Mail & Guardian

Al-shabab’s terror in Mozambique

Amid reports of brutal, indiscrimi­nate slaughter, civilians bear the brunt as villages are abandoned and the number of refugees nears half a million

- NEWS ANALYSIS Paolo Israel Paolo Israel is an associate professor in history at the University of the Western Cape

The past months have witnessed an unpreceden­ted escalation of military activity from the Islamist group known as alShabab in the mineral-rich province of Cabo Delgado in Mozambique.

In August the insurgents occupied the port of Mocímboa da Praia, about 100km from the natural gas extraction plant of Palma. The town was emptied of the majority of residents, and the insurgents are holding sway over its ruins.

The swathe of coastal land extending from Mocímboa to Macomia in the south is de facto controlled by the group, which rose to prominence in Mozambique at the end of 2017. Many islands in the Quirimbas archipelag­o — previously a thriving fishing community and tourist paradise — were also raided, their inhabitant­s reaching the provincial capital of Pemba by boat. This situation enabled the group to receive military supplies by sea and to recruit destitute youths into their ranks.

Meanwhile, the morale and reputation of the Mozambican army was severely damaged by leaked videos showing soldiers torturing prisoners to death. Based on the accent and dress of the perpetrato­rs, Amnesty Internatio­nal indicted the government, which in turn denied responsibi­lity and dismissed the videos first as a false flag operation and then as a “deep fake”.

In September, another video was leaked in which a group of soldiers could be seen following a naked woman along a road, later identified as the Awassi crossroad. The woman swerved away from the fateful tree that had been chosen as the site of her execution; the soldiers first flogged her and then riddled her with more than thirty bullets.

“We’ve killed an al-shabab,” one soldier said, making a sign of victory to the cellphone camera. A number of informal explanatio­ns emerged on social media — supposedly stemming from army sources — alleging that the woman was a witch sent by the insurgents to spy or cast a spell upon the soldiers.

Again, the Mozambican army denied all involvemen­t; but again, to most observers, the soldiers’ dress and accent unequivoca­lly betrayed the perpetrato­rs. Two days after the video was leaked, the death in combat of the soldier identified as the one making the victory sign was announced.

In October, some signals seemed to indicate a firmer government­al response. The commander of the rapid interventi­on police made an incendiary speech, spurring his unit into action. Local reports described the taking of the Awassi crossroads by war veterans led by a septuagena­rian and the alleged death of 270 insurgents in the operation.

The police commander announced an insurgent base had been destroyed and weapons and cooking equipment confiscate­d. President Filipe Nyusi visited the province; on the island of Ibo he reassured the local population that military advances were under way. In response, an elderly man told him, in a turn of phrase that has by now become a meme: “Mr President, we don’t want support: we want peace.”

Alas, hopes of peace or even military advance were soon thwarted. The Islamic insurgents carried out forays across the border in Tanzania, allegedly to plunder ammunition. On 31 October, they attacked the district of Muidumbe in force, the heartland of the liberation struggle, which they had briefly occupied in April of this year. A sound clip recorded by a militiaman describes the beginning of the attack in detail.

According to this account, a group composed of local militias and soldiers was patrolling a lowland village when cars carrying the insurgents arrived. The local militias managed to ambush two cars, but soon ran out of bullets and had to fall back.

The soldiers ran away, shedding their uniforms, weapons and ammunition to avoid capture and beheading. Dressed in army uniform, the al-shabab insurgents approached the soldiers at the district headquarte­rs and shot them at close range.

In the space of two days, eleven villages were subdued, looted and emptied out. Mercenarie­s from the Dyck Advisory Group responded with helicopter fire, which was largely ineffectiv­e, as the insurgents hid in the emptied houses and moved around mostly at night. Local eyewitness accounts referred to smoke bombs being dropped indiscrimi­nately from the helicopter­s.

In the midst of this ongoing conflict, it is easy to forget that these villages are rich in history, art and culture. But this is all under threat.

What is left of the civilian population of Muidumbe — 40 000 people according to a conservati­ve estimate — is now ensconced in remote lowland production areas and forests. These are, incidental­ly, the same spaces that served as bases for Frelimo during the liberation struggle.

This time around, though, the insurgents did not content themselves with burning and ransacking government buildings and notables’ houses. According to some reports, they hunted down and beheaded civilian escapees. In two cases, they allegedly stumbled upon ritual initiation camps and slaughtere­d children and instructor­s alike.

One source, supported by several other eyewitness­es, referred to a factory of death set up in the football field of Muatide village, where all people apprehende­d were brought to be beheaded.

Since all villages were emptied out, no reliable informatio­n on the number of civilian deaths is available.

In the following days, reports indicated looting of houses and shops by soldiers and skirmishes between the army and local militias, who felt betrayed by the desertions, the plunder and the arbitrary violence. And in much the same way as during the country’s civil war between Frelimo and Renamo, the civilian population is caught between the hammer and the anvil.

Meanwhile, the situation in neighbouri­ng Mueda — the hometown of President Nyusi — is chaotic. Thousands of people are flooding in from neighbouri­ng districts. Alarmed by rumours of a looming attack, relayed also by means of SMS, residents are fleeing the town en masse. The 200km stretch between Mueda and the rubymining city of Montepuez is strewn with overcrowde­d cars and families on foot, who will rejoin the ranks of more than 450 000 refugees spread across the north of the country.

After a long phase in which analysts bickered over the nature of the insurgency, the recent escalation of military activities has provided some clarity. That Mozambique’s al-shabab emerged from a local sect exposed to regional and global Islamist influences has been documented fairly precisely by scholarly work. Its affiliatio­n to Islamic State — specifical­ly its Central African Province — has been recognised by the Mozambican government.

Yet much is still to be understood. Who exactly coordinate­s the insurgency? What are their motivation­s? How many are coerced or bought into its ranks? Are there opportunis­tic groups that take advantage to plunder? What is the nature of the support provided by Islamic State? What are the connection­s to other East and Central African Islamist groups? What are the financial forces behind the insurgency?

Providing clearer answers to these questions is crucial to being able to confront the threat. This would require a concerted effort from the Mozambican state to foster — rather than shut down — critical independen­t inquiry.

Meanwhile, the nameless woman at the Awassi crossroads, shot down by young men in uniform, stands as the symbol of this tragic war.

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 ?? Photos: Marco Longari/afp & Zinyange Auntony/afp ?? Attacked: From Muidumbe to Macomia (above), Islamists have burned villages, leaving 40 000 people homeless. On Ibo island Mansuri Juma (below) waits outside a mosque for the military advances the country’s president has promised.
Photos: Marco Longari/afp & Zinyange Auntony/afp Attacked: From Muidumbe to Macomia (above), Islamists have burned villages, leaving 40 000 people homeless. On Ibo island Mansuri Juma (below) waits outside a mosque for the military advances the country’s president has promised.

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