Marin Independent Journal

Attacks by IS-linked group in Mozambique leave over 70 kids missing

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A surge of new attacks by an Islamic State-affiliated group in Mozambique's Cabo Delgado province has left more than 70 children missing, with fears they may have drowned in a river or been kidnapped by fighters as thousands of families fled, local authoritie­s and a group of aid agencies said.

Around 30 families now seeking shelter in Nampula province to the south have asked police to help locate their children, according to a report released Wednesday

by the Protection Working Group, a network of non-government­al organizati­ons and United Nations agencies.

The attacks have hit areas that had been relatively untouched since the start of the jihadist insurgency in Cabo Delgado in 2017. They may mark a new stage in a crisis that aid agencies say forced more than a million people to flee their homes during nearly seven years of violence. Thousands were killed.

Cabo Delgado, Mozambique's northernmo­st province that borders Tanzania, was thrust into the internatio­nal spotlight in 2020 and 2021 when insurgents were accused of carrying out mass beheadings, including of children.

The U.N.'s migration agency said nearly 100,000 people were displaced between early February and early March after Islamic State Mozambique fighters launched a new offensive from their heartland in coastal central Cabo Delgado into the south. More than 61,000 of those displaced were children, it said.

Save the Children called it the largest displaceme­nt of children in Cabo Delgado in 18 months.

“There are repeated reports of beheadings and abductions, including multiple child victims,” Save the Children said.

The U.N. high commission­er for refugees, Filippo Grandi, is in Cabo Delgado and was due to update on the situation and humanitari­an response on Thursday.

A total of 72 children have now been reported missing after the recent attacks, said Albertina Ussene, the Nampula provincial government's director of gender, children and social action, who was quoted by the Lusa news agency. Ussene told a meeting of provincial officials this week that another 29 children had been reunited with their families.

The report by the Protection Working Group said around 27 villages in southern Cabo Delgado were attacked late last month. It said children and older people were reported to have drowned while trying to escape, and some men were believed to have been kidnapped. The report said an unconfirme­d number of people were killed and 500 buildings were destroyed.

The U.N. children's agency said the displaceme­nt of tens of thousands more people risks exacerbati­ng cholera outbreaks due to overcrowdi­ng and the lack of clean water and sanitary facilities in displaceme­nt sites.

Insurgent attacks were relatively limited in Cabo Delgado last year. The head of the Mozambique army, Maj. Gen. Tiago Nampele, said in December that the troubled province was “9095% secure.”

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