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Mozambique opens new parliament amid protest, boycott


The Mozambican Presidential Military band walk next to an armoured Police vehicle near Parliament in Maputo on Jan. 13, 2025. Mozambique is set to swear in its new parliament on Jan. 13, 2025, following months of deadly protests over an election in October.
The Mozambican Presidential Military band walk next to an armoured Police vehicle near Parliament in Maputo on Jan. 13, 2025. Mozambique is set to swear in its new parliament on Jan. 13, 2025, following months of deadly protests over an election in October.

Mozambique swore in its new parliament on Monday with the streets of the capital deserted after the opposition leader called for a strike to protest the result of highly disputed elections.

Two smaller opposition parties boycotted the opening ceremony, saying they did not accept the outcome of the October election, while the incoming president, Daniel Chapo, called for calm and unity after months of deadly unrest.

FILE - Daniel Chapo, then-presidential candidate for the Mozambican Liberation Front party (FRELIMO), gestures as he addresses an electoral meeting with supporters and leaders of his party in Maputo, on Oct. 2, 2024.
FILE - Daniel Chapo, then-presidential candidate for the Mozambican Liberation Front party (FRELIMO), gestures as he addresses an electoral meeting with supporters and leaders of his party in Maputo, on Oct. 2, 2024.

Opposition leader Venancio Mondlane, who is popular with Mozambique's marginalized youth, claims the results were rigged in favor of Chapo's Frelimo party that has been in power for 50 years.

He urged his supporters at the weekend to "demonstrate our refusal" of the official election result with a national strike from Monday to Wednesday, when Chapo is due to be sworn in as president.

Military police surrounded the parliament building and police blocked main roads to the area during the inauguration ceremony.

The city centre, usually busy on a Monday morning, was deserted with most shops closed and protesters manning barricades in certain areas, an AFP reporter said.

Chapo and outgoing President Filipe Nyusi were present as parliamentarians from Frelimo — which won 171 seats — and the Podemos party — which has 43 — were sworn in to the 250-seat national assembly.

Renamo's 28 MPs and the eight from the MDM stayed away in protest.

The opening of parliament "constitutes a social outrage and a lack of respect for the will of Mozambicans" who were deprived of "free, fair and transparent" elections, a Renamo spokesman told reporters Sunday.

The MDM said it was boycotting to show it aligned itself with demands for "electoral truth".

Official results gave Chapo 65 percent of the presidential vote compared to 24 percent for Mondlane.

But the opposition leader claims he won 53 percent and that Mozambique's election institutions manipulated the results.

Mondlane returned to Mozambique on Thursday after going into hiding abroad following the October 19 assassination of his lawyer.

Thousands of jubilant supporters rallied in the city centre to meet him, sparking clashes with security forces that left at least three dead, according to an election monitor.

Unrest since the October 9 election day has claimed around 300 lives, according to a tally by a local rights group, with security forces accused of using excessive force, including live bullets, against demonstrators.

Police officers have also died, according to the authorities.

The unrest has caused major losses to Mozambique's economy, stopping cross-border trade and affecting shipping, mining and industry.

'Betrayal'

If "the assembly takes the oath, it is a betrayal of the will of the people," Mondlane, 50, said via Facebook late Saturday.

"Let us demonstrate against the inauguration of those who betrayed the will of the people on Monday and against those who stole the will of the people on Wednesday," he said.

Ahead of the opening of parliament, 48-year-old Chapo told reporters that Mozambique needed stability and unity.

With a new parliament in place, "we can continue to work and together, united ... to develop our country", he told journalists, calling for "open, frank debate".

Former president Joaquim Chissano said the new parliament needed to find answers to the "many things that are not right in the country.

"All debate should be about finding solutions," Chissano, in power from 1986 to 2005, told reporters ahead of the session.

There have been several calls for dialogue to resolve the standoff but Mondlane has been excluded from talks that Chapo and Nyusi have opened with the leaders of the main political parties.

Mondlane repeated after landing in Maputo Thursday that he was ready for dialogue. "I'm here in the flesh to say that if you want to negotiate... I'm here," he said.

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