Habari ya kufukuzwa kwa askari polisi wa usalama barabarani wiki iliyopita imepata attention ya kimataifa.
Hii ni habari iliyoandikwa kwenye website ya BBC.
When is it OK to kiss a colleague? Two
Tanzanian police officers, whose kiss was widely shared on social media,
have prompted a discussion about just that – and both have also lost
their jobs.
A relationship with a colleague can
throw up any number of complications, but the two young police officers
in the picture may not have thought it would end their careers. The
photograph – taken in Kagera, north west Tanzania – shows the pair
kissing whilst dressed in their work uniforms, and was considered
grounds for dismissal. Residents of the country have taken to social
media to voice their dismay.
The image was uploaded to the internet
by a third officer, who also took the photo, and drawn to the attention
of the authorities at the Kagera police force. Henry Mwaibambe, the
regional police commander, spoke to the BBC about the steps taken, and
defends his department’s decision. “We followed all disciplinary
procedures to make sure that they were given a chance to defend
themselves,” he says. “The officer looking at the case was convinced
there was compelling evidence against them, and that they had breached
police code of conduct. That’s why they lost their jobs.” In this case
it wasn’t the kiss itself that led to their dismissal, but the fact that
that it happened in public, whilst in uniform, and was subsequently
posted online. Indeed, the officer behind the camera also lost his job
over the incident.
The story was picked up by the local
press last week, and news of the punishment has surprised many on social
media. Most believed the response was disproportionate. “They should
have been reprimanded, sacking them is extreme, huuh!” posted one on
Facebook. “I once saw a pic of former US President the late Reagan
kissing his wife in the Oval Office… and nobody called for his
impeachment,” said another. “Police couple kissing taken more serious
than bribery,” wrote a third on Twitter.
Masoud George, a lawyer at the Tanzania
Legal and Human Rights Center says that as severe as the punishment
seems, the decision is unlikely to be illegal. “It is according to their
code of conduct, so from a legal point of view we can’t say their
dismissal was unfair.”
Reporting by Sam Judah
source: bbc
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