Ramaphosa deploys troops to fight jihadist insurgency in Mozambique
President Ramaphosa authorised the deployment of 1,495 troops to fight against 'acts of terrorism and violent extremists' in Mozambique.
A woman walks along a street in Pemba. The capital of Cabo Delgado has taken in tens of thousands of people fleeing from violence wreaked by Islamist insurgents. Photo: AFP/Johan Wessels
South Africa is sending almost 1,500 troops to Mozambique to help its neighbour battle jihadists wreaking havoc in the gas-rich north of the country, part of a growing multinational force there.
In a statement on Wednesday, parliament said President Cyril Ramaphosa had authorised the deployment of as many as 1,495 soldiers to support Mozambique in its fight against “acts of terrorism and violent extremists”.
Attacks have escalated in northern Mozambique over the past year, fuelling fears the violence could spill over into neighbouring countries.
Jihadist insurgency in Mozambique
Since 2017, the Cabo Delgado region has been battered by a bloody jihadist insurgency that has killed more than 3,100 people, according to conflict data tracker ACLED, and displaced more than 800,000 people.
The three-month mission for South Africa’s force – from July 15 to October 15 – is part of a deal agreed in June by the 16 nations of the Southern African Development Community (SADC).
The operation is expected to cost the country more than R984 million, said the parliamentary statement.
South Africa is the latest country in the region to despatch troops to Mozambique after Botswana, which sent soldiers on Monday. Earlier this month, Rwanda sent in a 1,000-strong force.
Mozambique welcomes troops
On Tuesday the Angolan National Assembly approved the deployment, from August 6, of 20 military personnel as part of the SADC mission.
The SADC approved the deployment of its “Standby Force” late last month to help smoke out the Islamic State-linked militants that have been terrorising its gas-rich north for nearly four years.
In a televised address on Sunday Mozambique President Filipe Nyusi, who had long been seen as resisting foreign intervention, lauded the military mobilisation by African countries.
Foreign forces will “help Mozambican forces restore peace and stability,” he said, adding “we should be afraid of being alone in fighting terrorism”.
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Rwandan reinforcements
One of the most notable achievements since the arrival of the Rwandan reinforcements was regaining control at the weekend of a police station in Awase, which had been an insurgent base for nearly a year.
Nyusi announced on Sunday that government troops had retaken Awase – a small but strategic settlement near the key town of Mocimboa da Praia seized by militants in August last year.
The attacks by the jihadists escalated last year, culminating on March 24 with coordinated raids on the port town of Palma in which dozens of people were killed, some decapitated, and tens of thousands displaced.
ALSO READ: A hesitant SA pulled into SADC military deployment to Mozambique
SADC deployment
The recent violence disrupted major gas exploration projects and raised fears it could spread to neighbouring countries – placing pressure on Nyusi to accept foreign help.
The total force size of the SADC regional deployment is not yet known.
The European Union on July 12 formally established a military mission for Mozambique to help train its armed forces battling the jihadists.
Former colonial ruler Portugal is already providing training for Mozambican troops, with Lisbon’s military instructors expected to make up some half of the new EU mission.
© Agence France-Presse
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