Court Upholds Disputed Presidential Poll in Mozambique, Sparking Protests

The decision paves the way for the governing party’s candidate to take office next month, but the country is on edge because earlier protests after the election left more than 100 people dead.

Daniel Chapo, smiling and in a red shirt, is surrounded by happy people, many in red caps, some holding cellphones aloft.
The President-elect of Mozambique, Daniel Chapo, meeting supporters in the capital, Maputo, on Monday.Credit…Luisa Nhantumbo/EPA, via Shutterstock

Protesters set fires on the streets across the southern African nation of Mozambique on Monday after the country’s highest court upheld the results of a contested presidential election in which the candidate from the governing party was declared the winner.

This is the latest round of unrest since the October election in Mozambique, where more than 100 people have been killed in protests that broke out after there were allegations of widespread voting irregularities.

The court’s ruling cleared the way to the presidency for Daniel Chapo, the candidate for Frelimo, the party that has governed the nation since its independence from Portugal in 1975.

The top opposition candidate, Venâncio Mondlane, had vowed to dispute the result and called on Mozambicans to protest against what he sees as the governing party clinging to power through fraud.

“There will be hard days, but from those hard days, good things will come,” Mr. Mondlane said in a video posted to Facebook after the decision.

Frelimo officials have denied any wrongdoing. But several independent election observers issued reports after the voting in October stating that they had witnessed irregularities in the process including “unjustified alteration of election results,” according to a statement by the European Union’s observer mission.

Mozambique, a country of 33 million people, is one of the poorest in the world and has also been coping with the effects of the climate crisis. Cyclone Chido, which struck last week, killed at least 94 in the country’s north.

That region is also struggling to contain an Islamic State-backed insurgency. The conflict has led lucrative natural gas projects to be placed on hold — projects that could be a boon amid an economic crisis that has left many people jobless.

The electoral commission in October declared that Mr. Chapo won 71 percent of the vote compared with 20 percent for Mr. Mondlane. Two other candidates split the rest of the vote.

The court on Monday largely upheld the result, but adjusted Mr. Chapo’s final vote tally down slightly, to 65 percent, and increased Mr. Mondlane’s share to 24 percent. The court said it had adjusted the vote totals after a recount based on submissions from the parties.

People on the street standing over objects in flames, sending up pillars of smoke.
Protesters gather next to a burning barricade in Maputo on Monday.Credit…Amilton Neves/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Speaking from the court in the capital, Maputo, where the ruling was announced, Veronica Macamo, a representative of Frelimo, said that all Mozambicans should unite and move forward now.

“We must respect the rules set for elections and the results,” she said.

In the capital, which is typically bustling ahead of Christmas, shops were closed on Monday in anticipation of the court ruling, public transportation was out of service and some roads were blocked by the police.

Soon after the court issued its decision, residents began burning tires and blocking roads around Maputo, according to videos posted on Telegram by Zitamar, a news outlet that covers Mozambique.

Immediately after the election, Mr. Mondlane, who ran as an independent candidate supported by a small party, had declared himself the winner and called on supporters to take to the streets.

Tensions spiked in October as Mr. Mondlane was preparing to challenge the results in court when two of his aides were fatally shot in a hail of bullets while riding in a car in Maputo.

Weeks of demonstrations since have resulted in violent confrontations between the police and protesters. At least 110 people have been killed, according to a Mozambican election monitoring organization.

The current president, Filipe Nyusi, has tried unsuccessfully to mediate a resolution to the political crisis with Mr. Mondlane. Mr. Nyusi said in a nationally televised address for Christmas and New Year’s last week that he had spoken by phone with Mr. Mondlane, and that while the discussion was calm, he did not offer specifics.

Mr. Nyusi assured Mozambicans that he would leave office as scheduled next month, when Mr. Chapo is set to take over.

But Mr. Mondlane has shown no signs of relenting in his challenge to the results. He posted a testament on his Facebook page last week that started by saying, “If these are my last words.”

Mr. Mondlane, who is in self-imposed exile, saying he has faced threats, lamented that his situation paled compared to Mozambicans who have been killed in the chaos following the election.

“Even if it is my last word, I will shout: WE WANT TRUTH.”

Image

Venâncio Mondlane speaks, surrounded by a crowd and reporters holding microphones.
Venâncio Mondlane, the opposition candidate, in October after two of his aides were fatally shot.Credit…Alfredo Zuniga/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Armando Tivane contributed reporting from Beira, Mozambique, and Amelia Nierenberg from London.

Source: NYTimes


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