Curfew lifted in Tanzania's Dar es Salaam city after election unrest

News · Samuel Otieno · November 4, 2025
Curfew lifted in Tanzania's Dar es Salaam city after election unrest
Tanzanian police. PHOTO/Handout
In Summary

Following the unrest, the internet was cut nationwide and most shops in Dar es Salaam closed amid acute shortages of basic essentials and soaring prices. Schools shut and public transport came to a halt.

Tanzanian police have lifted a night-time curfew imposed since last Wednesday in the main city Dar es Salaam following deadly election protests, as life slowly returns to normal across the country.

Following the unrest, the internet was cut nationwide and most shops in Dar es Salaam closed amid acute shortages of basic essentials and soaring prices. Schools shut and public transport came to a halt.

On Tuesday, some shops reopened and traffic resumed but with queues persisting at some petrol stations in Dar es Salaam.

Families continue to search for or bury relatives killed in the clashes between the security forces and opposition supporters who denounced the poll as a sham.

Observers from the Southern African Development Community (Sadc) - a regional bloc which includes Tanzania - said in a preliminary report that the election fell short of democratic standards.

The two main opposition leaders were unable to contest the poll - Tundu Lissu is in detention on treason charges, which he denies, while Luhaga Mpina's candidacy was rejected on technical grounds.

Lissu's Chadema party told the AFP news agency that it had recorded "no less than 800" deaths by Saturday, while a diplomatic source in Tanzania told the BBC there was credible evidence that at least 500 people had died.

The UN human rights office earlier said there were credible reports of at least 10 deaths in three cities.

The government has not given casualty figures.

On Tuesday, a doctor at Muhimbili Hospital in Dar es Salaam told the BBC that vehicles marked "Municipal Burial Services" had been collecting bodies.

"[They] are getting into the mortuary at night to pick bodies of those believed to have died during protests, they leave and take them to unknown destination," said the doctor, who asked not to be identified for safety reasons.

"Relatives are not being given the bodies and survivors are being taken from emergency department to unknown destination by the police… some even before they recover," he added.

Earlier, a Tanzanian woman who asked to be identified as Mama Kassim told the BBC that she had not seen her two sons since polling day - and was unable to reach one of them.

"I don't know where he is, I don't know whether he has been arrested, I don't know if he is injured, I don't know if he is hospitalised, I don't know if he is dead. Oh God, protect my son. He's only 21 years old," she said.

A Kenyan family said it had asked the government to help repatriate the body of a relative, 33-year-old teacher John Okoth Ogutu, who lived in Dar es Salaam.

A teacher at Sky School, he was allegedly shot by police while on his way to buy food at Gaba Centre in the city.

His older sister, Celestine Ogutu, told the BBC he was a loving, hard-working man who hated arguments and would walk away from any confrontation.

"He loved the family. The last time I talked to him was on 22nd September when he was wishing me my birthday, the only family member who remembered my birthday," she said.

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