Tanzania
Tanzania is world-renowned as a beautiful country, yet it is also one of the poorest, where average life expectancy is just 46 years
It shares the second largest freshwater lake in the world, Lake Victoria, with neighbouring countries Kenya and Uganda and is home to the highest mountain in Africa, Mount Kilimanjaro.
CAFOD spent £279,000 in Tanzania in 2006-07
But, despite being almost four times bigger than the UK, only four per cent of land is devoted to cultivated crops.
Industry focuses on processing agricultural products and light consumer goods. Coffee, cotton, cashew nuts, minerals, and tobacco are among its main exports.
Key challenges
CAFOD funds projects focused on health, HIV and AIDS, livelihoods and preventing the marginalisation of disabled people in Tanzanian society.
The number of people living with HIV and AIDS is increasing dramatically. Health systems, service providers and care providers are finding it hard to cope.
Programmes need to take a multi-pronged approach to the problem. For drugs such as antiretrovirals to work, adequate nutrition is important, to buy the right food it helps to be employed, and orphaned children need an education so they can rebuild their lives.
Until the end of 2007 CAFOD also supports work with Burundian refugees in the north-west of the country.
Read about our partners' work below:

Working with vulnerable children
AIDS-related illnesses have left an estimated 40,000 children orphaned or vulnerable in the Diocese of Moshi. Sister Ubdala Kessy talks about how these children are being supported

The Archdiocese of Arusha AIDS Prevention and Training Programme develops and distributes materials on HIV and AIDS and aims to increase the number of people receiving social and economic support
![]() Supporting orphans and vulnerable children The Diocese of Moshi based in the Kilimanjaro region of Tanzania runs an Orphans and Vulnerable Children Support Programme. |
![]() World Gifts making a difference Two CAFOD volunteers went to Africa to see how buying ethical Christmas presents can help improve life for people living in poverty |
![]() Working with vulnerable children AIDS-related illnesses have left an estimated 40,000 children orphaned or vulnerable in the Diocese of Moshi. Sister Ubdala Kessy talks about how these children are being supported |


![Refugees gather at a makeshift camp near Kibati, 12 km north of the provincial capital of Goma, October 29, 2008 [REUTERS/Stringer, courtesy www.alertnet.org]](/var/storage/images/about-cafod/where-we-work/dr-congo/images/refugees-who-fled-fighting/934156-2-eng-GB/refugees-who-fled-fighting_0column50_04space_landscape.jpg)

![More than 700 campaigners rallied before delivering anti-poverty messages to every EU embassy in London [CAFOD]](/var/storage/images/media_folder/cafod/images/campaign_images/trade_justice_campaign_images/embassy_bus/199633-2-eng-GB/embassy_bus_0column50_04space_landscape.jpg)
![Fatna (right) brings home wood that she and some neighbours have harvested from outside the camp in Kubum, south Darfur [Paul Jeffery/ACT/Caritas]](/var/storage/images/about-cafod/where-we-work/sudan/images/fatna-right-brings-home-wood/247664-2-eng-GB/fatna-right-brings-home-wood_0column50_04space_landscape.jpg)
![Niccollette and Shrirvanie film the aftermath of the Guyanan floods, with support from CAFOD partner Guyana Human Rights Association [CAFOD]](/var/storage/images/about-cafod/what-we-do/communications/images/after-guyana-floods/679742-1-eng-GB/after-guyana-floods_0column50_04space_landscape.jpg)


![Tanzania has been spared the internal strife that has blighted many African states but remains one of the poorest countries in the world [Sean Sprague]](/var/storage/images/where_we_work/africa/tanzania/images/boys_playing_in_tanzania/4243-2-eng-GB/boys_playing_in_tanzania_medium.jpg)
![Lilian Mori [James Fraser]](/var/storage/images/about-cafod/where-we-work/kenya/images/lilian-mori/111884-2-eng-GB/lilian-mori_0column75_06space_landscape.jpg)






