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Kenya: Maraga Campaign Slams Tanzania for Blocking Kenyan Observers At Lissu Trial

Nairobi — Former Chief Justice David Maraga’s Presidential Campaign has criticized Tanzanian authorities for detaining and deporting several Kenyans who traveled to Dar es Salaam to observe the trial of opposition leader Tundu Lissu.

In a statement following Maraga’s appearance in court for the trial hearing arising from Lissu’s ‘No Reforms, No Election’ call, the campaign described the deportations as “draconian acts” that undermine regional unity and democratic principles.

“The shrinking civic and democratic spaces in East Africa should be of concern to all of us,” the campaign cautioned on Monday.

Maraga’s campaign warned that such actions “erode the fundamental right to a fair and public hearing enshrined in international human rights law.”

“We strongly condemn the draconian acts of detention and deportation against citizens of the East African community who traveled to observe the trial of lawyer, Tundu Lissu,” the Maraga campaign said.

“The rapidly increasing trend of abductions, arbitrary arrests, detentions and extra-judicial killings undermines the welfare of our African Jumuiya.”

Maraga, who is eying the presidency in 2027, arrived in Dar es Salaam on Monday morning and made his way to court where Lissu was appearing for trial despite the detention of several Kenyans including his predecessor Willy Mutunga.

Tanzanian authorities held Mutunga who had arrived earlier accompanied by human rights activists Hanifa Adan and Hussein Khalid.

Immigration officials had earlier deported former Constitutional Affairs Minister Martha Karua, lawyer Gloria Kimani, and rights campaigner Lynn Ngugi in what appeared as a coordinated crackdown on Kenyan legal and civil society figures attending the trial.

Boniface Mwangi, a close ally of Mutunga, reported an attempted intrusion into his hotel room at 1am by unidentified individuals claiming to be “friends.”

The Maraga campaign noted it had learnt of similar frustrations from “other friends of democracy from Uganda”.

While some of the detained individuals have since returned to Kenya, the campaign emphasized that “it is not well in our region,” adding that “the fight for democratic spaces grows deeper.”

Maraga’s campaign highlighted the legacy of Tanzania’s founding President Julius Nyerere, praising the country’s historical role in supporting liberation movements and hosting exiled fighters during struggles against colonialism and apartheid.

The campaign warned the crackdown on Kenyan lawyers could erode Tanzania’s Pan-African image.

“Tanzania has given us exemplary lessons in Pan-Africanism… This history of institutionalized humanity has given Tanzania the character of Utu we all wish to emulate,” Maraga’s campaign noted.