No return to violence, Renamo chief pledges

What you need to know:

  • International observers have given conduct of election a clean bill of health
  • Mozambique is one of Africa’s fastest-growing economies, with billions of dollars worth of natural resources.

MAPUTO, Saturday

Former Mozambique rebel leader Afonso Dhlakama has pledged that his Renamo movement will not return to war despite disputing this week’s elections.

“Violence is not necessary,” he told a news conference, saying the southern African country had seen enough war.

“I want to promise... this will not ever happen again,” Dhlakama said.

With a third of the ballots counted after Wednesday’s presidential and legislative elections, the long-ruling Frelimo party had a thumping lead with 62 percent of the vote while Renamo trailed with about 32 percent.

A Renamo spokesman said on Thursday that the party rejected the result and claimed victory, sparking fears of renewed violence in the resource-rich but impoverished southern African country.

Dhlakama, breaking his silence for the first time since the election, said that while the vote was not free and fair the party wanted to negotiate a resolution with the government for the sake of democracy.

Renamo, which waged a 16-year war against Frelimo before signing a peace deal in 1992, ended a recently renewed low-level insurgency just weeks ahead of the election.

Dhlakama, who has lost every election since the end of the civil war, said “these were the fifth elections with fraud,” but added:
“We are investigating (to) find a solution.”

Foreign election observers have reported pre-election violence and biased media coverage, but said the vote was credible, paving the way for Frelimo’s Filipe Nyusi to become the next president.

Part of the deal to end the latest conflict involved disarming Renamo fighters. But that process was due to kick off only after the elections.
Analysts, however, played down the threat of a return to serious violence.

“Renamo has rejected every election since the beginning,” said Joseph Hanlon, a lecturer at Britain’s Open University and the author of a popular newsletter on Mozambican politics.

“I do not expect significant violence in the near future because they want to continue negotiating with government.”

But, he added, the actions of the new president could be critical.

“A lot will depend on what Nyusi does, because you cannot continue to marginalise a party which gets a third of the vote,” Hanlon said.
“He has to give something significant to Dhlakama as well as money.”

Any unrest could be disastrous for a country looking forward to the benefits of a mineral resource windfall as gas deposits are exploited.

On Wednesday night there were sporadic cases of violence at counting centres in some parts of the country, with police using tear gas to disperse rioting youths.

Frelimo has dominated politics since independence from Portugal in 1975.

More than 10.7 million people were registered to vote in the country’s 11 provinces, as well as more than 89,500 Mozambicans in the diaspora.
Voting was extended at some polling stations amid reports of a large turnout.

Mozambique is one of Africa’s fastest-growing economies, with billions of dollars worth of natural resources.

But the country remains one of the world’s poorest.