The National - News

ISIS-LINKED GROUP BEHEADS 50 IN MOZAMBIQUE KILLING SPREE

▶ Extremists kidnap women and children in latest atrocity to hit the country’s northern region

- JAMIE PRENTIS

ISIS- linked fighters beheaded at least 50 people in northern Mozambique in the latest killing spree in Cabo Delgado province.

The extremists reportedly chopped up bodies on a football pitch and decapitate­d an unknown number of people in a nearby village at the weekend.

Mozambique police chief Bernardino Rafael said women and children were kidnapped and houses were burnt down in the province’s Muidumbe and Macomia districts.

Extremists in the Muslim-majority, gas-rich province have wreaked havoc since 2017, killing as many as 2,000 people and displacing about 430,000. They recruit from impoverish­ed, unemployed youths in the area..

In April, militants shot dead and beheaded more than 50 young people for refusing to join their ranks. The perpetrato­rs pledged allegiance to ISIS last year and have since stepped up their offensive and seized sizeable chunks of territory.

The National reported last month that the fighters in Mozambique are acting with the approval of ISIS commanders in Iraq. In August, they captured a strategica­lly important port that serves as a logistics link for a $23 billion natural gas project by French energy company Total.

Known locally as Al Shabab – although not linked to the Somali group of the same name – the militants launched their first attack in October 2017.

The group has staged more than 600 attacks across 10 out of 17 districts in Cabo Delgado province, according to a US- based NGO, the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project.

Earlier this month at least 40 civilians fleeing the violence drowned when their boat sank.

About 10,000 people fled to the provincial capital Pemba by boat two weeks ago, Doctors Without Borders said, raising concerns about access to clean water and highlighti­ng the precarious situation for displaced people.

“They were dehydrated. Women gave birth at sea. There have been cases of severe and potentiall­y fatal diarrhoea,” said Joaquim Guinart, MSF project co-ordinator in Cabo Delgado.

“There’s a lot of pressure on local medical staff as 20,000 people have arrived throughout the last month, and more will continue to come.”

MSF says at least 20 local healthcare centres have been destroyed in the conflict.

Mozambique’s government has appealed for internatio­nal help because of its poorly trained and equipped security forces, and has had to resort to foreign mercenarie­s to try to fill the gap.

Last month, the EU said it would support the fight against terrorism in Mozambique, following an appeal by the country’s foreign minister.

Veronica Macamo said Mozambique needed technical, medical and training assistance.

Amnesty Internatio­nal said Al Shabab was responsibl­e for “untold suffering” in Cabo Delgado.

“They have reduced people’s homes to ashes through co-ordinated arson attacks, killed and beheaded civilians, looted food and property and forced hundreds of thousands to flee their homes,” said Deprose Muchena, Amnesty Internatio­nal’s director for East and Southern Africa in October.

But he said Mozambique’s forces also appeared to be guilty of crimes.

“There is evidence the security forces have also committed crimes under internatio­nal law and human rights violations, including enforced disappeara­nces, torture and extrajudic­ial killings,” Mr Muchena said.

Mozambique’s government has appealed for internatio­nal help because of its poorly trained security forces

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