Former Prime Minister Edward Lowassa (pictured)
yesterday called on the public remain calm through the difficult
political times the country is going through following the farcical
election re-run in Zanzibar and urged them to maintain peace and
tranquility in the country.
He made the call at the Azania Front Evangelical Lutheran Church in
Dar es Salaam where he attended Easter Monday mass and used the
occasion for thanksgiving prayers.
Lowassa, who moved to the opposition and vied for the Union
presidency in last year’s general elections via Chama cha Demokrasia na
Maendeleo (CHADEMA) said preserving peace is the only means of avoiding
unnecessary disputes.
“Every individual has the responsibility to maintain the existing
peace, clerics always tell us about the importance of maintaining the
prevailing peace, so we ought to act on their sermons knowing that peace
is the only gift we are blessed with,” he said.
Responding to reporters’ questions on the current situation in
Zanzibar following the election re-run, Lowassa called on people to be
patient until further notification.
“Let us wait for a while, we’ll be notified,” he said.
Earlier, Bishop Jacob Mameo of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of
Tanzania (ELCT) Diocese of Morogoro urged people to pray for the
country’s peace and build a habit of being grateful for who they are and
what they have.
CHADEMA National Chairman, Freeman Mbowe was among the members and
leaders from the opposition who attended the Easter Monday mass at
Azania Front.
A day before, President John Magufuli urged Tanzanians of all
faiths, races and ethnicities to uphold brotherly and sisterly
co-existence in order to maintain peace and tranquility in the country.
The head of state made the call at the Azania Front Evangelical
Lutheran Church in Dar es Salaam where he attended Easter mass despite
being a Roman Catholic.
“For us to make any progress as a nation, we must unite and respect
each other, after all, we are one and the same before God,” the
president asserted.
He stressed that if people opt to unite and work hard, Tanzania as a
country will neither remain poor nor continue to depend on aid from
rich countries.
He used a quote from the Bible to drum his message home by thus
saying: “One who is unwilling to work, shall not eat,” quoting from 2
Thessalonians 3:10, amid thunderous applause from the church
congregation.
“The country is so rich in resources that if everybody played their
roles in a responsible manner, it could turn the corner and even become
a donor member instead of recipient,” the president said.
Magufuli was welcomed by the Evangelical Lutheran Church in
Tanzania (ELCT) Archbishop of Eastern and Coastal Diocese, Dr Alex
Malasusa, to greet the congregation at the end of the mass.

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