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Tanzania

UNITED REPUBLIC OF TANZANIA

Tanzania | Amnesty International
23 May 2007

Region      

Tanzania: Further information: Harsh prison conditions/ Torture or ...
26 January 2005

The hunger strike by at least 15 death row prisoners in Ukonga maximum security prison in Dar es Salaam has come to an end. Amnesty International has now learnt ...

Urgent Action       AFR 56/002/2005

Tanzania: Harsh prison conditions/ Torture or Ill treatment ...
13 January 2005

On 3 January, at least 15 prisoners sentenced to death in the main Ukonga maximum security prison in the capital, Dar es Salaam, started a hunger strike protesting ...

Urgent Action       AFR 56/001/2005

Tanzania: Commission of Inquiry findings must be made public
14 June 2002

AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL. PRESS RELEASE. AI Index: AFR 56/004/2002 (Public). News Service No: 101. 14 June 2002. Tanzania: Commission of ...

Press Release       AFR 56/004/2002

Tanzania: Human rights concerns relating to demonstrations in ...
28 January 2002

On 27 January 2001 armed police shot dead between 22 and 60 opposition demonstrators on Pemba island. This report describes the background to the human rights crisis ...

Report       AFR 56/001/2002

Tanzania: Amnesty International welcomes creation of commission of ...
28 January 2002

AI Index AFR 56/003/2002 - News Service Nr 14/2002. Embargoed for : 28/01/2002 11:00 GMT. Tanzania: Amnesty International welcomes ...

Press Release       AFR 56/003/2002

Tanzania: Inquiry into Zanzibar killings must be prompt ...
20 November 2001

AI Index AFR 56/013/2001 - News Service Nr. 203. Embargoed for : 20/11/2001 11:00 GMT. Tanzania: Inquiry into Zanzibar killings must ...

Press Release       AFR 56/013/2001

Tanzania: Further information on Fear of Torture/Prisoners of ...
16 October 2001

Prisoners of conscience Juma Duni Haji and Machano Khamis Ali were released on 15 October, after a Zanzibar court dropped the charges of murder against them. Suleiman ...

Urgent Action       AFR 56/012/2001

Tanzania: Further information on Fear of Torture
6 June 2001

Most of those charged with the murder of a police officer during a demonstration on Pemba Island have been released. However, prisoners of conscience Juma Duni ...

Urgent Action       AFR 56/010/2001

Tanzania: Further information on Fear of Torture
16 March 2001

The torture and ill-treatment of detainees arrested following the recent violent crack-down on demonstrators in Tanzania reportedly continues. A number of those ...

Urgent Action       AFR 56/009/2001

Taken from the Amnesty International Report 2007

Head of state: Jakaya Kikwete
Head of government: Edward Lowassa
Head of Zanzibar government: Amani Abeid Karume
Death penalty: retentionist
International Criminal Court: ratified

All death sentences were commuted. Journalists were at times harassed or arrested. Several thousand long-settled unregistered migrants were deported. Prison conditions were harsh.

Background

Talks on legal and electoral reform in semi-autonomous Zanzibar continued between the ruling Party of the Revolution (Chama Cha Mapinduzi) and the opposition Civic United Front (CUF) but without much progress.

Freedom of expression and the media

Journalists writing articles criticizing the government were at times harassed, threatened or arrested.

• Three journalists of Rai newspaper were arrested and charged in July.

• In August Richard Mgamba of The Citizen newspaper was arrested and threatened with being stripped of his citizenship and expelled from the country on account of an interview he gave in a documentary film about arms trafficking.

• Three visiting mainland journalists were briefly arrested in Zanzibar in September.

A previous sedition case against opposition party leader Augustine Mrema and two environmental rights activists, all three of whom were free on bail, was continuing.

Violence against women

Female genital mutilation continued to be illegally practised in many rural areas on the mainland, with rates of over 80 per cent among some ethnic groups. No prosecutions were reported. The World Health Organization reported a high rate of domestic violence in Tanzania, with 30 per cent of victims suffering serious injuries due to severe beatings.

Prison conditions

The government accepted the need to reduce severe overcrowding in prisons but little action was taken. The National Commission for Human Rights and Good Governance inspected mainland prisons and criticized harsh conditions, particularly the holding of juvenile prisoners together with adults. The Commission was still barred by the Zanzibar government from working or opening an office in Zanzibar.

Migrants' rights

The government ordered the deportation of all illegal immigrants who had failed to register or apply for citizenship. Deportations began of several thousand people originating from neighbouring countries such as Rwanda, Burundi, Uganda and Democratic Republic of the Congo who had lived in Tanzania for up to 15 years or longer. There was a much larger number of such people, some of whom were former refugees integrated into rural communities who had never regularized their status.

Death penalty

In August President Kikwete commuted all death sentences on mainland Tanzania to life imprisonment. The total number of commutations was not officially disclosed, but was estimated to be about 400. Many of the prisoners had been on death row for several years. At the end of 2006, no one was under sentence of death in Tanzania, either on the mainland or in Zanzibar.