Dar es Salaam, 25 November, 2019 / 4:44 am (ACI Africa).
On Sunday, November 24, the East African country of Tanzania held local government elections, with the main opposition party, Chama cha Demokrasia na Mapinduzi (CHADEMA) boycotting the polls, a phenomenon Bishop Joseph Roman Mlola of Kigoma had hinted to in an interview with ACI Africa November 21.
“Things are not all that prepared because of some confusion here and there,” Bishop Mlola had told ACI Africa days to the elections and highlighted some of the challenges in the process leading to the polls, including disqualification of some candidates due to technicalities in requirements, which was interpreted as intimidation.
“Some parties have pulled out and now it is as if it will be rather for one party,” the Tanzanian Prelate had said referencing the possibility that the main opposition would boycott the elections, leaving the race for the long-ruling party, Chama Cha Mapinduzi (CCM), a situation he disapproved terming it “not good because we are a multiparty nation.”
He had prayed that the challenges would be surmounted “so that people may go to the elections freely and so the elections may be fair and free."
Regarded as significant in offering a preview of the bigger polls, the national elections slated to take place at the end of 2020, the nationwide local government elections have eligible Tanzanians vote for their respective streets and villages’ representatives.