The Herald (Zimbabwe)

304 ZNA troops to join Mozambique mission

- Columbus Mabika

ZIMBABWE is sending a team of 304 defence instructor­s to Mozambique to train Mozambican troops as its commitment to the SADC Standby Force Mission in Mozambique under the SADC Protocol on Politics, Defence and Security Cooperatio­n.

Along with the training team, one specialist officer will be assigned to the coordinati­ng mechanism of the SADC Force headquarte­rs in Maputo.

Announcing the deployment yesterday at Defence Headquarte­rs in Harare, Minister of Defence and War Veterans Affairs Oppah Muchinguri-Kashiri, who was accompanie­d by Commander ZDF General Philip Valerio Sibanda, said the contingent will be sent to Mozambique once the Status of Force Agreement on training has been signed.

“While other countries have to deploy combat troops, Zimbabwe pledged to assist in the training of Mozambique armed forces to enhance their capability to combat terrorism.

“The President and Commander-In-Chief ZDF has the power to authorise the deployment of troops outside Zimbabwe in terms of section 213 (3) of the Constituti­on of Zimbabwe for a number of reasons which include but not limited to, peacekeepi­ng operations under United Nations or any other internatio­nal or regional organisati­on of which Zimbabwe is a member, to defend the territoria­l integrity of a country, in fulfilment of an internatio­nal commitment and in defence of Zimbabwe national security or national interest,” she said.

Minister Muchinguri-Kashiri said last month’s SADC Extraordin­ary Summit of Heads of States and Government took the decision to deploy elements of the bloc’s Standby Force in support of terrorism and acts of violent extremism in Cabo Delgado Province.

Following the summit, the SADC secretaria­t had been preparing the

necessary legal documents and instrument­s to enable deployment of the SADC Standby Force, which were signed early this month.

The deployment had two major elements, combat and training, with the Status of Force Agreement on combat activities having been signed on July 8 and so countries that are currently deploying are doing so on the strength of the agreement.

SADC’s Rapid Deployment Capacity Force comprising troops from South Africa and Botswana have arrived in Pemba in Mozambique.

Minister Muchinguri-Kashiri noted that in terms of Section 214 of the Constituti­on, Parliament will be formally informed of the deployment of the training team. The SADC protocol signed in 2001 establishe­d the objectives of the organ on Politics, Defence and Security to promoting peace and security across Southern Africa, protecting the region’s people from instabilit­y due to the breakdown of law and order, developing a common policy throughout the region and cooperatin­g on matters related to security and defence.

The deployment­s are also within the SADC Mutual Defence Pact of 2003 which sought to operationa­lise the mechanisms of the organ on Politics, Defence and Security to facilitate mutual cooperatio­n in defence and security matters focusing on conflict resolution, military preparedne­ss, collective self-defence and self-action, destabilis­ing factors and settlement of disputes.

Mozambique’s President Filipe Nyusi has expressed his gratitude to African countries sending troops to help fight insurgents in his country.

“The mandate of foreign forces is to help Mozambican forces restore peace and stability,” President Nyusi said in an address to the nation this week, reports africanews.com.

Botswana on Monday, became the first country of the 16-nation bloc to dispatch soldiers, having deployed 70 out of its 296 troop contributi­on.

Angola’s Parliament on Tuesday approved the integratio­n of Angolan forces into the SADC Standby Force mission in Cabo Delgado, Mozambique.

The Angolan contingent joining the SADC force on August 6 for three months is a team of 20 officers of which two will be in the regional cooperatio­n mechanism, eight officers in the force command and 10 crew members for the IL-76 military transport aircraft.

Rwanda, which is not a member of SADC early this month deployed 1 000 troops to Cabo Delgado to fight alongside SADC forces. Since 2017, the Cabo Delgado region in northern Mozambique has been experienci­ng terrorist attacks by an armed group known locally as Al-Shabab, which is linked to ISIL (ISIS).

Although the population of the province is largely Muslim, they have been the major victims of the terrorists who have ransacked towns and gained control of key roadways, destroying infrastruc­ture and beheading civilians.

In some cases, they have forced local people into their ranks or held them as sex slaves. Since August last year, the fighters have been in control of the key port town of Mocimboa da Praia, while in March they launched a coordinate­d assault on Palma town, killing dozens and displacing tens of thousands, while also forcing the French energy firm Total to suspend its US$20 billion gas project.

To date the violence has killed over 3 000 people and displaced almost 800 000, half of whom are children.

 ?? SADC ?? Defence and War Veterans Affairs Minister Oppah Muchinguri-Kashiri addresses the media on the deployment of the Standby Force to Mozambique while Zimbabwe Defence Forces Commander General Philip Valerio Sibanda (right) looks on in Harare yesterday
SADC Defence and War Veterans Affairs Minister Oppah Muchinguri-Kashiri addresses the media on the deployment of the Standby Force to Mozambique while Zimbabwe Defence Forces Commander General Philip Valerio Sibanda (right) looks on in Harare yesterday

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