Tag: Mozambique

  • Gemfields leaves Mozambique exploration Camp after attack

    Gemfields leaves Mozambique exploration Camp after attack

    Gemfields Group, a precious stone miner, has left its Nairoto exploration camp in Mozambique’s Cabo Delgado province after an attack on a nearby village.

    The assault, which took place on Sunday, February 12, 2023, has been blamed on local insurgents.

    Since 2017, the Cabo Delgado province has been battling an insurgency linked to the Islamic State that has claimed thousands of lives and halted multibillion-dollar mining and natural gas projects.

    Gemfields Evacuates Mozambique Exploration Camp After Attack (News Central TV)

    Gemfields owns three-fourths of the exploration camp, located approximately 15 kilometres south-west of the attacked village.

    However, the flagship Montepuez ruby mine, which is approximately 83 kilometres north of the attacked village, remains operational and has not been affected.

    In October 2022, the company suspended operations at a nearby ruby mine for five days following an attack.

  • Amnesty blasts Mozambique’s ‘forgotten war’ after viral video

    Amnesty blasts Mozambique’s ‘forgotten war’ after viral video

    Since the conflict began in 2017, 4,500 people have died and nearly a million have been driven from their homes.

    According to Amnesty International, a video showing soldiers tossing a corpse onto a pile of burning rubble in northern Mozambique “gives a glimpse” of what is going on in a “forgotten war.”

    The video, which is thought to have been taken in November, shows a soldier dousing a corpse with liquid as bystanders, including one dressed in a South African uniform, observe and record the action on their cell phones.

    “Human rights violations and violations of international humanitarian law are still occurring,” the rights watchdog said in a statement on Thursday.

    An investigation has been opened by regional forces on the possible “involvement of its members in this despicable act”, the South African army announced on Tuesday.

    The video “is another horrific event that gives a glimpse of what is going on away from the attention of international media in this forgotten war,” said Amnesty’s east and southern Africa director, Tigere Chagutah.

    The crisis began in Cabo Delgado province in 2017, prompting the deployment of troops from Rwanda and neighbouring countries in mid-2021 to help Mozambique’s embattled army.

    The conflict has led to the death of more than 4,500 people, while nearly a million have fled their homes, according to NGOs and the United Nations.

    The government has regained control over much of the region since thousands of African troops were deployed in 2021.

    But “security in Cabo Delgado must not come at the cost of human rights violations”, Chagutah warned.

  • Black Galaxies’ friendly match against Mozambique ends abruptly

    Black Galaxies’ friendly match against Mozambique ends abruptly

    The Black Galaxies‘  friendly game against Mozambique on Tuesday afternoon ended abruptly when the Mozambican coach ordered his players to walk off the pitch.

    Mozambique took the lead in the game in the 39th minute as Ghana failed to make their initial dominance count.

    There were no goals as the first half ended 1-0 in favour of  Mozambique but things unraveled in the second half when Ghana strongly came into the game.

    The Black Galaxies were awarded a penalty in the 72nd minute after an infringement in the penalty area but the Mozambique technical bench disagreed with the decision as they walked onto the pitch and called off their players.

    The Ghanaian players stood on the pitch for several minutes as they waited in vain for the Mozambicans to have a change of mind but it never happened as the match was called off.

    The home-based national stars drew goalless with tournament hosts Algeria in a friendly match last Saturday in a game that was also to officially open the newly constructed Nelson Mandela Stadium in Algiers.

    Prior to their arrival in Algiers, the Black Galaxies beat Egypt’s U20 team(2-0) and Al Ahly FC(3-1) during the first phase of their pre-tournament tour in Cair

  • South Africa apprehend Mozambique’s alleged kidnap kingpin

    South Africa apprehend Mozambique’s alleged kidnap kingpin

    Interpol has apprehended a Mozambican man accused of masterminding kidnappings for ransom in South Africa.

    Esmael Malude Ramos Nangy is suspected of masterminding kidnappings for ransom worth millions of dollars over the last two decades.

    South African police said he was apprehended during a raid on an upscale housing estate in Centurion, near Pretoria.

    Over the weekend, police in Mozambique confirmed the arrest of the wanted man.

    The news of the arrest of the 50-year-old Mozambican citizen was first issued by the international police. It followed an international arrest warrant issued in July last year by the Mozambican authorities.

    A statement by the South African police said among the items seized at the home were a firearm, cartridges, five mobile phones and banks cards.

    He is due in court on Monday.

    Mozambique is seeking his extradition. A Mozambican police source said Mr Nangy was a suspect in a kidnapping that took place last year in the capital, Maputo.

    Kidnapping for ransom is common mainly in Mozambican major cities and towns and the key targets have been business people of Asian origin or their relatives.

    According to Mozambique’s National Criminal Investigation Service (Sernic), the country recorded 13 kidnappings in 2022 and 33 arrests linked to the crimes.

    Source: BBC.com
  • Mozambique takes seat at UN Security Council

    Mozambique takes seat at UN Security Council

    Mozambique replaced Kenya at the UN Security Council on Tuesday with a promise to prioritise the fight against terrorism.

    The country will serve at the council as a non-permanent member for the next two years.

    “We are going to deal a lot with terrorism,” said Mozambican ambassador to the UN, Pedro Comissário.

    Mozambique has been battling an Islamist insurgency in its northern Cabo Delgado province for the past five years. The conflict has displaced over one million people and killed around 4,000 others, according to official data.

    Mr Comissário said the country would also push for reforms at the Security Council to address “African concerns”.

    “It is necessary to pay attention to reforming the Security Council to reflect African concerns, a region that has suffered historical injustice. We have no permanent member on the Security Council,” said Mr Comissário.

    The Security Council has five permanent members – the United States of America, Russia, France, the United Kingdom and China – and 10 non-permanent members.

    Source:
  • Elephants rampage houses, granaries in Mozambique in search of food and water

    Elephants rampage houses, granaries in Mozambique in search of food and water

    In the center of Mozambique, elephant herds have destroyed homes, granaries, and crops.

    The animals were in desperate need of water, according to Safala province officials, as their usual sources had completely dried up.

    They claimed that because the elephants were destroying everything in their path, some families had to leave their homes and relocate.

    Elephants encroaching on areas of human settlement are an increasing problem in Mozambique, and they are leaving conservation areas in search of food and water.

    The national environmental body says nearly 100 people have been killed by wild animals in the past two years.

  • Mozambique endorses the use of local militias against jihadists

    A bill allowing local forces to participate in the conflict against jihadists in the northern Cabo Delgado province has been approved by Mozambique‘s parliament.

    The army and its allies from Rwanda and the southern African regional bloc have been working with local militias to combat jihadists in the province.

    The bill’s presenter in parliament, Defence Minister Cristovao Chume, acknowledged that the Mozambican army was insufficiently equipped to combat jihadist activities on its own.

    In order to support the army “in combating and containing the spread of jihadist incursions,” he said it was urgent to establish local forces.

    He said they would protect community settlements and public and private infrastructure, similar to strategies used in other jurisdictions where national security was compromised.

    The local forces are made up of volunteer former combatants.

  • Mozambique destroys cosmetics deemed to cause cancer

    In response to a warning from the European Union, the Mozambican government burned 10,000 cosmetic products that represent a “possible risk” like cancer to human health.

    The products include shower gels, shampoos, creams and sprays.

    The authorities say they contain substances that can cause cancer, in addition to being harmful to reproductive health and potentially causing infertility.

    The EU had warned against the products in early September, said Sheila Mercis, an inspector at the country’s medicines regulatory authority (Anarme).

    “By incinerating, we are guaranteeing that in the market, at least, there will no longer be any [harmful] products for sale,” said Paulo Aguiar, a director of Medis Moçambique, which is owned by the Portuguese pharmaceutical group Azevedos.

    The manufacturers have already submitted new formulas of the cosmetics in question to Anarme for approval so that they can be imported again “without the harmful substances”, according to Medis.

    “All manufacturers in Europe have already withdrawn the [harmful] substance. The next batches will not contain these substances,” Mr Aguiar said.

    Source: BBC

  • Mozambique ex-president’s son, others jailed for 12 years for corruption

    A Mozambican court has sentenced the son of a former president and others to prison for their role in the “tuna bonds” corruption scandal.

    Ex-President Armando Guebuza’s son, Ndambi Guebuza, and two former heads of intelligence, Gregorio Leao and Antonio do Rosario, each got 12 years behind bars.

    Eight of their co-accused were convicted and sentenced to between 10 and 12 years.

    “The crimes committed have brought consequences whose effects will last for generations,” Judge Efigenio Baptista said while handing down the sentences.

    A total of 19 people had been charged with blackmail, embezzlement and money laundering over their alleged roles in Mozambique’s biggest financial scandal. Eight have been acquitted for lack of evidence.

    The scandal involved the country borrowing more than $2bn ($1.6bn) from international banks, much of it without the knowledge or approval of the country’s parliament, triggering an economic crisis.

    Source: Myjoyonline

  • Son of former president of Mozambique, others, sentenced to 12 years in prison

    The son of a former president and others have received a 12-year prison sentence in Mozambique for their involvement in the “tuna bonds” corruption scam.

    Ex-President Armando Guebuza’s son, Ndambi Guebuza, and two former heads of intelligence, Gregorio Leao and Antonio do Rosario, each got 12 years behind bars.

    Eight of their co-accused were convicted and sentenced to between 10 and 12 years.

    “The crimes committed have brought consequences whose effects will last for generations,” Judge Efigenio Baptista said while handing down the sentences.

    A total of 19 people had been charged with blackmail, embezzlement and money laundering over their alleged roles in Mozambique’s biggest financial Scandal. Eight have been acquitted for lack of evidence.

    The scandal involved the country borrowing more than $2bn ($1.6bn) from international banks, much of it without the knowledge or approval of the country’s parliament, triggering an economic crisis.

    Source: BBC

  • 5 people die in Mozambique after Lightning strikes

    Lightning strikes killed five people and injured seven others at the weekend, the authorities in the northern Mozambican province of Cabo Delgado have said.

    According to district administrator Matias Constantino, who confirmed the fact today, people were hit while watching a recreational football match in Nangande disctrict.

    Speaking to state radio in Pemba, Mr Constantino said that in addition to causing fatalities, the phenomenon damaged the electrical system of the district administration building.

    Lightening strikes, cyclones and floods are common in central and northern Mozambique, particularly during the rainy season that runs between October and the end of March.

    Source: BBC

     

  • Lightning kills 5 people in Mozambique

    The authorities in the northern Mozambican province of Cabo Delgado say lightning strikes killed five people and injured seven others at the weekend.

    According to district administrator Matias Constantino, who confirmed the fact today, people were hit while watching a recreational football match in Nangande disctrict.

    Speaking to state radio in Pemba, Mr Constantino said that in addition to causing fatalities, the phenomenon damaged the electrical system of the district administration building.

    Lightening strikes, cyclones and floods are common in central and northern Mozambique, particularly during the rainy season that runs between October and the end of March.

     

  • Thirty jihadist suspects killed in Mozambique – Samim

    The Military Mission of the Southern African Development Community (SADC), best known as Samim, deployed as part of the fight against terrorism in Cabo Delgado in northern Mozambique, says it has killed 30 suspected jihadists in an operation launched last Tuesday.

    Weapons used by the jihadist suspects have also been recovered.

    The SADC military mission also announced that two of its soldiers, one from Botswana and the other from Tanzania, lost their lives in the operation in the woods of Nkonga village, in the district of Nangade, north of Cabo Delgado.

     

    Nangade still has strongholds of jihadists, who have carried out daily attacks against villages, farms and military positions.

    Recently, Tanzanian forces integrated in the SADC military mission fell into an ambush and five soldiers were injured. During the ambush, the jihadists seized weapons.

    Source: BBC

     

  • Aid worker killed in ambush by armed group in Mozambique

    A humanitarian worker for the French NGO Solidarités International was killed in an ambush by an armed group in northern Mozambique, which has been plagued by jihadist violence for more than five years, the organization said Tuesday.

    Solidarités International “is shocked by the news of the death of one of their colleagues, a victim of an attack by an armed group” on Sunday on a road in the district of Muidumbe in the direction of Palma, in the province of Cabo Delgado, wrote the NGO in a statement.

    The impoverished, Muslim-majority northern province bordering Tanzania has been plagued by jihadist violence that has killed more than 4,400 people, including nearly 2,000 civilians, since October 2017, according to the NGO Acled, which collects data in conflict zones. The violence has also caused one million people to flee, according to the UN.

    The victim aged about 30 years was a Mozambican national, a spokeswoman for the Paris-based organization, which operates in 23 countries, told AFP. Other people were killed, she added, not having more details at this stage.

    The generally well-informed Mozambican news website Zitamar reported a total of five dead, including the head of operations of the Palma police, his wife and nephew, as well as the aid worker.

    The aid worker was on his way back to Palma from the provincial capital Pemba after a weekend break when his car was targeted, Solidarités International said.

    In March 2021, a carefully planned murderous raid devastated the port city of Palma, population 75,000. The natural gas megaproject of the French group TotalEnergies, only a few kilometers away, was stopped dead in its tracks.

    Solidarités International, regularly present in Mozambique and back since last year, was preparing distributions of food in the region.

    “The murder of our colleague and the civilians traveling with him shocks and disgusts us,” said the director of the NGO, Kevin Goldberg, quoted in the statement.

     

    Source: African News

  • Restless innovator DJ Tarico flies the flag for Mozambique

    Mozambique isn’t a country I report a lot on, but DJ Tarico is putting it firmly on the musical map.

    He’s a super versatile producer who seems to be able to turn out hit after hit with different artists and in several musical genres.

    Now he’s conquered the amapiano scene with tracks so good even the South Africans are fooled.

    Already making waves across the continent with his 2020 hit Yaba Buluku, he gained global exposure the following year when Burna Boy collaborated on a remix of the song.

    DJ Tarico began experimenting in music back in 2010 when a school friend taught him how to play with sounds on a computer.

    He also had a friend who was a DJ so he had two people to guide him at the start, and in the beginning he was producing hip hop because that was what he listened to most.

    “When I felt I was producing good, I tried to change a bit. One thing that I like is to keep growing. I don’t like to be static.”

    So he changed from hip hop to Kuduro.

    “Kuduro is the style of Angola. Kuduro at that time was rocking all over the place. So then I moved from Kuduro to Kizomba, that dance when people are too close!,” he laughs.

    “After that I changed to Panza, our regional style here. That time I became a big producer here in Mozambique when I started producing local styles here.”

    He says that Panza was invented by DJ Ardiles and Ziqo.

    “They tried to mix Raga music with Marabenta. We tried to put more electronics on the traditional sounds.”

    He says it was quite hard back then as they didn’t know anything about the music industry, “we were just doing it”.

    He later switched again to Amapiano. “At that time amapiano was growing in Moz, so why not?”

    Burna Boy heard Yaba Buluku in a club and jumped on board the track propelling to the global stage with the remix.

    DJ Tarico says the track changed his life.

    “Now DJ Tarico is not a local artist, he’s an international artist. It’s the first time in Mozambique you see? It’s a hope for more Mozambican artists. It’s like a spark. They are now working more because they know that it’s possible. I became like an example here in Mozambique.”

    As a result he says the music industry is now changing in Mozambique, with artists becoming more aware of digital platforms on which to promote their work.

    But DJ Tarico has no plans to leave Mozambique in order to enhance his career.

    “From Southern Africa we don’t like to emigrate too much. It’s sweet bro!”

    Source: BBC

  • UN Security Council President holds meeting with Mozambican Foreign Minister

    Mr Harold Adlai Agyeman, President of the United Nations Security Council for the month of November and Permanent Representative of Ghana to the UN, has held a meeting with Madam Veronica Macamo, Foreign Minister of Mozambique.

    A statement issued by the Ghana Permanent Mission to the UN and copied to the Ghana News Agency said the meeting, which took place in New York focused on Mozambique’s preparations towards assuming membership of the Council from January 2023.

    Mr Agyeman used the opportunity to share Ghana’s experiences and outlined best practices that Ghana had explored since joining the Council.

    Source: GNA

     

  • Police raid fake iPhone factory in Mozambique

    The Mozambican authorities have seized 1,165 fake Apple iPhones and arrested two Chinese nationals following a raid at an apartment in the capital, Maputo, where the counterfeits were being assembled.

    Police said the suspected counterfeiters were able to use complex technical procedures, including assigning unique serial numbers to the phones.

    The suspects have denied any wrongdoing.

    Customs officials said they found the suspects thanks to a tip-off.

    “We received a complaint that caused suspicion. So we activated our operational lines to determine the veracity and after three weeks of investigation we discovered this factory,” said Gino Jone, the director of Mozambique customs operational area in Maputo City.

    He added that some of the seized phones are suspected to have been smuggled into the country, while others were obtained through theft.

    “It’s an apartment but it works like a factory. Mobile phones are made here, IMEIs [unique serial numbers] are placed and sold in a store located in the Alto-Maè area,” he said.

    Source: BBC

  • Pictures: Akabenzer aka Dr. LIKEE visits Black Meteors ahead of Mozambique clash

    Akabenzer aka Dr. LIKEE visited the Black Meteors team camp on Saturday ahead of Sunday’s AFCON U-23 Qualifier against Mozambique.

    Akabenzer as he is popularly known is a comedian based in Kumasi, Ghana. He visited the squad to motivate them ahead of the crucial second leg game.

    He met Black Meteors head coach Ibrahim Tanko and other officials.

    Black Meteors trained at the Baba Yara Stadium in Kumasi on Friday ahead of their TotalEnergies CAF U23 championship second leg qualifier against Mozambique.

    Black Meteors overcame their Mozambican opponents 2-1 in the first leg away in Maputo and will meet the Young Mambas at the Baba Yara Stadium on Sunday, October 30, 2022.

    Hearts of Oak attacker Daniel Afriyie Barnieh scored twice against Mozambique.

    Coach Ibrahim Tanko’s team has been training for the second leg encounter with the hopes of beating Mozambique at home and advancing to the final stage of the qualifiers.

    If Ghana wins on Sunday, the Black Meteors will play the winner of the match between Algeria and the Democratic Republic of the Congo in the final round of qualifiers.

    If Ghana wins on Sunday, the Black Meteors will face the winner of Algeria vs DR Congo encounter in the last round of qualifiers.

    Below are the pictures:

  • 2023 U-23 AFCON: Black Meteors arrive in Accra after beating Mozambique in 1st leg

    The Black Meteors of Ghana have touched down in the country following their 2-1 convincing win over Mozambique in the first leg of the TotalEnergies CAF U-23 qualifying match on Sunday.

    The team will head straight to Kumasi and begin camping ahead of the return on Sunday at the Baba Yara stadium.

    Hearts of Oak talisman Daniel Afriyie Barnieh scored two spot kicks to help coach Ibrahim Tanko’s side to secure a slim victory.

    The 21-year-old netted on the 61st and 76th minutes before the hosts capitalized on a mistake on the 88th minute to pull one back.Mozambique kept it compact in defense and managed to keep the Ghanaian forwards at bay in the first half.

    After the break, Ghana went in strongly and was rewarded with a penalty kick on the 61st minute which was well coveted by Barnieh.Another impressive run by Afriyie Barnieh resulted in a second penalty for the Black Meteors. He converted again to make it 2-0, however, the home side pulled one back.The win puts Ghana on a strong footing ahead of the return leg which will be played at the Baba Yara Stadium on Sunday, October 30,2022.A win for Ghana in the return encounter will take Ghana into the final round of the qualifiers where the Black Meteors will face either Ethiopia or Algeria.

    Source: Footballghana

  • 2023 AFCON: Black Meteors ready for Mozambique clash today

    The Black Meteor have set sights on securing a win in first leg tie away against Mozambique in Total Energies CAF U23 Championship  qualifiers on Sunday.

    Ghana U-23 side are set to take on Mozambique in the second round of qualification stage at the Estádio do Zimpeto in Maputo.

    Black Meteors Management Committee chairman are determined to secure a positive result in the first leg before hosting their opponents at the Baba Yara Stadum on Sunday, October 30, 2022.

    The match is scheduled to kick off at 3pm local time (1pm Ghana time).

    The squad has been boosted with the arrival of former U-20 AFCON winning defend Philemon Baffour who currently plays for Rio Ave in the Portuguese league.

    The winner will move on to play the winner of the tie between Algeria and DR Congo.

    The fourth edition of the U-23 Africa Cup of Nations will take place in Morocco in June 2023.

    Tanko was in charge of the team which finished fourth at the 2019 tournament won by hosts Egypt, which ensured Ghana missed out on the 2020 Olympic Games.

    Source: Football Ghana

  • Attacks prompt evacuation at Mozambique ruby mine

    Workers in a mining company have been evacuated following attacks by Islamist militants at a neighbouring mine in Mozambique’s troubled Cabo Delgado province.

    The attack against Montepuez Ruby Mining (MRM) happened on Thursday, October 20, 2022, and several families have moved to Montepuez town.

    Montepuez Ruby Mining evacuated all its employees and contractors to the town, local media report.

    Only employees thought to be essential to operations were left on site.

    A local radio station reported that security forces were already in the area.

    Montepuez Ruby Mining is extracting rubies from one of the largest deposits of rubies in the world.

    In 2009 a vast deposit of rubies was discovered in northern Mozambique and now half the world’s red gemstones come from there.

  • Rwandan troops discover a covert weapons store in Mozambique

    Rwandan troops deployed to help fight insurgents in northern Mozambique say they have discovered a stockpile of weapons and ammunition hidden by jihadists.

    The Rwanda Defence Force (RDF) posted a tweet with pictures of weapons and ammunition which it said jihadists had hidden in Mbau in Mocimboa da Praia district.

    The stockpile includes hundreds of weapons ranging from small arms and rockets as well as ammunition and shells.

    They are said to have been hidden by the Islamist Insurgents as the RDF pursued and dislodged them from their strongholds in the area.

    Cabo Delgado province has experienced jihadist attacks since 2017, which have so far displaced about a million people and caused the deaths of around 4,000 others.

     

  • Mozambique: Life after the jihadists’ rule of terror

    For the residents of the Mozambican town of Mocímboa da Praia, the city has almost returned to being a good place to live. It is football day and every goal is greeted with celebration.

    The port city was liberated from the Al-Shabaab terrorists a year ago.

    Despite the smiles, the scars and the memories of four years under Shebab jihadist terror remain.

    “They (Shebabs) came and said, “we are going to burn the house”. I went out, opened the door and they came into the room, Lucia Da Silva recounts.

    “I told the children to run and hide in the room, but one of them came in and took the children. I couldn’t stop them. They said they were going to take good care of the children. Afterward, we fled outside, they ignited the beds and mosquito nets with gasoline and burned the house”, she adds.

    This Wednesday marks five years since the first attack on police units in Mocímboa da Praia. The city is now under the protection of the Rwandan police, who came to back the Mozambican authorities.

    The conflict has spread across the entire province of Cabo Delgado and displaced thousands of people. Many have not yet been able to return home. They remain in makeshift accommodation centers still mourning their old lives.

    “We here in Cabo Delgado are tired of the terrorists, Ricardo Mendes sighs.

    “This quietness that we are seeing today is because our forces are working in the jungle. They are pursuing the terrorists”, the man living in Metuge explains.

    If streets are quiet, the fear of new attacks remains real. And most families have to face a new enemy: hunger.

    “Here since we arrived over a year ago we always eat the same thing: rice and beans, Graça João laments.

    “All of us. There is no money here for us”.

    The UN estimates that the years of terror have led almost a million Mozambicans to flee their homes.

    Despite efforts to pacify the province and international support, the conflict is not over yet. It is less noisy, but no less painful for thousands of families.

     

    Source: African News

  • Mozambique urges ‘knives and machetes’ war on jihadists

    The Mozambican police chief has asked residents in areas recently attacked by jihadists in the northern Cabo Delgado province to resist the attackers.

    In talks with the local population, Bernardino Rafael urged people to use all the means at their disposal and called for greater vigilance to protect the community.

    “Now is not the time to run away. It’s time to resist. When they [the jihadists] enter our fields what we have to do is chase them and resist with a knife, a machete [or] a spear and then one of you runs to communicate to the security forces to join and chase these jihadists away,” he said.

    He assured the population that the militants were being pursued and some had been killed during armed confrontations.

    In Quissanga district, local residents, particularly the youth, asked for weapons to help defend their land from jihadist invasions.

    The police chief assured that those who are qualified would be integrated into the local force – a group that works with government soldiers and international allies in the fight against terrorism.

    In talks with the local population, Bernardino Rafael urged people to use all the means at their disposal and called for greater vigilance to protect the community.

    “Now is not the time to run away. It’s time to resist. When they [the jihadists] enter our fields what we have to do is chase them and resist with a knife, a machete [or] a spear and then one of you runs to communicate to the security forces to join and chase these jihadists away,” he said.

    He assured the population that the militants were being pursued and some had been killed during armed confrontations.

    In Quissanga district, local residents, particularly the youth, asked for weapons to help defend their land from jihadist invasions.

    The police chief assured that those who are qualified would be integrated into the local force – a group that works with government soldiers and international allies in the fight against terrorism.

    Source: BBC

  • Activists offer to pay legal costs of abused students

    A campaign group in Mozambique is calling for tough action to stop the sexual abuse of women and girls in higher education, and has offered to pay the legal costs of students wanting to take their cases to court.

    The Observatory for Women says a recent study it conducted revealed the province of Tete had the worst level of such offences, and says it has spoken to multiple victims who allege they were harassed by one particular professor.

    “I did not file a complaint with the university – I am very frustrated because now I have to cross paths with the professor in hallways every day,” one of the alleged victims told the campaign group.

    The alleged abuser is himself taking legal action against the students who had accused him of attacking them, sparking outrage from the Observatory for Women.

    “If teachers continue to have this practice, we, as a civil society, are available to freely sponsor students to file lawsuits,” the group added.

    Source: BBC

  • IMF staff agreement with Mozambique that could unlock $63.8M

    Mozambique and the IMF team reached Monday a staff-level agreement on the economic and financial policies that could support the approval of the First Review of the program under the ECF arrangement.

    The ECF also known as Extended Credit Facility provides financial assistance to countries with protracted balance of payments problems.

    “All quantitative and structural benchmarks set for the first review have been met and good progress was made on the broader structural agenda. Looking ahead, the macroeconomic environment remains challenging.”

    “The authorities aim to continue implementing their ambitious economic reform agenda, including a sovereign wealth fund law, reform of public sector remuneration, and the amendment of the public probity law.”

    The agreement awaits the approval of the IMF Executive Board in December, which would enable the disbursement of about US$63.8 million.

    The Washington-based institution welcomed the Bank of Mozambique (BM) response to contain inflation which it called “proactive”.

    The (IMF) granted May a 432 million euro loan to Mozambique, a first since it withdrew six years ago at the time after finding undisclosed debts in the so-called “hidden debt” scandal involving the government.

     

    Source: Africanews

  • CCBA leads extensive beaches and rivers clean-up across Africa

    Coca-Cola Beverages Africa (CCBA) is leading extensive beach and river clean-ups across the African continent this month as part of the International Coastal Clean-up initiative to remove plastic waste from the environment and raise awareness of the need to recycle.

    Teams of volunteers supported by CCBA have rallied across Ghana, South Africa, Namibia, Mozambique, Zambia, Kenya, Uganda and Ethiopia to collect plastic waste.

    Every year, on the third Saturday of September, volunteers around the world take part in the world’s biggest coastal clean-up, International Coastal Cleanup Day.

    CCBA leads extensive beaches and rivers clean-up across Africa

    “Food and beverage packaging is an important part of our modern lives, yet the world has a packaging problem, which we as CCBA, together with the Coca-Cola Company, have a responsibility to help solve,” said Tshidi Ramogase, CCBA Chief Public Affairs, Communication and Sustainability Officer.

    “To encourage more people to recycle more often, we’re investing to help people understand what to recycle, how to recycle, and where to recycle. As part of International Coastal Cleanup Day, we are working with local communities and NGOs across Africa to highlight this critical issue.

    CCBA leads extensive beaches and rivers clean-up across Africa

    “These clean-ups help shift attitudes towards littering and recycling, encourage environmentally responsible waste-management habits and motivate communities across the continent to recycle,” Ramogase said.

    In Namibia, Coastal Cleanup Day coincides with a national clean-up day so the whole country is involved, as well as the Ministry for the Environment. CCBA will be doing clean-ups over September in Windhoek, Otjiwarongo, Keetmanshoop, Walvis Bay and Oshakati.

    In South Africa, there are clean-ups in Enseleni, Richards Bay, Durban, Gqeberha, East London and Port Shepstone.

    In Ghana, CCBA subsidiary, Voltic partnered with the University of Ghana Plastic Recycling Project and Miniplast Limited to clean up Laboma Beach.

    CCBA leads extensive beaches and rivers clean-up across Africa

    In Zambia, CCBA partnered with the Siavonga City Council to conduct a clean-up exercise at Lake Kariba.

    In Ethiopia, CCBA joined forces with a youth-led organisation called Green Rotaract Concept and cleaned up the Little Akaki River in Addis Ababa.

    The team in Mozambique not only held a volunteer clean-up but also had an educational workshop with well-known environmentalist, Carlos Serra, to help increase awareness of the need to develop good recycling habits.

    Ramogase added: “While increasing recycling rates and using more recycled content in packaging is key, it is equally important to dramatically increase the collection of post-consumer waste and prevent it from ending up in rivers and oceans.

    “This requires a mass awareness campaign to shift consumer behavior. We’re bringing people together through programmes like beach and river cleanups and other ongoing local activities.”

    CCBA aims to help make the world’s packaging problem a thing of the past, working in partnership with Coca-Cola Company which launched a sustainable packaging initiative called World Without Waste in 2018.

    CCBA aims to help collect a bottle or can for everyone it sells by 2030, to make all its packaging recyclable and have 50% recycled content in its packaging by 2030, and make 25% of its packaging reusable by 2030.

    Source:myjoyonline.com

  • Italian nun killed in jihadist attack in Mozambique

    An Italian nun, Maria De Coppi, has lost her life as a result of a suspected jihadist attack in northern Mozambique.

    The attack led to the destruction of a church, hospital and two schools.

    The deceased, aged 84, was shot in the head during the attack in the city of Chipene in Nampula province.

    Maria De Coppi had been in the country for nearly 60 years.

    A jihadist conflict began in 2017 and has recently spread from the oil-rich Cabo Delgado province to Nampula.

    The Comboni sisters said two other nuns, one Italian and one Spanish, had escaped to hide in the forest with a group of young girls.

  • IS behind attack on Australian mine in Mozambique

    The Islamic State group has said it was behind an attack on a graphite mining project run by an Australian firm in Mozambique’s northern Cabo Delgado province, saying it beheaded two security guards at the site.

    Triton Minerals Ltd confirmed the attack on its premises which took place on 8 June in the Ancuabe district, saying two members of its security and caretaker staff were killed, according to the Club of Mozambique news site.

    The district is in the south of Cabo Delgado and IS has only recently started targeting it.

    Previously the militants operated further north in the province, namely in the districts of Macomia, Mocimboa da Praia and Meluco.

    Cabo Delgado has been at the centre of a jihadist insurgency since 2017 that has forced hundreds of thousands people from their homes.

    Source: BBC
  • Former Mozambique minister loses extradition appeal

    A South African court has rejected the Mozambican government’s request to appeal against a decision to extradite former Finance Minister Manuel Chang to the US.

    Last November, a Johannesburg court ordered Mr Chang’s extradition to the US, where he is accused of corruption, fraud and money laundering.

    But the Mozambique government petitioned the South Africa’s constitutional court for authorisation to appeal against the sentence.

    On Tuesday, the court dismissed the request.

    The government in Mozambique had wanted him to be extradited to Maputo, where 19 suspects are on trial on similar charges.

    The crimes against Mr Chang relate to loans taken by Mozambique during his tenure as finance minister.

    Mr Chang signed off more than $2.7b in loans to set up a sophisticated tuna industry – to buy trawlers and military patrol boats, but much of it was allegedly diverted to corrupt officials.

    He denies accepting $7m in bribes. He was arrested in December 2018 at the request of the US, where investors were affected by the scandal.

    The former finance minister has been in a South African prison since his arrest following an indictment in a New York district court.

    He was arrested while he was on transit to the United Arab Emirates, according to court documents.

    Source: BBC

  • Ghana, Mozambique form alliance to address terrorist threats in sub-region

    President Akufo-Addo has appealed to President Felipe Jacinto Nyusi of Mozambique to join forces with Ghana in the battle against terrorist acts in the West African sub-region.

    In response to the rising tide of terrorism in West Africa, President Akufo-Addo remarked that both Ghana and Mozambique cannot turn a blind eye to the issue of terrorist acts in Africa, which is threatening the continent’s security.

    According to him, a cooperative effort between Ghana and Mozambique will not only strengthen security preparations, but also discover ways to decrease reliance on European countries.

    “Ghana will continue to collaborate with Mozambique to find solutions to challenges such as, the eradicate of widespread poverty, regulation of illegal migration, insecurity and human right violation, terrorist and violence extremism, human and drug trafficking as well as negative impact of climate changes on environment and livelihood.”

    President Akufo-Addo made these remarks when he welcomed President Felipe Jacinto Nyusi to the Jubilee House as part of his four-day visit to Ghana.

    The two Presidents also signed two bilateral agreements to deepen cooperation between the Ghana and Mozambique.

    The agreements are the Permanent Joint Partnership Commission for Cooperation and a Joint waiver on visa requirements and diplomatic service passports.

    Meanwhile, according to Edward Kweku Asomani, the Deputy National Security Coordinator, within the first quarter of 2022, Africa has experienced about 346 terrorist attacks in various countries. 49 per cent out of these, he noted, occurred in West Africa.

    These numbers emphasise the importance of such a collaboration in the battle against terrorism in West Africa.

    Source: The Independent Ghana

  • Mozambique drops pupils’ textbook over sex topics

    Mozambique is withdrawing from its education curriculum a book for 12-year-old grade seven pupils containing some controversial subjects on sexuality.

    The natural sciences book addresses subjects such as masturbation and sexual orientation.

    The education ministry says the book has been in use from 2004 but these topics “generating controversy in society” will no longer be taught.

    Teaching issues on sexuality to young people is for some communities in Mozambique being considered a taboo.

    Some also believe that sex education for children at this age group may promote premature marriages and early pregnancies.

    The book will be replaced next year but the education ministry has urged schools “not to address these issues”.

    “We talked to the publisher to remove that page”, said Ismael Nheze, the director of the National Institute of Education Development.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Mozambique militants kidnapped hundreds of girls

    At least 600 women and girls have been kidnapped and enslaved in the last three years by militants in Mozambique northern province of Cabo Delgado, a report by Human Rights Watch (HRW) says.

    The IS-linked militant group – known as Al Sunnah wa Jama’ah (ASWJ) or al-Shabab – forced younger, healthy-looking, and lighter-skinned women and girls in their custody to “marry” their fighters, who enslave and sexually abuse them, the rights group report says.

    Some of the abductees have been sold to foreign fighters for between $600 to $1,800 (£452 to £1,350). Others have been released after their families paid ransom, while another group has been freed following a military offensive led by government troops and regional forces.

    HRW called on the militants to release those still being held.

    At least 600 women and girls have been kidnapped and enslaved in the last three years by militants in Mozambique northern province of Cabo Delgado, a report by Human Rights Watch (HRW) says.

    The IS-linked militant group – known as Al Sunnah wa Jama’ah (ASWJ) or al-Shabab – forced younger, healthy-looking, and lighter-skinned women and girls in their custody to “marry” their fighters, who enslave and sexually abuse them, the rights group report says.

    Some of the abductees have been sold to foreign fighters for between $600 to $1,800 (£452 to £1,350). Others have been released after their families paid ransom, while another group has been freed following a military offensive led by government troops and regional forces.

    HRW called on the militants to release those still being held.

    The rights body conducted its investigations between August 2019 and October 2021, its findings are based on interviews of former abductees, their relatives, security sources, and government officials, as well as media reports.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Mozambican authorities vow to ensure normalcy to Palma after deadly attacks

    Families waited at a Mozambican port on Sunday as boats arrived carrying people who had fled the ongoing violence from a strategic town in the country’s north.

    Rebels fought Sunday for the fifth straight day to control the town of Palma, as reports came in that dozens of civilians had been killed and bodies were littering the streets.

    The fate of scores of foreign workers was also unknown.

    Many Palma residents ran into the dense tropical forest surrounding the town to escape the violence, according to Mozambican news reports.

    But a few hundred foreign workers from South Africa, Britain and France clustered at hotels that quickly became targets for the rebel attacks.

    The town is where many contractors have been working for a multi-billion-dollar liquified natural gas project by the French energy company Total.

    A teary-eyed Jose Abebe pleaded with journalists to help find his son, a worker at the Amarula hotel which was a reported target of the violent attacks.

    An estimated 200 foreign workers were at the Hotel Amarula.

    On Saturday a band of them in 17 vehicles drove together to try to reach the beach where they hoped to be rescued.

    The convoy came under heavy fire and only 7 vehicles reached the beach and several people in even those vehicles had been killed, according to local reports and messages sent by survivors.

    Abebe explained he and his family had previously fled violence in the country after rebel groups attacked the town of Macomia last year.

    He was among dozens at Pemba port on Sunday hoping to see their loved ones coming in on one of the boats that began arriving at the capital of Cabo Delgado province.

    Portuguese news agency LUSA reported that the first ship arrived in Pemba on Sunday morning, carrying around 1,000 people, many of them workers from the French company Total.

    The rescued were then to be transported via buses to local shelters.

    The total has told LUSA the operation is ongoing without any setbacks.

    The battle for Palma highlights the military and humanitarian crisis in this Southern African nation on the Indian Ocean.

    The three-year insurgency of the rebels, who are primarily disaffected young Muslim men, in the northern Cabo Delgado province has taken more than 2,600 lives and displaced an estimated 670,000 people, according to the U.N.

    Mozambique’s government is expected to issue an update on the battle for Palma later on Sunday.

    Mozambique’s rebels already hold the port town of Mocimboa da Praia, 50 kilometres (31 miles) south of Palma, which they captured in August.

    The insurgents are known locally as al-Shabab, although they do not have any known connection to Somalia’s jihadist rebels of that name.

    The rebels have been active in Cabo Delgado province since 2017 but their attacks became much more frequent and deadly in the past year.

    A Human Rights Watch representative in Mozambique condemned fighting over the strategic town of Palma which entered into its fifth day on Sunday.

    According to reports from the region, dozens of civilians have been killed and bodies were littering the streets of Palma as rebels continued to fight to control the northern town.

    The fate of scores of foreign workers was also unknown.

    Zenaida Machado, a representative in the country for Human Rights Watch, called on the Mozambican security forces to protect people fleeing the violence and help them find shelter.

    “It’s also important that the government move swiftly to restore order and security so that people can go back to their houses,” she added.

    The battle for Palma highlights the military and humanitarian crisis in this Southern African nation on the Indian Ocean.

    The three-year insurgency of the rebels, who are primarily disaffected young Muslim men, in the northern Cabo Delgado province has taken more than 2,600 lives and displaced an estimated 670,000 people, according to the U.N.

    Mozambique’s government is expected to issue an update on the battle for Palma later Sunday.

    Some of the dead had been beheaded, Human Rights Watch said.

    An attempt by expatriate workers to flee to safety came under heavy fire, causing many deaths, according to local reports.

    Most communications with Palma and the surrounding area have been cut off by the insurgents, although some in the besieged town got messages out using satellite phones.

    The town is where many contractors have been working for a multi-billion-dollar liquified natural gas project by the French energy company Total.

    Many Palma residents ran into the dense tropical forest surrounding the town to escape the violence, according to Mozambican news reports.

    But a few hundred foreign workers from South Africa, Britain and France clustered at hotels that quickly became targets for the rebel attacks.

    The attacks in Palma started just hours after Total announced that it would resume work outside the town on its natural gas project, near Mozambique’s northeastern border with Tanzania.

    Mozambique’s rebels already hold the port town of Mocimboa da Praia, 50 kilometres (31 miles) south of Palma, which they captured in August.

    Mozambique’s insurgents are known locally as al-Shabab, although they do not have any known connection to Somalia’s jihadist rebels of that name.

    The rebels have been active in Cabo Delgado province since 2017 but their attacks became much more frequent and deadly in the past year.

    Source: africanews.com

  • Mozambique legislators ask for increase in HIV budget

    Legislators in Mozambique’s parliament are urging the government to allocate more funds to tackle the HIV/Aids epidemic, in the week that marks World Aids day.

    The budget allocated to combat the epidemic has been reducing year after year – the budget has decreased from $2.9m (£2.1m) in 2015 to about $1.6m in 2020.

    Meanwhile, a report by the the parliamentary office to combat HIV records an increase in infections.

    It says contributing factors include an increase in population mobility, the growing number of multiple marital partners and the proliferation of mining lorry drivers and gold miners are contributing for the increase in new infections.

    The office says it has also recorded an increase in the number of sex workers.

    They have warned that budget cuts will affect the fight against HIV.

    The legislators say the epidemic has killed 50,000 people in the country over the past five years.

    Mozambique has the fourth highest rate of HIV in the world, after South Africa, Nigeria and Russia.

    According to official data, Mozambique has 2.2 million people living with HIV.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Mozambique ‘unaware of South Africa border wall plan’

    The Mozambican authorities say they have not yet received official information from South Africa on a reported plan to construct a wall on their common border.

    Foreign Affairs Minister Verónica Macamo said over the weekend that she had only seen the reports on media.

    The land border between the two countries measures approximately 490 kilometres (304 miles) long.

    Ms Macamo said the Mozambican authorities would discuss the matter with their South African counterparts once an official communication was made.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Mozambique seizes chicken imports from South Africa

    The customs authorities in Mozambique have seized just more than 300 boxes of smuggled chicken on the Ressano Garcia border with neighbouring South Africa.

    The boxes were hidden in a container. They had entered the country without paying the custom duties, according to an official.

    Maputo provincial director of customs Leonel Vasco said the importers had violated other rules apart from not paying taxes.

    Mozambique was to lose $4,173(£3,200) in tax charges.

    The country imports food from South Africa and importers have often tried to escape paying customs duties.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Mozambique warns of rising Covid-19 cases

    The Mozambican health authorities have expressed concern over the rising Covid-19 cases and the growing number of people going to hospital.

    The health system could be saturated by the trend, National Deputy Director of Public Health Benigna Matsinhe warned.

    Dr Matsinhe said it was time to increase preventive measures, as she believes that there are many people infected with Covid-19, travelling around the country.

    The country on Thursday recorded an additional death from the virus bringing the total number of fatalities to 26.

    There was an additional 90 positive cases of Covid-19, bringing the number of people infected by the virus to 4,207.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Mozambique declares second virus emergency

    Mozambican President Filipe Nyusi has announced another 30 days of emergency from Friday midnight in a bid to limit the spread of coronavirus.

    This is the second time the country has declared a health emergency since March when it confirmed its first case.

    In a televised address on Wednesday night, President Nyusi outlined a phased easing of restrictions.

    Phase one starts on 18 August with the resumption of classes at higher education institutions, military academies and technical training institutes. Religious gatherings will be allowed but limited to 50 people.

    The number of people at funerals will be raised to 50 from 20, except if the deceased died of COVID-19, in which case the number of attendants remains at 10.

    In phase two starting September, cinemas, casinos and gyms may reopen.

    The third phase starting in October will see final year students in secondary schools resuming classes.

    Bars will remain closed indefinitely.

    The country has so far confirmed 2,079 cases of coronavirus with 15 deaths.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Islamists becoming ‘more aggressive’ in Mozambique

    The US has warned that Islamist militants are getting more aggressive in Mozambique’s northern province of Cabo Delgado with support from the Islamic State.

    The militants, known locally as al-Shabab – although it has no known links to the Somali jihadi group of the same name, have been attacking remote villages across the province over the past two years.

    Head of US special operations in Africa, Maj-Gen Dagvin Anderson, told journalists that the group is receiving external support that is making it more dangerous.

    “We have seen them over the last 12 to 18 months develop in their capabilities, become more aggressive, and use techniques and procedures that are common in other parts of the world in the Middle East that are associated with Islamic State,” Gen Anderson told avirtual media briefing.

    “We do believe there are external actors that are influencing that and making that more virulent and more dangerous up in the Cabo Delgado region.”

    Source: bbc.com

  • ‘Mozambique riot officers arrested for policeman’s murder’

    Two members of Mozambique’s riot police have been arrested for the murder of a police officer in the northern city of Nampula, according to the newspaper O Pais.

    Selemane Momade Hassane was shot in the chest when he was outside his house on Tuesday, the paper adds.

    It says that he was parking his car but the riot police allegedly intercepted him at his gate. It goes on to say that he brought out his wife and son to vouch that he lived there.

    He was reportedly shot and went in the car with his son to the hospital but died before arriving.

    An investigation into the murder has started, a spokesperson for the Nampula Provincial Police Command Dercio Samuel is quoted as saying in O Pais.

    O Pais quotes a colleague as describing Mr Hassane’s death as “inexplicable.

    Source: BBC

  • Coronavirus: Mozambique extends state of emergency

    Mozambique’s President Filipe Nyusi has extended the country’s state of emergency for another 30 days but relaxed some measures seen to be hurting the economy.

    Stringent restrictions that have affected tourism, sports, trade and labour will be relaxed, he said in a televised address.

    The country’s airspace would also be opened to friendly countries – but he did not list them.

    Classes in primary and secondary schools will resume in phases, while public transport vehicles will be inspected more.

    The president said colleges and universities will also reopen in the next 30 days, but must adhere to safety measures that will be announced by the government.

    This is the third consecutive 30-day extension of the state of emergency.

    Mozambique has so far confirmed 859 cases of coronavirus and five deaths.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Mozambique confirms first coronavirus death

    Mozambique has reported its first coronavirus death – a 13-year-old boy from the northern province of Nampula.

    National Director of Public Health Rosa Marlene confirmed the death on Monday.

    The southern Africa country has also confirmed 15 new cases, bringing the total number to 209 cases.

    The new cases include a health worker who was diagnosed with Covid-19 in the northern province of Cabo Delgado.

    The authorities have now decided to test all 5,000 health workers in the mineral rich province – the worst hit by the pandemic.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Mozambique forces ‘push back militant attack’

    The Mozambican defence and security forces have pushed back an attack by Islamist militants against the village of Nacoba, in Metuge district, in the northern province of Cabo Delgado, reports Carta de Moçambique.

    The newspaper says that the raiders burnt down a tourist camp used by the Quirimbas National Park on Tuesday, which included 20 huts and 15 cows and goats.

    The newspaper’s sources are quoted as saying that there were no human casualties, due to the prompt response of the Mozambican forces.

    The villagers had received advance notice that there might be an attack and so most of them had left the village before the fighting began.

    This clash follows an attack a week ago at a funeral in Imbada village, also in Meluco.

    Friends and relatives were preparing to bury the deceased when a gang of men armed with machetes and firearms invaded the cemetery.

    The militants caught and beheaded four people, while others attending the funeral fled in panic.

    They returned hours later to complete the ceremony, and collect the bodies of the four victims.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Jihadists killed in major Mozambique crackdown

    Mozambique’s security forces have killed nearly 130 Islamist militants in the past three weeks, the government says.

    Interior Minister Amad Miquidade said the gas-rich northern province of Cabo Delgado was now under government control.

    He said the military would carry out further operations to make sure all jihadist bases were destroyed.

    The Islamist fighters, known locally as al-Shabab, have been beheading people and burning villages in northern Mozambique for the past three years.

    It is not clear whether the group has any links to the Somali group of the same name.

    At least 900 people have been killed and there has been an upsurge in attacks recently.

    Last week the authorities said for the first time that the militants were part of the Islamic State group.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Jihadists killed in major Mozambique crackdown

    Mozambique’s security forces have killed nearly 130 Islamist militants in the past three weeks, the government says.

    Interior Minister Amad Miquidade said the gas-rich northern province of Cabo Delgado was now under government control.

    He said the military would carry out further operations to make sure all jihadist bases were destroyed.

    The Islamist fighters, known locally as al-Shabab, have been beheading people and burning villages in northern Mozambique for the past three years.

    At least 900 people have been killed and there has been an upsurge in attacks recently.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Mozambique expels suspected Brazilian drug lord ‘Fuminho’

    One of Brazil’s most wanted criminals has been sent home from Mozambique to face justice.

    Gilberto Aparecido dos Santos was allegedly a leader of one of Brazil’s most powerful criminal groups – São Paulo-based First Capital Command (PCC) drug gang.

    The alleged drug baron – known as ‘Fuminho’ – had been on the run for more than two decades.

    He is accused of overseeing the flow of cocaine around the world.

    Dos Santos was arrested in Maputo on Monday in a sting operation involving agents from Mozambique, Brazil and the US.

    A Brazilian air force plane, with dozens of police on board, flew him back to his home country in the early hours of Sunday morning.

    The PCC – which began as a prison gang – has spread across Brazil. It’s now reported to be sending tonnes of cocaine to Europe and Africa.

    Source: bbc.com

  • Greenpeace blocks unloading of coal at Polish port

    Greenpeace said its activists climbed cranes at the Polish port of Gdansk Wednesday to block the unloading of coal from Mozambique, and called on the government to move to renewable energy.

    “At dawn, 29 Greenpeace activists climbed two cranes at a coal terminal of the Gdansk port,” Greenpeace Polska spokeswoman Katarzyna Guzek told AFP. The activists hung banners on the cranes reading “Poland without coal 2030”, she added.

    Local police told AFP they were aware of the Greenpeace action and were monitoring the situation along with port officials.

    “First we blocked the vessel from docking, now we’re preventing it from unloading the shipment,” said Guzek.

    Read:Cyclone Idai: Huge area of Mozambique submerged

    The group tried on Monday to prevent the cargo vessel Indian Goodwill from docking, blocking it with its own vessel, Rainbow Warrior.

    Armed border guards intervened, hauling the Greenpeace boat out of the port and detaining the captain and another activist early on Tuesday.

    They released another 16 activists on board after identity checks, and the vessel anchored outside the port.

    Prosecutors said they would decide Wednesday whether to charge the two activists — the Spanish captain and an Austrian national — detained for navigation security violations.

    Greenpeace wants Poland’s right-wing Law and Justice (PiS) government to abandon burning coal by 2030 — the European Union’s target date for phasing out coal use.

    Read:Bid to punish underage marriage in Mozambique

    “We have little time left to prevent an unfolding climate disaster and the Polish government’s reliance on coal puts at risk our hopes for a safe and sustainable future,” Greenpeace Poland programme director Pawel Szypulski said in a statement.

    “This is why activists are compelled to take action. Polish citizens are calling for a transition from coal towards renewable energy.”

    Under the 2015 Paris climate treaty, the EU pledged to reduce its carbon emissions responsible for causing rising global temperatures by 40 percent below 1990 levels by 2030.

    The Polish government plans only a gradual reduction in dependence on coal for electricity production, from around 80 percent today to 60 percent in 2030.

    Poland along with Hungary has rejected an EU bid for zero-net greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, insisting this would hamper their economies.

    Source: France24