Mozambican President
Filipe Nyusi on Thursday called for restraint in the disarming of the illegal
militia of the former rebel movement Renamo.Speaking in Moamba, about 60
kilometres northwest of Maputo, during a graduation ceremony for newly trained
prison guards, Nyusi put the brakes on the compulsory disarmament of Renamo,
calling instead on the Renamo gunmen to hand over their weapons voluntarily.“I
am using this podium to order restraint in compulsory disarmament, allowing
everyone to hand over voluntarily that which they think they should not
possess”, said Nyusi. “Above all, this is to allow us to work and to enter into
dialogue, in the spirit of trust and mutual willingness”. “If there is no
willingness on the part of all those involved in the peace process, we are
aware that this peace may not happen”, he warned.“I am ready to speak with
anybody, including the Renamo leadership, in order effectively to re-establish
peace”, Nyusi declared. “This is so that we can find solutions that will calm
Mozambicans”.He once again appealed to the Renamo militiamen to hand over their
guns, “so that the ownership of weaponry is reserved only for the defence and
security forces, based on a spirit of concord”.This emphasis is quite different
from that given by Interior Minister Jaime Monteiro, when he addressed the
country’s parliament, the Assembly of the Republic, on 4 November. Monteiro
then had promised “to strengthen the collection of weapons that are in
illegitimate hands”, and promised that this collection would continue “until
the last firearm in unauthorized hands is collected coercively or handed over
voluntarily”.Nyusi was clearly suggesting the re-opening of talks with Renamo.
But it was Renamo, on the instructions of its leader, Afonso Dhlakama, which in
August unilaterally broke off the dialogue with the government that had been
under way since April 2013.Dhlakama himself publicly rejected the invitation
from Nyusi, issued in late August, for a face-to-face meeting in Maputo.
Currently Dhlakama has dropped off the radar – he has not been seen in public
since 9 October, when the defence forces disarmed his bodyguards in the central
city of Beira.Addressing the newly trained prison guards, Nyusi called for
selfless dedication to the tasks entrusted to them. He reminded them that “the
people are with you in the mission you will be carrying out as from today”. About
600 guards from all over the country graduated from the course, which lasted
for six weeks.
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