Tanzania

United Republic of Tanzania

Country panel · State Media Monitor 2026

Country at a glance

Population
68.6 million (World Bank, 2024); approximately 70.6 million (UNFPA 2025 estimate)
GDP per capita
Approximately US$1,300–1,400
Capital
Dodoma (official); Dar es Salaam (commercial); Zanzibar City (Zanzibar)
Official languages
Kiswahili, English
Government
Presidential constitutional republic; Union formed in 1964 from Tanganyika (independent 1961) and Zanzibar (independent 1963)
President (Union)
Samia Suluhu Hassan (CCM); in office since March 2021; re-elected 29 October 2025 with 97.66% of the vote
President (Zanzibar)
Dr Hussein Ali Mwinyi (CCM); re-elected 28–29 October 2025 with 74.8%; inaugurated 1 November 2025 at New Amani Complex Stadium, Unguja
Ruling party
Chama Cha Mapinduzi (CCM); in power continuously since independence (under TANU and Afro-Shirazi Party prior to 1977 merger)

Media regulatory environment

Union regulator
Tanzania Communications Regulatory Authority (TCRA) for broadcasting, spectrum, and electronic communications on the mainland
Union print authority
Tanzania Information Services (MAELEZO) for newspaper registration and editorial accountability under the Media Services Act framework
Zanzibar regulator
Zanzibar Broadcasting Commission; the TCRA Act does not apply to Zanzibar in respect of broadcasting and content matters
Key statutes
TBC Act No. 3 of 2025; Media Services Act, 2016; Electronic and Postal Communications Act; Cybercrimes Act; Online Content Regulations (TCRA); Zanzibar Broadcasting Corporation Act, 2013; The Establishment of the Corporation of Government Newspapers Act, No. 11 of 2008
Minister of Information (Union)
Paul Makonda (Minister of Information, Culture, Arts and Sports per 2026/27 budget cycle)
Platform restrictions
X reportedly blocked from May 2025, with official confirmation in early June 2025 (Access Now); JamiiForums access blocked and licence suspended for 90 days by TCRA on 6 September 2025 (CPJ); complete internet shutdown 29 October – 3 November 2025 (OHCHR)

Key events, 2025–26

29 October 2025
Union general election; Samia Suluhu Hassan declared winner with 97.66% amid disputed high-turnout figures; Chadema and ACT-Wazalendo barred from the Union presidential race
28–29 October 2025
Zanzibar general election; Mwinyi re-elected with 74.8% (448,892 votes); ACT-Wazalendo’s Othman Masoud Othman 23.22% (139,399 votes); turnout 84.88%; CCM 40 of 50 House of Representatives constituency seats
Post-election period
OHCHR reported hundreds of extrajudicial killings, enforced disappearances, mass detentions; AU Election Observation Mission found election did not comply with AU democratic standards
23 April 2026
Government-appointed commission chaired by Mohamed Chande Othman documented 518 deaths across 11 regions; full report not made public; Human Rights Watch criticised the commission for failing to establish full accountability
January 2025
TBC Act No. 3 of 2025 passed by Parliament on 30 January 2025; assented April 2025, replacing earlier statutory framework
2 March 2026
High Court Commercial Division placed Sahara Communication and Publishing Co Ltd under compulsory winding-up; joint liquidators appointed (Alex Gaithan Mgongolwa; Frank Mwalongo); outlets remained operational under liquidator supervision
Press freedom (RSF 2026)
117 / 180 — a drop of 22 places from 95/180 in 2025

State and state-aligned media — 8 media organisations and groups

Tanzania Broadcasting Corporation (TBC)
Mainland · National TV and radio public broadcaster · Founded 1 July 2007 · TBC Act No. 3 of 2025 · 100% state-owned through the Treasury Registrar
SC
Tanzania Standard Newspapers Ltd (TSN)
Mainland · Print · Nationalised in 1970 · Publishes Daily News, Sunday News, HabariLEO, SpotiLEO · Government-owned limited-liability company
CaPu
Sahara Media Group
Mainland · Multi-platform · Founded by Dr Anthony Mwandu Diallo (former CCM MP / cabinet minister) · Star TV, Radio Free Africa, Kiss FM · Placed under compulsory winding-up by High Court Commercial Division on 2 March 2026
CaPr
Uhuru Media Group
Mainland · Multi-platform · CCM party-media structure · Print: Uhuru (since 9 December 1961), Mzalendo, Uelekeo, Burudani · Radio: Uhuru Radio, Magic FM, Classic FM · Television: Channel Ten, Channel Ten Plus, C2C, CTN via Africa Media Group
CaPr
IPP Media
Mainland · Multi-platform · IPP Group (founded by the late Dr Reginald Mengi, 1944–2019) · The Guardian, Nipashe, ITV, Radio One, EATV, Capital Television, Capital Radio, East Africa Radio
CaPr
Azam Media Ltd
Mainland · Multi-platform · Bakhresa Group Broadcast & Media Division · AzamTV launched 4 December 2013 · ~1.43 million active decoders (December 2025); Tanzania Premier League rights TZS 225.6bn 10-year (2021)
CaPr
Zanzibar Broadcasting Corporation (ZBC)
Zanzibar · TV and radio public broadcaster · Sauti ya Unguja launched 1951; TVZ inaugurated 12 January 1974 · Zanzibar Broadcasting Corporation Act, 2013 · TVZ / ZBC TV, ZBC Radio, Spice FM
SC
Zanzibar Newspaper Corporation (ZNC) / SMSZ
Zanzibar · Print · The Establishment of the Corporation of Government Newspapers Act, No. 11 of 2008 · Zanzibar Leo (launched 12 January 2002 by President Karume), Zanzibar Leo Jumapili, Zasport, Zanzibar Mail, Zanzibar Leo Wanawake
SC
Typology distribution 3 SC · 1 CaPu · 4 CaPr

State Media Monitor 2026 · May 2026 · See the State Media Matrix typology for category definitions (SC = State Controlled; CaPu = Captured Public; CaPr = Captured Private).

The United Republic of Tanzania is a presidential constitutional republic formed from the 1964 Union of Tanganyika (independent from Britain in 1961) and Zanzibar (independent from Britain in 1963, with the Zanzibar Revolution in January 1964). The country has a population of approximately 70 million (World Bank: 68.6 million in 2024; UNFPA 2025 estimate around 70.6 million), a GDP per capita of around US$1,300–1,400, and a two-tier governance structure in which the Government of the United Republic exercises Union-wide authority on matters such as defence, foreign affairs, and citizenship, while the Revolutionary Government of Zanzibar retains autonomy over Zanzibar’s domestic affairs, including its own legislature, judiciary, and media-regulation framework.

Samia Suluhu Hassan, of the ruling Chama Cha Mapinduzi (CCM) party, has served as President since March 2021, assuming office after the death of President John Pombe Magufuli,and was re-elected on 29 October 2025. CCM has held power continuously since the country’s independence, governing through its predecessor parties TANU and the Afro-Shirazi Party prior to their 1977 merger. The Zanzibar archipelago is governed by President Dr Hussein Ali Mwinyi (CCM), re-elected on 28–29 October 2025 and inaugurated for a second five-year term on 1 November 2025 at the New Amani Complex Stadium in Unguja.

The 29 October 2025 general election placed Tanzania’s media landscape under unusually intense scrutiny. President Samia Suluhu Hassan was declared winner of the Union presidential race with 97.66% of the vote amid disputed high-turnout figures, after the two largest opposition parties, Chadema (whose leader Tundu Lissu faced treason charges) and ACT-Wazalendo on the mainland (whose Union presidential candidate Luhaga Mpina was disqualified on technicalities), were barred from the Union presidential race. The African Union Election Observation Mission noted that the election did not comply with AU democratic standards, citing ballot-stuffing, expulsion of opposition agents, and obstruction of observers during counting.

The Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights reported allegations of hundreds of extrajudicial killings, enforced disappearances, mass detentions, and a complete internet shutdown from 29 October to 3 November 2025. Restrictions on social-media platforms (X reportedly blocked from May 2025, with official confirmation in early June 2025, per Access Now; JamiiForums access blocked and its licence suspended for 90 days by the Tanzania Communications Regulatory Authority on 6 September 2025 per CPJ) constrained independent reporting throughout the campaign and post-election periods. On 23 April 2026, a government-appointed commission of inquiry chaired by Mohamed Chande Othman documented 518 deaths across 11 regions during and after the elections; the full report has not been made public, and Human Rights Watch criticised the commission for failing to establish full accountability. Reporters Without Borders ranked Tanzania 117th of 180 countries in the 2026 World Press Freedom Index, a drop of 22 places from 95/180 in 2025, and Freedom House documented enforced disappearances of opposition activists Deusdedith Soka and Dioniz Kipanya, and the killing of Ally Kibao, found dead a day after his September 2024 abduction with severe acid burns to his face and other signs of torture.

Tanzania’s state-aligned media architecture spans both the Union and the Revolutionary Government of Zanzibar, comprising eight media organisations and groups across three typology categories. The mainland State-Controlled (SC) broadcaster Tanzania Broadcasting Corporation (TBC), operating under the Tanzania Broadcasting Corporation Act, No. 3 of 2025, anchors the Union’s public-broadcasting role through its national television and radio services. The mainland Captured Public (CaPu) publisher Tanzania Standard Newspapers (TSN), nationalised in 1970 and publisher of Daily NewsSunday NewsHabariLEO, and SpotiLEO, operates as a government-owned limited-liability company under Ministry of Finance shareholding.

Four Captured Private (CaPr) groups complete the mainland picture: Sahara Media Group, owner of Star TV, Radio Free Africa, and Kiss FM, placed under compulsory winding-up by the High Court Commercial Division on 2 March 2026; the Uhuru Media Group / CCM-linked party-media structure, including the print titles Uhuru and Mzalendo, the radio stations Uhuru Radio, Magic FM, and Classic FM, and Channel Ten-related television operations through the CCM-aligned Africa Media Group; IPP Media, founded by the late Dr Reginald Mengi (1944–2019) and operator of The GuardianNipashe, ITV, Radio One, EATV, Capital TV, Capital Radio, and East Africa Radio; and Azam Media Ltd, the Bakhresa Group’s pay-TV and content division, operator of AzamTV with approximately 1.43 million active decoders as of December 2025.

The Zanzibar archipelago contributes two State-Controlled (SC) outlets: the Zanzibar Broadcasting Corporation (ZBC, established under the Zanzibar Broadcasting Corporation Act, 2013, and the official state broadcaster covering Unguja, Pemba, and parts of Dar es Salaam, and the Zanzibar Newspaper Corporation (ZNC) / Shirika la Magazeti Serikali Zanzibar (SMSZ), established under The Establishment of the Corporation of Government Newspapers Act, No. 11 of 2008, and publisher of Zanzibar Leo alongside four sister titles.

The 2026 typology distribution stands at 3 SC + 1 CaPu + 4 CaPr, reflecting a media architecture in which formal state media remain tied to Union and Revolutionary Government priorities, while the wider private, party-owned, and commercially organised sector operates under strong political, licensing, advertising, and regulatory pressures documented across the 2025 election cycle.

Typology distribution

Tanzania · 8 media organisations and groups · State Media Monitor 2026

3 SC
1 CaPu
4 CaPr
37.5%
12.5%
50.0%

State Controlled (SC)

3 organisations

Government-owned media operating under direct state-appointment frameworks at the Union (TBC) and Zanzibar (ZBC, ZNC) levels, with no autonomous appointment model or independent editorial-oversight body.

  • Tanzania Broadcasting Corporation (TBC) — mainland TV and radio
  • Zanzibar Broadcasting Corporation (ZBC) — Zanzibar TV and radio
  • Zanzibar Newspaper Corporation (ZNC) / SMSZ — Zanzibar print

Captured Public Media (CaPu)

1 organisation

Government-owned limited-liability publisher operating as a commercial company under Ministry of Finance shareholding.

  • Tanzania Standard Newspapers Ltd (TSN) — Daily News, Sunday News, HabariLEO, SpotiLEO

Captured Private Media (CaPr)

4 organisations

Privately controlled and party-owned commercial media groups operating under structural pressures from licensing regimes, government advertising, and political-business relationships that incentivise cautious editorial alignment; the Uhuru Media Group is directly CCM party-owned.

  • Sahara Media Group — Star TV, Radio Free Africa, Kiss FM (under compulsory winding-up from 2 March 2026)
  • Uhuru Media Group / CCM party-media structure — Uhuru, Mzalendo, Uhuru Radio, Magic FM, Classic FM; Channel Ten, Channel Ten Plus, C2C, CTN via Africa Media Group
  • IPP Media — The Guardian, Nipashe, ITV, Radio One, EATV, Capital TV, Capital Radio, East Africa Radio
  • Azam Media Ltd — AzamTV; Bakhresa Group Broadcast & Media Division

See the State Media Matrix typology for category definitions.


Media profiles