The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Why Islamist attack demands careful response from Mozambique

- Eric Morier-Genoud Correspond­ent

The return of African graduates from Saudi Arabia in the 1970s gave political clout to the reformist and scriptural­ist movements in Mozambique. They gained control of some mosques and, in collaborat­ion with the Portuguese, expanded their presence.

IN THE early hours of October 5, 2017 a group of 30 men attacked three police stations in Mocimboa da Praia, a small town of 30 000 inhabitant­s in northern Mozambique. They killed two policemen, stole arms and ammunition and occupied the town.

They told local people they would not hurt them, that their fight was with the state and the police. They explained that they rejected state health and education and refused to pay taxes.

The local population calls these men “Al-Shabaabs”.

Mozambique government’s response was swift. It fought back with forces from other districts and special forces from the provincial capital. The battle lasted several hours and left 16 dead, including two policemen and a community leader.

The attack came as a shock to a country already grappling with major economic and political problems. The incident is the first confirmed Islamist armed attack in Mozambique.

Informatio­n is still sparse and confusing But for now, we can say with some degree of certainty that what happened on October 5, 2017 was not a Somali Al-Shabaab attack nor an externally driven internatio­nal Jihadi plot. Nor was it a state conspiracy as some had suggested.

Rather, the attack appears to have been carried out by a group of local young Muslims who formed a sect in 2014 in Mocimboa da Praia, which is known as “Al-Shabaab”.

The group controls two mosques in the town and have told their followers to stop sending their children to secular institutio­ns such as state schools and hospitals. It wants Sharia law applied in their area.

The fact that this first Islamist attack was carried out by Mozambican­s makes the event no less shocking, particular­ly in a country proud of its sound and relaxed inter-religious relations.

Until we get more informatio­n on the group and what triggered it to attack the state, it’s worth setting the incident within a historical context.

Islam has a very old presence in Mozambique, particular­ly on the coast and in the northern parts of the country. Various Sultanates and Sheikdom existed before Portugal occupied the territory in the late 19th Century .

The Portuguese colonialis­ts openly and officially favoured Catholicis­m, at the same time repressing Islam and other religions. But Islam gained converts and nonetheles­s grew. By the time of independen­ce in 1975, Muslims officially accounted for 13 percent of the population. The 1997 census gave the figure of 17,8 percent. Both figures are contested by Muslims who believe them to be higher.

After independen­ce the Liberation Front of Mozambique (Frelimo) adopted Marxist-Leninism. It attacked all faiths, but Islam was particular­ly affected. It was a faith most state leaders didn’t understand.

This was evident in incidents such as President Samora Machel keeping his shoes when he walked into the main mosque in the country. Another example was the government insisting on pigsties being built in Muslim areas in the name of “developmen­t”. Memories such as these are still raw and were raised yet again after the Mocimboa da Praia attack.

After Frelimo abandoned Marxism-Leninism and shifted to multi-party democracy, the party began courting all religions to gain electoral support.

But tensions still arose from time to time. One involved the government taking steps to officially recognise Islamic holidays. This sparked a crisis in parliament in 1996 and the Frelimo governing party backtracke­d, adopting a more secular approach from then on.

The incident served to remind Muslims that they still felt marginalis­ed.

Islam is overwhelmi­ngly Sufi in Mozambique, with a majority of Muslims belonging to different Turuq (brotherhoo­ds). Sufism represents the more mystical side of Islam - opposed by scriptural­ist Muslims, such as the Wahhabi, who accuse them of deviating from the Koran.

The return of African graduates from Saudi Arabia in the 1970s gave political clout to the reformist and scriptural­ist movements in Mozambique. They gained control of some mosques and, in collaborat­ion with the Portuguese, expanded their presence.

Today the main national organisati­on is the reformist Islamic Council, which was created after independen­ce by Wahhabi elements and grew in the 1980s and 1990s in partnershi­p with the authoritie­s. - Conversati­on Africa Eric Morier-Genoud is a lecturer in African history at Queen’s University Belfast. This article was originally published on The Conversati­on. Read full article on www. herald.co.zw

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