Providing Evidence of Violent Repression by Government a Criminal Offence in Tanzania
"The killings were pre-planned to target regions that are known to be politically active, those that are critics of the ruling party. ""Following people to their homes and killing them amounts to a massacre."Tanganyika Law Society President Boniface Mwabukusi"People in the government are in shock... there's disbelief,""Nobody has the guts to talk... that's the sad part of it. But people do whisper.""We really don't know what to do. Do we want more demos? No, because the youth are going to be executed again.""[Hassan's son, Abdul, has] a private militia and most of the people believe that's the one involved in the abductions from the beginning.""Why are you abducting a 20-year-old kid just because they criticized you? You're the president, for crying out loud!"Government official, unnamed for protection"There's a very, very tiny cabal who is informing and influencing the president and running the country.""It's unprecedented and very un-Tanzanian. [Everyone else] has been completely frozen out.""The only explanation is deep-seated paranoia... and now it's out of control.""[Those with power] know one tool... a very brutal, crude, authoritarian tool.""What's clear is that Tanzania will never be the same again."Former presidential adviser
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| President Samia Suluhu Hassan was inaugurated on 3 November 2025 at Chamwino, Dodoma, following her re-election with 97.66% of the vote. Photo: Tanzaniainvest |
Hundreds
of young Tanzanian protesters have been massacred in the wake of the
country's recent election. They were out protesting at the behest of the
country's opposition party, reflecting a broad general consensus that
the vote that gave President Samia Suluhu Hassan a massive win was
rigged. In many areas of the country people were unable to cast their
ballots. Internet had been shut down. Some candidates had been arrested
and imprisoned. The unrest and resistance against the outcome of the
election had spread across the country.
And
everywhere there have been reports of extrajudicial killings, not only
of those who have gone out to publicly and vehemently protest, but
people who happen to be passersby caught in crossfires, or just people
going about their business shot by police; a report of a woman in her
car with her children having been shot dead, just one example. In other
instances police arriving at the home of those they pinpoint as
troublemakers, shot dead.
It
speedily became generally acknowledged that a small, vociferous and
threatening cabal around the president have taken control of government
reaction to what has amounted to a popular uprising in the making. Of a
population of around 70 million people, Tanzania is majority Christian,
with a large minority Muslim population. President Hassan is the
country's first Muslim president, purportedly elected on October 29 with
98 percent of the vote.
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| Tanzanian authorities are facing growing concern over killings during crackdowns on protests surrounding last week's election Still from video ABCNews |
It
took no time at all for the protests against the election results, and
charges of repression to surface. The country's politicians are reputed
to be in shock over the violence that has ensued, with claims surfacing
that at least a thousand people have been killed. Many of those
politicians, while stunned with disbelief, are silent in the face of
what appears to be control grasped by hardliners in support of the new
president.
Bloody
images of the dead have appeared on social media; their ubiquity
spurring even wider protests. While President Samia Suluhu Hassan is now
officially Tanzania's new leader, the reality also is that key
opposition leaders were either disqualified from running or were
incarcerated, keeping them out of contention. Protests were speedily
crushed while communication was cut off, given a five-day Internet
blackout.
The United Nations human rights head Volker Turk announced on Tuesday that: "There
are ... disturbing reports that security forces have been seen removing
bodies from streets and hospitals and taking them to undisclosed
locations in an apparent attempt to conceal evidence".
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| Demonstrations in Dar es Salaam. Photo: Vellum |
A
Tanzanian government senior official, fearing for his life, should his
name be attached to any explanatory revelations given to the Western
press, spoke on condition that his name be withheld. He spoke of two
suspected sites of mass graves located near Dar es Salaam, and at Kondo
and Mabwepande. The levers of power and repression appears to be in
total control of a group supporting President Hassan, confirmed those in
government willing to speak under cover.
Eyewitnesses
came forward discreetly to describe their experiences in seeing people
shot at point-blank range by police and armed men otherwise
unidentified. A bystander was shot in the head by a soldier on election
day in Dar es Salaam. Three people were lined up and shot "five or six times" in the legs by police the following day, one of the eyewitnesses said, unburdening himself of a nightmare experience.
Independence
day, on December 9 has been highlighted by the country's political
opposition for country-wide protests. President Hassan's son Abdul
Halim Hafidh Ameir, her private secretary Waziri Salum, head of the
intelligence service Suleiman Abubakar Mombo, and a member of the East
African parliament, Angela Kizigha, comprise the principals surrounding
and supporting the president, according to discreet government
sources.
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| Funeral for an opposition youth leader killed during election protests AFP |
"There is extreme fear for everyone.""If it wasn’t for the massive efforts of brave activists sending videos to us, and the people recording them on their phones, the world would have no idea of the scale of the killings."Kenyan activist Mwanse Ahmed"Avoid sharing images or videos that are disturbing or demeaning to someone’s dignity.""Doing so is a criminal offense."Tanzanian Police
Labels: Christian Majority East Africa, Extrajudicial Killing, Minority Muslim Government, Repression, Tanzania, Threats, Violence





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