Tanzanian President Samia Suluhu Hassan has been sworn in for a second time period amid tight safety, following an election marred by violent protests and rejected by the opposition as a sham.
The inauguration ceremony is being held at a navy parade grounds within the capital, Dodoma, as an alternative of a stadium as in earlier years. It’s closed to the general public however is being proven on state TV.
Samia was declared the winner on Saturday with 98% of the vote. She confronted little opposition with key rival candidates both imprisoned or barred from operating.
Worldwide observers have raised issues concerning the transparency of the election and its violent aftermath, with a whole bunch of individuals reportedly killed.
The authorities have sought to downplay the dimensions of the violence. It has been tough to acquire info from the nation or confirm the loss of life toll, amid a nationwide web shutdown in place since election day.
Sporting a purple scarf and darkish glasses, Samia took her oath of workplace at a ceremony attended by regional leaders and dignitaries, together with the presidents of Somalia, Zambia, Mozambique, and Burundi. State broadcaster TBC had earlier mentioned the general public wouldn’t attend the occasion.
In her victory speech on Saturday, Samia mentioned the ballot was “free and democratic” and described the protesters as “unpatriotic”.
Opposition leaders and activists say a whole bunch have been killed in clashes with safety forces. The opposition Chadema social gathering instructed the AFP information company that it had recorded “at least 800” deaths by Saturday, whereas a diplomatic supply in Tanzania instructed the BBC there was credible proof that no less than 500 individuals had died.
The UN human rights workplace earlier mentioned there have been credible reviews of no less than 10 deaths in three cities.
Following the unrest, the costs of meals, gasoline and different necessities have greater than doubled or tripled in lots of areas. Colleges and faculties are closed and public transport is halted.
Chadema – which was barred from competing – rejects the outcomes introduced by the electoral fee, saying they’d “no foundation in actuality as the reality is that no real election happened in Tanzania”. It has referred to as for a contemporary election.
On election day, polling stations remained largely empty – however the electoral authorities later mentioned turnout had been 87%.
On Sunday, police spokesman David Misime blamed motorcycle operators and international nationals for the violent demonstrations and vandalism.
He mentioned there have been people who had “entered the nation illegally with the intention of inflicting chaos”.
Misime has urged Tanzanians to report “any foreigner who’s unknown or whose actions in Tanzania are unclear” to the authorities.
His remarks come amid reviews that a number of Kenyan nationals have gone lacking in Tanzania. Kenyan activist Hussein Khalid mentioned on X that he had obtained reviews of a Kenyan instructor being killed and others nonetheless unaccounted for.
The state of affairs in Tanzania has sparked international concern, with Pope Leo XIV on Sunday calling for prayers, saying post-election violence had erupted “with quite a few victims”.
EU international affairs chief Kaja Kallas urged Tanzanian authorities to train restraint to protect lives, whereas UN Secretary-Common António Guterres mentioned he was “deeply involved” concerning the state of affairs “together with reviews of deaths and accidents”.
The nation’s two major opposition leaders didn’t contest the election – Tundu Lissu is being held on treason expenses, which he denies, whereas Luhaga Mpina of the ACT-Wazalendo social gathering was excluded on authorized technicalities.
Sixteen fringe events, none of whom have traditionally had important public assist, have been allowed to run.
The ruling social gathering, Chama Cha Mapinduzi (CCM), and its predecessor Tanu, have dominated the nation’s politics and have by no means misplaced an election since independence.
Forward of the election, rights teams condemned authorities repression, with Amnesty Worldwide citing a “wave of terror” involving enforced disappearances, torture, and extrajudicial killings of opposition figures.
The federal government rejected the claims, and officers mentioned the election can be free and honest.
Samia got here into workplace in 2021 as Tanzania’s first feminine president following the loss of life of President John Magufuli.
Extra about Tanzania from the BBC:
[Getty Images/BBC]
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