Political violence flared with mobs attacking political opposition members' offices and homes in Zanzibar, leaving at least 17 people injured, as the island prepares for elections this year, police and opposition leaders said.
Four branch offices belonging to the opposition Civic United Front were burned to the ground late Sunday night and another mob attacked the home of the party's leader, setting two vehicles on fire, party spokesman Salim Bimani said Monday.
Two of the injured were admitted to the Mnazi Mmoja National Hospital's intensive care unit in critical condition, he said. The destroyed vehicles belonged to two bodyguards who fought off the mob that attacked front leader Seif Shariff Hamad's home.
The attacks were in the western section of the town of Zanzibar, where members of both the opposition and the ruling Chama Cha Mapinduzi party live. The Zanzibar Electoral Commission plans to begin registering voters in the area next month.
General elections are scheduled for Oct. 23 in Zanzibar, a semiautonomous archipelago off the coast of Tanzania. The last elections, in 2000, were marred by violence and irregularities.
Politics in Zanzibar also have a religious dimension. The ruling party is based on the largely Christian mainland Tanzania, while the Zanzibar-based Civic United Front is largely Muslim. More than 90 percent of Zanzibaris are Muslim.
Political and religious tensions on Zanzibar, home to about one million people, have only grown since the 2000 election.
The recent trouble started Sunday night when both parties held rallies less than 1km from one another. When the two rallies ended, supporters provoked one another, and soon stones, knives and spears were hurled through the air, witnesses said.
LANDMARK CASE: ‘Every night we were dragged to US soldiers and sexually abused. Every week we were forced to undergo venereal disease tests,’ a victim said More than 100 South Korean women who were forced to work as prostitutes for US soldiers stationed in the country have filed a landmark lawsuit accusing Washington of abuse, their lawyers said yesterday. Historians and activists say tens of thousands of South Korean women worked for state-sanctioned brothels from the 1950s to 1980s, serving US troops stationed in country to protect the South from North Korea. In 2022, South Korea’s top court ruled that the government had illegally “established, managed and operated” such brothels for the US military, ordering it to pay about 120 plaintiffs compensation. Last week, 117 victims
China on Monday announced its first ever sanctions against an individual Japanese lawmaker, targeting China-born Hei Seki for “spreading fallacies” on issues such as Taiwan, Hong Kong and disputed islands, prompting a protest from Tokyo. Beijing has an ongoing spat with Tokyo over islands in the East China Sea claimed by both countries, and considers foreign criticism on sensitive political topics to be acts of interference. Seki, a naturalised Japanese citizen, “spread false information, colluded with Japanese anti-China forces, and wantonly attacked and smeared China”, foreign ministry spokesman Lin Jian told reporters on Monday. “For his own selfish interests, (Seki)
Argentine President Javier Milei on Sunday vowed to “accelerate” his libertarian reforms after a crushing defeat in Buenos Aires provincial elections. The 54-year-old economist has slashed public spending, dismissed tens of thousands of public employees and led a major deregulation drive since taking office in December 2023. He acknowledged his party’s “clear defeat” by the center-left Peronist movement in the elections to the legislature of Buenos Aires province, the country’s economic powerhouse. A deflated-sounding Milei admitted to unspecified “mistakes” which he vowed to “correct,” but said he would not be swayed “one millimeter” from his reform agenda. “We will deepen and accelerate it,” he
‘HYANGDO’: A South Korean lawmaker said there was no credible evidence to support rumors that Kim Jong-un has a son with a disability or who is studying abroad South Korea’s spy agency yesterday said that North Korean leader Kim Jong-un’s daughter, Kim Ju-ae, who last week accompanied him on a high-profile visit to Beijing, is understood to be his recognized successor. The teenager drew global attention when she made her first official overseas trip with her father, as he met with Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平) and Russian President Vladimir Putin. Analysts have long seen her as Kim’s likely successor, although some have suggested she has an older brother who is being secretly groomed as the next leader. The South Korean National Intelligence Service (NIS) “assesses that she [Kim Ju-ae]