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Islamic State-Linked Fighters Seize Mozambique LNG Port Town

canada-man

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Fighters linked to Islamic State took control of a northern Mozambican port town that’s been a key logistics link for a $23 billion natural-gas project being built by Total SE, according to Risk Advisory Group.



It’s the third time this year the insurgents have seized Mocimboa da Praia, located about 60 kilometers (37 miles) south of the LNG project and the closest harbor. About three months ago, fighters that first pledged allegiance to IS in 2018 occupied it for as long as three days.





The site of Total’s project is in the preparation stage, with the company having recently finalized an initial $15 billion of financing and the town is among several access points to bring in supplies, including a port and airport at the development. The fighting, though, shows an escalation of insurgent attacks in the region that authorities are battling to contain.



“The capture of Mocimboa da Praia, as well as the previous assaults on district capitals since March, shows that the capabilities of IS militants has improved,” Tristan Gueret, an analyst at RAG in London, said by email on Wednesday.



Total didn’t immediately respond to emails seeking comment.

Gas projects in the country’s northern-most Cabo Delgado province are central to plans to transform the impoverished southeast African nation. Projected revenue from the developments are estimated at more than three times its current gross domestic product.

Mocimboa is where Islamist militants started a war in 2017 that’s left more than 1,500 people dead, according to estimates from the Madison, Wisconsin-based Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project, which tracks global violence. The conflict has displaced 220,000 people in the region.

‘Dedicated Force’
“Although it is another indication of the fast deterioration in the security environment in Cabo Delgado, the success of the attack in Mocimboa da Praia does not necessarily have major or immediate implications for LNG operations,” Gueret said. The Total project area is “currently secured by a dedicated force, and this means that mounting a successful raid there would be much more challenging for the group,” he said.

Even with the help of private military contractors flying helicopters armed with machine guns, the Mozambican government has struggled to curb the insurgency, which has grown increasingly brazen in its attacks this year.

Security forces have in the past seven days killed 59 fighters in the region and destroyed six of their camps, the government said in a statement. Fighting is continuing in order to “neutralize” the militants, it said.

The Southern African Development Community and the African Union should urgently assist Mozambique to end the insurgency and help the displaced populations, the Pretoria, South Africa-based Institute for Security Studies said in a statement Thursday. SADC leaders are set to meet on Aug. 17, when Mozambique takes over the chairmanship of the regional bloc from Tanzania.

“Military action by the Mozambique government, including the continued use of mercenaries, has not stopped the attacks and has worsened the plight of civilians,” the ISS said. “Left unchecked, the insurgency is likely to grow and spill over into neighboring countries.”

 

jerimander

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Frankfooter

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They even kill people trying to help them.

Jihadwatch is a race baiting propaganda site.
 

Conil

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Fighters linked to Islamic State took control of a northern Mozambican port town that’s been a key logistics link for a $23 billion natural-gas project being built by Total SE, according to Risk Advisory Group.
It’s the third time this year the insurgents have seized Mocimboa da Praia, located about 60 kilometers (37 miles) south of the LNG project and the closest harbor. About three months ago, fighters that first pledged allegiance to IS in 2018 occupied it for as long as three days.

The site of Total’s project is in the preparation stage, with the company having recently finalized an initial $15 billion of financing and the town is among several access points to bring in supplies, including a port and airport at the development. The fighting, though, shows an escalation of insurgent attacks in the region that authorities are battling to contain.

“The capture of Mocimboa da Praia, as well as the previous assaults on district capitals since March, shows that the capabilities of IS militants has improved,” Tristan Gueret, an analyst at RAG in London, said by email on Wednesday.
You don't fuck with energy and gas, time to wipe out these terrorists.
 

Frankfooter

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You don't fuck with energy and gas, time to wipe out these terrorists.
So Pax Americana...
I thought these attitudes died out with Reagan, though its true Trump did call oil in Syria and Iraq 'ours'.

Time for the new green deal, much better than these racist, religious wars of yours.
 

jerimander

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Well, there is one group that doesn't like Jihadwatch and I don't really expect them to. For the rest of us it serves a very useful purpose.
 

Valcazar

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Well, there is one group that doesn't like Jihadwatch and I don't really expect them to. For the rest of us it serves a very useful purpose.
I don't doubt it serves a very useful purpose for you.

But you know what? I was wrong to post that. I took "very reliable" as "very credible" and reacted to that.

But Conil said reliable and presumably that is what he meant.

My error. I was in the wrong.
 

jerimander

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Frankfooter

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canada-man

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Islamic State has gained its first outpost in southern Africa after the capture of strategic port in Mozambique



Mozambique has become the latest African stronghold of Islamic State (IS) after well-armed insurgents captured a strategic port in the north of the country.

Fighters affiliated to IS overran the port of Mocimboa da Praia after several days of fighting earlier this week. The city is now under Sharia law, according to The Times.

The latest reports say government troops are still battling to regain control of the city and hundreds of reinforcements have been rushed to the battle, the Guardian reported, on Sunday. Mercenaries from Russia and South Africa have also been in combat for the government, said the report.

The Mozambican defense minister, Jaime Neto, said that the extremists had infiltrated parts of the port and "attacked the town from the inside out, causing destruction, looting, and the murder of defenseless citizens", according to a report from the local Zitamar news agency.


A conflict has been bubbling in the region for three years with local jihadists who align themselves with the Islamic State franchise - called the Islamic State Central Africa Province - growing in confidence and military strength. Since 2017, monitoring groups say more than 1,500 people have been killed and at least 250,000 displaced from their homes in the area, reports Al Jazeera.

Cabo Delgado is a Muslim majority province and the Islamic militants have been able to exploit local grievances and economic hardship to rally fighters around the IS flag. Almost 20% of Mozambique's 32 million population are Muslims.

The loss of the city is a severe blow to impoverished Mozambique. It is in the gas-rich northern province of Cabo Delgado where energy giants, such as the French-owned Total, are planning to develop offshore gas projects worth up to $60 billion, according to Al Jazeera.

A deal struck in July, which meant Mozambique would receive $14.9 billion in debt financing from Total, was one of the largest single investment projects on the continent, according to Foreign Policy.

Experts now fear Mozambique will become a regional center for Islamic extremism. It borders six other African nations, including South Africa.

 

canada-man

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Islamists seize northern Mozambican islands: witnesses


SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 12 2020


In Summary

Jihadists in northern Mozambique occupied two small islands in the Indian Ocean threatening maritime traffic in the region where a multi-billion-dollar offshore gas exploration project is being developed, locals said Friday.


 

canada-man

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The occupation of the islands came a month after the Islamic State-linked insurgents occupied a strategic port town of Mocimboa da Praia.

Jihadists in northern Mozambique occupied two small islands in the Indian Ocean last week, threatening tourism and maritime traffic in the region where a multibillion-dollar offshore gas exploration project is being developed, locals said on Friday.
The occupied islands are Mecungo and Vamizi, part of the Quirimbas archipelago which is known as a diving and holiday paradise, and also is home to a number of luxury holiday resorts, many of them involving South African interests. Nearby popular resort islands include Ibo Island and Medjumbe Island.
It is not exactly clear what the situation is regarding the resorts and their safety, as news coming from the region is patchy at best.
According to an employee of Siyabona Africa, a Cape Town-based tour operator offering luxury holiday packages to several Mozambican destinations including Ibo Island Lodge and Anantara Medjumbe Island Resort, they have received absolutely no advisories or reports from the area.

The employee, who spoke on condition of anonimity because she wasn’t authorised to comment, said all the lodges have been closed because of the Covid-19 travel restrictions, so no guests could have been on the islands at the time of the takeover.
The company also didn’t know what the status of the resorts are and if they would be able to open once the Covid-19 restrictions are lifted.

“We can only wait and see how the situation develops,” she said.
The occupation of the islands came a month after the Islamic State-linked insurgents occupied a strategic port town of Mocimboa da Praia, which was used for cargo deliveries for the development of the gas project.
Witnesses told AFP that the militants seized control of the islands of Mecungo and Vamizi on Wednesday night last week.
“They arrived at night in small fishing boats. They removed people from the houses and then torched them,” said one man who had fled to Mecungo island from Mocimboa da Praia.

“They didn’t hurt anyone, they just gave orders to leave the islands,” he said by phone, adding that he had moved further inland to the ruby mining town of Montepuez after sailing to the mainland and then taking a bus ride to Montepuez.
The islands were mostly inhabited by internally displaced people who fled their villages on the mainland where attacks have escalated.
Another witness said that before the houses were burned down, the insurgents held meetings with people and instructed everyone to leave the island.

“They got us together and told us to run away if we want to live. I think everyone left the island,” one said asking to not be identified.
Government forces are still battling to retake the Mocimboa da Praia port since it was occupied on August 12.
The militants’ attacks in the Cabo Delgado have rendered the road network between the provincial capital Pemba and the gas region in Palma, impassable.

Maritime transport had been the alternative for goods and people.
But French oil giant Total, which is investing $23 billion in the gas exploration project, said it no longer relies on the occupied Mocimboa da Praia port.
“Mozambique LNG is not using Mocimboa da Praia as a logistical hub and has indeed built its own marine facilities,” Total said in an emailed response to questions.
Provincial police declined to comment on the islands’ occupation.

On Saturday, suspected jihahists ambushed two cargo trucks carrying passengers from Palma to the district of Nangade, near the Tanzanian border.
Two unnamed military sources confirmed the attack, which took place near an army post 40 kilometres from Palma.
“Assistance was provided but at the moment two deaths and many injured are confirmed,” said a soldier who witnessed the attack, explaining that one of the trucks crashed into a tree.

A high-ranking officer in Palma said the ambush significantly raised the threat level posed by insurgency.
“The vehicles circulated without military escort because we assumed that the route was safe”, he told AFP.
“With this attack we can assume that we are isolated from the rest of the province and the country. Right now the only safe way to get in and out of the Palma is by air.”

“We are surrounded and at this moment the defence and security forces have neither the conditions nor the capacity to repel the insurgents from Palma and recover Mocimboa da Praia,” confided another military officer based in the town.

 

canada-man

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ISIS militants have taken over paradise islands in the Indian Ocean, burning down hotels and imposing Sharia Law.

Luxury islands off the coast of Mozambique, where A-list celebrities spend their holidays, have been overrun by insurgents linked to Islamic State.


Luxury hotels, wildlife, and homes have been torched and "reduced to ashes" in the militant attacks.

The ISIS insurgents have ordered residents to abandon the islands of Vamizi and Mecungo - where celebrities like Daniel Craig, Bono and Prince Albert of Monaco have holidayed in luxury.

Footballer Cristiano Ronaldo and political leader Nelson Mandela have also been known to have enjoyed holidays on the picturesque island.

Burnt-out beach huts and torched safari cars were pictured on Vamizi Island.


One resident of Mecungo island told AFP that the insurgents had arrived by boat at night and rounded everyone up.

The local said: "They told us to run if we want to live. Everyone left the island."


Mozambique and its islands have been closed to tourists since pandemic travel restrictions were imposed.

The ISIS-linked militants also captured and occupied the port town of Mocimboa de Praia on the Mozambican mainland - telling locals that it would become their new capital, run under Islamic law.


The Cabo Delgado provence has also been ransacked and raided by the jihadists.

One man who had fled to Mecungo Island from Mocimboa da Praia said: "They arrived at night in small fishing boats. They removed people from the houses and then torched them.

"They didn’t hurt anyone, they just gave orders to leave the islands."


Government troops are failing to keep pace with the militants' new firepower.

Western energy companies, who have invested in gas projects off the coast of Mozambique, have been forced to build new facilities to avoid the jihadis' path.

More than 1,500 people have been killed and 250,000 displaced during the insurgency, which erupted three years ago close to the border with Tanzania.

In the past year, the militants have taken credit for the brutal insurgency, naming themselves the Islamic State Central Africa Province.

Jasmine Opperman, an analyst with the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project, said: "The insurgents now have a strong maritime capability, which is rapidly evolving.

 

canada-man

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“Inside ISIS’ new capital as terrorists carry out beheadings and take sex slaves,” by Tom Towers, Daily Star, October 3, 2020

ISIS -linked jihadis have amassed a fighting force that is wreaking havoc and slaughtering its enemies.
The terrorists have killed more than 1,500 people in northern Mozambique and displaced more than a quarter of a million since 2017….
Back in August, ISIS militants captured the port town of Mocimboa da Praia, in the province of Cabo Delgado, and told locals it would be their new capital.
The region is rich in oil – featuring Total and Exxon Mobile bases – and its deep forests offer terrorists smuggling routes for arms and ammunition.
Locals refer to the armed group as the Machababos or Al Shabaab, but the ISIS-affiliated group calls itself Al-Sunnah Wa Jama’ah….
The terrorists pledged allegiance to ISIS last year and have launched a series of attacks.
During their assault on Mocimboa da Praia, marines attempted to resist hundreds of the militants but ran out of ammunition and were forced to retreat.
The town is close to a site of natural gas projects worth £45billion….
It has reportedly recruited foreign fighters from neighbouring Kenya, Tanzania, and possibly Somalia.
Some estimates suggest they may have approximately 1,000 trained male fighters – but this could be a low estimate.
In March, jihadis occupied the centre of Mocimboa da Praia and burned government facilities.
They also launched an attack on a police headquarters in a second town, brandishing an ISIS flag.
Describing how they strike fear into their enemies, Mr Otto explained: “State forces and suspected spies have been captured and beheaded by the jihadist group to send a warning message.
“Women have been the subject of targeted kidnapping. Sources say the jihadists keep the women as sex slaves.”…
 
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