Mozambican president set to tighten grip on Frelimo
MAPUTO: Mozambican President Filipe Nyusi is expected to consolidate his hold on the governing Frelimo party at its 11th congress, which is due to get under way in the southern city of Matola today.
Nyusi was not well known inside the country or abroad when Frelimo chose him as its presidential candidate at a central committee meeting in 2014. The only government position he had held was that of defence minister from 2008 and he was not elected to the central committee until 2012.
Seen at the time as a protégé of then president, Armando Guebuza, Nyusi beat better known figures such as former prime minister Luisa Diogo to become the Frelimo candidate in the October 2014 elections, winning with 58% of the vote.
Guebuza confidently expected to remain party president at the time. But Nyusi had no intention of being subordinate to his predecessor. Since independence, the posts of president of the republic and president of Frelimo have generally been united.
Guebuza’s opponents on the central committee rebelled and forced his resignation in Nyusi’s favour in March, 2015.
In the ensuing two-and-a-half years, Nyusi stamped his authority on the party and has marginalised Guebuza loyalists.
He has also taken personal control of negotiations to end the low level insurrections by the rebel movement Renamo. Nyusi’s repeated phone conversations with Renamo leader Afonso Dhlakama led to a truce declared by Renamo in December, 2016 which is honoured up until today, with no serious violations.
Nyusi has established a rapport with Dhlakama and visited the Renamo leader in his bush headquarters in the central district of Gorongosa in August – something that Guebuza never risked.