Displaced Mozambicans recall terror of new jihadist attacks

When gunmen arrived in her village for the second time, Alexandrina Calisto realised it was time to take her terrified family to join the latest wave of people fleeing Mozambique's Cabo Delgado province.

The lawless region has been prey to a jihadist insurgency for more than six years, but in recent weeks there has been a surge in violence that has sent more than 70,000 people fleeing on foot, by bus and boat.

According to the UN migration agency IOM, those escaping attacks in six districts of the province -- a mineral-rich area already prone to catastrophic flooding and, last year, a cholera outbreak -- numbered 68,156 between February 8 and 27 alone.

UN agencies have begun to register the displaced people for emergency food supplies. But NGO leaders warn that after months of conflict and disaster, the terror of the attacks has begun to take a mental toll on the population.  

Displaced people have been escaping Cabo Delgado for months, aid agencies say, but in the last two weeks there has been a sharp increase in numbers
AFP | Alfredo ZUNIGA

On February 20, 30-year-old Calisto fled with her mother, sister and three children after armed men entered their home. 

Mozambican soldiers arriving at the scene told her it would be safe to return, but when she tried, the gunmen launched an attack.

The men were armed with "knives, rifles, pistols, and weapons to kill people", Calisto said, describing how the gang burned vehicles. 

"We began to defend each other's lives, and then we had to flee," she told AFP.

 

- Mental toll -

Now the family is in Namapa, just south of Cabo Delgado, a small town that is quickly filling with thousands fleeing violence that the Maputo government has long tried to play down. 

"In reality the trend of new displacement is not only in the recent weeks, we have seen the resuming peak of displaced already in November," said Francesca Zuccaro, NGO Doctors Without Borders' (MSF) deputy head of mission.

People in some districts have been displaced multiple times, she told AFP in a telephone interview.  

"Within a population that is involved in conflict for more than six years... the impact on the mental health is the one that is striking," Zuccaro said.

Cornelio Alberto was at a local market when an armed group arrived.

The UN's migration agency IOM says almost 70,000 people have fled their homes between February 8 to 27
AFP | Alfredo ZUNIGA

"They arrived at the market at three in the afternoon," he told AFP, explaining the gunman walked the crowd out of the village towards a nearby river.

"We fled to the jungle and ran, we slept in the jungle" and "the next day, we walked and arrived at Namapa". 

Alberto, a father-of-five who fled with his children, wife and three brothers, said they had not eaten much in days. 

MSF said it was providing individual consultations for psychological support despite limited health infrastructure.

In one Cabo Delgado district alone, Macomia, six out of seven health centres have been destroyed. 

In 2021, forces from Rwanda and the SADC regional bloc arrived to help Mozambique's forces put down the insurgency. At first, they appeared to have some success in stabilising the situation. 

Almost 5,000 people have been killed and almost a million have been forced to flee their homes.

 

- 'Beautiful country' -

The World Food Programme has begun to register displaced people for emergency supplies, but Mozambique's government says it is not yet time to declare a state of emergency
AFP | Alfredo ZUNIGA

The insurgency, which has claimed links to the Islamic State group, survived and attacks have resumed -- although the government has rebuffed calls for a state of emergency and the SADC portion of the force is due to withdraw in July.

On Wednesday, the chair of the European Union's political and security committee, Delphine Pronk, reassured Mozambique of the pair's "strong relations" during a working visit.

Jihadist attacks displace tens of thousands in Mozambique
AFP | Alfredo ZUNIGA

The EU will, she said, "help your armed forces... to fight the terrorism in the northern parts of your beautiful country."

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