Uru Shimbwe is a town and ward in the Moshi Rural district of the Kilimanjaro Region of Tanzania. In 2016 the Tanzania National Bureau of Statistics report there were 6,550 people in the ward, from 6,107 in 2012.
Location
2.8 km
Materuni Waterfall, at an elevation of 1,540 m above sea level is one of the Waterfalls in the Mware River. It is found in the village of Materuni on the edge of the Kilimanjaro mountain reserve.
2.8 km
Uru Kaskazini is a town and ward in the Moshi Rural district of the Kilimanjaro Region of Tanzania. In 2016 the Tanzania National Bureau of Statistics report there were 11,885 people in the ward, from 11,081 in 2012.
3.7 km
Uru Mashariki is a town and ward in the Moshi Rural district of the Kilimanjaro Region of Tanzania. In 2016 the Tanzania National Bureau of Statistics report there were 15,853 people in the ward, from 14,781 in 2012.
6.0 km
The College of African Wildlife Management, commonly known as Mweka College or just Mweka, is located near the village of that name on the southern slopes of Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania, above the city of Moshi, about 14 kilometres north of its centre.
The locality also gives its name to the Mweka Trail, one of the routes on Kilimanjaro, used for the descent.
Following the independence of Tanganyika in 1961, the College of African Wildlife Management was established in 1963 by Bruce Kinloch as a pioneer institution for the training of African wildlife managers. Initial funding for Mweka was provided by the African Wildlife Leadership Foundation, the U.S. Agency for International Development, and the Frankfurt Zoological Society, with facilities donated by the government of Tanganyika. Since this time, the College has trained over 5,000 wildlife managers from 52 countries worldwide, the majority are working in protected areas throughout sub-Saharan Africa.
In the mid-2010s, the college's 30 million tanzanian shillings annual tuition fees made it inaccessible for most Tanzanian students, and the few students in attendance mostly originated from abroad. The college became more accessible when it reduced its tuition fee to less than 4 million tanzanian shillings in the late 2010s. Since then, the vast majority of the College's students come from Tanzania, with a minority coming from the broader SADC region.
However, the college still opens its doors to all students with an interest in African wildlife management. Some alumni students also came from Western and Eastern Europe, and countries such as the United States, India, Sri Lanka, and Japan among many others.
The college has two main aims:
To prepare both local and international students for work within the national parks and reserves of Tanzania and the rest of Africa.
To prepare students for work within the safari industries within Tanzania and Africa as a whole.