Mozambicans flee to neighbouring Malawi amid post-election unrest
More than 2,000
Mozambican families have sought refuge in Malawi this week, Malawian
authorities said, as dozens of people were reported killed in spreading unrest
over a disputed election in October.
Some businesses
including banks were closed in Mozambique's capital Maputo on Friday and
patrols were set up in some areas following a deadly prison riot and breakout
on Wednesday.
Mozambique has been
gripped by violent protests for about two months since the electoral
commission said the ruling Frelimo party had retained power and its
candidate won the presidency in the election. Frelimo denies opposition
accusations of electoral fraud.
A decision by
Mozambique's Constitutional Council to validate the election results
on Monday triggered more demonstrations.
Monitoring group
Plataforma Decide put the death toll at 125 since the court's decision and at
252 since late October.
A senior Malawian
official said that as of Wednesday, 2,182 Mozambican households fleeing the
violence had crossed into Malawi's Nsanje district, which borders Mozambique.
"The situation
remains dire as these individuals urgently require humanitarian
assistance," Nsanje district commissioner Dominic Mwandira said in a
letter to the country's commissioner for refugees seen by Reuters.
Mozambique's main
opposition leader Venancio Mondlane, who the Constitutional Council said had
come second in the presidential election and who rejects the results, has
called for more protests from his supporters but urged them not to loot and
damage infrastructure.
The unrest has
affected foreign firms operating in Mozambique, including mining
companies Gemfields Group and South32 and petrochemical
company Sasol.
Operations at
Gemfields' biggest ruby mine in Mozambique were temporarily halted on Tuesday
after violent incidents near the mine, it said in a statement on Friday.
More than 200 people
had attempted to gain access to a residential site for mine employees and set
fire to structures, it said. Mozambican security forces shot and killed two
people, Gemfields said.
The prison riot in
Maputo on Christmas Day left at least 33 people dead and saw more than 1,500
prisoners escape before some were recaptured.
Frelimo has ruled
Mozambique since the end of the war against Portuguese colonial rule in 1975.
Western observers have said this year's election was not free and fair.
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