, tobacco, pyrethrum, tea, etc. Our land is
also good for grazing cattle, goats, sheep, and for raising chickens, etc.; we
can get plenty of fish from our rivers, lakes, and from the sea. All of our
farmers are in areas which can produce two or three or even more of the food
and cash crops enumerated above, and each farmer could increase his production
so as to get more food or more money. And because the main aim of development
is to get more food, and more money for our other needs our purpose must be to
increase production of these agricultural crops. This is in fact the only road
through which we can develop our country – in other words, only by increasing
our production of these things can we get more food and more money for every Tanzanian.
THE CONDITIONS OF DEVELOPMENT
(a) Hard
Work
Everybody
wants development; but not everybody understands and accepts the basic
requirements for development. The biggest requirement is hard work. Let us go
to the villages and talk to our people and see whether or not it is possible
for them to work harder.
In towns,
for example, wage-earners normally work for seven and a half or eight hours a
day, and for six or six and a half days a week. This is about 45 hours a week
for the whole year, except for two or three weeks leave. In other words, a
wage-earner works for 45 hours a week for 48 or 50 weeks of the year.
In or a
country like ours these are really quite short working hours. In other
countries, even those which are more developed than we are, people work for
more than 45 hours a week. It is not normal for a young country to start with
such a short working week. The normal thing is to begin with long working hours
and decrease them as the country becomes more and more prosperous. By starting
with such short working hours and asking for even shorter hours, we are in fact
imitating the more developed countries. And we shall regret this imitation.
Nevertheless, wage earners do work for 45 hours per week and their annual
vacation does not exceed four weeks.
It would
be appropriate to ask our farmers, especially the men, how many hours a week
and how many weeks a year they work. Many do not even work for half as many
hours as the wage-earner does. The truth is that in the villages the women work
very hard. At times they work for 12 or 14 hours a day. They even work on
Sundays and public holidays. Women who live in the villages work harder than
anybody else in Tanzania. But the men who live in villages (and some of the
women in towns) are on leave for half of their lire. The energies of the
millions of men in the villages and thousands of women in the towns which are
at present wasted in gossip, dancing and drinking, are a great treasure which
could contribute more towards the development of our country than anything we
could get from rich nations.
We would
be doing something very beneficial to our country if we went to the villages
and told our people that they hold this treasure and that it is up to them to
use it for their own benefit and the benefit of our whole nation .
(b)
Intelligence
The
second condition of development is the use of intelligence. Unintelligent hard
work would not bring the same good results as the two combined. Using a big hoe
instead of a small one; using a plow pulled by oxen instead of an ordinary hoe;
the use of fertilizers; the use of insecticides; knowing the right crop for a
particular season or soil; choosing good seeds for planting; knowing the right
time for planting, weeding, etc.; all these things show the use of knowledge and
intelligence. And all of them combine with hard work to produce more and better
results.
The money
and time we spend on passing this knowledge to the peasants are better spent
and bring more benefits to our country than the money and great amount of time
we spend on other things which we call development.
These
facts are well known to all of us. The parts of our Five-Year Development Plan
which are on target, or where the target has been exceeded, are those parts
which depend solely upon the people’s own hard work. The production of cotton,
coffee, cashew nuts, tobacco and pyrethrum has increased enormously for the
past three years. But these are things which are produced by hard work and the
good leadership of the people, not by the use of great amounts of money.
Furthermore
the people, through their own hard work and with a little help and leadership,
have finished many development projects in the villages. They have built
schools, dispensaries, community centers, and roads; they have dug wells, water
channels, animal dips, small dams, and completed various other development
projects. Had they waited for money, they would not now have the use of these
things.
HARD WORK IS THE ROOT OF DEVELOPMENT
Some Plan
projects which depend on money are going on well, but there are many which have
stopped and others which might never be fulfilled because of lack of money. Yet
still we talk about money and our search for money increases and takes nearly
all our energies. We should not lessen our efforts to get the money we really
need, but it would be more appropriate for us to spend time in the villages
showing the people how to bring about development through their own efforts
rather than going on so many long and expensive journeys abroad in search of
development money. This is the real way to bring development to everybody in
the country.
None of
this means that from now on we will not need money or that we will not start
industries or embark upon development projects which require money.
Furthermore, we are not saying that we will not accept, or even that we shall
not look for, money from other countries for our development. This is not what
we are saying. We will continue to use money; and each year we will use more
money for the various development projects than we uscd the previous year
because this will be one of the signs of our development.
What we
are saying, however, is that from now on we shall know what is the foundation
and what is the fruit of development. Between money and people it is obvious
that the people and their hard work are the foundation of development, and
money is one of the fruits of that hard work.
From now
on we shall stand upright and walk forward on our feet rather than look at this
problem upside down. industries will come and money will come but their
foundation is the people and their hard work, especially in AGRICULTURE. This
is the meaning of self-reliance.
Our
emphasis should therefore be on:
(a) The
Land and Agriculture
(b) The
People
(c) The
Policy of Socialism and Self-Reliance, and
(d) Good
Leadership.
(a) The
Land
Because
the economy of Tanzania depends and will continue to depend on agriculture and
animal husbandry, Tanzanians can live well without depending on help from
outside if they use their land properly. Land is the basis of human life and
all Tanzanians should use it as a valuable investment for future development.
Because the land belongs to the nation, the Government has to see to it that it
is being used for the benefit of the whole nation and not for the benefit of
one individual or just a few people.
It is the
responsibility of TANU to see that the country produces enough food and enough
cash crops for export. It is the responsibility of the Government and the
co-operative societies to see to it that our people get the necessary tools,
training and leadership in modern methods of agriculture.
(b) The
People
In order
properly to implement the policy of self-reliance, the people have to be taught
the meaning of self-reliance and its practice. They must become self-sufficient
in food, serviceable clothes and good housing.
In our
country work should be something to be proud of, and laziness, drunkenness and
idleness should be things to be ashamed of. And for the defense of our nation,
it is necessary for us to be on guard against internal stooges who could be
used by external enemies who aim to destroy us. The people should always be
ready to defend their nation when they are called upon to do so.
(c) Good
Policies
The
principles of our policy of self-reliance go hand in hand with our policy of
socialism. In order to prevent exploitation it is necessary for everybody to
work and to live on his own labour. And in order to distribute the national
wealth rairly, it is necessary for everybody to work to the maximum of his
ability. Nobody should go and stay for a long time with his relative, doing no
work, because in doing so he will be exploiting his relative. Likewise, nobody
should be allowed to loiter in towns or villages without doing work which would
enable him to be self-reliant without exploiting his relatives.
TANU
believes that everybody who loves his nation has a duty to serve it by
co-operating with his fellows in building the country for the benefit of all
the people of Tanzania. In order to maintain our independence and our pcople’s
freedom we ought to be self-reliant in every possible way and avoid depending
upon other countries for assistance. If every individual is self-reliant
ten-house cell will be self-reliant; if all the cells are self-reliant the
whole ward will be self-reliant; and if the wards are self-reliant the District
will be self-reliant. If the Districts arc self-reliant, then the Region is
self-reliant, and if the Regions are self-reliant, then the whole nation is
self-reliant and this our aim.
(d) Good
Leadership
TANU
recognizes the urgency and importance of good leadership. But we have not yet
produced systematic training for our leaders; it is necessary that TANU
Headquarters should now prepare a programme of training for all leaders – from
the national level to the ten-house cell level – so that every one of them
understands our political and economic policies. Leaders must set a good
example to the rest of the people in their lives and in all their activities.
PART FOUR
TANU Membership
TANU Membership
Since the
Party was founded we have put great emphasis on getting as many members as
possible. This was the right policy during the independence struggle. But now
the National Executive feels that the time has come when we should put more
emphasis on the beliefs of our Party and its policies of socialism.
That part
of the TANU Constitution which relates to the admission of a member should be
adhered to, and if it is discovered that a man does not appear to accept the
faith, the objects, and the rules and regulations of the Party, then he should
not be accepted as a member. In particular, it should not be forgotten that
TANU is a party of peasants and workers.
PART FIVE
The
Arusha Resolution
Therefore,
the National Executive Committee, meeting in the Community Centre at Arusha
from 26.1.67 to 29.1.67 resolves:
(a) The
Leadership
1. Every
TANU and Government leader must be either a peasant or a worker, and should in
no way be associated with the practices or capitalism or feudalism.
2. No
TANU or Government leader should hold shares in any company.
3. No TAN
U or Government leader should hold directorships in any privately owned
enterprise.
4. No
TANU or Government leader should receive two or more salaries.
5. No
TANU or Government leader should own houses which he rents to others.
6. For
the purposes of this Resolution the term ‘leader’ should comprise the
following:
Members
of the TANU National Executive Committee; Ministers; Members of Parliament;
senior officials of organizations affiliated to TANU; senior officers of par-statal
organizations; all those appointed or elected under any clause of the TANU
Constitution; councilors; and civil servants in the high and middle cadres. (In
this context ‘leader’ means a man, or a man and his wife; a woman, or a woman
and her husband.)
(b) The
Government and other Institutions
1.
Congratulates the Government for the steps it has taken so far in the
implementation of the policy of socialism
2. Calls
upon the Government to take further steps in the implementation of our policy
of socialism as described in Part Two of this document without waiting for a
Commission on Socialism.
3. Calls
upon the Government to put emphasis, when preparing its development plans, on
the ability of this country to implement the plans rather than depending on
foreign loans and grants as has been done in the current Five-Year Development
Plan. The National Executive Committee also resolves that the Plan should be
amended so as to make it fit in with the policy of self-reliance.
4. Calls
upon the Government to take action designed to ensure that the incomes of
workers in the private sector are not very different from the incomes of
workers in the public sector.
5. Calls
upon the Government to put great emphasis on actions which will raise the
standard of living of the peasants, and the rural community.
6. Calls
upon NUTA, the co-operatives, TAPA, UWT, TYL, and other Government institutions
to take steps to implement the policy of socialism and self-reliance.
(c)
Membership
Members
should get thorough teaching on Party ideology so that they may understand it,
and they should always be reminded of the importance of living up to its
principles.
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