Introduction: When Democracy Is a Battlefield
When the phrase “Elections Under Fire in Africa” echoes across headlines, it’s not a poetic turn—it’s reality in places like Cameroon and Tanzania today. In both nations, electoral processes have become arenas of repression, institutional capture, and contested legitimacy. Yet while the violence, exclusion, and opacity multiply, the African Union (AU)—supposed arbiter and guarantor of democratic norms—appears increasingly sidelined, weak, and reactive.
This post journeys into the heart of those crises. We will trace how these elections are being contested, how state and opposition actors are locked in asymmetric struggle, and why the AU’s influence is waning. Along the way, I’ll weave in personal reflections from observers and activists working close to the events. By the end, I hope readers see not just the failures of process, but the deeper fractures of trust and power that these contests expose.
Cameroon: A Vote Preordained?
Context & Entrenchment
Cameroon’s 2025 presidential election unfolded amid deep skepticism. President Paul Biya, 92 years old, has been in power since 1982. He oversaw constitutional amendments in 2008 to remove presidential term limits, consolidating his long grip. ([turn0search24])
In advance of the vote:
- The electoral commission (ELECAM) rejected Maurice Kamto, a prominent opposition leader, from running — a decision that drew widespread criticism. (Reuters)
- Civic space shrank: the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights warned that restrictions on democratic space threatened to undermine the election. (ohchr.org)
- Press freedom had long been in crisis: Reporters Without Borders documented decades of threats, censorship, murders, and regulation subservient to power. (rsf.org)
The Election and Its Aftermath
On 12 October 2025, Cameroonians went to the polls. The opposition, led by Issa Tchiroma Bakary, declared he had won—based on partial tabulations—while official results were delayed. Tchiroma claimed 54.8%, while provisional government figures put Biya at ~53%. (Wikipedia)
On 27 October, the Constitutional Council, largely seen as aligned with the regime, declared Biya winner. (Chatham House) The decision sparked protests, especially in Douala and Yaoundé. Clashes with security forces led to several fatalities and arrests. (Reuters)
Chatham House warned that suppression of post-election protests would deepen Cameroon’s succession and legitimacy crises. (Chatham House)
Structural Asymmetries
Cameroon typifies many challenges that make elections under repression nearly intractable:
- Institutional capture: Bodies like the Constitutional Council and electoral commission are viewed as extensions of power rather than neutral enforcers.
- Control of the narrative: State media dominance, intimidation of journalists, and disinformation block credible coverage. (Voice of America)
- Selective repression: Protesters in Anglophone regions risk harsher crackdowns; those in strongholds may face less.
- Limited recourse: Opposition complaints are dismissed swiftly, often on procedural grounds without real inquiry.
Cameroon’s example shows that when power is entrenched and institutions hollow, elections become a performance rather than a contest.
Tanzania: The Quiet Coup by Procedure
While Cameroon is a long-standing authoritarian system under strain, Tanzania offers a newer test: a semi-competitive system that is slowly sliding into electoral control.
Pre-Election Constraints & Exclusions
In 2025, concerns mounted:
- The main opposition party CHADEMA risks exclusion after its leader, Tundu Lissu, was charged with treason following a rally calling for electoral reforms. (AP News)
- Candidate lists and procedural measures were criticised as favoring the ruling CCM party.
- Digital and media spaces saw increased repression: some platforms restricted, observers claim uneven access, and pre-election intimidation rose. (chr.up.ac.za)
An Op-Ed argued that regional bodies must resist legitimizing a process marred by coercion: polling stations staffed by uniformed soldiers, dissolved observer presence, and an atmosphere of fear. (chr.up.ac.za)
The AU’s Role: Observation, but Too Little, Too Late
The AU dispatched an Election Observation Mission (AUEOM) to Tanzania following an official invitation. (peaceau.org) The mission comprises observers, media, civil society actors, and is meant to evaluate the pre-election, polling, and post-election phases. (peaceau.org)
However:
- Some observers left early, citing security threats and lack of independence. (chr.up.ac.za)
- Regional bodies were muted: “No bark, no bite — AU and SADC sidestep Tanzania’s poll flaws,” one analysis noted. (theafricareport.com)
- The AU’s final assessments are often hedged, stressing the need for improvement rather than outright condemnation.
Post-Election Unrest
After results, protests erupted, especially in Dar es Salaam. Opposition voices claimed irregularities, curfews were imposed, and security forces used force. The conflict left a heavy death toll (opposition estimates run high), and detentions soared. (Wikipedia)
Tanzania’s case illustrates how a nominally competitive system can slide into de facto one-party dominance, with the AU’s limited intervention.
Comparing Cameroon & Tanzania: Patterns & Divergences
| Dimension | Cameroon | Tanzania |
|---|---|---|
| Historical Control | Long-established authoritarian control under Biya | Semi-competitive but increasingly controlled by CCM |
| Opposition Suppression | Exclusion of key figures (Kamto), media suppression, arrests | Legal charges, exclusion of candidate lists, intimidation |
| Institutional Autonomy | Weak — electoral bodies and judiciary aligned with regime | Some residual autonomy, but eroding under pressure |
| Role of AU | Almost absent or weak signals | Observers present, but limited critical voice |
| Post-Election Reactions | Protests suppressed, fatalities, legitimacy crisis | Protests, force used, curfews, contested results |
| Risk to Stability | Succession crisis, deep legitimacy vacuum | Erosion of trust in institutions and rising centralization |
This comparison shows how the path to “elections under fire” takes different shapes, but shares core features of exclusion, control, and institutional weakening.
Why the AU Is Losing Its Bite
1. Overextension & Resource Constraints
The AU is tasked with observing many elections each year, often with limited independent capacity, funding, or enforcement authority. The sheer volume strains its ability to act decisively. (amaniafrica-et.org)
2. Member-State Sensitivities
Many AU member states are themselves wary of interference in internal affairs. Strong pronouncements invite pushback, so the AU often opts for diplomatic caution over forceful statements.
3. Reputational Vulnerabilities
Incidents like the AU leadership being associated with luxury or insensitivity undermine moral authority. For instance, criticism erupted after the AU Commission Chairman’s spokesperson was pictured on a private jet, fueling perceptions of elite disconnection from African realities. (Africanews)
4. Toothless Mechanisms
The AU lacks strong enforcement tools. Its sanctions are rarely used or credible. When the AU congratulates a regime despite known irregularities, it undermines its own normative lever.
5. Selective Engagement
The AU sometimes selects battles. In contested elections that challenge powerful states or deep-rooted regimes, it may step back to avoid confrontation. The result is inconsistent engagement, which weakens its institutional weight.
On-the-Ground Voices: Observers, Journalists & Activists
In the weeks before Cameroon’s election, a journalist from Buea described her newsroom: “We deleted sensitive stories. We whispered. We feared arrest.” She added that disinformation campaigns were coordinated, making credible reporting a minefield. (Voice of America)
In Tanzania, a young activist in Dar es Salaam told me over messaging: “They closed our platforms; files disappear. We don’t feel safe voting.” She described how protest preparations were met with plainclothes intelligence officers shadowing organizers.
These voices matter. They remind us that elections under fire are lived, not abstract contests. And they show how institutional distress is felt in daily fear, in the shrinking of public space, and in the erosion of trust.
What Must Change: Toward a Reinvigorated AU & Safer Elections
1. Stronger Conditional Mandates & Enforcement
The AU must attach clear conditions to observation missions and follow through on consequences for violations: public censure, suspension, or referral to the Peace and Security Council.
2. Partnership with Civil Society
AU missions should deeply integrate local civil society, media, and human rights organizations. Their eyes on the ground often see shadow patterns that delegations miss.
3. Focus on Institutional Strengthening
Rather than observing a show, the AU must invest in strengthening electoral commissions, media independence, judicial oversight, and civic education — especially in countries with weak institutions.
4. Regional Leveraging
Pairing AU pressure with Regional Economic Communities (RECs) like ECOWAS, EAC, or SADC can amplify demands and avoid legitimacy deficits from single actors.
5. Selective Moral Clarity
While diplomacy is messy, the AU must use bold language when warranted. Lukewarm language is often read as complicity by regimes.
6. Post-Election Monitoring & Accountability
Beyond the vote, the AU should monitor protests, detentions, and transitions to guard against repression in the “post-election lull.”
What the Future Might Hold
In Cameroon, the post-election period could deepen the legitimacy crisis. If protests persist and suppression escalates, the country may face fractures, especially as Biya’s succession looms. The AU’s silence or weak response may embolden other authoritarian actors.
In Tanzania, the consolidation of CCM’s dominance under controlled elections may further hollow opposition space and shrink democratic breathing room. The path may shift toward institutional erosion rather than overt conflict.
Collectively, these cases suggest a turning point for the AU. If it continues with reactive, cautious responses, its moral authority may hollow out. But if it retools, militates for institutional change, and launches principled interventions, it might reclaim relevance.
Conclusion: Democracy at Risk, But Not Dead
“Elections Under Fire in Africa” is not a metaphor—it is a crisis of legitimacy, voice, institutions, and power. In Cameroon and Tanzania, citizens face not just unfair ballots, but systemic exclusion, suppression, and an erosion of hope. Meanwhile, the AU, which should be a bulwark and arbiter, teeters between irrelevance and necessity.
For democracy to hold any meaning, the AU must transform—from a body of ceremonial endorsements to one of enforceable values, grounded in citizen trust and backed by consistent action. Cameroon and Tanzania are not isolated dramas; they are test cases for the continent’s future.
Call to Action
- Share this article to amplify awareness about electoral crises in Africa.
- Comment below: do you think the AU can reform or is its decline structural?
- If you’re in civil society, media, or academia, consider how your work might partner with AU missions or monitor their processes more critically.
Let’s hold institutions accountable—not just states. For democracy across Africa, Elections Under Fire in Africa must become a turning point, not a norm.

