Tag: Mange Kimambi

  • Tanzanian Activist Blocked From Instagram After Mobilising Election Protests

    Tanzanian Activist Blocked From Instagram After Mobilising Election Protests

    Prominent Tanzanian activist Mange Kimambi has accused the government of instigating the removal of her social media accounts that she has been using to mobilise Tanzanians against the government.

    The former fashion model-turned-activist, who is based in the US, is an outspoken critic of President Samia Suluhu Hassan and had nearly three million followers on Instagram.

    She has been accused of inciting the recent deadly election protests, sparking calls for her arrest.

    A Meta spokesperson told the BBC that her Instagram accounts had been “removed for violating our recidivism policy”. Tanzania government spokesman Gerson Msigwa told the BBC that she should “provide proof of her claims”.

    “We don’t allow people to create new accounts that are similar to those we’ve previously removed for violating our Community Standards,” said Meta, the parent parent company of Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp.

    In what is believed to be a reference to Kimambi last month, Tanzania’s Attorney-General Hamza Johari said it was “impossible” how “one person outside the country” was directing people through social media.

    “[She is] just telling people to do such things [protest] and they actually go and do it and she starts boasting… We must arrest her,” he said.

    Widespread protests followed the disputed 29 October elections, which Samia won with about 98% after her key opponents were unable to contest the poll – Tundu Lissu is detained on treason charges, while Luhaga Mpina was barred on technical grounds

    The opposition and rights groups believe hundreds of people were killed in the crackdown by security officers in the aftermath. The government has not released any casualty figures.

    Despite widespread international condemnation, Samia has since defended the use of force as “necessary” against protesters who “were ready to overthrow the government”.

    On Monday, Samia said her government was ready to confront protesters in the fresh protests planned for Tuesday next week.

    Kimambi noted that on the same day her accounts were removed, those of another prominent Tanzanian activist, Maria Sarungi, were restricted.

    “I believe this provides further evidence that Meta may have been pressured by the Tanzanian government to silence voices speaking out for the people,” she wrote on her X account, which is still available.

    She also asked US President Donald Trump to urge Meta to reinstate her pages.

    “For months, I used my platforms to highlight these issues and consistently encouraged PEACEFUL protests, as many Tanzanians feel there is no safe alternative for expressing dissent,” she said.

    Popularly known as dada wa taifa (sister of the nation), Kimambi built her influence primarily through her social media platforms and began her campaign against the Tanzanian government during the presidency of the late John Magufuli in 2016.

    Two years later, she unsuccessfully attempted to mobilise nationwide protests against his government.

    In 2021, she publicly switched her stance and backed Samia when she took office after Magufuli’s death, even though they are both from the CCM party that has governed Tanzania since independence. Kimambi even attended Samia’s first official visit to the US, where the two were photographed together.

    However, that relationship later deteriorated, and Kimambi now uses the same platform to sharply criticise President Samia and her administration.

    Her critics dismiss her political activism and accuse her of using offensive language when criticising the president and other top government officials.

    Kimambi already faces charges of economic sabotage, which came up in court in Dar es Salaam on Thursday. The case was postponed to 28 January, with state prosecutors saying the matter was still under investigation.

    She faces one count of money laundering in the case involving over $56,000 (£42,000) alleged to be proceeds of crime obtained about three years ago.

    It is alleged that she acquired the money by working as a journalist without accreditation, and obtained payment through intimidation. The case was initially filed on 28 August, alleging that she had obtained the money in 2022.

    In a post on her Instagram page before it became unavailable, she dismissed the case as “cooked”, adding that it “won’t change her views about the president”.

    She said the case was linked to her account with a Tanzanian bank that held $40,000. She claimed her last transaction in the account was in 2023 and that it was frozen last year.

    The government has not responded to the accusations that the charges are politically motivated and previously told the BBC to refer to the court case.

    In many of her recent posts on Instagram, Kimambi has called on Tanzanians to resist the administration and turn up for protests, including the one planned for 9 December. She also shared images of the aftermath of the election protests.

    The removal of Kimambi’s accounts come as the US says it is reviewing its relationship with Tanzania, citing growing concerns over democratic backsliding and human rights.

    In a statement issued on Thursday by the Department of State, Washington accuses the Tanzanian government of repressing religious freedom and free speech, blocking US investment, and failing to prevent violence before and after the 29 October elections.

    It says these actions have put American citizens, tourists, and US interests at risk and threaten decades of security and development cooperation.

    “The future of our bilateral relationship will be based on the government’s actions,” says the statement.

    The Tanzanian authorities have not yet responded.

    (BBC)

  • Outspoken Samia Critic Mange Kimambi Hit With Money-Laundering Charges In Tanzania

    Outspoken Samia Critic Mange Kimambi Hit With Money-Laundering Charges In Tanzania

    Prominent Tanzanian social media activist Mange Kimambi, a vocal critic of President Samia Suluhu Hassan’s administration who resides in the United States, has been charged in her home country with economic sabotage.

    She faces one count of money laundering involving Tsh138.5 million.

    The case is scheduled for mention on December 4 this year before Senior Resident Magistrate Hassan Makube at the Kisutu Resident Magistrate’s Court in Dar es Salaam. The matter was filed by the prosecution on August 28 this year.

    On the morning of December 2, 2025, Mange appeared in a widely circulated video on social media, confirming that she had been informed of the charges, claiming that the Tanzanian Government intends to bring her back to the country.

    In Criminal Case No. 000021172 of 2025, the alleged offence falls under Sections 12(1)(d) and 13(a) of the Anti-Money Laundering Act, Cap 423 of 2019, read together with the Economic and Organised Crime Control Act.

    According to the charge sheet, the prosecution alleges that between March 1 and March 31, 2022, at various locations in Dar es Salaam, she obtained Tsh138.5 million knowing that the money was proceeds of crime.

    The Tanzanian prosecutors further alleged that Mange acquired the money by working as a journalist without accreditation and by demanding the money through intimidation.

  • Tanzania Demands Extradition of US-Based Activist Mange Kimambi Over Social Media Posts on Post-Election Violence

    Tanzania Demands Extradition of US-Based Activist Mange Kimambi Over Social Media Posts on Post-Election Violence

    Tanzania’s newly reappointed Attorney General Hamza Said Johari has sparked controversy after publicly demanding the arrest and extradition of outspoken activist Mange Kimambi from the United States, accusing her of inciting unrest through social media.

    Johari, who was reinstated as Attorney General barely 24 hours earlier, made the declaration in a video that has since gone viral in Tanzania.

    In the clip, he accused Kimambi of “using digital platforms to destabilize the country” by publishing videos alleging state-sponsored executions of citizens during the recent post-election violence.

    https://www.instagram.com/reel/DQsHRmrEu6q/?igsh=aHRwM2NscWF5dDVv

    The renewed protests across several Tanzanian towns followed what opposition groups described as a stolen election.

    Rights monitors claim hundreds of people have been killed or disappeared in the government crackdown, although authorities insist they are restoring order against what they term “lawless mobs.”

    Johari’s comments marked a sharp escalation in the government’s attempts to silence dissenting voices abroad.

    He instructed Tanzanian security and diplomatic agencies to liaise with their US counterparts to facilitate Kimambi’s arrest and extradition, arguing that her online activities amounted to criminal incitement.

    But Kimambi, who has long been a fierce critic of President Samia Suluhu Hassan’s administration, fired back in a defiant Instagram post.

    “Appointed Attorney General today, and the first thing you do is demand Mange Kimambi’s extradition,” she wrote. “You’ve killed thousands of Tanzanian youths, but you’re after Mange — not the killers or those who ordered the killings.”

    The activist ridiculed the possibility of her extradition, questioning what crime she had committed under US law.

    “The US government will laugh at you like the fools that you are. What law have I broken? Exposing your corruption and stolen elections? Organising peaceful protests? You can’t arrest me for telling the truth.”

    She further alleged that the Tanzanian government had contracted Mexican cartels to track her down, describing herself as living under constant threat.

    “Will you bring me back to Tanzania after I’ve been shot by the Mexican Cartel or while I’m walking? Be specific,” she said sarcastically.

    Kimambi, who rose to prominence through her unfiltered broadcasts on Instagram and X (formerly Twitter), has a massive online following and has frequently accused the government of extrajudicial killings and election manipulation.

    Tanzanian authorities have long viewed her as a destabilising figure, previously issuing warrants over alleged cybercrime and sedition.

    Legal analysts say Tanzania’s request faces steep diplomatic and legal hurdles.

    Although the United States and Tanzania maintain an extradition treaty dating back decades, it primarily covers criminal offences — not political speech or activism protected under the US Constitution’s First Amendment.

    “Unless the Tanzanian government can prove Kimambi has committed a recognized crime under both jurisdictions, the US would have no legal basis to extradite her,” said a legal expert familiar with extradition law.

    The standoff underscores the growing tension between Tanzania’s government and its diaspora critics, many of whom fled after a decade of political crackdowns under former President John Magufuli and continued restrictions under President Suluhu.

    Kimambi ended her fiery response with a vow to one day return to Tanzania — but on her own terms. “One day, I will return to Tanzania myself, for my own peace,” she wrote.

    “But it won’t be because you forced me back so you can arrest and shoot me like those children. It won’t happen.”

    As the Tanzanian government doubles down on its pursuit of exiled critics, human rights groups warn that Johari’s latest remarks signal an alarming slide toward transnational repression — targeting dissidents far beyond the country’s borders.

    https://www.instagram.com/reel/DQs1q_HEUrv/?igsh=MXM0a2xlc3pmZnY1OQ==