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    HomeWorldAfricaTanzania poll expected to return Hassan with key opponents barred

    Tanzania poll expected to return Hassan with key opponents barred

    (Reuters) -Tanzanians went to the polls on Wednesday in an election President Samia Suluhu Hassan is expected to win after candidates from the two leading opposition parties were barred from standing.

    Police dispersed small groups of protesters at polling stations in two neighbourhoods in the commercial capital Dar es Salaam, following calls from activists on social media for demonstrations, Reuters witnesses said.

    Internet monitor NetBlocks said that live network data showed a nationwide disruption to Internet connectivity in Tanzania.

    The vote is being held without the leading opposition party, CHADEMA, whose leader Tundu Lissu is on trial for treason, which he has denied. The electoral commission disqualified CHADEMA in April after it refused to sign an electoral code of conduct.

    The commission also disqualified Luhaga Mpina, the presidential candidate for the second-largest opposition party, ACT-Wazalendo, after an objection from the attorney general, leaving only candidates from minor parties taking on Hassan.

    "There is no election in Tanzania. If I may sum up properly, it is a coronation," Deogratius Munishi, CHADEMA's secretary for foreign affairs, told Citizen Television in neighbouring Kenya on Wednesday.

    The government has said the election is being conducted fairly and denied allegations of widespread human rights abuses in the run-up, including abductions of opposition figures.

    RESULTS DUE WITHIN THREE DAYS

    Voters are also choosing members of the country's 400-seat parliament and a president and lawmakers in the semi-autonomous Zanzibar archipelago.

    Polls are due to close at 1300 GMT, and results are expected within three days.

    "I urge all Tanzanians, those who are still at home, to come out and exercise their right and vote and choose their preferred leaders," Hassan said after voting in the administrative capital Dodoma.

    She has been traversing the country of around 68 million people to tout her record of expanding transport networks and increasing power generation. 

    Juma Mtali, a businessperson voting in Dar es Salaam, said his experience had been smooth.

    "As of now it is very peaceful," he said.

    Small groups of young people protested in Dar es Salaam's Manzese and Ubungo neighbourhoods before being dispersed by police, Reuters witnesses said.

    GOVERNMENT ORDERED PROBE INTO ALLEGED ABDUCTIONS 

    Hassan's CCM, whose predecessor party led the struggle for independence for mainland Tanzania in the 1950s, has dominated national politics since it was founded in 1977.

    Hassan, one of ONLY two female heads of state in Africa, won plaudits after coming to power in 2021 for easing repression of political opponents and censorship that proliferated under her predecessor, John Magufuli, who died in office.

    But in the last two years, rights campaigners and opposition candidates have accused the government of unexplained abductions of its critics.

    This month, the country's former ambassador to Cuba, now a fierce critic of the government, was taken from his home by unknown assailants, his family said. Police said they were investigating.

    Hassan has said her government is committed to respecting human rights and last year ordered an investigation into the reports of abductions. No official findings have been made public.

    (Reporting by Nairobi Newsroom; Writing by George Obulutsa and Vincent Mumo; Editing by Ammu Kannampilly, Aaron Ross and Ed Osmond)

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