Dar es Salaam: Tanzania is quietly expanding its investment diplomacy beyond boardrooms and bilateral meetings into the strategic influence arena of the global media.
Discussions held on Monday, February 9, 2026, at the Office of the Treasurer and Registrar (OTR) in Dar es Salaam, between Nehemiah Muchechu, Treasurer-Registrar, and Frederic van de Vijver, Head of Anglophone Africa June Afrik Media Group, demonstrate Tanzania’s deliberate efforts in how to tell its economic story to investors across the African continent and the world.
While the talks focused on exploring ways of cooperation and highlighting the investment opportunities available in Tanzania, its importance extends far beyond day-to-day institutional engagement.
These reflect Tanzania’s growing awareness that attracting investment today depends not only on policy frameworks, but also on storytelling and visibility within trusted international information platforms.
Tanzania has focused in recent years on strengthening macroeconomic stability, improving the regulatory framework, and repositioning public institutions such as OTR to strengthen resource mobilization and performance monitoring of public investments.
But attracting long-term capital increasingly requires greater credibility within the global ecosystem in which investors, policy makers, and business leaders interpret signals of reform and market potential. This is where Jeune Afrique Media Group becomes strategically important.
Headquartered in Paris and founded in 1960, the group sits at the intersection of African political information, economic analysis and investor-focused journalism.
Through its English-language publication The Africa Report and its investment-focused platform African Business+, the group provides extensive coverage of political and economic trends, as well as in-depth, independent, high-quality analysis trusted by investors, policymakers and business leaders in Anglophone and Francophone Africa.
With its strong network of experts and extensive reach across the continent, it has become a reference point for understanding Africa’s complex and rapidly evolving business environment, with specialized coverage of areas such as extractive industries, infrastructure, energy and financial markets.
By joining this group, Tanzania is positioning itself within serious policy-level economic discussions, reaching not only a general audience but also institutional investors and corporate strategists, while bridging the traditional divide between Francophone and Anglophone investment information flows.
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This reflects the understanding that the competition for modern capital is increasingly fierce in the analytical field, where credibility, depth of insight, and a trusted platform are more important than promotional messages.
It was within this strategic context, at the intersection of narrative, reform credibility, and investor perception, that the tone for the discussion in Dar es Salaam was set.
During the meeting, Muchechu assured Van de Vijver that Tanzania offers a favorable investment environment and will receive strong institutional support.
He stressed that cooperation within the public sector would receive full support from OTR, while engagement with the private sector could be facilitated through the Tanzania CEO Roundtable. Meanwhile, Mr. Van de Vyver expressed his determination to strengthen cooperation, noting that both sides need to find the best way to work together, and agreed that Tanzania offers a business-friendly environment.
His remarks reflected the Treasury Registrar’s assurances and pointed to more than diplomatic courtesy. They expressed a common understanding that how Tanzania’s economic story is framed internationally is becoming part of investment strategy.
Rather than relying solely on traditional investment promotion campaigns, by working with analytics platforms, we can communicate sector-specific narratives – from mining reform and energy transition to logistics corridors and financial deepening – in a format trusted by global investors. Jeune Afrique Media Group’s role goes beyond publishing.
The organization also convenes influential networks through platforms such as the Africa CEO Forum, which brings together thousands of CEOs, investors and government leaders, and the Africa Financial Industry Summit, which focuses on the financial sector.
Participation in these ecosystems creates channels for partnerships, funding discussions, and strategic networking that extend far beyond our readership and into the heart of business and policy decision-making on the continent. Governments across Africa increasingly understand that platforms such as Africa Report influence how they assess risks, compare markets and determine reform trajectories.
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By opening the door to cooperation, Tanzania is in line with broader continental trends that include structured engagement with respected analytical media in economic diplomacy.
DIFCOM, the Group’s communications and media planning division, works with its digital platforms, applications and professional networks to offer multiple channels for editorial collaborations, corporate communications, advertising partnerships and increasing the organization’s visibility at major business events.
Van de Vyver’s commitment to finding the best ways to collaborate also reflects Jeune Afrique Media Group’s unique strategic direction.
The group is investing heavily in digital transformation and expanding its footprint in English-speaking markets such as Nigeria, Kenya and Ghana, making English-speaking Africa a key driver of growth and complementing its strong base in Francophone North and West Africa. Tanzania is a natural fit for this expansion as one of East Africa’s most stable and reform-oriented economies.
Experience elsewhere on the continent shows how such engagement can strengthen national strategies. Egypt, for example, is actively strengthening its economic, political, and strategic partnerships across Africa, with deliberate expansion into English-speaking markets alongside its traditional influence in North Africa.
Working with analytical media platforms, including Jeune Afrique Media Group, has enabled Cairo to amplify its investment, infrastructure and energy narrative, while clarifying its strategic role in regions such as the Horn of Africa and the Red Sea Corridor.
Through exposure on respected platforms, Egypt’s reform trajectory and continental ambitions gained further attention, contributing to the country’s ranking as Africa’s top-performing economy in a recent assessment.
Similarly, Morocco is expanding its economic and diplomatic engagement across English-speaking Africa as part of its South-South cooperation strategy, establishing itself as a gateway to the continent. Leveraging partnerships with pan-African analytical media, Mr. Rabat envisions an economic vision centered on industrialization, financial expansion, and the African Continental Free Trade Area.
This visibility has reinforced Morocco’s broader strategy to integrate development models into its investments and policy discussions on the continent. These experiences underscore the growing consensus across Africa that partnerships with trusted media serve as a power multiplier for economic diplomacy.
These help transform domestic reforms into a narrative that resonates with global investors, policy makers, and business leaders, and narrow the gap between policy action and international recognition.
Against this backdrop, Tanzania’s support for Jeune Afrik Media Group demonstrates a strategic recognition that the visibility of trusted analytical media is itself an economic asset. Unlike promotional outlets, Jeune Afrique’s reputation is built on decades of independent analysis and political and economic scrutiny. Positive exposure within such platforms carries more weight than traditional advertising and contributes to building long-term credibility.
As African economies compete for investment in a global environment shaped by capital constraints and geopolitical shifts, competition increasingly revolves around who can convincingly shape a narrative of reform, stability, and opportunity.
Tanzania’s engagement with June Afrik Media Group reflects a clear step in that direction. While the February 9 meeting may not have resulted in a signed agreement, it represents a meaningful move towards positioning Tanzania not only as an investment destination but also as a serious participant in Africa’s strategic economic, political and business dialogue. • Prepared by the Treasury Registrar’s Office.


