Post-election violence killed 518 in Tanzania: Govt inquiry

At least 518 people died in last year's post election violence in Tanzania, which happened amid an internet shutdown, a commission formed to investigate said on Thursday.
Thousands of people were injured in the violence, with more than 800 people having gunshot wounds.
The commission chairman, Mohamed Chande Othman, said that the number of deaths was likely to be higher, because some families buried their loved ones without taking their bodies to morgues.
Tanzania experienced post election violence on October 29, after young people took to the streets, accusing the Government of silencing the opposition, as the country's main opposition party leader remained in prison for treason and the presidential candidate for the second-largest opposition party was barred from running.
The internet was shut down in the country for days, a move that President Samia Suluhu Hassan later apologized to the diplomatic community for and promised would never happen again.
Hassan was seeking a second term in office after serving out the term of her predecessor, John Magufuli, after he died in office.
Hassan won with 97 per cent of the vote, and some international observers said the election fell short of a free and fair vote.
Othman recommended that a further investigation be conducted on the use of firearms, as some of the witnesses told the commission that their loved ones were shot while sitting inside their houses.
Since the violence, 245 people remain unaccounted for, and 39 families reported having seen the bodies of their loved ones in morgues before they later disappeared.










