Jihadist insurgents in Mozambique are targeting Christians as they ramp up attacks in the country’s northern-most province, just as neighboring countries are planning to withdraw troops helping government forces to fight them.
The Mozambique army with help from neighboring countries had restored calm to the Cabo Delgado Province last year, but insurgents loosely linked with Islamic State have returned with a series of fierce offensives since January that have driven at least 80,000 civilians from their homes, most of them Christians, according to The Telegraph.
Cabo Delgado’s population is about 54 percent Muslim, and the insurgents seek not only to establish a strict Islamic state but address grievances of discrimination and neglect by the government of the country that is majority Christian (56.4 percent), mainly Roman Catholic, according to analysts.
Insurgent military campaigns have included the burning of several church buildings in southern Cabo Delgado’s Chiure District, which is 42 percent Catholic and 44 percent Muslim, The Telegraph reported.
The Islamic State has lauded the offensives, provided some financial help and has maintained contact with the rebels, but the terrorist group does not exercise command and control of the insurgents, according to the International Crisis Group.
Initially known as Ansar al-Sunna, the insurgents claimed affiliation with the Islamic State in 2019. Locally the group is known as Al-Shabab, which comes from the Arabic word for youth, but the militants are not related to Somalia’s Al-Shabab rebels.
Eyewitnesses have reported beheadings and kidnappings, displacing at least 800,000 people since 2017.
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Following the National Assembly's passage of the impeachment motion against President Yoon Suk-yeol on December 14, religious leaders have called on the Korean Church to pray for the stability of South Korea. The impeachment vote came after the president briefly imposed martial law, a move that was widely condemned.