When elections deliver 98% and dissent delivers funerals, democracy is already dying—Tanzania now faces its most perilous hour since independence.
I have watched power in Africa long enough to know the
smell of it when it turns sour. It starts with applause. It ends with gunfire.
Tanzania, once the quiet diplomat of East Africa, now walks with a limp and a
loaded rifle. Don’t welcome Africa’s newest despot. Samia Suluhu Hassan has
caused Tanzania’s most dangerous crisis since independence.
Chama Cha Mapinduzi has ruled Tanzania since 1961. That
is 65 years of unbroken control. Longer than any ruling party in Africa. Under
Julius Nyerere, the founding father, millions were forced into collective farms
under the policy of ujamaa. It was sold as African socialism. It delivered
shortages, inefficiency and economic collapse. By the early 1980s, inflation
had soared above 30%, growth had stalled, and Tanzania had to turn to the IMF.
When Nyerere stepped down in 1985, CCM reinvented itself. It embraced a flawed
but competitive democracy. It allowed opposition parties. It opened markets.
For decades, Tanzania became the poster child for slow, steady stability.
Average GDP growth over the past 20 years has hovered
around 6%. Investors came. Tourists came. Aid flowed. Afrobarometer polling in
2024 still showed CCM as the most popular party. Tanzania looked like the calm
cousin in a rough neighborhood.
Then came October.
An election that should have been routine exploded into
the first mass protests in mainland Tanzania’s history. The country has a
population of more than 70m. It is not a small island state. When anger erupts
at that scale, it shakes the ground. State security forces responded with
bullets. Hundreds, possibly thousands, were killed. The exact number is
unclear. That alone tells you everything. In stable democracies, body counts
are counted. In broken regimes, they are buried.
And as people died in the streets, Samia Suluhu Hassan
claimed 98% of the vote.
Ninety-eight percent. In a competitive system. In 2026.
That number does not whisper legitimacy. It screams fraud. Even dictators in
the 1970s blushed at figures like that.
Dan Paget, a scholar of Tanzanian politics, has said that
the last time mainland Tanzania experienced brutality on this scale was under
German colonial rule more than 100 years ago. Let that sink in. A country that
survived colonialism, Cold War politics, and regional wars without mass
bloodshed has now drawn blood from its own citizens.
Samia came to power in 2021 after John Magufuli died.
Magufuli was autocratic, yes, but he wrapped himself in populist nationalism.
He cut waste, fought some forms of corruption, and cultivated an image as a
bulldozer for the common man. Samia styled herself as the opposite. She spoke
softly. She welcomed back exiles. She reopened space for media. She mended ties
with Western investors. Many Tanzanians believed she was a liberal reformer.
I did not.
When a leader promises constitutional reform and then
quietly shelves it, I take note. Tanzania’s constitution gives the president
enormous power. The promised review stalled. Opposition parties threatened to
boycott the election. The state responded not with dialogue but with arrests.
Tundu Lissu, the most prominent opposition figure, was arrested and charged
with treason. Treason is not a parking ticket. It carries the possibility of
death. He remains behind bars.
In 2025, critics disappeared. A CCM bigwig vanished. A
Catholic priest vanished. Scores of others were taken. Many are feared dead.
When disappearances become routine, fear becomes policy.
Some once argued that Samia, a Muslim from Zanzibar,
which accounts for about 3% of Tanzania’s population, was forced to rely on
hardliners in the party and security services. They said she was weak. That she
had no base. That she was cornered.
But after repeated cabinet reshuffles, she now commands
every arm of the regime. Diplomats in Dar es Salaam say she has surrounded
herself with Zanzibaris, family and loyal newcomers. Her daughter is now deputy
minister of education. Her son-in-law is minister of health. When blood ties
replace merit, the state becomes a family business.
And the world is watching.
The EU has frozen aid. The United States is reviewing
bilateral relations, citing concerns over churches and the treatment of
investors. Tanzania relies heavily on foreign capital and development finance.
In 2023, foreign direct investment inflows were about $1bn, modest but vital.
If investors fear instability, that money dries up fast.
Yet the government’s first instinct after the crackdown
was not remorse but reassurance. Reassure investors. Protect existing capital.
Speed up talks on a long-delayed liquefied natural gas project. A final
investment decision is expected this year. The message is clear: business
first, bodies later.
But growth alone cannot silence anger. Tanzania’s
population grows at nearly 3% per year. That means the economy must grow above
that rate just to keep incomes steady. At 6% GDP growth, per capita gains are
thin. Youth unemployment and underemployment remain high. Too few young people
have formal jobs. When they are jobless, they are restless. As one minister
admitted, they are easily “triggered” into protest.
China is often cited as a model. After the 1989 Tiananmen
Square massacre, China doubled down on growth. It delivered decades of rapid
expansion, lifting hundreds of millions out of poverty. But Tanzania is not
China. It lacks the industrial base, the scale, and the global leverage Beijing
wielded. You cannot copy and paste history.
Meanwhile, corruption is said to be rising. Business
experts in Dar es Salaam speak of rent-seeking everywhere. Foreign firms
complain of shake-downs. A Western diplomat put it bluntly: things are better
for corrupt oligarchs. Not for investors.
I have heard this script before. First comes
centralization. Then comes repression. Then comes economic favoritism for
insiders. Finally comes the claim that stability requires strong hands. When
the drumbeat of fear grows louder, liberty slips out the back door.
Some criticism of Samia is fueled by misogyny and
Islamophobia. That is real and ugly. But stripping away prejudice does not
erase policy. The crisis is not about gender. It is about governance. It is
about the gap between promise and practice.
CCM has survived because it adapts. After economic
collapse in the 1980s, it reformed. After political pressure in the 1990s, it
opened space. It has been a strange beast, yes, but a flexible one. Now it
faces an inflection point. Another uprising could be catastrophic. A former
minister has warned that unless security forces show humanity, CCM will be
removed from power.
A coup within the party is possible. Internal rebellion
has toppled leaders before in African ruling parties. Outsiders cannot know how
deep dissatisfaction runs within CCM. But when elites begin whispering, the
clock starts ticking.
Tanzania was long known for stability in a volatile
region. It mediated conflicts in Burundi. It hosted refugees. It avoided the
coups and civil wars that scarred neighbors. Now that reputation is cracking.
I do not celebrate instability. I fear it. A nation of
70m cannot afford chaos. But stability built on fear is a house of cards. A 98%
victory is not strength. It is insecurity dressed up as triumph. Do not welcome
Africa’s newest despot. Do not clap for a leader who trades reform for
repression and calls it order. Tanzania stands at its most dangerous crossroads
since 1961. The bullets of October did more than kill protesters. They
shattered a myth. The myth that CCM’s long rule guaranteed peace.
History teaches a brutal lesson. When power refuses to
bend, it eventually breaks. And when it breaks, it rarely does so quietly.
For readers interested
in a separate line of thought, the titles in my “Brief Book Series” are available on
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