TANZANIA
Tanzania is the home to the ‘greatest
wildlife show on earth' The annual migration of the wildebeest in the
Serengeti.
Area- Includes island of Mafia, pemba and Zanzibar
Total: 945,087 sq km, land: 886,037 sq
km, water: 59,050 sq km. Note: includes the islands of Mafia, Official name
The United Republic of Tanzania
(Jamhuri ya Muungano wa Tanzania).
Location Capita city
Administrative capital: Dodoma.
Commercial capital: Dar es Salaam.
Borders
Climate Population
Tanzania has over 120 ethnic groups.
Mainland - African 99% (of which 95% are Bantu consisting of more than 130
tribes), other 1% (consisting of Asian, European, and Arab); Zanzibar - Arab,
African, mixed Arab and African.
Religion Language
Kiswahili or Swahili (official),
English (official, primary language of commerce, administration, and higher
education), Arabic (widely spoken in Zanzibar), many local languages.
Communications
Currency
Banking
Credit cards and travelers cheques
Credit cards (Access, MasterCard,
Visa, American -Express, and Eurocard) are accepted only at major lodges,
hotels, and travel agents. A surcharge may be added for this service. ATM and
24-hour cash machines are available in branches of major banks. Travellers'
cheques in pounds sterling or US dollars are recommended, though it may be
difficult to exchange them outside the main cities.
Tipping
Time
Water
Landscape
The National Parks and Reserves
The game parks of Tanzania have been
set aside by the government as wildlife and botanical sanctuaries that enjoy a
high degree of protection and management. 25% of Tanzania is gazetted as
national parks and reserves making conservation a major element in land use.
Tanzania has more than 20 game reserves including the world's largest, the
Selous. Five game reserves have been declared and there are about 50
game-controlled areas totalling more than 120,000 square kilometres. Forest
reserves make up 15% of the country.
Biosphere
reserves Ngorongoro Conservation area, Selous
Game Reserve and Serengeti National Park.
Olduvai Gorge, The National Museum of
Dar es Salaam, The Catholic Mission and prison of Bagamoyo, Ujijii Cultural
Centre, Sukuma Museum, Mwanza, The Amboni Caves and Hot Springs, the Tongoni
Ruins, the National Museum of Zanzibar (also the Kidichi Persian Baths, the
House of Wonders, the Arab Fort, Livingstone's House, Mangapwani Slaves Caves,
the Maruhubi Palace, the Old Slave Market and the People's Palace).
Flora
Avifauna A valid passport. Most visitors to
Tanzania require a visa to enter the country. Three-month single-entry tourist
visas are available from all Tanzanian embassies (price subject to
nationality). For further information contact: www.tanzaniatouristboard.com
The yellow-fever vaccination is no
longer officially required when entering Tanzania; however
Vaccinations Malaria HIV/AIDS
Travellers to Tanzania are recommended
to obtain medical insurance prior to arrival.
Security
Tanzania has three international
airports: Dar es Salaam International Airport (which handles most international
flights), Kilimanjaro International Airport and Zanzibar International Airport.
Located 15 km southwest of Dar es
Salaam and takes approximately 25 minutes to reach by car from downtown. Lies 40 km from Arusha and takes
approximately one hour to reach by car. Shuttle bus services to the airport run
regularly from both Arusha and Moshi. Located
approximately 7 km from the centre of Stone Town.
From the north, paved roads connect
the Kenyan capital of Nairobi with Arusha and cross the border at the Namanga
post. A number of shuttle buses, leaving twice daily between the two cities,
also follow this route. The trip takes approximately 4 - 6 hours. Driving
Buses and taxis operate in most towns.
Price is open to negotiation and should be decided in advance.
Dressing
It is an offence to: deface a
Tanzanian banknote; urinate in public; sunbath topless; hire a prostitute; buy
or take drugs; remove wildlife products from Tanzania, export products made
from elephant, rhino or sea turtle derivatives, or to remove coral. Swearing
and blasphemy are inadvisable. Visitors are requested to stand when the
Tanzanian anthem is played, or the national flag raised or lowered. They are
also advised that photographing the president without prior permission or any
military installation is not permitted.
Photography
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