MAPUTO, Mozambique
Leaders of Mozambique and Tanzania said on Wednesday they had signed defence and security deals aimed at fighting terrorism and crime along their shared border.
No details were released about
the agreements, which were signed during a visit to Maputo by Tanzania's
President Samia Hassan.
A deadly insurgency erupted in
northern Mozambique, near the Tanzanian border, five years ago.
It has killed thousands and
displaced hundreds of thousands.
But life now was
"gradually returning to normal" after thousands of foreign troops
from several African countries were deployed more than a year ago to quell the
unrest, said Mozambican President Filipe Nyusi.
"The enemy is now
operating in small groups trying to descend into the southern districts,"
Nyusi said during their talks.
President Hassan said as the
two neighbours share a "very long" boundary, "we need a good
security system in which we can protect our border".
"We have been seeing...
cross-border crimes (and) terrorism," she said.
Nyusi on Tuesday toured the
recovered port of Mocimboa da Praia, previously the de-facto headquarters of
the jihadists.
In October 2017, about 30
armed men launched a dawn raid on three police stations in Mocimboa da Praia --
marking the start of the insurgency.
Since then, more than 4,258
people have been killed according to conflict tracker ACLED, and 820,000 have
fled their homes.
Mozambican forces, backed by
Rwandan troops, said in August last year that they had driven out the militants
occupying the port. - AFP
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