Oscar Kambona Explained

Oscar Kambona
Office:1st Minister of External Affairs
Term Start:1963
Term End:1966
President:Julius Nyerere
Birth Date:13 August 1928
Birth Place:Mbinga District,
Death Place:London, United Kingdom
Nationality:Tanzanian
Otherparty:Tanganyika African National Union
Spouse:Flora Moriyo
Children:Mosi
Neema
Alma Mater:Middle Temple

Oscar Salathiel Kambona (13 August 1928 – 3 June 1997[1] [2]) was the first Minister of Foreign Affairs of Tanganyika from 1963 to 1966.

The son of the Reverend David Kambona and Miriam Kambona, Kambona's father was among the first African priests to be ordained into the Anglican Church of Tanganyika. He received his elementary school education at home taught by his parents and uncle, all of whom were teachers. Kambona was then sent to St. Barnabas Middle School in Liuli, Southern Tanganyika, near his home. He subsequently attended Alliance Secondary School in Dodoma, Central Tanganyika.

Political career

Kambona became the secretary-general of the Tanganyika African National Union (TANU) during the struggle for independence and worked closely with Nyerere, who was president of TANU, the party that led Tanganyika to independence. Tanganyika secured independence from Britain on December 9, 1961.

In February 1967, Tanzania adopted the Arusha Declaration, an economic and political blueprint for the transformation of Tanzania into a socialist state. Kambona was opposed to this fundamental change and argued that the government should first launch a pilot scheme to see if the policy was going to work on a national scale.

Tony Laurence states in his book The Dar Mutiny of 1964, published by Book Guild Publishing, that, fearing for his life, Kambona went to live in exile in Great Britain with no financial support and took a number of low-paying jobs to support himself and his family.

Sources

The book covers extensively the 1970 treason trial in which Oscar Kambona was implicated as the ring leader. The trial was open to the public.

The author has also addressed the army mutiny of 1964 in Tanganyika among many other subjects.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Index Ka .
  2. Web site: Africa Analysis . 1997 .