Tanzania loses Denmark aid, World Bank loan over 'homophobia' concerns

Tanzania's President John Pombe Magufuli addresses members of the ruling Chama Cha Mapinduzi Party (CCM) at the party's sub-head office on Lumumba road in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania October 30, 2015. REUTERS
Tanzania's President John Pombe Magufuli addresses members of the ruling Chama Cha Mapinduzi Party (CCM) at the party's sub-head office on Lumumba road in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania October 30, 2015. REUTERS

Tanzania's second-biggest donor Denmark said it would withhold $10 million worth of aid money, citing concerns over human rights abuses and "unacceptable homophobic comments" made by a government official.

The decision came on the same day that the World Bank said it had scrapped a plan to loan

Tanzania

$300 million after the country reaffirmed its policy of banning pregnant girls from school and recently made it a crime to question official statistics.

"I am very worried about the negative development in

Tanzania, the latest being the completely unacceptable homophobic statements from a commissioner," Minister for Development Cooperation Ulla Tornaes said on Twitter on Wednesday.

Denmark will now withhold 65 million Danish crowns ($9.88 million) in aid to

Tanzania, she added. Denmark provided 349 million crowns in foreign aid last year.

The comments in question were made by administrative chief of the capital Dar es Salaam, Paul Makonda, who earlier this month announced an anti-gay crackdown in the city, a spokeswoman for the Danish minister told Reuters.

Reuters was not able to reach

Tanzanian government officials for immediate comment. The foreign ministry has previously said Makonda's anti-gay campaign represented his own views and not the official government position.

However, President Magufuli's government has also been criticised by opposition politicians and international rights groups for what they say is growing authoritarianism and intolerance of dissent. The government rejects the criticism.

Recently, journalists Muthoki Mumo and former Mail & Guardian editor Angela Quintal were arrested

in unclear circumstances.

The Committee to Protect Journalists pushed the authorities for their release. The journalists passports were also seized by immigration authorities.

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