Tanzaniaās two leading opposition parties said they would not recognise the results of a presidential election that handed incumbent John Magufuli a second five-year term.
Tanzaniaās National Electoral Commission declared Magufuli the winner of last Wednesdayās (28 October) poll, with 84% of the vote against 13% for his opponent, Tundu Lissu of the Chadema party.
Presidential and parliamentary elections were held simultaneously in mainland Tanzania and semi-autonomous Zanzibar, an Indian Ocean archipelago.
āWe are calling on the international community and bodies not to recognise what was referred to as a general election, and we call on them to take appropriate action,ā Chadema chairman Freeman Mbowe said in comments posted on the partyās Twitter account.
āWe demand fresh elections as soon as possible.ā
Mbowe, who led the opposition in parliament, lost his long-held seat in the vote and urged opposition supporters to demonstrate on Monday against the handling of the election, which Lissu has called a ātravestyā.
Zitto Kabwe, the leader of another major opposition party, ACT-Wazalendo, was among dozens of opposition candidates who lost their seats in parliament to the ruling CCM party. ACT-Wazalendo on Saturday joined the calls for protests against the result.
In a video tweeted by police, senior police official Liberatus Sabas said āillegal assemblies and demonstrationsā would not be permitted.
In Zanzibar, 33 people were detained over alleged election-related offences, police commissioner, Mohammed Haji Hassan, said.
In his bid for a second term, Magufuli promised to boost the economy by completing infrastructure projects started in his first term, such as a hydro-electric dam, a railway line and new planes for the national carrier.
But the opposition and rights groups have complained that his administration has cracked down on critical voices, closing down media outlets and preventing opposition rallies.
The main challenger, Lissu, was shot 16 times in 2017 in what remains an unsolved case.
The government has denied stifling dissent.
The United States has said it was concerned about āreports of systematic interference in the democratic processā during the election.
The vote was marred by allegations of irregularities, including the use of force against unarmed civilians, pre-ticking of ballots, the detention of opposition officials and restrictions on political party agents accessing polling stations, the U.S. Embassy said.
But in a preliminary statement, the East African Communityās Election Observer Mission said that the electoral commission had āorganised the elections in a professional mannerā.
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