Boniface Mwangi Detained In Tanzania, Family Can’t Reach Him

Activist Boniface Mwangi was arrested at his hotel in Tanzania where he had planned to attend an opposition leader’s treason trial.
Mwangi — one of the most prominent campaigners against corruption and police violence in Kenya — was among several regional activists who travelled to Tanzania to show solidarity with opposition leader Tundu Lissu during his court appearance on Monday.
Lissu’s Chadema party has been banned from taking part in elections due in October after insisting on reforms.
Several activists, including former justice minister and presidential candidate Martha Karua, were denied entry at the airport ahead of his latest hearing and deported. Mwangi’s wife Njeri said she had not been able to contact him since his arrest.
“I have been told they are waiting for the government of Tanzania to consult and decide whether to charge him or to deport him,” she said.
Tanzanian President Samia Suluhu Hassan said Monday that foreign activists would not be allowed to interfere in the country’s affairs and urged security organs “not to allow ill-mannered individuals from other countries to cross the line here”.
According to Njeri, Mwangi was taken from the Serena Hotel alongside Ugandan activist Agather Atuhaire.
They spent the night at the central police station in Dar es Salaam, his lawyer Jebra Kambole.
Activists say the events in Tanzania are part of a wider erosion of democracy across east Africa.
In neighbouring Uganda, opposition leader Kizza Besigye is also on trial for treason after being kidnapped in Kenya and taken across the border.
Karua, the Kenyan presidential candidate, is serving as his lawyer.
She travelled to Uganda on Tuesday ahead of Besigye’s latest hearing the following day, and posted online that “entry was without a hitch”.
In Nairobi, police were deployed to the offices of Mwangi as the family planned to have a press conference over his detention.
A group of activists protested outside the Tanzanian Consulate in Mombasa, demanding the release of Mwangi and Ugandan journalist Agather Atuhaire, detained in Tanzania.
