Isis fighters infiltrate neighbouring Mozambique
It is believed that the group headed to Nacala to
bolster the Isis stronghold at the port where containers laden with drugs are
offloaded monthly from cargo ships.
According to well-placed intelligence sources, the
infiltrators entered from the island of Zanzibar and used Tanzania as
springboard to cross the border into Mozambique. There have been numerous prior
infiltrations, but this was the largest single group that came into the
neighbouring state, the sources indicated.
Although not confirmed yet, security experts
indicated that the jihadists may try to join forces with Renamo rebels in a
united front against the Frelimo government, so as to bolster their stand in
the neighbouring country.
Lowvelder can also today reveal that the Mbombela
branch of home affairs has become the most sought-after port of call for
illegal Pakistani, Bangladeshi and Somalian immigrants entering South Africa to
buy identification documents from corrupt officials.
Also confirming the infiltration of Isis into
Mozambique, another international authority on radical Islam, who asked not to
be named, told Lowvelder, “Yes, definitely Al Shabaab fighters whom switched
allegiance from al-Qaeda to Isis operate in northern Mozambique.”
He also confirmed the intelligence sources’
information that the containers of heroin come from Afghanistan, are
transported to Pakistan and then shipped to Lamu Island off the north-eastern
coast of Kenya. From there they are transported to Pemba Island in the Zanzibar
Archipelago from where the shipments find their way to Port Nacala and finally
to Durban.
The Isis fighters protecting the drug shipments get
a cut to fund their extremist activities,” he added.
This latest incursion happened hardly six months
after a heavily armed group of militant Islamists attacked three police
stations in the early hours of October 5 in Mocimboa da Praia, a small town in
Cabo Delgado Province, 590 kilometres north of Nacala. Two policemen were
killed, firearms and ammunition were looted and the town occupied. The locals
referred to these men as the “Al Shabaabs”.
The Mozambican military acted swiftly and after a
prolonged battle, 16 militants were dead. Two policemen and a local resident
were also killed. Despite assurances from the Mozambican authorities that they
had the situation under control, several more skirmishes occurred since
January.
According to an article, “The emergence of violent
extremism in northern Mozambique”, published by the Africa Center for Strategic
Studies last month, the national police arrested 24 men on a bus en route from
Nacala in Nampula Province. They were suspected of heading to Cabo Delgado
Province to join the militants.
According to the research paper, authored by Greg
Pirio and Robert Pittelli, the president and associate of the American-based
Empowering Communications, and Yussuf Adam, an associate professor of
contemporary history at the University of Eduardo Mondlane in Maputo, one of
the leaders is a Gambian named Musa. The other, a Mozambican, goes by the name
Nuro Adremane.
“The latter reportedly received a scholarship to
train in Somalia, travelling by road through Tanzania and Kenya to reach
Somalia, as did a number of other members of the group. The Gambian leader
actively sought out recruits among segments of the population with grievances
against both the security forces of an international mining company and the
national police, they wrote.