Tanzania police ban proposed rallies after poll violence

A street boy sits next to roses and placards showing portraits of Tanzanian President Samia Suluhu Hassan during a memorial vigil to honour Tanzanians killed during post-election unrest in Nairobi. (AFP)
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Updated 06 December 2025
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Tanzania police ban proposed rallies after poll violence

  • More than 1,000 people were shot dead by security forces over several days of unrest according to the opposition and rights groups

DAR ES SALAAM: Tanzania’s police have banned proposed rallies next week, following a violent crackdown by security forces on election demonstrations.
Polls on October 29 erupted into days of violent protests over claims that President Samia Suluhu Hassan had rigged the polls and was behind a campaign of murders and abductions of her critics.
She was declared winner with 98 percent of the vote.
More than 1,000 people were shot dead by security forces over several days of unrest, according to the opposition and rights groups, though the government has yet to give a final toll.
Despite attempts to suppress information, anger within the east African nation has grown with some saying they will return to the streets on December 9.
In a statement in Swahili late Friday, police spokesperson David Misime said officials had seen the calls on social media but noted: “No identifiable person has so far submitted formal notification for the planned demonstrations.”
Citing police guidelines, the statement said that “given the unlawful tactics that have surfaced,” the proposed rally “no longer meets the legal requirements to be authorized.”
“Therefore, the Police Force, as of today, bans the planned demonstrations described as peaceful and indefinite,” it said.
The statement added calls for the proposed rally were being coordinated by individuals using “telephone numbers based both inside and outside Tanzania, as well as anonymous online accounts managed by persons outside the country.”
It follows a decision by Meta earlier this week to suspend the Instagram accounts of two Tanzanian activists after they posted images of the violent crackdown on election protests.
International criticism has grown, with the United States stating it would be “comprehensively reviewing” its relationship with the country following the election violence.


Russia’s Taman port damaged by Ukrainian drone strike

Updated 9 sec ago
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Russia’s Taman port damaged by Ukrainian drone strike

MOSCOW: Russia’s Black Sea port of Taman, which handles oil ​products, grain, coal and commodities, has been damaged by a Ukrainian drone attack, the governor of Russia’s Krasnodar region said on Sunday.
Two people were injured as an oil storage ‌tank, warehouse and ‌terminals took damage ​in ‌Volna ⁠village, ​the site ⁠of Taman port, Veniamin Kondratyev said in a post on Telegram.
Kondratyev said that more than 100 people were working to put out several fires at ⁠the port.
Separate strikes on ‌the resort ‌city of Sochi ​and the ‌village of Yurovka, close to the ‌seaside town of Anapa, had caused less significant damage, he added.
Ukraine has resumed attacks on Russian energy ‌infrastructure in recent days after a US-brokered moratorium on such ⁠strikes expired.
Russia ⁠has repeatedly targeted energy and utility infrastructure in Ukraine, cutting off heating and electricity to hundreds of thousands of people in the midst of an unusually cold winter.
Industry sources said that about 4.16 million metric tons of oil products were ​shipped through Taman ​last year.