Times of Eswatini

Aid reaches Moz’s insurgent-hit Palma

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MAPUTO - Aid has reached Mozambique’s northern coastal town of Palma for the first time since it was over run by jihadists in March, the United Nations said on Monday, even as beheadings were reported in another area.

Palma - the operationa­l hub of a multi billion Dollar gas project of France’s TotalEnerg­ies - had been off bounds since it was attacked by Islamic Statelinke­d militants earlier this year.

Dozens of people were killed, some beheaded, and thousands fled through surroundin­g forests, joining hundreds of thousands already displaced by the violence.

Access

Humanitari­an access to the town remained difficult as local troops worked alongside soldiers sent by several other African countries to stem the insurgency.

“For the first time since March, humanitari­an aid reached people in Palma,” tweeted the UN’s World Food Programme (WFP) in Mozambique, adding that 2 150 families had received emergency food, hygiene and shelter kits.

Many of those displaced from Palma had sought refuge in the nearby village of Quitunda, close to the gas project, where rights groups say they were trapped by troops and ongoing fighting.

WFP’s announceme­nt was made days after suspected militants beheaded five civilians in the village of Namaluco, around 150 kilometres south of Palma, military and local sources told AFP.

The victims were reportedly brewing a traditiona­l alcoholic beverage when they were murdered.

Locally referred to as Al-Shabab, Mozambique’s insurgents have been troubling the gas-rich Cabo Delgado province since 2017 in a bid to establish an Islamist caliphate.

 ?? (Pic: Supplied) ?? The World Food Programme has distribute­d food in Palma.
(Pic: Supplied) The World Food Programme has distribute­d food in Palma.

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