Thursday, October 30, 2025 - Tanzanian police ordered a curfew in Dar es Salaam on Wednesday after violent protests marred an election that President Samia Suluhu Hassan is expected to win following the disqualification of the two leading opposition candidates.
Internet service was disrupted across the country, monitor
group NetBlocks said, as videos of young protesters throwing rocks at security
forces and a petrol station in flames circulated on social media.
Witnesses reported aggressive demonstrations in several
neighbourhoods of Dar es Salaam, the country's main city, including the burning
of a local government office.
Video posted on X by the leading opposition party showed dozens of young men running through the streets of the northern city of Arusha, columns of dark smoke rising behind them, chanting: "We want our country!"
Protesters are angry about the banning of the two leading
opposition candidates from the election and a wave of alleged abductions of
government critics.
The government has said the election is being conducted
fairly and denied allegations of widespread human rights abuses in the run-up.
The police curfew started at 6 p.m. local time (1500 GMT),
and the U.S. embassy said American government personnel had been advised to
shelter at their residences.
CHADEMA had called for protests during the election, which
it said amounted to a "coronation" of Hassan, who came to power in
2021 after her predecessor died in office.
The party was disqualified in April after it refused to sign a code of conduct, and its leader Tundu Lissu was charged with treason.
The commission also disqualified Luhaga Mpina, the
candidate for opposition party ACT-Wazalendo, leaving only minor parties to
take on Hassan.
Turnout appeared low at polling stations, which closed at 4
p.m. Results are expected within three days.
After voting in the administrative capital Dodoma, Hassan
told reporters: "I urge all Tanzanians, those who are still at home, to
come out and exercise their right and vote and choose their preferred
leaders."
Voters were also choosing members of the country's 400-seat parliament and a president and lawmakers in the semi-autonomous Zanzibar archipelago.
Hassan's CCM, whose predecessor party led the struggle for
independence for mainland Tanzania in the 1950s, has dominated national
politics since it was founded in 1977.
Hassan, one of only two female heads of state in Africa, has
been touring the country of around 68 million people to tout her record of
expanding transport networks and increasing power generation.
She has won plaudits for easing repression of political
opponents and censorship that proliferated under her predecessor, John
Magufuli.
In recent years, however, rights campaigners and opposition
candidates have accused the government of unexplained abductions of
its critics.
Hassan said last year she had ordered an investigation into
reports of abductions. No official findings have been made public.




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