بالعربي
Facebook Twitter Linkedin Youtube
Alafarika for Studies and Consultancy
Library
0

No products in the cart.

مكتبتنا (عربي)
  • Home
  • Reports
    • Geopolitics & Governance
    • Economy & Trade
    • Security & Conflict Resolution
    • Regional Integration & Global Cooperation
    • Education, Science & Technology
    • Culture & Media
  • Analyses
    • Geopolitics & Governance
    • Economy & Trade
    • Security & Conflict Resolution
    • Regional Integration & Global Cooperation
    • Education, Science & Technology
    • Culture & Media
  • Weekly Brief
  • Data
    • Charts
    • Infographics
  • Journals
  • Events
  • Country Profile
    • Nigeria
Font ResizerAa
Alafarika for Studies and ConsultancyAlafarika for Studies and Consultancy
Search
  • Home
  • بالعربي
  • Reports
    • Geopolitics & Governance
    • Economy & Trade
    • Security & Conflict Resolution
    • Regional Integration & Global Cooperation
    • Education, Science & Technology
    • Culture & Media
  • Analyses
    • Geopolitics & Governance
    • Economy & Trade
    • Security & Conflict Resolution
    • Regional Integration & Global Cooperation
    • Education, Science & Technology
    • Culture & Media
  • Weekly News Brief
  • Journals
  • Data
    • Infographics
    • Charts
  • Events
  • Country Profile
    • Nigeria
Follow US
  • About
  • Request A Report/Study
  • Consult With Us
  • Call to Host/Train
  • To Publish With Us
All Rights Reserved | Alafarika for Studies and Consultancy © 2026.
Situation Reports

Tanzania’s Samia Suluhu Hassan and the challenges ahead

By
Abdul Wasiu Mujeeb
Last updated: January 8, 2023
6 Min Read
Share

Tanzania got its first female president following the death of John Pombe Magufuli, who died at the age of 61, due to a heart condition.

President Samia Suluhu Hassan was the country’s vice president and has been described as someone that may cut a different leadership figure than her predecessor. She was born in Zanzibar on January 27, 1960, and is considered an outspoken leader and veteran politician.

She holds university qualifications from Tanzania, Britain and the United States. The mother of four has spoken publicly to encourage Tanzanian women and girls to pursue their dreams.

President Suluhu Hassan worked as a clerk officer in a government office at 17 after graduating from high school with a very poor result. She rose through the ranks to become a development officer in the Zanzibar government by 1988.

In the 1990s, she worked as a project manager for the United Nation’s World Food Programme (WFP) before getting an appointment as executive director of a union body governing non-governmental organisations in Zanzibar.

Hassan was nominated by her party, CCM to a special seat in Zanzibar’s House of Representatives. Then, she served as a two-term local government minister, and in 2010, she got elected to the National Assembly on mainland Tanzania.

Unexpectedly in March 2021, she was thrust from the role of vice president to become Tanzania’s first female president following President John Magufuli’s sudden death.

It was a history made on Friday 19th March 2021 when she took an oath of office to serve as the next president of Tanzanian at a ceremony in the commercial capital Dar es Salaam.

“It’s not a good day for me to talk to you because I have a wound in my heart,” she said in her speech during the inauguration, adding that “Today I have taken an oath different from the rest that I have taken in my career. Those were taken in happiness. Today I took the highest oath of office in mourning.”

According to Tanzania’s constitution, Samiat Hassan will remain the president for the remainder of Magufuli’s second five-year term, which expires in 2025.

Tanzania Under Magufuli

The late Magufuli was elected as the president in October 2015 following his intense promise of stamping out corruption in the country, and after he was sworn in, he hailed to be the kind of leader Tanzania needed.

He was nicknamed “the bulldozer” for his initiatives to build roads and was as well commended for his anti-corruption policies and his distinct disciplinary steps against wasting governmental funds.

For example in November 2015, he ordered the cancellation of the country’s Independence Day celebrations and all foreign trips for public servants, for the first time in 54 years.

His administration also showed a strong intolerance for the chronic absenteeism in the country’s civil service by identifying and firing thousands of so-called “ghost workers” from the government payroll.

These approaches gave him great commendations and recommendations, as his results-oriented actions were poised as what the African continent needed to deal with its governance problems.

However, due to his other divisive policies surrounding press freedom, political expression, and free speech, his administration was later criticized, and his legacy elicited mixed reactions from both within and outside the government.

Magufuli’s election victory late last year was also marred by controversy, with foreign observers, including the US embassy, raising questions about the results’ legitimacy and treatment of the opposition in the run-up to the elections.

Challenges ahead

The nation’s first female chief, who hails from Zanzibar’s semi-autonomous archipelago, faces various challenges. Apart from the challenges posed by Magafuli’s authoritarian tendencies, some reports indicate that she has little political resources of her own and faces an uphill struggle in stamping her authority over a fractured ruling party and an anxious government.

President Suluhu Hassan’s treatment of Covid-19 will also influence thoughts on her time in office, especially as her predecessor did not believe in people staying at home when Covid-19 arrived in Tanzania. Instead, he wished for them to pray in the churches and mosques.

Also, the late Magufuli dramatically pursued an interventionist economic policy agenda throughout his lifetime, although some economists believe his political style has had unintended consequences for Tanzania’s economy. Hundreds of significant companies have shut down or decreased their activities. Economic growth has slowed, unemployment has risen, and economic hardships have increased.

Samiah’s international experience can provide her with the perspective needed to address the nation’s political infighting, diplomatic blunders, and “the need to bury differences and display unity as a nation,” according to her inaugural address on March 19, 2021.

Her actions since her inauguration have also proved that her forthrightness and sanity may be crucial in pushing the country forward. Although she will also need to act quickly to shift the country’s stance on COVID-19 and reach out to the opposition and other stakeholders in order to foster an inclusive national dialogue.

Keywords:John Pombe MagufuliPresident Samia Suluhu HassanTanzania politics

Sign Up For Weekly Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our weekly briefs, reports, and analysis instantly!

By signing up, you agree to our Terms of Use and acknowledge the data practices in our Privacy Policy. You may unsubscribe at any time.
Share This Article
Facebook Whatsapp Whatsapp LinkedIn Reddit Threads Email Copy Link Print
ByAbdul Wasiu Mujeeb
Writer, journalist, and legal researcher, Alafarika for Studies and Consultancy.

SUBSCRIBE NOW

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our weekly briefs, reports, and analysis instantly!

WHAT OTHERS ARE READING

Chad and the Crisis of Statehood in the Sahel: Collapse, Resilience, or Transformation?

AnalysesSecurity & Conflict Resolution
June 2, 2026

Can the 2026 Ethiopia General Election Secure a Fractured Nation?

On June 1, 2026, Ethiopia is scheduled to hold its 7th General Election to fill…

May 31, 2026

Faye-Sonko Fallout: Senegal’s Political Tension Amid Economic Crisis

In political philosophy, one of its powerful core concepts is a classic realist principle, attributed…

May 25, 2026

Africa This Week (23/05/2026)

This week, the death toll from the ongoing Ebola outbreak in the eastern Democratic Republic…

May 23, 2026

From The Same Section

AnalysesSecurity & Conflict Resolution

Nigeria-US Elimination of ISWAP’s Abu-Bilal Al-Minuki: What Does It Mean, and What are the Future Expectations?

For over 50 years, the United States of America and the Federal…

By
Ahmadulbadawy AbdulRaheem
May 18, 2026
Weekly News Brief

Africa This Week (16/05/2026)

This week, Uganda's long-serving leader Yoweri Museveni took the oath of office…

By
Ahmadulbadawy AbdulRaheem
May 16, 2026
AnalysesRegional Integration & Global Cooperation

Africa Forward Summit: A New Policy for The Continent or A Familiar Script?

For decades, France’s relationship with the African continent was shaped by a…

By
Ahmadulbadawy AbdulRaheem
May 14, 2026

Discover More

Assessing the Northern Nigeria’s Persistent Insecurity and the New US-Nigeria Strategic Partnership

Situation Reports
February 11, 2026

Trump’s “Christian genocide” claim and “guns-a-blazing” threat to Nigeria: What do they mean?

Situation Reports
February 5, 2026

How Gen-Z is Influencing Political Reforms: Lessons from Madagascar

Situation Reports
October 24, 2025

What the Trump-Africa Summit Means for Global Politics—Outcomes and Insights

Situation Reports
July 20, 2025
Registered and Certified by:

Follow us: 

Other Pages

  • About
  • Request A Report/Study
  • Consult With Us
  • Call to Host/Train
  • To Publish With Us

Quick Links

  • Events
  • Library
  • Journals
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
All Rights Reserved | Alafarika for Studies and Consultancy © 2026.
Get Updated!
Subscribe to our newsletter and never miss our latest reports, analyses, publications, and other events.

Zero spam, Unsubscribe at any time.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?