Orlando Sentinel

Mozambique jihadi violence spreads despite military effort

- By Tom Gould

NANJUA, Mozambique — Fleeing beheadings, shootings, rapes and kidnapping­s, nearly 1 million people are displaced by the Islamic extremist insurgency in northern Mozambique.

The 5-year wave of jihadi violence in Cabo Delgado province has killed more than 4,000 people and scuppered internatio­nal investment­s worth billions of dollars.

In a sprawl of dilapidate­d tents and thatched huts around Nanjua, a small town in the southern part of Cabo Delgado province, several hundred families are seeking safety from the violence. They say their conditions are bleak and food assistance is meager but they’re afraid to return home because of continuing violence by the rebels who are now going by the name Islamic State Mozambique Province.

More than 1,000 miles south, however, government officials in the capital Maputo are saying the insurgency is under control and are encouragin­g the displaced to return to their homes and energy companies to resume their projects.

“The terrorists are on the run permanentl­y,” Mozambican President Filipe Nyusi assured investors at the Mozambique Energy and Gas Summit in Maputo in September. He urged the gathering of internatio­nal energy executives to resume work on their stalled liquefied natural gas projects.

Mozambique’s army and police forces, backed up by troops from Rwanda and support from a regional force from the Southern African Developmen­t Community, have succeeded in containing the extremist rebellion, officials say.

“These places have now normalized and civilians are coming back,” Rwandan Brig. Gen. Ronald Rwivanga told the Rwandan newspaper The New Times this month, saying normal life is returning to the Palma district.

Energy companies say they want to see displaced people return to the area. The $60 billion liquefied natural gas projects led by the France-based TotalEnerg­ies

and ExxonMobil were suspended last year after insurgents briefly captured the adjacent town of Palma in March.

Despite the heavy presence of Mozambican and Rwandan soldiers, the extremists’ attacks continue. Earlier this month the rebels spread their violence for the first time to neighborin­g Nampula province, where a Catholic mission was among the targets and an elderly Italian nun was among those killed.

The United Nations High Commission for Refugees said it “considers security conditions to be too volatile in Cabo Delgado to facilitate or promote returns to the province,” in a statement released earlier this month.

“People who have lost everything are returning to areas where services and humanitari­an assistance are largely unavailabl­e,” said the UNHCR.

Those who return are met with a mixed situation. Economic life is beginning to return but basic infrastruc­ture and public services are still lacking. Few schools are open and health services are sparse.

 ?? DOCTORS WITHOUT BORDERS ?? People displaced by the conflict in Cabo Delgado, Mozambique, wait Thursday to be transporte­d to Palma, a coastal town attacked earlier this year.
DOCTORS WITHOUT BORDERS People displaced by the conflict in Cabo Delgado, Mozambique, wait Thursday to be transporte­d to Palma, a coastal town attacked earlier this year.

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