The peace
agreement between Renamo and the government was published by Mozambican media
at the weekend, and is unexpectedly vague - leaving many problems for future
negotiations.
The key point
is the transfer of what are called the “residual forces of Renamo” into the
army and the police, and this has been left to a joint team of Renamo and
government military experts, who will eventually give a proposal to the
Renamo-government negotiations. Monday saw the 72nd negotiating session.
The accord
only spells out how the integration is to take place once the details have been
agreed by the negotiations. When Renamo forces are integrated into the military
and police they must hand over their weapons, and once all Renamo “residual
forces” have been “integrated”, “no political party should have residual armed
forces”. In other words, there can no longer be a Renamo armed presidential
guard.
The largest
part of the accord is taken up with specifying the terms of reference of the
Military Team of International Observers of the Cessation of Military
Hostilities (EMOCHM - Equipa Militar de Observadores Internacionais da Cessacao
das Hostilidades Militares). There will be 23 foreign military observers from
Botswana, Zimbabwe, South Africa, Kenya, Cape Verde, Portugal, Italy, Britain
and the United States and 35 each from government and Renamo, commanded by a
brigadier from Botswana. They will be based in Maputo with delegations in
Inhambane, Sofala, Tete and Nampula provinces. Their task will be “to observe,
monitor and guarantee implementation of the cessation of military hostilities
and the start of the subsequent phases." It will begin 10 days after it is
formed (for which no date is given) and continue for 135 days, which can be
extended.
With extended
negotiations likely first in the expert team and then in the formal
negotiations, and then at least 145 days for EMOCHM, the integration of Renamo
forces is likely to be well after the 15 October elections and probably extending
into next year.
Both sides
gave small and vague concessions to the other in the accord. Government agreed
to Renamo demand for the use of the word "republican." The accord
says that "defence and security services must be republican, that is,
non-party and serving the Republic of Mozambique." Government also agreed to the "immediate
cessation of all hostile manifestations, overall military, but also including
media." For its part Renamo agreed to full disarmament and also that
neither party could made "new demands".
The accord
also promises an amnesty law, which was passed by parliament and promulgated by
President Armando Guebuza last week. There was a 13 hour parliament session
Tuesday 12 August with intense negotiations which at different times involved
Frelimo talking to Guebuza and Renamo talking to Dhlakama. Government only
wanted the amnesty to cover the most recent violence, from June 2012, but
Renamo wanted it dated earlier to allow the release of Renamo members arrested
in various earlier incidents. The eventual deal was to date it from March 2012
to cover a shoot-out between police and Renamo in Nampula, and to cover three
specific incidents in Sofala province in 2002, 2004 and 2011.
Fonte:
Mozambique 269
News reports & clippings
19 August 2014
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