New Era

Tanzania opposition loses key seats

… vote marred by fraud claims

- Photo: Nampa/AFP

Democratic right… A elderly woman sits on the ground alongside a queue of other voters outside Wazo Hill polling station as she waits to cast her ballot in Dar es Salaam.

STONE TOWN - Tanzania’s polls commission began releasing parliament­ary election results yesterday with the opposition losing key seats in a vote they said was riddled with irregulari­ties.

Countingwa­stakingpla­ceacross Tanzania and its semi-autonomous archipelag­o Zanzibar - which also elects its own president and lawmakers - after the opposition reported ballot box stuffing and their party agents thrown out of polling stations.

As results trickled out on state TV, opposition Chadema lawmaker and chairman Freeman Mbowe lost his long-held seat at Hai in the Kilimanjar­o region, one of several lost by the opposition.

“We can’t talk about elections. It is violence. There were several deplorable incidents across the country,” Mbowe told AFP on Wednesday.

Mbowe, who was brutally assaulted in what he said was a politicall­y-motivated attack in June, tweeted that his life was “in danger” on the eve of the election, accusing police of raiding his hotel.

There are 264 parliament­ary seats up for grabs in the election.

Election commission chairman Wilson Charles Mahera said they would shortly begin releasing results from a presidenti­al race in which John Magufuli is seeking a second term in office.

“The commission is starting to receive results from the presidenti­al election... after verificati­on we will at any moment start publishing preliminar­y results,” he told reporters.

Long deemed a haven of stability in East Africa, observers say Tanzania is sliding into autocracy under Magufuli and his Chama Cha Mapinduzi (CCM) party, which has been in power since independen­ce 1961.

Magufuli, who turned 61 yesterday, was elected in 2015 as a corruption-busting man of the people, but has drawn criticism over a slide into autocracy, crackdown on the opposition and freedom of speech.

His main challenger in a field of 15 presidenti­al candidates is 52-year-old Tundu Lissu, who returned to Tanzania in July after three years abroad recovering from 16 bullet wounds sustained in what he believes was a politicall­ymotivated assassinat­ion attempt.

Lissu’s return reinvigora­ted an opposition demoralise­d by arrests, attacks and a ban on rallies outside of election time.

However, the opposition had already voiced concern about the fairness of the election ahead of polling, and on Wednesday both parties on mainland Tanzania and semi-autonomous Zanzibar cried foul.

“Voting reports indicate widespread irregulari­ties in the form of preventing our polling agents from accessing polling stations,” Lissu, from the Chadema party, said on Twitter.

“If this continues, mass democratic action will be the only option to protect the integrity of the election.”

Chadema secretary general John Mnyika told AFP their lawmaker in the Kawe district of Dar es Salaam, Halima Mdee, was briefly arrested after protesting the discovery of ballot boxes stuffed with “pre-marked votes” in favour of the ruling CCM.

In volatile Zanzibar, where the opposition ACT-Wazalendo said 10 people were killed in the run-up to the vote, party official Muhene Said Rashid showed journalist­s piles of stamped ballots with tick marks next to Magufuli’s name which he said had been seized from CCM “zealots”.

He said party agents had been kicked out of some polling stations.

The president of Tanzania’s electoral commission, Semistocle­s Kaijage, said Wednesday night they had not yet received complaints on the incidents of ballot stuffing.

Zanzibar, which has a history of contested, violent elections, voted under heavy security, and police and soldiers, some on armoured personnel carriers, continued to patrol throughout Wednesday evening.

An AFP reporter saw security forces beating several civilians.

Assistant police chief Awadhi Juma Haji said they were “just ensuring our people of security. We were alert, no need to panic”.

Zanzibar’s election body director Thabit Idarous Faina said: “We are finalising tallying, Zanzibar presidenti­al results will be announced within 24 hours.”

Opposition leader Seif Sharif Hamad has accused the ruling party of trying to steal every vote since multi-party democracy was introduced in 1995. Foreign observers have often agreed.

Tanzania’s election, for which around 29 million people were registered to vote on the mainland and 560 000 in Zanzibar, took place largely without external monitors.

Most internatio­nal media were unable to gain accreditat­ion to cover voting on the mainland, and major social media networks were blocked, accessible only through virtual private networks (VPN).

-Nampa/AFP

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