epa08777262 A police officer enforces pre-election laws during ongoing security operations prior to Tanzania's general elections, in Stone Town, Zanzibar, Tanzania, 27 October 2020. Police forces have been forcefully quelling any attempts by locals to protest ahead of the general elections scheduled on 28 October 2020. Incumbent President John Magufuli is seeking re-election on the mainland among a crowded field of 15 contenders. He is the candidate of the Chama Cha Mapinduzi (CCM) party, which has led Tanzania since independence in 1961. EPA-EFE/ANTHONY SIAME

UN human rights chief Michelle Bachelet said Tuesday that at least 150 members of Tanzania’s opposition had been arrested over the country’s fiercely disputed elections.

Arrests of opposition leaders and followers began on the eve of the October 28 poll, she said in a statement, citing reports from the country.

Police patrolling the streets of Zanzibar

“At least 18 reportedly remain in custody,” she said, adding that she was disturbed by accounts of continued intimidation and harassment.

Tanzanian cartoonist depicting President Magufuli

“The tense situation in the country will not be defused by silencing those who challenge the outcome of the elections, but rather through a participatory dialogue,” Bachelet warned. 

“I urge the Tanzanian authorities to respect and facilitate exercise of the rights to freedom of expression and of peaceful assembly.”

President John Magufuli won a crushing 84 percent of the vote, in an election that the opposition says was stained by massive fraud.

President Magufuli being sworn in by the chief justice in Dodoma, Tanzania.

His Chama Cha Mapinduzi (CCM) party took 97 percent of the parliament seats up for grabs.

Magufuli’s main challenger, Tundu Lissu, officially won just 13 percent of the vote, while popular opposition MPs lost seats in key strongholds.

The opposition called for street demonstrations against the results, but their leaders were swiftly detained and a heavy security presence deterred potential protest action.

Lissu, who was himself detained and questioned after dismissing the election as a sham, said Tuesday he was leaving Tanzania for Belgium, but did not specify why or for how long.

Tundu waving while leaving Tanzania from Mwalimu Julius Kambarage Nyerere International Airport in Dar Es Salaam.

“I am on my way to Belgium. At the airport right now,” Lissu told AFP in a brief comment on WhatsApp.

Lissu had only returned to Tanzania in July after three years in Belgium recovering from 16 bullet wounds sustained in what he said was a politically-motivated assassination attempt.

US Ambassador Donald Wright said Lissu had safely departed Tanzania “to seek medical treatment abroad”.

“Wishing him good health and a quick return so that he can continue to play a vital role in Tanzania’s political life,” he posted on Twitter.

On Sunday, a former opposition legislator, Godbless Lema, sought refuge in Kenya with his wife and children, his lawyer said.

He was arrested by local police and then released.

“I received information that my life was in danger,” Lema told reporters as he left the police station in Kajiado, near the border.

“I could not ignore this information, because I have buried many of my friends and others are still missing. I acted fast and fled.”

Source: AFP

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