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No reasons were given for the arrest of Lissu, a member of the main opposition party Chadema who serves as the chief whip of the opposition in parliament and also leads Tanzania’s bar association.
Government spokesman Hassan Abbas reacted to Lissu’s comments earlier this week by saying in a statement “the government will not accept that someone, or a group of people, abuse the freedom of expression”.
Lissu was arrested at Dar es Salaam airport as he attempted to take a plane to Rwanda, Chadema spokesman Tumaini Makene told AFP.
On Monday Lissu told reporters that repeated arrests of senior party members, locally and nationally, were intended to muzzle any opposition to Magufuli, in power since late 2015.
Addressing his comments to the international community, he called for “the dictator and his government, to be isolated politically, diplomatically and economically.”
Magufuli, whose nickname “tingatinga” means “bulldozer” in Swahili, swept to power in 2015, presenting himself as a no-nonsense, corruption-busting, man-of-the-people.
However, critics see a wide authoritarian streak at the core of his populism. They argue he acts on impulse regardless of due process or political niceties, while being intolerant of any dissent.
Lissu spoke of a “climate of fear which reigns everywhere”, accusing Magufuli of constructing “a system based on favouritism, nepotism, tribalism and regionalism”.
Opposition meetings are banned, newspapers have been shut down and journalists and artists have been threatened or received death threats for criticising the administration.
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