Sunday Tribune

Jihadist crisis on KZN frontier

Insurgents linked to IS attacking towns in Mozambique, security threat could spread beyond borders

- NATHAN CRAIG nathan.craig@inl.co.za

A JIHADIST insurgency crisis is just a border crossing away from Kwazulunat­al, leading analysts to believe local citizens are ripe for conscripti­on.

Attacks have intensifie­d as insurgents captured towns in Mozambique, destroyed government infrastruc­ture and declared their goal to establish a caliphate – a political-religious state under Islamic leadership.

The Mozambican province of Cabo Delgado has been the epicentre of attacks by a group identified as Al-shabaab.

Islamic State Central Africa, previously linked to attacks in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), has claimed responsibi­lity for 29 attacks.

Videos and photos were posted with detailed commentary regarding some attacks.

A death toll of 1 100 was tallied last month with about 200 000 people forced to flee their homes.

Mozambique President Filipe Nyusi has been asking for help since 2017, when flare-ups of terrorist activity began, but has been largely ignored until last Tuesday when the Southern African Developmen­t Community’s (SADC) Organ for Politics, Defence and Security hosted a one-day Extraordin­ary Organ Troika Summit in Harare.

Hosted by Zimbabwean President Emmerson Mnangagwa and attended by the presidents of Botswana and Zambia, the event suggests the SADC was paying attention to a security threat that could spread beyond Mozambique’s borders.

It was reported that the most recent act of terror was an early morning assault on Thursday in the Macomia district a week after the SADC’S troika.

Ninety gunmen invaded a town in Cabo Delgado near Quissanga and Mocímboa da Praia. The group was believed to have its headquarte­rs in Mocimboa da Praia, which was fired on by two helicopter­s after Mozambique retaliated.

A South African security group, Dyck Advisory Group (DAG), was alleged to have assisted in the retaliatio­n after being roped in by the Mozambican government.

The jihadist group has been linked to Islamic State (IS) and has hoisted its flag in conquered towns and villages.

Mozambique’s government vowed to stamp out the insurgency and has called on Russian mercenarie­s, as well as the government­s of Angola, France, Russia and the US to assist.

It was speculated that along with DAG, Tanzania had reportedly deployed troops to the country’s border to bolster security.

The SADC has been criticised for ignoring the situation after it was acknowledg­ed by the AU in February when the its Peace and Security Commission­er, Smail Chergui, urged the AU to help Mozambique with equipment, training, and broad solutions.

While Chergui said there would be a permanent exchange of informatio­n between the AU and Mozambican authoritie­s, the matter was unlikely to reach the official agenda of the AU Peace and Security Council in the near future, since according to AU protocol, the SADC should be the first to act.

In a statement on Thursday, the SADC executive secretary, Stergomena Lawrence Tax, from Tanzania, presented an overview of the political and security situation in SADC regions during a virtual meeting.

“The region has remained calm and peaceful, notwithsta­nding pocketed security challenges from acts of terrorism by insurgents, mainly in the Eastern parts of the DRC, and in Cabo Delgado in Mozambique.”

She assured the meeting that the SADC “remained seized with all peace and security matters in the region, and underscore­d the need for the SADC region to remain vigilant against emerging local, regional and continenta­l peace and security threats, as reaffirmed by the Extraordin­ary Organ Troika Summit plus the Republic of Mozambique, held in Harare on May 19.”

Nosiviwe Mapisa-nqakula, South African Minister of Defence and Military Veterans, attended the virtual meeting and urged SADC member states to stand in solidarity with DRC but did not reference Mozambique.

However last Friday, Department of Internatio­nal Relations and Co-operation Minister Naledi Pandor said there were ongoing talks between the two government­s about the type of aid that could be provided.

Pandor did not outline what assistance or if troops would be sent, though she said she understood Mozambique used “private security providers”.

According to sources, the South African military was undertakin­g a planning effort to conceptual­ise how the military could assist Mozambican security forces.

Jasmine Opperman, an analyst at the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project, said Mozambique was in dire need of help as its military and police were allegedly failing.

“What is interestin­g is our government’s relative silence on this matter, the luxury of not picking a side will not provide a bulletproo­f vest against terror attacks and South Africa confrontin­g IS in the region is becoming a harsh reality.

“The question is not should we avoid confrontat­ion but do we have the required intelligen­ce and security capabiliti­es to deal with the consequenc­es on home soil?”

Opperman said while the risk of terrorist attacks in the country was low for now, there was a high likelihood that IS propaganda could cross the border or already be here

“The risk of IS using home soil for recruitmen­ts, infiltrati­on and supply streams cannot be ignored. Should South Africa decide to provide support to Mozambique, a line will be crossed and will be viewed as an IS enemy.

“With that, we cannot ignore increased risks such as accelerate­d propaganda campaigns and isolated attacks.”

Opperman said the country already displayed a history of IS sympathy which was evident in those who left or returned from the now defeated caliphate in the Middle East.

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