The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Afonso Dhlakama laid to rest

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BEIRA. — Accompanie­d by a military gun salute, Mozambique laid to rest rebel supremo and opposition leader Afonso Dhlakama in his remote birth village yesterday after his unexpected death threw the country’s peace process into uncertaint­y.

Thousands of mourners attended the funeral in the country’s central Sofala province, a heartland of support for the Renamo group that he led for nearly 40 years.

Dhlakama, who died of a suspected heart attack last week aged 65, was buried in a private family cemetery in the village of Mangunde.

During his decades as leader, Ren- amo evolved from rebels fi ghting in the bloody 1977-1992 civil war to an opposition party with lawmakers in parliament while also maintainin­g an armed guerilla force.

Aft er a renewed bout of unrest, Dhlakama declared a truce in 2016 and had recently pursued peace talks with President Filipe Nyusi, leader of the ruling Frelimo party.

“We are burying the body, but we are not burying the ideas,” his brother Elias Dhlakama said aft er the casket was lowered into the ground.

Some people perched on trees to watch t he burial in t he place Dhlakama was born on New Year’s Day 1953.

Backed by apartheid South Africa, Renamo launched a bitter war against the Soviet- backed Frelimo government and fought for control of its stronghold­s in the north and centre of the country.

Dhlakama later then transforme­d Renamo into a political party which has participat­ed in elections since the fi rst multi-party democratic vote in October 1994.

He later retreated to his wartime bush camp in central Mozambique’s Gorongosa mountains, claiming the government had reneged on a 1992 peace agreement. — News24.

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