At least 10 people are killed by police in Mozambique post-election
protests, medical groups say
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[October 31, 2024]
MAPUTO, Mozambique (AP) — At least 10 people were fatally
shot by police and dozens of others were injured when authorities
cracked down on unrest following Mozambique's presidential election, two
medical groups said, as the country braced Thursday for more protests
against a vote criticized as fraudulent by opposition parties and
questioned by international observers.
Daniel Chapo of the ruling Front for the Liberation of Mozambique was
announced as the winner of the election on Oct. 24, extending the
Frelimo party's 49 years in power since independence from Portugal in
1975. Chapo is to succeed President Filipe Nyusi, who is stepping down
after serving the two terms allowed under the constitution.
Frelimo has regularly been accused of rigging elections and Mozambique's
security forces have previously been criticized for suppressing protests
with deadly force. Opposition parties claimed fraud on the day of the
election, while observers from the European Union said in a later report
that there were irregularities in the vote counting and some results had
been altered.
Tensions were high in the southern African country in the buildup and
immediate aftermath of the Oct. 9 vote, but more unrest was stoked when
two senior officials of an opposition party were killed in their car in
the capital, Maputo, on Oct. 18 after being ambushed by unidentified
gunmen late at night. The opposition says the attackers fired 25 bullets
at the car.
The killings were widely seen in Mozambique as being politically
motivated. One of the victims was the lawyer and adviser to Venancio
Mondlane, the main opposition candidate for president who was second in
the election.
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Mozambican police deploys in the streets of Maputo, Mozambique,
Monday, Oct. 21, 2024, during a nationwide shutdown protest
following a disputed Oct. 9 election. (AP Photo/Carlos Uqueio)
Ten people died of gunshot wounds and another 63 were wounded by
gunfire in protests between Oct. 18 and Oct. 26, the Medical
Association of Mozambique and the Mozambique Order of Doctors said
in a joint statement Wednesday. “In most of the shootings,
especially those that resulted in death, the intention of the police
was to shoot to kill," Gilberto Manhiça, the head of the Order of
Doctors, was quoted as saying by local media.
In a separate statement, Human Rights Watch put the death toll at
11. It said more than 50 people sustained serious gunshot wounds in
the protests and called for an investigation into the “apparently
excessive use of force."
Amnesty International said police also fired on a peaceful
opposition rally in the city of Nampula on Oct. 16, injuring at
least one person, and “repeatedly attacked” protesters during the
post-election demonstrations.
Protesters burned tires and blocked roads in some cities and
authorities characterized some of the unrest as violent that had to
be quelled. Police spokesperson Orlando Mudumane told state-run
Radio Mozambique that the situation was now “relatively calm and
controlled.”
Opposition leader Mondlane has called for a week of new protests to
begin on Thursday.
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