Authorities
in northern Tanzania have started working on measures towards
preserving the country's iconic historic features and tourist
destinations which are being targeted by vandals and thieves, an
official said on Saturday.
Reports have it that thieves are looking to illegally remove bronze, copper or other metals to sell on for scrap.
Arusha Declaration Monument, one of the iconic features of the
northern Tanzania's tourist hub of Arusha, is now under threat from
vandalism.
This is raising fears on the security of other tourist attractions
in the country's tourist hub, after a plaque made of copper displayed
below the monument with inscriptions of its significance to the history
of the town and country has been plucked off by unknown people.
Arusha City Mayor Gaudence Lyimo said on Saturday that his office
has started working on a programme to ensure all the monuments are
protected for the current and future generations.
He attributed the situation to the failure by the Arusha City
Council authority to recruit staff responsible for caring historical
sites.
"So, we are going to recruit people who will be responsible for taking care of the facility," he said.
The monument was unveiled in 1977 to commemorate 10 years of Arusha
Declaration, the Tanzania's most prominent political statement of
African socialism and self-reliance.
The northern zone manager of the Tanzania Tourist Board (TTB),
Willy Lyimo expressed worries on the theft and little care taken, saying
this could impact on the number of visitors seeking information on
important sites in the safari city.
"The visitors will not get important information on the monument,"
he said, noting that the statute used to attract significant number of
visitors, including tourists.
"This is a place where Arusha Declaration was born. Yet it is under
threat of being further vandalised," he said, adding that the changing
management of the site between different government ministries and
departments may have complicated matters.
One of the items plucked off the towering monument in the heart of
the town is a plaque made of copper which was displayed below the
monument amid claims of little care of the facility.
Lyimo said TTB has struggled to seek information contained in the
plague carted away from the Antiquities Department of the Ministry of
Natural Resources and Tourism but without any success.
He says the tourism promotion body was keen to restore the damaged
part of the monument by having another plaque with vital information on
Arusha Declaration but with little support from other stakeholders.
Arusha regional police chief Liberatus Sabas pledged to work on the threat by tracking down the culprits.
Arusha Declaration Monument is one of the iconic historical
features of Arusha, the others being the Clock Tower and the Natural
History Museum. Both of them attract thousands of visitors every year.
The Clock Tower is said to be midway between Cairo and Cape Town
while the Natural History Museum has thousands of collections of hominid
remains picked from Olduvai Gorge and other areas in northern Tanzania.
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