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PoliticsTanzania

Tanzania opposition Chadema says senior leaders arrested

August 12, 2024

Protest organizers say police have arrested the leader of Tanzania's opposition Chadema party ahead of a planned rally. Hundreds of youth supporters were also taken into custody.

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Freeman Mbowe (L), Chairman Tanzania's main opposition party Chadema, gestures as he addresses a speech
Chadema chairman Freeman Mbowe was said to have been arrested while seeking answers about other detentionsImage: Michael Jameson/AFP/Getty Images

Tanzania's opposition Chadema party on Monday said its leader Freeman Mbowe had been arrested, the latest of several politicians to have been detained.

Police are also said to have rounded up several hundred youth supporters, saying they expect a scheduled demonstration marking International Youth Day to turn violent. The detentions come amid fears of a backslide in President Samia Suluhu Hassan's moves away from authoritarian rule.

What has happened to the arrested leaders?

Mbowe was said to have been arrested as he visited the southwestern city of Mbeya to meet police and army leaders.

Chadema said he was arrested at the city's Songwe airport alongside John Pambalu, the chairman of the party's youth wing Bavicha.

Mbowe had planned to use the visit to inquire about the health and whereabouts of already-detained opposition figures, including former presidential candidate Tundu Lissu.

Mbowe had on Sunday demanded "the immediate and unconditional release of all our leaders, members, and supporters who were arrested in various parts of the country."

"The party is closely monitoring the situation and will continue to inform the public of every development step by step," he said.

Hassan took over as president in 2021 after the sudden death of her predecessor John Magufuli. Since then, she has departed from the late president's authoritarian policies, relaxing some media and opposition restrictions.

However, opposition parties and rights groups have also criticized her for arrests last year of people planning protests against a port management deal.

Tundu Lissu
The party's deputy chairman, Tundu Lissu, is among those arrested ahead of the planned protestImage: AP Photo/picture alliance

Mbowe was previously detained for about seven months after he and other Chadema leaders were arrested before a public forum to demand constitutional reforms. He was released in March 2022.

Lissu, Chadema's deputy chairman and a fierce critic of Hassan's ruling center-left Chama Cha Mapinduzi (CCM), returned to Tanzania soon after Hassan lifted a ban on opposition rallies that was imposed in 2016. Lissu had previously spent five years mainly living in exile after an assassination attempt in 2017.

The country is due to hold presidential and parliamentary polls late next year, with Lissu expected to run for the presidency once again.

Why did police ban the demonstration?

Chadema youth wing had said about 10,000 youngsters would meet in the southwestern city of Mbeya under the slogan "Take charge of your future."

However, police chief Awadh Haji said his force had "clear indications that their aim is not to celebrate the International Youth Day but to initiate and engage in violence."

"Police have decided to ban any form of internal and public gathering or demonstrations which go under the name of marking the youth day," Haji said. His statement mentioned the "youth of Kenya," an apparent reference to anti-corruption and cost-of-living protests in the neighboring East African country.

Party officials on Sunday had denounced the demonstration ban and urged the president to intervene.

Chadema said some 500 of its young supporters had been temporarily on their way to the demonstration before being escorted home.

On Sunday, Lissu had condemned the detentions and appealed directly to the president.

"President Samia, don't bring Magufuli's strange ways. International Youth Day is celebrated globally. Why are your police blocking Chadema youth on the road and arresting them?" he posted on X, the platform formerly known as Twitter.

"This is not a time to stay silent, be afraid, or just talk. It's a time to stand up and be counted. Let's raise our voices with all our strength!"

rc/nm (AFP, LUSA)