Sitrep in Mozambique

The_Unbeliever

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Our one Project Manager's stuck in Mozambique. :erm:

According to the one technician there (chatted to him on Skype) they've blocked all the roads going in and out of Maputo, so nobody can get in or out. :rolleyes:

Also, heard on the news that they'll be sending in aeroplanes to airlift the stuck tourists (and others) in Maputo.

Anybody with more information than the usual sources?
 
Does not sound good... even SA has closed its Embassy in Maputo!

http://www.news24.com/SouthAfrica/Politics/SA-closes-embassy-in-Mozambique-20100901
http://www.timeslive.co.za/local/article635715.ece/Three-dead-in-Moz-price-hike-riots
http://www.news24.com/Africa/News/Moz-cops-open-fire-on-protesters-20100901

Johannesburg - The SA government has closed its embassy in Mozambique following violent riots in the capital Maputo, the SABC reported on Wednesday.

The road to South Africa had also been closed as rioters blockaded the route and set fire to a petrol station in the Matola suburb, between Maputo and its border.

"There have been sporadic incidents of stoning and blockades of roads in the vicinity of Maputo including the airport... the embassy has been temporarily closed as a result," High Commissioner to Mozambique Dikgang Moopeloa said in a statement.

He said the N4 between Maputo and Matola should be avoided by anyone travelling into the country.

Flights into Maputo by both SAA and local airline LAN were cancelled on Wednesday. Travellers using other airlines were urged to check whether flights were still planned.

Anyone requiring further information could contact the SA High Commission in Maputo on 00-258-21-49-1614 or 00-258-21-49-0059 or the international relations and co-operation department on 012 351-1249 or 012 351-1924.

Many South Africans were reportedly unable to get to the airport.

Police in Mozambique have killed up to seven people and wounded 27 when they fired on demonstrators protesting rising prices on Wednesday.

Bread, water and electricity were among the basics which had showed price hikes following fuel price increases and the devaluation of the national currency, the metical, against the rand.

The metical was 4.3 to the rand in March, and now five.

Taxi drivers were also striking and schools were closed.

Although the centre of the city was calm, there was violence in the townships around the capital.

Hundreds of people lined the streets and police opened fire with live and rubber bullets when people started protesting.
 
Give SA another 5-10 years or so and we'll be seeing the exact same thing locally.

Welcome to Africa, where the only positive thing is HIV.
 
The situation does not seem to be improving. Has your man been evacuated yet?

http://www.news24.com/Africa/News/Riots-chaos-grip-Mozambique-20100901

Riots, chaos grip Mozambique
2010-09-01 22:28


Maputo - Young men angry over the rising cost of food, fuel and water rampaged through Mozambique's capital on Wednesday, throwing stones, looting shops and drawing police fire that killed at least seven people.

The SA government closed its embassy in Mozambique following the riots, the SABC reported.

The road to South Africa had also been closed as rioters blockaded the route and set fire to a petrol station in the Matola suburb, between Maputo and its border.

Rising prices around the world have raised concerns about a return to the political instability of 2008, when Haiti, Kenya and Somalia were among impoverished countries that saw rioting over the cost of living.

Egypt, where rioting also broke out in 2008, has in recent months seen protests over rising food prices. The UN said on Wednesday that international food prices have risen to their highest in two years.

Mozambican police had declared Wednesday's marches illegal, saying no group sought permission for them. For days, word of the protests had been spread, in some cases by cellphone message, in this former Portuguese colony in south-east Africa.

Thousands of people, mostly young men, turned out.

Chaos, anguish

"This strike is about the hike in prices. More than that, it's about injustice," said one protester, 34-year-old Albino Mkwate.

Parts of the capital descended into chaos, with women crying in anguish at the violence and protesters running through the streets carrying the wounded. A boy of about 12 could be seen lying motionless on a Maputo street in a pool of blood.

Horatio Antonio, a 45-year-old unemployed man, said he saw police open fire on protesters without provocation.

"People are angry because prices are going up: petrol, rice, water, electricity, everything," Antonio said.

A witness described a women running along the road to the airport after the riots, rubbing her stomach and saying, "We are hungry, all Mozambicans are hungry."

State television said police shot and killed seven people, including a girl of about 6-years-old who was on her way home from school and another girl whose age and the circumstances of death were not given.

SA closes embassy

Alice Caisane, a Maputo hospital medical chief, told state TV that four of the victims died at her hospital and 16 were treated for gunshot injuries.

Pedro Cossa, a spokesperson for the police ministry, said he had heard the TV and radio casualty reports, but he was still awaiting word from officers. He said police had fired with both rubber bullets and live ammunition, and at times had been under attack by protesters.

While there were no calls for more protests, Cossa said he feared unrest would continue.

Mozambicans have seen the price of a loaf of bread rise by 25%, from four to five meticais in the past year. Fuel and water costs also have risen.

The Rome-based UN Food and Agriculture Organisation said on Wednesday its global food price index shot up 5% between July and August.

The FAO's Abdulreza Abbassian said there are sharp differences between the current price situation and the spring of 2008, when high oil prices and growing demand for biofuels pushed world food stocks to their lowest levels since 1982.

Plagued

Critics say bad government decisions are making shortages worse and accuse producers of colluding to push up prices.

Mozambique's Frelimo party, in power since independence from Portugal in 1975, has been plagued by charges its government is corrupt and inefficient.

In 2008 in Mozambique, after a week of clashes between police and rioters that killed at least four people and seriously injured more than 100, the government cut fuel prices.

Mozambique was left in ruins by a civil war that broke out after independence from Portugal in 1975 and lasted for 17 years. Aids, outbreaks of diseases like cholera and frequent natural disasters strain the government's resources.

More than half the population lives in poverty, and Mozambique ranks 175th of 179 countries on the UN Human Development Index, a measure of progress that takes into account health and education levels as well as income.

- AP
 
Apocalypse

Anyone remember the Polana Hotel and LM Radio :confused: [ went to both -- back in the day :) ]

A journey from Heaven to Hell -- the story of African decolonisation.

"Les-Jeunes" Mai Mulele

and so it goes

Start preparing for "SkyNet"
 
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Anyone remember the Polana Hotel and LM Radio

I was doing my military service at the time of the Frelimo take-over. We were choppered-in to the Kruger National Park to prevent any Mozambique spill-over into SA (the SA/Mos. border is there). LM radio was a popular music station. We were so close that reception was outstanding. Over the radio you could hear the anchor pleading for SA assistance. Then the door burst open. Machine gun fire. Silence. Then a Frelimo broadcast – no cause for panic, everything was under control.

I was appalled. I asked my mom (when I got back) if she had heard it. Apparently not. It must have been only a short-range broadcast. No one else in SA had heard anything untoward on LM radio. It was a good music station back in the day.
 
I have been held up By the "anti Corruption police" in Moz ( with AK's) (for a bribe )

I Am happy i'm not there.

Good luck to the people with family there.
 
Yep got told I was speading there a few weeks ago. Middle of the night pulling a fishing jetski to Xai Xai. Cop said there was a camera behind me that caught me doing 80 in a 60 zone. I paid R500 and kept going...some things never change.
 
You know what I love about countries like Mozambique. They are totally screwed. I mean TOTALLY. When you drive through Mozambique you realise just how screwed it is. There is no real infrastructure to speak of. Maputo is OK in that it has a few buses and stuff but for the most part it is just a mess.

Despite all of this they still have a parliament and everything where they discuss national policies for policing etc. as though they had some sort of control on the ground level. I always look at the Mozambique parliament and think it is a lot like little children playing 'house', except they're playing 'country'.
 
Yet these investors are eager to get into Libya, Angola, Nigeria, the DRC, and other conflict ridden African countries.

they have oil and Zim is the new star with the diamonds. Moz.. nothing much there but pretty beaches
 
Pretty sure they found oil or gas recently off the coast.

Yes Anadarko is up there north of Pemba with a exploration drill ship.Widespread seismic vessel researching going on also.
 
Yet these investors are eager to get into Libya, Angola, Nigeria, the DRC, and other conflict ridden African countries.

Sustainable development - not quick grab and bag deals. If investors were less fearful of Africa this continent will see an explosion of development.
 
One thing I never seem to find, is discussions about the difference between Asia decolonisations and African decolonisations, for example Hong Kong versus South Africa.
 
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