10
March
2026

WMU and Dar es Salaam Maritime Institute Sign MoU to Strengthen Maritime Education and Blue Economy Cooperation

The World Maritime University (WMU) and the Dar es Salaam Maritime Institute (DMI) have signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to deepen cooperation in maritime education, research and institutional capacity development. The signing ceremony took place on 26 February 2026 at the High Commission of the United Republic of Tanzania in London.

The agreement was signed by Professor Tumaini Gurumo, Rector of DMI and WMU alumna (MSc 2007), and Professor Maximo Q. Mejia, Jr., President of WMU, in the presence of H.E. Mbelwa Kairuki, High Commissioner of Tanzania to the United Kingdom, who graciously hosted the ceremony.

“This agreement reflects WMU’s enduring commitment to supporting Member States of the International Maritime Organization (IMO) beyond the classroom,” said President Mejia. “As a university established within the framework of the IMO, we are educating maritime leaders and working alongside our alumni and partner institutions to strengthen national and regional capacity in a sustainable and coordinated manner.”

This partnership marks an important step in WMU’s broader strategy to strengthen engagement with its alumni communities across Africa and to provide sustained institutional support to the countries of its graduates beyond their period of study. WMU views such cooperation as a natural extension of its mandate to contribute to global maritime capacity development, in close coordination with IMO and its Technical Cooperation and Implementation Division.

The MoU establishes a framework for collaboration in joint Africa–Europe training initiatives, maritime education data systems development, research on maritime safety — including studies on traditional dhows in the Western Indian Ocean — academic exchanges, curriculum enhancement, and broader institutional strengthening.

In his remarks, High Commissioner Kairuki underlined Tanzania’s regional responsibility in serving not only its own maritime economy but also neighbouring landlocked countries. He emphasized that investment in maritime infrastructure must be accompanied by investment in human capital through education, research and adherence to international standards.

Through this agreement, WMU and DMI aim to advance maritime professionalism and leadership, contribute to the sustainable development of the blue economy, and reinforce Tanzania’s and Africa’s role within the global maritime community.

Both institutions expressed their commitment to the timely implementation of the agreement and to translating the partnership into tangible outcomes for the maritime sector.

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