FACTBOX: Facts and figures on child marriage in Tanzania
The country’s marriage law, which dates from 1971, allows girls aged 14 to get married with parental consent and, according to the United Nations Population Fund, between 20 percent and 40 percent of girls do so before reaching adulthood
Child marriage in Tanzania: cash for parents, problems for girls
In Tanzania, where laws permit 14-year-olds to marry, poor parents swap their girls for cash or cows
Corruption engulfs construction sector in Tanzania
As buildings collapse, claiming lives, Tanzania's president blames corrupt procurement and tendering process - a problem even though Tanzania is member of Construction Sector Transparency Initiative.
Corruption blights public institutions in Tanzania, audit shows
Report by the National Audit Office exposes misuse of public funds at a time when donors are looking for signs of progress in the fight against corruption
When the floodwaters hit home
Extreme weather can be a distant worry – until a river of floodwater comes rushing through your own door
Tanzanian officials, drought-hit farmers exchange blame for crop failure
Farmers resist adopting unfamiliar drought-hit crops, arguing that government must come up with other responses to worsening drought
Maofisa wa Tanzania, wakulima walaumiana kwa kunyauka mazao
Farmers resist adopting unfamiliar drought-hit crops, arguing that government must come up with other responses to worsening drought
Tanzania foreign affairs official sacked for alleged corruption but not charged
Protocol chief Anthony Itatiro loses his job after being linked to a botched attempt to steal public funds but no charges are brought and critics say the case shows the anti-corruption watchdog's failure to take action against powerful officials
Tanzanian herders fight state plan to lease land
Government says it wants to expand wildlife conservation areas, but pastoralists fear they will be evicted to make way for foreign investors
Tanzania media demand action over attacks on journalists
Unsolved attacks on Tanzanian journalists who have focused on corruption have led media chiefs to seek a meeting with security chiefs and faster police investigations