Former
US President Bill Clinton calls President Jakaya Kikwete from the
Loduare Gate of the Ngorongoro Conservation Area (NCA) to appreciate
Tanzania’s efforts in conserving wildlife at the NCA. PHOTO |
CORREPONDENT
By Zulfa Musa, The Citizen Correspondent
Posted Monday, May 4 2015 at 09:39
Posted Monday, May 4 2015 at 09:39
IN SUMMARY
Excited
by the unique conservation, which allows wildlife to co-exist with
humans, Mr Clinton could not resist calling President Jakaya Kikwete on
his way back from the NCA, telling him how he was impressed by the
scenery in the crater.
Arusha.
Former US President Bill Clinton has said Ngorongoro Conservation Area
(NCA) must be protected at any cost to retain its status as a world’s
heritage site of immeasurable allure.
Excited
by the unique conservation, which allows wildlife to co-exist with
humans, Mr Clinton could not resist calling President Jakaya Kikwete on
his way back from the NCA, telling him how he was impressed by the
scenery in the crater.
According
to the Tanzania Tourists Board, the Ngorongoro attracts over 600,000
visitors annually, accounting for over 50 per cent of the country’s
arrivals which stand at 1.2 million.
Mr
Clinton saw 19 lions, some black rhinos and herds of buffaloes and
wildebeest when the former US Head of State visited the crater on his
way back from Nainokanoka Ward within the NCA where the Clinton
Foundation is supporting a health initiative.
The
former US President inoculated Maasai children at Nainokanoka Village
Dispensary where mothers from the pastoralist community turned out in
large numbers to receive him.
Mr
Clinton assured the community that his foundation would empower the
dispensary for the facility to improve health of the mothers and
children by carrying out vaccinations in a bid to prevent emerging
diseases and reduce the cost of treating them.
Mr
Clinton, whose foundation built a dispensary at the Nainokanoka Ward,
promised to install another refrigerator for the storage of vaccination
drugs, laboratory test samples, and sterilised vaccine equipment, as the
remote area was not connected to electricity.
“All
what I wanted to do after retiring from the presidency is to help the
needy in developing countries particularly in Africa where the gap
between the haves and the have-nots is considerably wide,” he said as he
posed for photographs with his hosts.
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