Difference between revisions of "John Magufuli"

From Wikispooks
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(adjusting)
(Kit Knightly quote)
Line 26: Line 26:
 
|start=6 November 2000
 
|start=6 November 2000
 
|end=21 December 2005}}
 
|end=21 December 2005}}
}}'''Dr John Pombe Magufuli''' was the [[president of Tanzania]]. He was widely criticised by {{ccm}} after questioning the [[WHO]]'s narrative about [[COVID-19]].<ref name=tcn/> In February 2021, ''[[The Guardian]]'' headlined an article <u>''It's time for Africa to rein in Tanzania's anti-vaxxer president''</u>. He died in March 2021, reportedly of heart failure. [[Deutsche Welle]] reported that "His hands-on war against corruption was admired not just in Tanzania — but the [[Africa|entire continent]].".<ref name=dw>https://www.dw.com/en/tanzanias-covid-skeptic-president-john-magufuli-dies-at-61/a-56908583</ref>
+
}}'''Dr John Pombe Magufuli''' was the [[president of Tanzania]]. He was widely criticised by {{ccm}} after questioning the [[WHO]]'s narrative about [[COVID-19]].<ref name=tcn/> In February 2021, ''[[The Guardian]]'' headlined an article <u>''It's time for Africa to rein in Tanzania's anti-vaxxer president''</u>.  
 +
 
 +
{{SMWQ
 +
|authors=Kit Knightly
 +
|date=12 March 2021
 +
|text=The negative coverage of [[Tanzania/President|President]] [[John Magufuli|Magufuli]] is a very recent phenomenon. Early in his Presidency he even received glowing write-ups from the Western press and [[Soros]]-backed [[think tank]]s, praising his reforms and calling him an “example” to other [[African]] nations.
 +
 
 +
All that changed when he spoke out about [[Covid]] being hoax.
 +
 
 +
When he was re-elected in October 2020 the standard Western accusations of “voter suppression” and “[[electoral fraud]]” appeared in the Western press which had previously reported his approval rating as high as 96%.
 +
|source_name=Off Guardian
 +
|source_URL=https://off-guardian.org/2021/03/12/tanzania-the-second-covid-coup/
 +
}}
 +
 
 +
He died in March 2021, reportedly of [[heart failure]]. [[Deutsche Welle]] reported that "His hands-on war against corruption was admired not just in Tanzania — but the [[Africa|entire continent]].".<ref name=dw>https://www.dw.com/en/tanzanias-covid-skeptic-president-john-magufuli-dies-at-61/a-56908583</ref>
  
 
==Background==
 
==Background==
Line 57: Line 71:
  
 
{{SMWDocs}}
 
{{SMWDocs}}
 
 
==References==
 
==References==
 
{{reflist}}
 
{{reflist}}

Revision as of 16:21, 20 March 2021

Person.png John MagufuliRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
(politician, COVID-19/Premature death)
John Magufuli.jpg
Born29 October 1959
DiedMarch 2021 (Age 61)
Cause of death
"heart failure"
NationalityTanzanian
Alma materUniversity of Dar es Salaam
President of Tanzania who refused to institute a Covid lockdown and rejected WHO advice. Died aged 61. A friend of Pierre Nkurunziza, President of Burundi who took a similar policy and died suddenly aged 55.

Employment.png President of Tanzania

In office
5 November 2015 - Present

Dr John Pombe Magufuli was the president of Tanzania. He was widely criticised by commercially-controlled media after questioning the WHO's narrative about COVID-19.[1] In February 2021, The Guardian headlined an article It's time for Africa to rein in Tanzania's anti-vaxxer president.

“The negative coverage of President Magufuli is a very recent phenomenon. Early in his Presidency he even received glowing write-ups from the Western press and Soros-backed think tanks, praising his reforms and calling him an “example” to other African nations.

All that changed when he spoke out about Covid being hoax.

When he was re-elected in October 2020 the standard Western accusations of “voter suppression” and “electoral fraud” appeared in the Western press which had previously reported his approval rating as high as 96%.”
Kit Knightly (12 March 2021)  [2]

He died in March 2021, reportedly of heart failure. Deutsche Welle reported that "His hands-on war against corruption was admired not just in Tanzania — but the entire continent.".[3]

Background

Magufuli earned his bachelor of science in education degree majoring in chemistry and mathematics as teaching subjects from The University of Dar es Salaam in 1988. He also earned his masters and PhD (doctorate) degrees in chemistry from the University of Dar es Salaam, in 1994 and 2009, respectively.

President John Magufuli of Tanzania Sends Fake COVID-19 Test Samples to the Lab That Test Positive

Covid-19

Testing the WHO

Radio AN24 reported that Magufuli sent the WHO a variety of non-human samples for COVID testing.[4][5] The samples of a goat, a papaya and a quail were to be tested for COVID-19. All 3 were judged to carry the virus.[1] His comment at the time was that the equipment or people may be compromised, and sometimes it can be sabotage, since they are otherwise capable to detect diseases reliably.

COVID-19 lockdown refusal

Full article: COVID-19/Lockdown

Magufuli was a "close friend" of Pierre Nkurunziza, who also refused to order a lockdown in response to COVID-19[6] and who also died suddenly, reported of a "heart attack".

Regime change warnings

Pompeo tweet.png

In August 2020, the powerful D.C. think tank Council on Foreign Relations published a blog post noting that president Magufuli was becoming “increasingly problematic”.

After the 2020 October 28th Tanzanian election, the pressure from Washington DC increased, an indication the US did not achieve its desired outcome. The US State Department[7] soon claimed that “significant election-related fraud and intimidation” and called for an election re-do.[8]

In February 2021, The Guardian carried a story about Magufuli entitled It's time for Africa to rein in Tanzania's anti-vaxxer president.[9] by Vava Tampa. The story was sponsored by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. Tampa's obituary for Pierre Nkurunziza was subtitled "President of Burundi whose 15-year rule was ultimately marked by violence and repression".

Death

John Magufuli-death.png

John Magufuli reportedly died of heart failure on March 2021, after being admitted to hospital on 6 March.[3][10]


Many thanks to our Patrons who cover ~2/3 of our hosting bill. Please join them if you can.


References