Tanzania on Sunday held local government elections, viewed as a test case ahead of national polls next year, with the main opposition party boycotting the ballot citing violence and intimidation.
The long-ruling Chama Cha Mapinduzi (CCM) party of President John Magufuli is therefore set to sweep the board.
The nationwide polls, with over 19 million registered voters, elect the lowest rung of local government leaders.
The posts, for the chair of villages and streets, are critical for organising public meetings and mobilising grass-root support campaigning.
They hold considerable power. Elderly people in Tanzania do not pay for medical services, but need to have the endorsement from a local leader to access it.
Chadema, the main opposition party, said in November it would not be taking part because its candidates were too fearful, or were disqualified from running by stringent rules they say were used to block them.
Five other smaller parties have also joined the boycott.
Chadema say their activists have been kidnapped and beaten, and at least one has blamed authorities for an attack in 2017, which saw him shot multiple times.
Several have disappeared and turned up murdered.
"Our party believes it is wiser not to support such electoral cheating," Chadema president Freeman Mbowe said in November.
"To continue to participate in elections of this kind is to legitimise illegality."
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