African Business

Private security firms won’t end Cabo Delgado insurgency

The insurgency in Mozambique’s gas-rich Cabo Delgado province has caused over 2,000 deaths and is spooking investors, but sending in more troops will not solve the underlying problems, writes African Business editor David Thomas

-

The vicious insurgency that has raged in Mozambique’s gas-rich Cabo Delgado province since 2017 shows no signs of abating. The United Nations says violence is escalating in the strategica­lly important northern region, which is home to some of Africa’s largest liquid natural gas developmen­ts. At least 2,000 people have been killed, and the number of internally displaced people has increased from around 70,000 roughly a year ago, to close to 700,000 today. It is expected to reach 1m by June.

While the insurgency is usually characteri­sed as Islamist, it remains unclear who the militants are, how they are supported, or what they want, according to UNHCR assistant high commission­er Gillian Triggs. An Islamist armed group called Al-Shabaab, unrelated to Al-Shabaab in Somalia, has killed civilians and burned villages and towns, according to Amnesty Internatio­nal.

The violence has spooked investors – in January, French energy giant Total withdrew most of its workforce from its $20bn developmen­t after a nearby attack, and only agreed to reopen in late March after fresh security guarantees from the government including the introducti­on of a 25km secure buffer zone.

In a bid to respond to violence across the region and bolster its flagging security forces, the Mozambique government is increasing­ly coming to rely on internatio­nal private security firms. Originally enlisted to protect mining installati­ons and offshore rigs, security companies are now assuming a more permanent role in the country’s security architectu­re. Hired troops are increasing­ly conducting frontline operations, according to the BBC, including using planes and helicopter­s to deliver supplies to government forces, hunt militants from the air and attack them with guns and bombs.

Yet in a report that also implicated militants and government forces in atrocities, Amnesty says that a private firm has committed violations against the region’s civilian population. Citing 53 witnesses, Amnesty alleged that operatives from a South African private military company indiscrimi­nately

A reliance on external forces with limited local knowledge risks fuelling support for the insurgency

fired at civilians and dropped hand grenades into crowds of people. At the beginning of March the firm told Reuters news agency it was investigat­ing the allegation­s.

Addressing the underlying causes

While securing the region against insurgents is vital for Mozambique’s energy future, a reliance on unaccounta­ble external forces with limited local knowledge risks fuelling support for an insurgency with complex local roots.

While Islamism appears to be part of the insurgency’s toxic mix, violent groups also feed off “Mozambique’s north-south regional divide, perception­s of the capture of the state and its resources, and a sense of socioecono­mic exclusion, particular­ly among the youth” writes Idah Pswarayi-Riddihough, World Bank country director for Mozambique. The region has historical­ly ranked among the lowest in the country for access to education, water, sanitation and electricit­y, fuelling local resentment and providing fertile soil for militants.

Unless these underlying issues are addressed, and the state finds a way to equitably distribute the revenues expected to emerge from Cabo Delgado’s giant gas fields, enlisting private security firms will only ever be a salve over an open wound.

 ??  ?? Above: Government troops in northern Mozambique.
Above: Government troops in northern Mozambique.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kenya