Daily Maverick

SADC mission stays in Mozambique to fight Islamic State-affiliated insurgency

- By Peter Fabricius

Southern African leaders have renewed the mandate of their military force fighting an Islamic State-affiliated insurgency in northern Mozambique. This will keep the mission going beyond 15 January, when its mandate was due to expire.

The leaders of the Southern African Developmen­t Community (SADC), meeting for a summit in Lilongwe, Malawi, on 12 January, did not say in their communiqué for how long they had extended the mandate of the SADC Mission in Mozambique (Samim), which has been in the country since July 2021.

But officials told DM168 that the leaders had extended the mission for three months in its present form, which mainly comprises a few hundred special forces attacking the bases of Al-Sunnah-Wa-Jama’ah, also known as Islamic State, Central Africa Province because of its affiliatio­n to the global Islamic State terror group.

The officials said that, after three months, Samim’s mandate would automatica­lly be extended for another three months, but at a different level. Infantry and other support elements would be brought in to back up the special forces, holding ground captured from the insurgents and setting up civic structures to help the displaced and terrorised local population, mainly in the northernmo­st province of Cabo Delgado.

It is not clear what else the leaders agreed to, but it does not seem that they made any decision about reinforcin­g the present small contingent of special forces from SA, Tanzania, Botswana and Lesotho, which is doing most of the fighting alongside Mozambican troops, plus a contingent of Rwandans.

Failure to beef up the mission would be bad news for the special forces, who have been complainin­g that they don’t have the numbers or the equipment they need to effectivel­y fight the insurgents. Samim appears, for example, to be supported by only two SA Air Force (SAAF) Oryx utility helicopter­s, which are overstretc­hed in transporti­ng special forces into battle and extracting them when they run into trouble.

The original battle plan called for more utility helicopter­s as well as some attack helicopter­s. These would very likely have been SAAF Rooivalk aircraft, but financial and logistical problems in the SA National Defence Force and the state defence company, Denel, seem to have sabotaged these plans.

And it is not clear if sending in the infantry in three months’ time will solve the problem. Some analysts suspect the intention may be simply to replace highly trained and capable special forces with less trained and less capable infantry. The communiqué from the summit said: “Summit noted the good progress made since the deployment of the SADC Mission in Mozambique and extended its mandate with associated budgetary implicatio­ns, and that it will continue to monitor the situation going forwards.” The summit also approved the “Framework for Support to the Republic of Mozambique in addressing terrorism which outlines, among others, actions for consolidat­ing peace, security and socio-economic recovery of the Cabo Delgado Province”.

The communiqué did not address the question of funding the extended mission. So far the countries contributi­ng troops have financed their deployment themselves. Officials have said SADC is negotiatin­g with internatio­nal partners for additional funding, but that nothing has been concluded.

In his address to the summit, Malawian President Lazarus Chakwera, SADC’s current chairperso­n, said the resolution­s by the leaders at the summit were “a signal to our brothers and sisters in Mozambique that they are not alone”. “Today we took a bold and decisive step to extend the Mission in Mozambique so that we are able to consolidat­e and sustain the gains we have made thus far. Until victory and peace is secured, we will not relent, we will not regress, and we will not retreat.

“We must finish the job and allow the Republic of Mozambique to pursue her developmen­t aspiration­s as she sees fit.”

Despite the professed importance of the summit, only six of SADC’s 16 member states were represente­d by their heads of state or government: Chakwera, President Cyril Ramaphosa, Democratic Republic of the Congo President Félix Tshisekedi, Mozambican President Filipe Nyusi, Zambian President Hakainde Hichilema and Eswatini Prime Minister Cleopas Dlamini.

 ?? Photo: Siyabulela Duda/GCIS ?? Mozambique President Filipe Nyusi (left) and President Cyril Ramaphosa in Lilongwe, Malawi, on 12 January at the Southern African Developmen­t Community’s Extraordin­ary Summit of Heads of State and Government.
Photo: Siyabulela Duda/GCIS Mozambique President Filipe Nyusi (left) and President Cyril Ramaphosa in Lilongwe, Malawi, on 12 January at the Southern African Developmen­t Community’s Extraordin­ary Summit of Heads of State and Government.

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