Call for Zuma to mediate in Moz

Mozambique's opposition Renamo leader Afonso Dhlakama. Picture: Grant Lee Neuenburg

Mozambique's opposition Renamo leader Afonso Dhlakama. Picture: Grant Lee Neuenburg

Published Feb 12, 2016

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Maputo – Afonso Dhlakama, leader of Mozambique’s former rebel movement Renamo, says South African President Jacob Zuma is favourably disposed towards mediating in the conflict between Renamo and the Mozambican government.

However, South African International Relations and Co-operation Minister Maite Nkoana-Mashabane says Dhlakama has not even contacted the South African government.

Interviewed by the independent television station STV in his bush hideout in the central district of Gorongosa, Dhlakama, who had earlier rejected any face-to-face meeting with President Filipe Nyusi, said he was prepared to speak to Nyusi provided certain conditions were met.

These included guarantees for his own safety and mediation by the Catholic Church and Zuma.

Dhlakama said the Catholic Church had agreed to mediate, but did not say who in the church had made the promise. He also claimed that Zuma was favourably disposed to the idea.

However, Nkoana-Mashabane, who was in Maputo on Wednesday, flatly denied Dhlakama’s claims.

She pointed out that Mozambique “has a democratically elected government” and the opposition sits in parliament. Thus, if somebody in the Mozambican opposition were to approach the South African government, the first thing Zuma’s Cabinet would do would be to speak to the Mozambican government.

But this did not arise because the South African government had not been asked to play a mediating role, either by Renamo or by the government, Nkoana-Mashabane said.

Dhlakama nonetheless insisted that Renamo had sent a letter to Zuma via the South African High Commission in Maputo and had received an encouraging response.

While Dhlakama talks of mediation, his militia have returned to staging ambushes on the country’s main north-south highway. At about 6.30am on Thursday, Renamo gunmen opened fire on five civilian vehicles, including a health ministry truck carrying medicines, about 12km from the town of Muxungue in the central province of Sofala. The vehicles were slightly damaged and three people in the vehicles sustained minor injuries.

The Mozambican police have not yet decided whether to reinstate a system of military convoys along the road between the Save River and Muxungue.

“Teams from the defence and security forces are on the terrain monitoring the situation,” Sofala police spokesperson Sididi Paulo told reporters. “Depending on the real conditions observed on the ground, we will see whether it is necessary to reintroduce the escort.”

The Save-Muxungue stretch of road – about 100km – was one of the main theatres of operations in Renamo’s low-level insurgency, mainly in Sofala province, in 2013-2014. After the first ambushes, in late June 2013, the authorities decided the danger was such that vehicles could only use the road in convoy and under military escort.

This system remained in force until then president Armando Guebuza and Dhlakama signed an agreement on the cessation of military hostilities on September 5, 2014.

Renamo, which never honoured the clauses in the agreement under which the Renamo militia should have been disarmed, has now ripped up the accord.

African News Agency

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