By Charles Mangwiro, MAPUTO
Mozambique
Mozambicans will vote this week for a new president who many hope will bring peace to an oil and gas rich northern province that has been ravaged by a jihadist insurgency for nearly seven years.
Close to 17 million voters
will vote for the next president, alongside 250 members of parliament and
provincial assemblies, on Wednesday. The current president, Filipe Nyusi, is
ineligible to stand again after two terms of office.
During the six-week campaign
period, which ended Sunday, the frontrunners promised that violence in the
north of the country will be their main priority, although none has laid out a
plan to end it.
Mozambique has been fighting
an Islamic State-affiliated group that has launched attacks on communities in
the province of Cabo Delgado since 2017, including beheadings and other
killings.
Some 1.3 million people
were forced
to flee their homes. Around 600,000 people have since returned home, many
to shattered communities where houses, markets, churches, schools and health
facilities have been destroyed, the United Nations refugee agency said earlier
this year.
The candidates rounded off
their campaigns on Sunday in the northern and central provinces, which are
regarded as the highest-voting constituencies. They promised to address
development issues exacerbated by the insurgency.
Daniel Chapo, the presidential
candidate of Nyusi’s ruling Front for the Liberation of Mozambique (Frelimo),
has been telling rallies that peace will allow Cabo Delgado to rebuild
infrastructure.
“The first objective of
governance is to work to end terrorism using all available means to return
peace. Peace is the condition for development,” said Chapo at a rally last week
in Pemba, the provincial capital of Cabo Delgado.
Frelimo, which has ruled the
country since independence in 1975, is widely expected to win again.
Lutero Simango, the candidate
of the Democratic Movement of Mozambique, spent most of his time campaigning in
the central and northern regions, and made promises to remedy a lack of
medicines in public hospitals, high unemployment and abject poverty.
Venacio Mondlane, who is
running for president as an independent, has also promised to deal with the
violence in the region.
“From the moment my government
is in place, I can assure you that kidnappings happening in the country,
including terrorism in Cabo Delgado, will be wiped out in one year,” Mondlane
said drawing wild cheers from his supporters.
Corruption and poverty have
also been major campaign issues as the country grapples with high levels of
unemployment and hunger that has been exacerbated by El
Nino-induced severe drought.
According to the United
Nations World Food Program, 1.3 million people in Mozambique are facing severe
food shortages as a result of the drought.
The ruling Frelimo party has
also been tainted by corruption scandals, including the so-called “tuna
bond” scandal, which saw politicians jailed for taking payoffs to arrange
secret loan guarantees for government-controlled fishing companies.
The loans were plundered, and
Mozambique ended up with $2 billion in “hidden debt,” spurring a financial
crisis as the International Monetary Fund halted financial support to the
country.
The Southern African
Development Community, a regional bloc of southern African nations, has sent a
delegation of 52 election observers to the country. The observer mission on
Friday called for the impartiality of the country’s electoral bodies during the
polls.
Local elections held in
Mozambique last year were marred by wide-ranging allegations of vote-rigging
and electoral
fraud, sparking violent protests, after Frelimo won 64 of 65
municipalities. A consortium of election observers reported widespread ballot
stuffing, voter intimidation and falsification of results in favor of Frelimo.
“The political parties already
have their bases in the electorate and during the campaign we did not see
anything different in relation to the previous elections. We would need
something drastic to happen for Frelimo to lose these elections,” said political
analyst Dercia Alfazema.
Borges Nhamire, a researcher
at the Institute for Security Studies, said the eventual winner will inherit a
country facing many problems.
“The president to be elected
will find a very difficult situation because he is in transition during a
period of war, and every transition that takes place during a period of war is
very difficult,” said Nhamire.
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