NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

What lies behind Mozambique’s failure to find lasting peace?

- Luca Bussotti ● Luca Bussotti is Associate Professor, Universida­de Federal de Pernambuco, Brazil

MOZAMBIQUE gained independen­ce from Portugal in 1975 following a bloody liberation war that lasted about 11 years. But independen­ce did not mean the end of conflict. The dominant liberation movement, Liberation Front of Mozambique (Frelimo), got embroiled in civil conflicts with the smaller Mozambican National Resistance (Renamo) immediatel­y after the political independen­ce of the State.

This is not unique to Mozambique. Independen­ce wars in Africa were in many instances followed by civil conflict. This was the case in Angola, South Sudan, the Democratic Republic of Congo and Zimbabwe. In others, the quality of the peace implemente­d has been low.

Mozambique is not an exception, but presents some interestin­g peculiarit­ies. Its process of pacificati­on — after 16 years of civil war between the governing Frelimo and the Renamo rebel movement — has long been considered a good example of how to mediate in African conflicts. But, as the facts show, this is not the case.

Following internatio­nal mediation, the Frelimo government and Renamo signed the Mozambican General Peace Agreement in 1992 in Rome, hosted by the Italian government and other internatio­nal mediators.

Once the peace deal was signed, it was left to the two warring parties to bring about peace. In practice, the peace agreement was not able to bring about a climate for “positive peace”.

The term, first used by Johan Galtung, a Norwegian sociologis­t, emphasises that peace is a multidimen­sional concept and practice, in addition to a simple absence of war. Social equity, sustainabl­e developmen­t and trust among the people are all fundamenta­l aspects which define a climate of positive peace. In Mozambique, the general peace agreement did not establish the conditions for avoiding new conflicts and wars.

My research aimed to analyse these dynamics in Mozambique, whereby Frelimo and Renamo continued to regard each other as enemies, in a climate of mutual distrust, even after the peace deal.

My conclusion was that the general peace agreement failed to bring peace to Mozambique. Instead, it created a climate of negative peace in which the conditions that gave rise to old conflicts continued to fester.

That’s because internatio­nal mediators were simply interested in getting the warring parties to quickly agree to end hostilitie­s, instead of supporting deep peace-building processes that take longer but lead to a climate of positive peace.

The result was a mere formal adhesion to democracy by Frelimo that the internatio­nal community hailed as an example of how to resolve conflicts in Africa. They ignored the problem of ethnic divisions which excluded a greater part of Mozambican’s population from economic and social developmen­t.

Conflict in Mozambique

In 2013, the tensions between Frelimo and Renamo reached a critical level and war broke out again in the centre of the country. Hundreds of lives were lost and both sides committed human rights abuses.

Mozambique was effectivel­y divided into two: As the war was concentrat­ed in Sofala, the centre of the country, it was impossible to go from the south to the north of the country by land. The economic impact was dire. Since then, various declaratio­ns of cessation of hostilitie­s, and two new peace agreements were signed in 2014 and 2019, but the war continues.

I used a qualitativ­e approach for my study, based on historical and political analyses of Mozambican public life, starting from 1992. I complement­ed my data with informatio­n from privileged witnesses from political parties and civil society organisati­ons.

I explored whether the climate of negative peace originated by the general peace agreement in 1992 had a bearing on the new conflict in Mozambique, starting with the first conflict which erupted in 2013.

This conflict, like the first just after independen­ce in 1975, have different features and origins, but a common element: Exclusion.

I concluded that the electoral processes in Mozambique were neither transparen­t nor fair. The control which Frelimo exerts on all the institutio­ns, including the National Electoral Committee and the Judiciary, together with the complacent silence of the internatio­nal community, have allowed the flawed electoral processes to go on for too long.

The lack of transparen­cy in electoral processes is a decisive factor in the failure of Mozambique’s democracy. Renamo has no option but to resort to armed conflict.

Besides the conflict with Renamo, another insurgency has been raging in the Cabo Delgado province since 2017. The Islamist insurgency was not part of this study. But, research shows that it, too, has its in economic, social and ethnic exclusion.

Mozambique’s negative peace My study shows that the Mozambique peace process has never been the success internatio­nal actors have claimed. Its democracy remains weak and based on an ambiguity: Frelimo has to find a way to manage the country, regardless of what the elections results said.

Thus, elections simply became a mechanism to confirm the hegemony of Frelimo as an incumbent party. It cannot lose power in favour of Renamo, which internatio­nal donors consider unreliable, given its history of being used by South Africa’s apartheid regime to destabilis­e Mozambique. Such a situation contribute­d to fostering a climate of marginalis­ation and exclusion of large sections of Mozambican society, resulting in Renamo returning to war.

In other words, the 1992 peace agreement stopped the war, but it also contribute­d to creating a climate of “negative peace” in Mozambique.

This atmosphere unfolded in two ways: Frelimo continued to manage the country following non-transparen­t elections. Renamo was implicitly allowed to maintain its army, which has been used — especially from 2013 onwards — as a weapon of political blackmail. This is against the peace agreement, in terms of which Renamo could keep only a small number of bodyguards to protect its leader, Alfonso Dhlakama.

Some examples illustrate this problem: In 1999, in the second general Mozambican elections, Frelimo faced the real risk of losing power. “Administra­tive” measures were implemente­d to avoid this. Votes in some Renamo stronghold­s, such as Zambezi, were not counted. In the end, Joaquim Alberto Chissano, the Frelimo candidate, won 52% of the valid votes.

Renamo did not accept the results. But its attempts to get justice failed. The National Electoral Committee ignored its appeal. Thus, protests, especially in the north of the country, were organised by local leaders of this party.

In 2014 a similar situation occurred: Not only did Renamo not recognise the results, but it claimed the right to manage the six provinces in which it had won. Neverthele­ss, the new president, Filipe Jacinto Nyusi, named only provincial governors belonging to Frelimo. It opened a new crisis which culminated with a new war.

A last finding of my research concerns the role of the internatio­nal, especially Western, community: It aimed to establish a “steady” country. Stability was identified with the government of Frelimo, not with the maturity of Mozambican institutio­ns.

Conclusion­s

This research establishe­d a close relation between absence of peace, flawed electoral processes and mistrust between the two main political actors, Frelimo and Renamo.

● Read full article on www.newsday. co.zw

● This article first appeared in The Conversati­on

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