Zimbabwe Urges Southern Africa to Fight Islamists in Mozambique

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Zimbabwe urged the Southern African Development Community to help its neighbor Mozambique fight a devastating Islamist insurgency that’s raising alarm across the region, saying it shouldn’t be the only member state prepared to send troops.

Zimbabwe’s ruling party “feels that Mozambique should not be expected to deal with a potential regional and security threat of this gravity and magnitude alone,” Patrick Chinamasa, Zanu-PF’s acting spokesman, told reporters in the capital, Harare, on Wednesday.

The 16-member regional bloc should invoke its mutual defense pact, under which any armed attack against a member state must be met with immediate collective action, he said. Mozambique’s appeal to SADC for assistance has so far been unanswered, he said.

“Zimbabwe has the full capacity to intervene in Mozambique, but it must be a collective SADC-AU initiative,” he said, referring to both the regional bloc and the African Union.

Last month, the U.S. approached Zimbabwe to help fight the insurgents in Mozambique’s gas-rich north, where companies including Total SE and Exxon Mobile Corp. are planning to invest nearly $60 billion in natural gas facilities. In exchange for the assistance requested by the U.S., Zimbabwe Foreign Affairs Minister Sibusiso Moyo was reported to have asked that targeted sanctions imposed nearly two decades ago be removed.

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