Tanzanian opposition party says whereabouts of its leaders unknown

Lissu, runner-up in the country's 2020 presidential election, was charged with treason last week over what prosecutors said was a speech calling on the public to launch a rebellion and disrupt the election. He was not allowed to enter a plea on the treason charge.
Tanzania’s main opposition party said on Friday it could not establish the whereabouts of its leader Tundu Lissu after he was moved from a jail where he was being held following his arrest on treason charges last week.
Senior CHADEMA party officials, his lawyers and family members said they tried unsuccessfully on different occasions on Friday to get access to him at a jail in the capital Dar es Salaam where he has been held since April 9.
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Prison service authorities could not be reached for immediate comment.
Government spokesperson Gerson Msigwa did not immediately respond to calls and text messages seeking comment.
"CHADEMA would like the Prisons Service, concerned government agencies to give information on where Lissu has been taken," the party said in a statement.
Lissu, runner-up in the country's 2020 presidential election, was charged with treason last week over what prosecutors said was a speech calling on the public to launch a rebellion and disrupt the election. He was not allowed to enter a plea on the treason charge.
The charges against him will bring fresh scrutiny to President Samia Suluhu Hassan's human rights record as she bids for re-election later this year.
Last weekend, the election commission said CHADEMA would be disqualified from elections due in October over its refusal to sign a code of conduct as it demands electoral reforms.
President Samia Suluhu Hassan won praise after coming to power in 2021 for easing repression of political opponents and censorship of the media that proliferated under her predecessor, John Magufuli, who died in office.
But she has faced mounting criticism from human rights activists over a series of arrests and unexplained abductions and killings of political opponents.
President Samia has said the government is committed to respecting human rights and she ordered an investigation into reported abductions last year.
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