Mozambique attack survivors stream into Pemba safe haven

More than 8,000 were displaced, dozens killed and many more are still missing following a coordinated attack on the town of Palma on March 24.


More than a week after jihadists staged a deadly raid on the northern Mozambican town of Palma, survivors on Thursday were streaming into the port of Pemba, capital of gas-rich Cabo Delgado province.

Scores of relatives huddled outside the port, straining to spot family members disembarking from boats arriving from Palma, some 200 kilometres away.

More than 8,000 were displaced, dozens killed and many more are still missing following a coordinated attack on the town of Palma on March 24.

The jihadists reportedly beheaded residents and ransacked buildings in a rampage that forced thousands to seek safety in surrounding forests.

ALSO READ: All SA citizens in Mozambique successfully evacuated

The attack is seen as the biggest escalation of the Islamist insurgency ravaging Cabo Delgado province since 2017.

On fishing boats or on foot, thousands of survivors fled the city of 75,000 inhabitants — more than 40,000 of whom had already been displaced from their original homes and were living in Palma.

Hundreds more were still arriving in Pemba, the UN said on Thursday.

There is “no sense of normalcy returning, unfortunately,” the UN refugee agency’s Juliana Ghazi told AFP in Johannesburg from Pemba on Thursday.

A woman wearing a blue denim pinafore and pink face mask sat on the ground at the port, with a vacant stare, one hand clutching a fence, waiting for her son.

Another woman consoled her as she broke down in sobs.

A ferry carrying almost 1,200 passengers, mainly women and children, had docked at the port overnight.

The most vulnerable escapees including unaccompanied and injured children are being flown to the city — the UN said nearly half of the 8,166 people who are registered as displaced are children.

‘Utmost concern’

The attack launched Wednesday was the latest in a string of more than 830 organised raids by the  Islamist militants over the past three years, killing more than 2,689 and uprooting nearly 700,000.

A South African man was among those killed when a convoy of cars trying to evacuate survivors from a hotel was ambushed, his family said.

Britain’s Times newspaper on Thursday reported that a Briton also died in the ambush and that his remains had been handed to the Special Air Services rescue team.

The defence ministry could not confirm or deny the death.

The African Union has called for urgent and coordinated international action to jointly address the “urgent threat to regional and continental peace and security”.

In a statement, AU chairman Moussa Faki Mahamat expressed “utmost concern” at the presence of international extremist groups in southern Africa, calling for an “urgent and coordinated regional and international action”.

The regional Southern African Development Community held emergency talks in Harare on Wednesday to discuss the violence.

Botswana’s President Mokgweetsi Masisi vowed regional help, but gave no details.

He said the “integrity and sovereignty” of SADC member states should be assured and they should be protected from assault.

But Mozambique President Filipe Nyusi on Wednesday played down the attack as “not the biggest”, despite its unprecedented proximity to Africa’s single biggest investment project.

The aid-dependent country has sent troops to Palma to try and recapture the town.

On Tuesday, Mozambique’s former colonial master Portugal announced plans to send around 60 troops to back them up.

Cabo Delgado’s jihadists have wreaked havoc across the province with the aim of establishing a caliphate.

The insurgents are affiliated with the Islamic State group, which claimed the attack on Palma this week.

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