Beheadings in Mozambique: Islamist Jihadists aren’t only to blame - expert

Loading player...
Islamic State has claimed responsibility for killing and displacing people - but experts in Mozambique don’t believe it’s that simple to blame Islamic militants for the humanitarian crisis that has unfolded in the southern African country. Complicated social conditions, ethnic rivalries, criminal gangs including drug traffickers, government corruption, elites and global corporate bosses turning a blind eye to the needs of the desperately poor communities around one of Africa’s biggest liquified gas investments are among the other factors playing into extreme violence. South African mercenaries are also interfering. Speaking to BizNews editor at large Jackie Cameron, Professor Adriano Nuvunga of the Centre for Democracy and Development in Mozambique says the solution is dialogue and that French multinational Total, behind the big liquefied natural gas (#lng) investment in the area, has been late in engaging with stakeholders. It should have done more to allow locals to benefit from the development, given the fragility of the situation, says the Mozambique expert. South African mercenaries have been hired to help the Mozambique government, but Prof Nuvunga says this exacerbate the problems in the long run. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
15 Apr 2021 7AM English South Africa Investing · Business News

Other recent episodes

BN Daybreak - Fri 12 June 2026: Trump halts Iran strikes; SA's overlooked gold fortune; PA surge; World Cup fees

In today's BizNews Daybreak: Global markets rallied after President Trump halted planned military strikes against Iran. In South Africa, the Patriotic Alliance clinched a major by-election victory in Malmesbury, weakening established parties. Meanwhile, Alec Hogg unpacked South Africa’s overlooked multi-billion rand gold mining fortune. Finally, we highlight Adobe’s executive shakeup…
11 Jun 11PM 15 min

The Daily Edge: Gold at $4,100 and SA is sitting on a fortune it can't see

Alec Hogg opens with a thesis from Merrill Lynch veteran Dr. Duarte de Silva: South Africa's abandoned gold mines and tailings dumps — written off at $300–$800/oz — are generating margins above $3,000 per ounce at today's prices. The Witwatersrand Basin still holds as much gold as has ever been…
11 Jun 7AM 19 min