Audio By Carbonatix
Tanzanians will vote today, Wednesday, October 29, in an election that President Samia Suluhu Hassan is expected to win after candidates from the two leading opposition parties were barred from standing.
In addition to the presidential election, voters will choose members of the country's 400-seat parliament and a president and lawmakers in the semi-autonomous Zanzibar archipelago.
The presidential vote will be held without the leading opposition party, CHADEMA, whose leader, Tundu Lissu, is on trial for treason, charges he denies. The electoral commission disqualified CHADEMA in April after it refused to sign an electoral code of conduct.
The commission also disqualified Luhaga Mpina, the candidate for the second largest opposition party, ACT-Wazalendo, after an objection from the Attorney General, leaving only candidates from minor parties taking on Hassan.
Hassan's CCM, whose predecessor party led the struggle for independence for mainland Tanzania in the 1950s, has dominated national politics since its founding in 1977.
RESULTS DUE WITHIN THREE DAYS
Echoing criticism from other rights groups and opposition figures, Amnesty International last week accused the authorities of repressing dissent, charges the government denied.
U.S. crisis-monitoring group Armed Conflict Location & Event Data said CCM was intent on maintaining its status as the "last hegemonic liberation party in southern Africa" and avoiding the recent electoral pressures faced by counterparts in South Africa, Namibia and Zimbabwe.
The election commission says it will announce the results within three days from election day. The polls open at 0400 GMT and close at 1300 GMT.
Hassan, whose posters dominate towns and villages, has been traversing the country of around 68 million people.
She has boasted about expanding road and railway networks and increasing power generation capacity. In her next term, she has promised to prioritise hiring more teachers.
Hassan won plaudits after coming to power in 2021 for easing repression of political opponents and censorship that proliferated under her predecessor, John Magufuli, who died in office.
GOVERNMENT ORDERED PROBE INTO ALLEGED ABDUCTIONS
But in the last two years, rights campaigners and opposition candidates have accused the government of unexplained abductions of its critics.
Hassan, one of just two female heads of state in Africa, has said her government is committed to respecting human rights and last year ordered an investigation into the reports of abductions. No official findings have been made public.
Earlier this month, the country's former ambassador to Cuba, now a fierce critic of the government, was taken from his home by unknown assailants, his family said. Police said they were investigating.
"Authorities must end their unacceptable campaign of repression against dissent," Amnesty said in its statement on October 20.
Tanzanian government spokesperson Gerson Msigwa said Amnesty had not asked authorities to respond before publishing the statement, though the rights watchdog said it had in fact done so.
"The brief's portrayal of Tanzania as a country that tolerates arbitrary arrests, enforced disappearances, and suppression of freedoms is inconsistent with the legal and institutional safeguards in place," Msigwa said in a statement.
Latest Stories
-
Developing countries paid more in debt service in 2025 – World Bank
3 minutes -
Education Minister raises concern over prolonged CETAG strike
5 minutes -
Vice President honours Nkrumah’s photographer, Chris Hesse, for safeguarding national memory
13 minutes -
3 arrested for impersonating Speaker, IGP on social media
13 minutes -
BoG to tighten monetary policy in half-year 2026
21 minutes -
Parliament approves GH₵357 billion budget for 2026
27 minutes -
MAX and Bolt announce strategic partnership to power electric mobility and vehicle ownership in Ghana
44 minutes -
Greater Accra poultry farmers association says it was excluded from gov’t ‘Nkoko nkiti nkiti’ initiative
57 minutes -
Michael Adangba survives dawn road crash en route to BolgatangaÂ
1 hour -
Court remands 40-year-old man for alleged murder
1 hour -
AngloGold Ashanti Obuasi mine donates fire tender to boost emergency response in municipality
1 hour -
Gov’t introduces sliding-scale mining royalties to capture price gains
1 hour -
Global Africa Summit Accra 2025 rallies investors, diaspora and policymakers to boost trade and growth
1 hour -
New research suggests a better way to fight littering in Ghana
1 hour -
UN-backed experts say Gaza food supplies improving but 100,000 still in ‘catastrophic conditions’
2 hours
