In Tanzania and Uganda, legitimate concerns are cast as foreign intervention.

Source Council on Foreign Relations

President Samia Suluhu Hassan addresses a joint press conference with President Yoweri Museveni during his working visit at the State House grounds in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania on February 7, 2026.
President Samia Suluhu Hassan addresses a joint press conference with President Yoweri Museveni during his working visit at the State House grounds in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania on February 7, 2026. Emmanuel Herman/REUTERS

By Michelle Gavin, Ralph Bunche Senior Fellow for Africa Policy Studies

Published April 28, 2026 5:13 p.m.

    Last week, Tanzania’s government-appointed Commission of Inquiry handed over its report on the 2025 post-election violence to President Samia Suluhu Hassan. While some Tanzanians expressed appreciation that the state was finally willing to acknowledge that 518 people were killed (the report’s death toll was likely a significant undercount), the exercise missed the mark if it was intended to restore trust or bolster accountability.

    The integrity of the report was doomed from the start. An incumbent supposedly elected with an eye-rolling 98 percent of the vote hand-picked the officials charged with investigating the bloody crackdown on post-election protests. President Samia had already claimed, without evidence, that the protests were orchestrated by shadowy, foreign-backed entities bent on overthrowing the government, and her chosen commissioners largely reinforced this narrative of blaming citizens for, among other things, “lack of patriotism.” Somehow the critical question of who did the killing was evaded, despite numerous reports and video evidence of security forces firing on unarmed civilians. Instead, the focus of the state remains firmly on the “organizers of chaos,” and it is plain that plans for future judicial proceedings will not include accountability for security forces. Adding insult to injury, the report was handed over to the president but not made available to the public.

    Samia’s advisors were quick to paint the exercise as one contributing to national healing and unity, and to assert that international investors should feel reassured and confident in the country going forward. But ultimately, the message sent by the Commission of Inquiry is the same message sent by the country’s farcical election results: citizens just need to get with the program, as defined by the elites in charge. The authorities have written the script, and everyone else is to play their part, or else. It’s an attempt to control popular will and events that finds expression in censorship, internet shutdowns, co-option, and intimidation.

    In Uganda, it’s also a message sent by proposed legislation, the “Protection of Sovereignty” bill. Masquerading as an attempt to flush out manipulative foreign influences, the draft law uses vague language to criminalize an astonishingly wide range of activity, and even manages to classify Ugandan citizens residing outside of Uganda as “foreigners.” This effort to control Ugandans’ speech and association is manifestly about isolating and undermining civil society, and Ugandans know it. Social media is filled with comments expressing contempt for the government’s power grab, while others allege that the real aim of the bill is to silence opposition leader Bobi Wine, who was forced to flee the country in the face of death threats and security forces’ invasion of his home when he dared to challenge President Museveni at the ballot box.

    Perhaps it is unsurprising that two governments so closely associated with transnational repression, so willing to detain and threaten activists and dissidents traveling within the region, are so fixated on the idea of nefarious foreign plots. But it’s plain to see that rather than protecting their societies from external manipulation, they are focused on protecting themselves. Ugandans are fed up with corruption. Tanzanians are appalled by state-sponsored violence. Even if their leaders sealed off their countries and shut down the internet forever, they would still confront popular opposition to the status quo. Museveni and Samia know this; it’s why Uganda deploys the military around Kampala on election day and why Tanzania refused to let prominent opposition figures on the ballot. The contradiction between the script these leaders prefer, in which subversive foreigners are the real problem, and the reality, of their aggrieved societies demanding change, cannot be reconciled. Museveni and Samia have reasons to fear change agents. They just can’t seem to accept that the call is coming from inside the house.