SADC will urgently resuscitate and capacitate its Force Intervention Brigade (FIB) in order to facilitate deployment in Mozambique, which is presently under siege from insurgents that claim to be affiliated to the Islamic State (IS), President Mnangagwa has said.
Speaking after returning from Mozambique for the Double
Troika Summit yesterday, the President said it was now the responsibility of
defence and security chiefs to implement the resolution.
“First, we had the Troika itself, which sat and adopted the
recommendations of the Ministers of Defence and Security which, in the main,
included the need to have SADC take responsibility in dealing with the threat
in Cabo Delgado, in the sense that SADC, through its Force Intervention Brigade
— our SADC force — should be resuscitated and capacitated immediately so that
it can intervene,” he said.
“Later on we had the Double Troika, which then brings on
board the outgoing chair, Tanzania, and the incoming chair, Malawi. The Troika
submitted its report to the Double Troika, and the Double Troika endorsed the
decisions of the Troika.
“Yes, what is happening now is that the defence and
security chiefs have the responsibility of implementing the decisions of the
Double Troika.”
FIB was first conceived as an arm of the United Nations
Organisation Stabilisation Mission in the DRC (MONUSCO). It is composed
entirely of troops from South Africa, Tanzania and Malawi.
However, at a key meeting of the Organ Troika convened in
Botswana in November last year, the bloc accepted a proposal by the United
Nations to “realign the current Force Intervention Brigade (FIB) troops’
strength to create the headroom for the Quick Reaction Forces (QRFs), and
generate two QRFs from the SADC Troops-Contributing Countries”.
Yesterday’s Double Troika Summit was called by Botswana
President Mokgweetsi Masisi, who is chair of the Organ on Defence, Politics and
Security Cooperation, which is responsible for peace and security in the
region.
At the key meeting, SADC resolved to immediately deploy in
Mozambique as it prepares “a proportionate regional response” to terrorist
attacks in northern Mozambique.
Defence ministers from Botswana, Zimbabwe and South Africa
— which currently make up the Organ Troika — will also meet on April 28 to
prepare a follow-up extraordinary meeting of the Organ Troika the following
day.
In a communiqué at the end of the Summit, the SADC
secretariat said the heinous attacks, particularly in Cabo Delgado province,
could not be allowed to continue. Insurgents attacked the coastal city of Palma
on March 24 and displaced more than 11 000 people.
The exact number of people killed in the horrific attacks,
which took place close to a multibillion-dollar gas project by French energy
giant Total, are not yet known.
“Double Troika Summit received a report from the Organ
Troika on the security situation in Mozambique, and noted with concern the acts
of terrorism perpetrated against innocent civilians, women and children in some
of the districts of Cabo Delgado Province of the Republic of Mozambique;
condemned the terrorist attacks in strongest terms; and affirmed that such
heinous attacks cannot be allowed to continue without a proportionate regional
response,” read part of the statement released after the key meetings. “Double
Troika directed an immediate technical deployment to the Republic of Mozambique,
and the convening of an Extraordinary Meeting of the Ministerial Committee of
the Organ by April 28, 2021, that will report to the Extraordinary Organ Troika
Summit on April 29, 2021.”
Regional countries have resolved to intervene “as a collective”
to deal with the deteriorating security situation in Mozambique, which
threatens “the whole region and humanity at large”.
Officially opening the Organ Troika Summit, President
Masisi said there was need to deal decisively with the insurgents to bring SADC
back on its development path. The region, he added, would ensure “the scourge
of terrorism does not find a home in our region”.
“We all agree that the deteriorating security situation in
the northern province of Cabo Delgado in Mozambique is indeed a serious threat
to peace and security not only our sister country, but also to the whole region
and humanity at large. In particular, the recent attacks in the town of Palma
have recently demonstrated the magnitude of the problem at our doorsteps,” said
President Masisi.
“We cannot stay indifferent to the brutal and
indiscriminate attacks by these faceless terrorists.” Describing the insurgents
as “inhumane killers”, President Masisi said there was need to ensure “the
scourge of terrorism does not find a home in our region”.
He said although Mozambique had commendably fought off
attacks from the terrorists, it could not possibly be expected to sustain the
operations in the long term.
“No member state can deal with the scourge of terrorism
alone. Even the most powerful of nations on the planet have not been able to
effectively address terrorism on their own.”
The Double Troika is made up of Mozambique, the current
chair; Malawi, which is the incoming chair; and Tanzania (the outgoing). Other
members include Botswana, South Africa and Zimbabwe. Herald
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