BFF-30, 31 Mozambique election to test fragile peace

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Mozambique election to test fragile peace

MAPUTO, Oct 13, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – Mozambique holds a general election on
Tuesday that will test the country’s fragile peace as the Frelimo party,
faced with economic crisis and chronic conflict, prepares to relinquish at
least some control after 44 years in power.

The impoverished southern African nation has seen one of the most violent
campaigns in its brief and turbulent history, raising fears that the
presidential, parliamentary and provincial polls could be marred by
bloodshed.

Frelimo has ruled Mozambique since independence from Portugal in 1975 and
— barring a major upset — is expected to again beat it arch-rival Renamo, a
former rebel group turned opposition party.

Frelimo and Renamo, who fought a brutal civil war from 1975-1992 that left
a nearly million people dead, signed a peace deal in August hoping to turn
the page on decades of conflict.

But an armed breakaway faction of Renamo has splintered off, rejecting the
treaty and threatening to attack campaign events.

“This election will be a test for democracy,” said Ericino de Salema of
the Electoral Institute for Sustainable Democracy in Africa.

“For the first time, the political geography of the country may change
substantially, it may even lead to confrontation.”

– A bitter, violent campaign –

Under the peace deal, Frelimo will have to loosen its stranglehold on
power.

Mozambique’s 13 million voters, out of a population of nearly 30 million,
will elect provincial governors for the first time — they were previously
appointed by the government — who will have expanded powers.

Renamo is expected to gain control of between three to five of the
country’s 10 provinces.

“For the very first time, the ruling party is facing the risk of losing
something… and there is no way they are going to let it go,” said Zenaida
Machado of Human Rights Watch.

“These elections are on track to be one of the most violent that we have
ever seen.”

The increasingly bitter campaign has seen candidates threatened, election
material destroyed, and clashes break out between supporters of both sides.

The lowest point was the brutal murder of a prominent election observer,
with four police officers suspected of being responsible.

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Civil society groups have already denounced numerous irregularities,
including thousands of “ghost voters” on the electoral roll, and intend to
deploy thousands of observers for the vote.

– Cyclone, conflict and scandal –

Frelimo enters the election in an unprecedented position of weakness after
its worst-ever performance at the ballot box last year, winning 51.8 percent
of votes in local elections.

The party’s popularity took a hit when it was revealed the government had
secretly borrowed $2 billion, sparking one of Mozambique’s worst financial
crisis.

For one of the world’s poorest countries, which is heavily reliant on aid,
the “hidden debt” scandal severely tarnished the regime’s image in the eyes
of donors and investors.

Mozambique is also still picking up the pieces after Cyclone Idai
decimated the second city of Beira in March, leaving nearly two million
people displaced.

And the government has struggled to respond to an insurrection by a
shadowy jihadist group that has killed hundreds of people in the northernmost
Cabo Delgado province since 2017.

President Filipe Nyusi, who hails from the province, has vowed to restore
order, but with little success.

The violence has threatened to delay the exploitation of vast gas reserves
in the north, which could pose a problem for Nyusi, who has touted future
“petrodollars” in his campaign speeches.

Renamo leader Ossufo Momade has had his own difficulties.

Only rising to prominence after the death of long-time leader Afonso
Dhlakama in 2016, Momade pushed for the peace deal but has struggled to rally
his party behind it, with the breakaway faction threatening to revive
hostilities.

With tensions so high, some fear a return to the bad old days.

“Renamo didn’t hand over its weapons. It therefore shouldn’t surprise
anyone if it decides to resort to violence again,” warned Machado.

Nyusi, who is running for his second five-year term in office, urged calm
as he wrapped up his campaign on the outskirts of capital Maputo on Saturday.

“We call on our supporters not to respond to provocation and to avoid
violence,” he told thousands of supporters.

At his own rally in the central city of Nacala, Momade pledged that his
party would win and “put an end to corruption”.

“Let’s remove Frelimo from power so we can give Mozambicans back their
dignity,” he said.

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