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The Geneva Handover: How Tanzania Helped Steer IPU’s Historic Shift

By Prosper Makene

GENEVA, — The Geneva handover reshaping the Inter-Parliamentary Union this June bears a clear Tanzanian imprint. As Ambassador Anda Filip prepares to become the IPU’s first female Secretary General, host leader President Dr. Samia Suluhu Hassan readies Tanzania to welcome the 153rd IPU Assembly in Arusha this October — a summit that will cap a transition Tanzania helped steer from the drafting room to the diplomatic floor.

Secretary General Martin Chungong will conclude his tenure at the end of June, ending a decade of leadership during which he championed parliamentary strengthening, youth participation, and gender equality across member parliaments. His successor, Ambassador Anda Filip of Romania, brings extensive multilateral experience to the role. She previously served as Permanent Representative to the UN in Geneva and has been a vocal advocate for institutional reform and inclusive governance.

IPU President Dr. Tulia Ackson of Tanzania is expected to chair the Executive Committee session in Geneva that will oversee the transition. Dr. Ackson herself made history in 2023 as the first Tanzanian and first East African woman elected IPU President. She has used her term to push for greater representation of African parliaments and stronger parliamentary action on climate, health, and digital cooperation.

Tanzania’s diplomatic team in Geneva has played a central role in laying groundwork for both the handover and the Assembly. Dr. Ambassador Hoyce Temu, Tanzania’s Deputy Permanent Representative in Geneva, has been instrumental in coordinating with the IPU Secretariat and Member States ahead of the leadership change. The Permanent Representative office in Geneva has facilitated technical consultations on agenda priorities, logistics, and parliamentary participation.

Dr. Temu described the transition as a moment that reflects how far multilateralism has come. She noted that Tanzania’s engagement goes beyond hosting: “We are helping shape the substance. From climate language to digital inclusion, Tanzania’s voice is in the drafting room.”

The leadership change comes just months before Tanzania hosts the 153rd IPU Assembly in Arusha. The Assembly is the IPU’s principal statutory body, bringing together Speakers of Parliament and legislators from 179 Member Parliaments. Organizers expect more than 2,000 delegates in Arusha, making it one of the largest diplomatic gatherings ever hosted in Tanzania.

A key item on the Arusha agenda will be the election of a new IPU President to succeed Dr. Ackson, whose three-year term concludes at the Assembly. The election is closely watched, as the IPU President sets the political direction of the organization and represents parliaments globally at UN high-level meetings.

With Arusha approaching, Tanzania is also working to ensure strong African parliamentary turnout and side events focused on women and youth leadership. “The IPU is a parliament of parliaments,” Dr. Temu said. “Our job is to make sure every delegation arrives ready to legislate, not just to attend.”

The October Assembly will carry unique symbolic weight for Tanzania. Three Tanzanian women will hold central leadership roles in what has been informally dubbed “The Triple Three.” President Dr. Samia Suluhu Hassan will serve as host of the Assembly, reinforcing Tanzania’s growing profile in multilateral diplomacy. Ambassador Anda Filip will preside over her first IPU Assembly as Secretary General, stepping into the role only four months after her appointment. Dr. Tulia Ackson will chair her final Assembly as IPU President, closing a tenure that elevated Tanzania’s parliamentary diplomacy to new levels.

For the first time, the organization’s top elected office, its top administrative office, and the head of state hosting its Assembly will all be women — with Tanzania at the center.

Founded in 1889, the IPU works to facilitate parliamentary dialogue, set standards for democratic parliaments, and mobilize legislative action on global challenges ranging from peace and security to sustainable development.

The Arusha Assembly is expected to focus on parliamentary responses to climate change, digital governance, and peacebuilding, themes Dr. Ackson has prioritized during her presidency. Side meetings will also address women’s political participation and youth engagement, aligning with the broader significance of the leadership transition underway.

For Tanzania, hosting the 153rd Assembly caps a period of increased visibility in global parliamentary affairs. It follows the country’s active role in IPU committees and Dr. Ackson’s leadership of the body since 2023.