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SPEAKING TRUTH, DEMANDING JUSTICES

As Tanzania approaches its general elections scheduled for 29 October 2025, the country is confronting a deepening crisis of democratic governance and human rights. What should be a moment of civic renewal is instead shaping into a period of severe repression, shrinking civic space and mounting questions about the fairness of the process.

 

The Political Arena & Electoral Competition

In recent months, opposition parties and candidates have faced a wave of restrictions, from disqualifications to arrests and bans on political activities. The country’s main opposition, Chama cha Demokrasia na Maendeleo (CHADEMA), has been particularly affected. 
For example, the African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights admitted intervention from external legal bodies in a case challenging Tanzania’s electoral rights. 
These developments cast serious doubt on whether the upcoming election will allow genuine competition, or if the outcome has largely been determined in advance.

 

Closing Civic Space

The rights to assemble, speak freely, campaign and participate are under increasing pressure. A recent report by Human Rights Watch documents arrests, abductions, torture and the harassment of activists, opposition members, lawyers and religious leaders. 
On digital fronts too, the government has taken steps to regulate or block online platforms, restrict social media and control information flows ahead of October’s elections.
Civil society organisations warn that this chilling environment undermines the very foundations of open democratic participation.

 

Justice Systems Under Pressure

Fair trials, access to legal representation, transparency in legal proceedings and protections for human rights defenders are all being tested in Tanzania. The Southern Africa Litigation Centre has described the environment as one where “when critics disappear and citizens live in fear, democracy itself disappears.” 
The interplay between electoral rights and access to justice is critical: without a predictable, fair legal system, the credibility of elections and democratic institutions is weakened.

 

Digital Rights & Information Access

In the modern electoral era, access to online spaces, digital tools and open communication is inseparable from democracy. A 2025 advocacy brief by Tech & Media Convergency (TMC) and the Internet Governance Tanzania Working Group (IGTWG) warns that internet shutdowns, social media blocks and regulatory overreach risk turning the public sphere into a “superficially calm but substantively hollow” space. 
For example: since May 2025, the social‑platform X (formerly Twitter) has been blocked, and major forums face suspensions or restrictions. 
When citizens cannot engage, organise or access independent information, the democracy‑justice link weakens.

 

Why It Matters for Democracy & Justice

When the competitive element of elections is eroded, when civic space is under siege, and when justice systems permit selective or politically‑directed enforcement, the result is not a robust democracy but a controlled, managed political order. In Tanzania’s case:

  • The exclusion of opposition actors undermines the possibility of meaningful choice.
  • The suppression of independent media, digital platforms and dissent means citizens cannot hold power to account.
  • The erosion of fair‑trial rights and due process diminishes the legitimacy of the state’s justice system.

Collectively, these trends threaten both democratic norms and the proper functioning of justice in Tanzania.

 

What to Watch & What Should Happen

In the months ahead, key indicators will include:

  • Whether opposition parties are allowed to campaign freely and whether the electoral commission acts independently.
  • Whether citizens can access digital platforms and independent media without fear of reprisals.
  • Whether legal proceedings involving political actors respect international standards for fairness, transparency and due process.
  • Whether civil society and human rights defenders can operate without intimidation or threat of disappearance or arrest.

For meaningful reform to take place, the Tanzanian government should:

  • Remove legal or regulatory barriers that restrict assembly, expression and political participation.
  • Ensure independent monitoring of the election process and permit credible international observers.
  • Investigate allegations of torture, abduction, media censorship and digital repression and hold perpetrators accountable.
  • Guarantee open internet access and repeal laws that allow arbitrary shutdowns or surveillance of citizens engaging in public discourse.

 

Tanzania stands at a significant crossroads. The upcoming election period and the surrounding context of justice and civic freedoms will define whether the country upholds a credible democracy or slides further toward managed authoritarianism. For the readers of Voices for Democracy and Justice, the key concern is not just “who wins the vote” but whether the system by which power is contested and exercised remains open, fair and accountable.

If Tanzania is to remain a space where voices for democracy and justice can flourish, then the coming months need to deliver not only an election, but a renewed commitment to rights, participation and rule of law.

 

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Author: Raveloaritiana Mamisoa Isabelle

 

 

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