Mozambique ex-rebels on attack

LazyLion

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Mozambican ex-rebel group Renamo staged a pre-dawn attack on a police station Tuesday after declaring the end of a two-decade-old peace deal that ended one of Africa's worst civil wars, officials and locals said.

Police fled their post in the central town of Maringue when Renamo fighters opened fire in an escalation of hostilities between the ex-rebels and Frelimo, the ruling party against which Renamo fought a bloody 16-year war that ended in 1992.

"Gunmen attacked the police station but fortunately there were no casualties because the policemen fled the post," Maringue's administrator Antonio Absalao told AFP by phone.

The town is located about 35 kilometres (20 miles) from Renamo's military base, which government troops seized on Monday in an operation the ex-rebels claimed was aimed at killing their leader, Afonso Dhlakama.

"The situation is horrible here. Early this morning, armed men supposed to be Renamo attacked, and it was a mess," said Romao Martins, a Maringue teacher.

"For one hour shooting could be heard from all directions and people fled from their homes," he said.

Schools have been shut amid fears of an escalation in violence.

The United States said it "profoundly deplores" the resumption of violence, urging both parties to take "decisive steps to calm tensions".

"We will welcome public declarations of representatives calling for peaceful solutions," the US embassy in Maputo added in a statement.

A spokesman for Renamo -- the Mozambique National Resistance, which became a political party with a parliamentary minority after the civil war -- hinted that the group was responsible for Tuesday's attack.

"The president of Renamo has lost control of the situation and you cannot blame... (him) for what happens from here on," Fernando Mazanga told AFP.

"The guerrillas are scattered and will attack without taking any orders," he said.

Renamo, which took up arms against the then-communist government of Frelimo -- the Mozambique Liberation Front -- after independence from Portugal in 1975, declared Monday that it had pulled out of the peace agreement that ended the civil war.

The Renamo spokesman said Monday's attack on its base "marks the end of multiparty democracy" in Mozambique.

But the declaration should be taken with a "pinch of salt", said South African Institute of International Affairs researcher Aditi Lalbahadur.

"It's very unlikely that you are going to see a return to war," she told AFP.

Lalbahadur said that Renamo lacked the capacity to engage in a full-scale conflict and that war was not in the interests of the government with its more powerful armed forces.

"Mozambique is trying very much to attract foreign investment into the country so any type of political instability works to their disadvantage," she said.

Heading into local government polls next month and a national vote in 2014, Mozambique has a history of election-related violence.

Renamo, which has faced dwindling political support, is demanding more representation on election bodies and in the armed forces.

The government has said it is open to electoral reforms, but accuses Renamo of refusing to budge in negotiations.

Tensions between the rival sides began escalating last year after Renamo leader Dhlakama set up camp in the Gorongosa mountains and began retraining former guerrilla fighters.

"You're seeing a Renamo that has always ever spoken the language of war... and you're seeing it again in a context where they have lost a lot of support over the years," Lalbahadur said.

Charles Laurie, Africa expert with London-based risk analysts Maplecroft, agreed.

"I really see the extent of these recent incidents as in fact being a sign of weakening political prospects for Renamo whilst of course acknowledging that these are worrying military events, worrying incidents of conflict," he said.

The army's assault on Renamo's base came after the former rebels attacked a government military unit on Thursday.

Defence ministry spokesman Custodio Chume said the assault was in response to that attack.

The Mozambique civil war killed about one million people before Renamo accepted a peace deal, having lost its backers Rhodesia and apartheid South Africa in a period of political change that swept the region at the end of the Cold War.


Source : Sapa-AFP /sdv/hdw/jk
Date : 22 Oct 2013 15:52
 
The Mozambique civil war killed about one million people before Renamo accepted a peace deal, having lost its backers Rhodesia and apartheid South Africa in a period of political change that swept the region at the end of the Cold War.

Interesting. I'd like to read more about this.
 
Interesting. I'd like to read more about this.

Nothing much to know about it except Frelimo are/were communists and backed by the then-USSR. It wasn't in Rhodesia or SA's interests to have a communist-controlled nation on their border, hence they backed Renamo (the enemy of my enemy et cetera).
 
Interesting. I'd like to read more about this.
Actually there is more to know about it. Frelimo were freedom fighters who fought against colonialism. It wasn't in Apartheid South Africa's interest to have an ANC-aligned government on its doorstep which would encourage the liberation of South Africa and offer material support to the liberation movement. So South Africa financed and supported the war against liberation movement rule just like it had done in Namibia and Angola.
 
This might present a problem for some insurance companies who have included Mozambique into their territorial limits of their policy wording. If it gets any worse or goes back into civil war, then this will affect motor, goods in transit and marine cargo underwriters.

The flipside of the coin is that it could mean a decline in freight and cargo going through Moz (to their detriment) and more coming in through Namibia and South Africa for countries like Zimbabwe, Zambia and Malawi. Beira is an important port city for the said region, iirc. Maputo too, but that might be too far south from the nonsense with Renamo.
 
Actually there is more to know about it. Frelimo were freedom fighters who fought against colonialism. It wasn't in Apartheid South Africa's interest to have an ANC-aligned government on its doorstep which would encourage the liberation of South Africa and offer material support to the liberation movement. So South Africa financed and supported the war against liberation movement rule just like it had done in Namibia and Angola.

Um, that's exactly what the poster above you said... just with less propaganda.
 
This might present a problem for some insurance companies who have included Mozambique into their territorial limits of their policy wording. If it gets any worse or goes back into civil war, then this will affect motor, goods in transit and marine cargo underwriters.

The flipside of the coin is that it could mean a decline in freight and cargo going through Moz (to their detriment) and more coming in through Namibia and South Africa for countries like Zimbabwe, Zambia and Malawi. Beira is an important port city for the said region, iirc. Maputo too, but that might be too far south from the nonsense with Renamo.

Figured you would take that angle on it! :D
 
Anglo has withdrawn all their people out of Northern Moz more than a month ago.
It has been very quiet.
This is not good for Moz.
 
Um, that's exactly what the poster above you said... just with less propaganda.
Propaganda is what the Apartheid government preached, that they were slaughtering blacks in the frontline states to stop the Rooi Gevaar, and many of you still believe that to this day.
 
This is possibly the beginning of a mineral resource war. Although Renamo doesn't have the capacity to fight an all out war, all they need to do is become a thorn in the side of the government and hijack or prevent the free movement of the resources to gain the support of interested parties who will sponsor them. They will either get paid protection money to cease aggression, or to continue agression

One of the largest coal reserves in the world was found in Moatize in Tete province a few years ago. The coal is shipped from there to Nacala port through Malawi passing not far from where the Renamo stronghold lies. This rail line is being refurbished at the moment. If this situation escalates, this line could be the ideal target as it will be very difficult to protect, and will cause pain to the govt.

I think Vale and Rio tinto amongst others have mining concessions in Moatize
 
Propaganda is what the Apartheid government preached, that they were slaughtering blacks in the frontline states to stop the Rooi Gevaar, and many of you still believe that to this day.

No propaganda is when you use emotive and overly descriptive terms designed to evoke reactions and paint certain groups in a negative light. Kinda like you are doing right now. :D
Objective readers can see right through it though.
 
The war between SA/Rhodesia and the various African resistance movements was in many ways a proxy war between West and East/capitalism and communism. One of the reasons that the white governments lost the war was due to diminishing support from the West as the USSR's power waned - it is no coincidence that the beginning of SA's democracy coincided with the fall of the USSR.
 
The war between SA/Rhodesia and the various African resistance movements was in many ways a proxy war between West and East/capitalism and communism. One of the reasons that the white governments lost the war was due to diminishing support from the West as the USSR's power waned - it is no coincidence that the beginning of SA's democracy coincided with the fall of the USSR.

Lost which war?
 
Propaganda is what the Apartheid government preached, that they were slaughtering blacks in the frontline states to stop the Rooi Gevaar, and many of you still believe that to this day.

I thought Zimbabwe was supposed to have a reasonable standard of education.

Oh well, you live, you learn.
 
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