Tanzania’s President Samia Suluhu Hassan caused a stir after she appointed Stergomena Tax as defense minister. She becomes the first woman to hold the critical portfolio since the country’s independence.
“I have decided to break the longtime myth that in the defense ministry, there should be a man with muscles,” President Samia Suluhu Hassan said earlier this week as she administered the oath of office to Stergomena Tax.
“The minister’s job in that office is not to carry guns or artillery,” Suluhu Hassan declared. Tax’s appointment was part of President Suluhu Hassan’s second cabinet reshuffle since she took over from the late President John Magufuli.
In handing the defense ministry job to a woman, Suluhu Hassan set another milestone regarding women holding top positions in Tanzania. Currently, eight women have cabinet positions.”Our president has proven that women can hold powerful positions,” Dar es Salaam resident Catherine Evarist declared. She said she was confident that Stergomana Tax’s past work experience would help her to excel in her new role.
Johnson Soah, head of Dar es Salaam University’s journalism school, welcomed Tax’s appointment. “Men have long dominated this ministry, and so she [President Samia Suluhu Hassan] has broken with tradition by giving a woman this role,”, adding that he believed Suluhu Hassan’s choices are based on qualifications and capabilities.
Tanzania’s President Samia Suluhu Hassan has appointed a record eight women to ministerial positions
Before she took over as Tanzania’s defense minister, Tax had just finished her tenure as secretary-general of the South African Development Community (SADC). The 61-year-old, who attended the Lake Secondary school with the late President Magufuli, has worked as a public servant since the early 1990s.
She previously worked with Tanzania’s finance ministry and later became the permanent secretary at the ministry of East Africa Cooperation. Stergomena Tax has also worked under the United Nations Development Program, where she was credited for mediating and supervising security operations in conflict areas such as the volatile eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and Mozambique.
Now that Tanzania has its first woman president and first woman defense minister, rights advocate Anna Henga believes it is a step in the right direction. “The President has shown that anything is possible, there is no difference in leadership between man and woman, what matters is qualities,” Henga, who heads Tanzania’s Legal and Human Rights Center, told DW.
Tax replaced Elias Kwandikwa, who passed away in August while undergoing treatment in Dar es Salaam.