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Wall painting with with Samora Machel (FRELIMO), first President of Mozambique from the country’s independence. Cornelius Kibelka / Flickr – CC BY-SA 2.0, https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/legalcode.en

Protests in Mozambique: Public Anger Mounts Following Contested Election

Mozambique’s ruling party, FRELIMO, prevailed in a disputed election last year, extending its 49-year grip on power in the southern African nation. The country has been wracked by protests ever since – but who is behind the discontent, and how does it compare to protest movements in countries like Kenya and Nigeria?

Last October, Mozambique held its seventh multiparty election since the end of the country’s civil war in 1994, but the results have been controversial. Local and international election observers, including teams from the Episcopal Conference and the European Union , noted that the process was marred by irregularities. But the country’s apex court nonetheless declared Daniel Chapo of the ruling FRELIMO (Mozambique Liberation Front) as winner with 65.2 per cent of the vote, revised down from the initial results of nearly 71 per cent.

His closest opponent, with 24.2 per cent, was Venâncio Mondlane, leader of PODEMOS (The Optimist Party for the Development of Mozambique), which has gone from the fringes of the political landscape to become the main opposition party in the Southern African state. The party, founded by former FRELIMO members, rose by tapping into the anger of the youth against the government. FRELIMO, previously a Marxist-Leninist organization, claims it has long changed ideology to democratic socialism but many remain unconvinced.

Following the election, protests erupted across cities like Maputo, Beira, and Nampula. Estimates suggest the post-election violence has now claimed over 400 lives since October. Tensions were running high after the killing of a Mozambique opposition lawyer and a party official after unidentified gunmen fired multiple rounds at a car while the results of the ballot were still uncertain, Reuters reported.

Since then, more than 2,000 people were arbitrarily detained, and the authorities have clamped down, imposing internet restrictions, as confirmed by a recent report from the group Access Now. In the midst of the political chaos, 1,500 inmates escaped from a Maputo prison in December.

“The deployment of tanks and heavily armed officers has turned Maputo and other cities of the country into a de facto conflict zone, sparking widespread alarm among the citizens,” Adriano Nuvunga, director of the Center for Democracy and Human Rights , a prominent Mozambican think tank, told a local paper.

Youth discontent rises, protests continue

FRELIMO has been at the helm of affairs in the country since its independence from Portuguese colonial rule in 1975. The party’s critics and civil society leaders say it has kept its grip on power through electoral manipulation and running an authoritarian state that quashes dissent and encourages crony corruption.

Many have cited similarities in the protests with those in Nigeria and Kenya over the last five years, as more youths express their frustration with democracy and its failure to improve quality of life or to protect citizens’ fundamental human rights.

A key difference, analysts noted, was the absence of a singular, charismatic leader in Nigeria and Kenya, where the protests were sparked by police brutality and a cost-of-living crisis. Instead, the movements there were organic and led by young people rather than by civil society or opposition politicians. Nonetheless, as in Mozambique, they were spearheaded by a similar demographic: the youth.

Eventually the protests turned into looting, evidence of high-level opportunism in a country with multiple issues: rampant corruption, 80 percent youth underemployment, the continuing impact of Cyclone Chido as well as jihadism.

Mondlane urged more protests while defending his supporters from accusations of looting and damaging infrastructure by the authorities.

“It’s the policemen who are prepared to rob the stores, set fire to the banks and break into the warehouses,” he said during a live broadcast earlier this month. “You saw the images of policemen telling the population to come in to get food. People come in because they are hungry.”

Mozambique in contrast with Kenya and Nigeria

But some aspects of the recent uprising are specific to Mozambique. The very nature of FRELIMO’s dominance, its deep entrenchment in the state apparatus, and its control over key sectors of the economy created a sense that their grip on power was inevitable. Unlike the more fluid political landscapes of Kenya or Nigeria, where opposition voices find space to maneuver and still be loud, Mozambique’s political terrain is tightly controlled, limiting the scope for dissent. Under immediate past president Filipe Nyusi, some improvement was seen compared to his predecessors, but the progress was minimal.

According to the 2024 country report by the Bertelsmann Transformation Index, authorities often interpret information by civil society groups about their protests – a right enshrined in the constitution – as an obligation to seek authorization. That, the report notes, has led to a clampdown on demonstrations except those by groups allied to FRELIMO.

Overall, the BTI ranked the country a “moderate autocracy,” giving it a democracy status of 4.1, out of a possible ten points. That figure was down from 6.1 points ten years earlier, reflecting a steady erosion of democratic freedoms. “In Mozambique, economic growth does not trigger development as policies lack coherence and coordination, and legal frameworks are insufficiently implemented,” BTI authors concluded.

In southern Africa, ruling parties like FRELIMO alongside South Africa’s ANC and Zimbabwe’s ZANU-PF are the same nationalist movements that fought against settler colonialism. But the median age in many of the countries ranges from 18-23, meaning that many citizens were not born during the days of nationalist struggle and so do not share the nostalgia of those days or their forefather’s solidarity with these liberation movements turned into political parties. Thus, their sense of outrage is growing fast .

For a long time, there was the lingering trauma of the civil war , a conflict that pitted brother against brother and left deep psychological wounds. The fear of a return to violence, the memory of the brutal years of conflict, acted as a powerful deterrent, muting the voices of dissent and tempering the urge to take to the streets. But the youth, who lack such memories, are taking to the streets as their frustrations reach boiling point.

This was a point taken advantage of by Mondlane, a populist with the gift of reading his audience. Rather than negotiate with FRELIMO in a bid to share power, he rallied his supporters to continue the protests. As pockets of protests continue in Mozambique, it is clear that the balance of power is shifting and that Mondlane will be waiting for another opportunity to get young people on the streets again in his bid to wrest power away from a party now associated with state failure.

First published on Fair Observer

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