Andrew Chenge

Tanzanian politician
Honourable
Andrew Chenge
MP
Minister of Infrastructure Development
In office
2006–2008
PresidentJakaya Kikwete
Succeeded byShukuru Kawambwa
1st Minister of East African Cooperation
In office
6 January 2006 – 16 October 2006
PresidentJakaya Kikwete
Succeeded byIbrahim Msabaha
Member of Parliament
for Bariadi West
In office
December 2005 – June 2020
Preceded byIsaac Cheyo
Succeeded byKundo Mathew
5th Attorney General of Tanzania
In office
1993–2005
Appointed byAli Hassan Mwinyi 1993–95)
Benjamin Mkapa (1995–05)
Preceded byDamian Lubuva
Succeeded byJohnson Mwanyika
Personal details
Born (1947-12-24) 24 December 1947 (age 76)
Tanganyika
NationalityTanzanian
Political partyCCM
Alma materUniversity of Dar es Salaam
Harvard University (LL.M)

Andrew John Chenge (born 24 December 1947) is a Tanzanian CCM politician and Former Member of Parliament for Bariadi West constituency from 2005 to 2020.[1]

Background

After serving as Attorney-General, he was appointed as Minister of East African Affairs in the Cabinet named on January 4, 2006.[2] He was then appointed as Minister of Infrastructure on October 15, 2006,[3] retaining that post in the Cabinet named on February 12, 2008.[4] He resigned on 20 April 2008 after it was revealed by UK's Serious Fraud Office that he holds US$ 1million (over 1 billion Tanzania shillings) in an overseas offshore account, allegedly as kickbacks from a controversial military radar deal between UK's BAE Systems and Tanzania government which he partly oversaw while serving as Attorney-General. However, an investigation by Tanzania's Prevention and Combating of Corruption Bureau concluded that Chenge was not related to the radar scam. [5][6]

In 2009, Andrew Chenge was involved in an accident in Dar es Salaam in which two women died. He was later convicted of dangerous driving and fined 700,000 Tsh.

He was reelected in November 2015 as a parliamentary representative for the Bariadi West Constituency. He has also been appointed as the presiding Chairman of Parliament as of January 2015.[7]

References

  1. ^ "Member of Parliament CV". Parliament of Tanzania. 2010. Retrieved 24 October 2013.
  2. ^ Hassan Muhiddin, "JK's beefed up team", Guardian (IPP Media), January 5, 2006.
  3. ^ "Kikwete reshuffles Cabinet", Guardian (IPP Media), October 16, 2006.
  4. ^ List of Cabinet ministers (as of February 12, 2008), Tanzanian Parliament website.
  5. ^ "Not yet free", Guardian on Sunday (IPP Media), July 10, 2011
  6. ^ "PCCB probes Chenge over wealth property" Archived October 4, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, The Citizen, July 21, 2011
  7. ^ "Three lawmakers chosen to help Speaker". Daily News. Tanzania. Archived from the original on 2016-01-28.

External links

  • Chenge case not yet closed, says UK, 11 November 2010
  • BAE plea deal in danger of collapse, 20 December 2010
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Chama Cha Mapinduzi MPs in the 10th Parliament
At the time of dissolution, the party had 185 of the 239 electoral seats in the National Assembly
Arusha Region (4/7)Dar es Salaam Region (6/8)
Dodoma Region (9/9)Iringa Region (10/11)Kagera Region (9/10)Kigoma Region (3/8)Kilimanjaro Region (5/9)Lindi Region (6/8)Manyara Region (5/6)Mara Region (6/7)Mbeya Region (9/11)Morogoro Region (10/10)Mtwara Region (7/7)Mwanza Region (10/13)Pwani Region (9/9)Rukwa Region (7/8)Ruvuma Region (7/7)Shinyanga Region (8/13)Singida Region (7/8)Tabora Region (9/9)Tanga Region (11/11)Pemba Island (0/18)
None (The island is the opposition stronghold of the Civic United Front)
Unguja North Region (7/8)Unguja South Region (5/5)Urban West Region (16/19)Nominated by the President (7/8)