Tanzania inquiry says over 500 killed in last year's election violence
Tanzania's President Samia Suluhu Hassan addresses delegates after receiving the report by the Presidential Commission of Inquiry into violence that erupted during and after Tanzania’s October 29, 2025, General Election at the State House in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, April 23, 2026. REUTERS/Emmanuel Herman
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At least 518 people were killed in violence that broke out
during Tanzania's
elections last October, a government-appointed commission of inquiry
said on Thursday, in the first official acknowledgment of the scale of the
deadly unrest.
The commission, however, placed the blame for the violence
with the protesters, infuriating the government's opponents, who accused it of
bias.
The U.N. human rights office estimated last year that hundreds were killed in violence driven by the exclusion of leading
opposition candidates from presidential and parliamentary elections. The main
opposition party has said thousands died.
Tanzanian authorities have previously declined to comment on
casualty figures, saying they were awaiting the
report of the commission, which President Samia Suluhu Hassan appointed in
November. They have denied allegations by human rights groups that the
security services used excessive force.
Speaking at a ceremony to hand over the report to Hassan,
commission chair Mohamed Chande Othman said the death toll could be an
undercount because of difficulties identifying victims. He did not pass
judgment on the actions of law enforcement, instead recommending that a
commission of criminal investigation be formed to probe specific incidents.
Chande said the commission had "indisputable
evidence" the violence was planned and funded by "trained
people" but did not name them.
“Organisers used various techniques, including using people
without deep understanding and desperate youth, while encouraging simultaneous
acts of violence across different locations," he said.
Hassan, who was declared the winner of the presidential
election with nearly 98% of the vote, has said the protests were an attempt to
overthrow her government and received foreign funding, without providing
evidence.
The commission's report was not immediately made public and it
was not clear whether it would be. In comments at the ceremony, Hassan
said the report was "the property of the president".
The main opposition party, CHADEMA, rejected the commission's
work, saying in a statement on Thursday that a government accused of carrying
out violent abuses cannot investigate itself.
Chande acknowledged receiving allegations that people were
shot in homes and shops, including near a cafe in the
northern city of Mwanza.
Reuters
reporting found that police officers massacred more than a dozen
unarmed young men at the cafe far from any known protest. Witnesses to other
incidents in Mwanza and two other cities also told
Reuters they saw officers shoot at people who were not protesting.
The government said at the time that it took concerns about
the use of force seriously but that many allegations were based on unverified
and out-of-context information.

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