Five women beaten and burned part of rising wave of Tanzanian "witch killings"
Thousands of elderly Tanzanian women have been strangled, knifed to death and burned alive over the last two decades after being denounced as witches
Farmers pushed off their land to save Tanzania's Great Ruaha River
The government accuses farmers of illegally squatting on protected land along the river banks. Now, thousands face eviction
FEATURE-Tanzania's women street cooks hope for safety, loans
"Urban food vending may be a good tool for creating livelihood security for the urban poor, but to achieve this there has to be better policy initiatives"
Tanzania sets aside special room for lactating legislators
Women are routinely castigated in some countries for exposing their flesh to nurse
Tanzania's ban on pregnant girls in school violates basic rights - campaigners
More than 55,000 Tanzanian schoolgirls have been expelled from school over the last decade for being pregnant
FEATURE-Solar energy powers clean water, business opportunities for refugees
Practical and affordable, solar energy is being deployed on a growing scale to provide essential services for refugee camps in Africa and the Middle East
Tanzania seeks to protect cities from climate threats with urban plan
"Disaster itself is often a failure in development planning"
FEATURE-As grazing land shrinks, Maasai herders make unlikely city dwellers
Forced from traditional rural areas by drought and loss of grazing land, Maasai are an increasingly common sight in Dar es Salaam
Tanzania demarcates national parks to avert human-wildlife clashes
Conflicts between nomad pastoralists and wildlife have been stoked by a scorching drought in many parts of East Africa