In a bid to put an end to anti-government rallies in Tanzania’s commercial hub of Dar es Salaam, the police detained two opposition leaders on Monday once more, according to both their party and the police.
Freeman Mbowe, the head of the largest opposition group CHADEMA, was arrested on the street, while Tundu Lissu, his deputy, was abducted from his residence in anticipation of a protest against the purported murders and kidnappings of government critics.
Campaigners for human rights claim that in advance of the December municipal elections and the 2025 national election, President Samia Suluhu Hassan’s administration is smearing rivals.
Mbowe and Lissu were among the 14 persons detained by the police for violating a ban on protests, according to the police.
Hassan’s administration did not immediately respond, but in the past, it has stated that it upholds democracy and does not condone violence.
CHADEMA in a social media post claims that Mbowe was taken into custody when he arrived to conduct a nonviolent protest in the city’s Magomeni neighbourhood. It said that after picking up Lissu, an 11-car convoy departed without disclosing his destination.
Last month, the two and hundreds of supporters were also briefly detained.
In 2016, Lissu escaped an attempted assassination after being shot sixteen times. Another senior CHADEMA member was kidnapped from a bus earlier this month; his body was subsequently discovered with indications that he had been assaulted and had acid poured on his face.