Tanzania arrests top opposition leader, blocks protest
Africa
By
AFP
| Sep 23, 2024
Police arrested one of Tanzania's most high-profile opposition figures Tundu Lissu on Monday, his party said, as they moved to block a mass protest in the commercial capital Dar es Salaam.
Despite an official ban, the opposition Chadema party had vowed to go ahead with the rally over the alleged kidnapping and killing of its members by security forces.
The party accuses the government of President Samia Suluhu Hassan of returning the country to the repressive tactics of her predecessor, John Magufuli.
She took over in March 2021 following Magufuli's sudden death and appeared to signal a more open democracy, reversing restrictions on opposition rallies and the media.
But Chadema accuses the security forces of being behind the disappearance of several members and the killing of Ali Mohamed Kibao, of its national secretariat, who was found dead earlier this month.
READ MORE
Ketraco gets nod to reappoint board after petition struck out
Kenya targets 240,000 youth jobs in fisheries sector expansion
Kenya's insurance industry faces its claims moment
Co-op Bank posts Sh29.75b profit, proposes a record Sh14.67 billion dividend
MPs push KenGen to upgrade its power generation technology
Mwangi's Sh734m windfall as Equity posts record earnings
MoUs without jobs? Kenya's seafarer strategy under scrutiny
Why World Bank has banned PwC Kenya for 21 months
Property sector reaps big from rising demand for luxury healthcare
The party said Lissu had been arrested early Monday and police had also blocked access to the home of party chairman Freeman Mbowe.
Lissu, an opposition stalwart, has been arrested countless times and was shot in an assassination attempt in 2017.
He returned to Tanzania last year after Hassan lifted the ban on opposition rallies.
But he was arrested again in August, along with dozens of Chadema members, when the party tried to hold a youth day rally.
Rights groups and Western governments, including the United States, have criticised the crackdowns, which have raised fears of renewed repression ahead of local elections in November and a general election in late 2025.
"I remind Tanzanians that we are going to hold peaceful protests. We are neither carrying any weapons nor planning to violate the peace as some people allege," party chairman Mbowe said in a speech broadcast on X on Sunday.
Riot police with water cannons were deployed from Saturday across key areas of Dar es Salaam.
"We have seen the deployment of armed police officers in the city but we are ready to face them. In case some of us will be arrested, hurt or even killed, pray for us and never turn back. We are doing this to make our country a peaceful place to live," Mbowe said Sunday.