Tanzanian President Samia Suluhu Hassan has won a landslide election victory, official results showed on Saturday, after key candidates were jailed or barred from a vote that has triggered days of violent protests.
The final result showed Hassan won 97.66 percent of the vote, dominating every constituency, the electoral commission announced on state television.
A quick swearing-in ceremony was to take place yesterday, state TV said.
Photo: AFP
The main opposition party, Chadema, said hundreds of people have been killed by security forces since protests broke out on election day on Wednesday.
Hassan was elevated from vice-president on the sudden death of her predecessor, John Magufuli, in 2021.
She has faced opposition from parts of the army and Magufuli’s allies, and sought to cement her position with an emphatic win, analysts said.
Rights groups said she oversaw a “wave of terror” in the east African nation ahead of the vote, including a string of high-profile abductions that escalated in the final days.
Chadema was barred from taking part in the election, and its leader put on trial for treason.
Despite a heavy security presence, election day descended into chaos as crowds took to the streets across the country, tearing down her posters, and attacking police and polling stations, leading to an Internet shutdown and curfew.
A Chadema spokesman on Friday said that “around 700” people had been killed, based on figures gathered from a network checking hospitals and health clinics.
A security source and diplomat in Dar es Salaam both said that deaths were “in the hundreds.”
Hassan has not made any public statement since the unrest began.
Her government denies using “excessive force,” but has blocked the Internet and imposed a tight lockdown and curfew nationwide, making it hard to get any information. News Web sites have not been updated since early Wednesday, and journalists are not allowed to operate freely in the country.
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres is “deeply concerned” about the situation in Tanzania, “including reports of deaths and injuries during the demonstrations,” his spokesman said in a statement.
Much public anger has been directed at Hassan’s son, Abdul Halim Hafidh Ameir, accused of overseeing the crackdown.
There have been unconfirmed reports of the army siding with protesters in some places, but army chief Jacob Mkunda came out strongly on Hassan’s side on Thursday, calling the protesters “criminals,”
Tanzanian Minister of Foreign Affairs and East African Cooperation Mahmoud Thabit Kombo on Friday said that his government had “no figures” on any dead.
“Currently, no excessive force has been used,” he said in an interview with al-Jazeera.
“There’s no number until now of any protesters killed,” he said.
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