Thousands flee Mozambique for camps in Malawi

Conflict worsens between Frelimo government forces and opposition Renamo

Mozambican refugees wait to  register at the Kapise refugee camp on the  Mozambican border  in Malawi. Photograph: Eldson  Chagara/AFP/Getty Images
Mozambican refugees wait to register at the Kapise refugee camp on the Mozambican border in Malawi. Photograph: Eldson Chagara/AFP/Getty Images

When Mozambican troops hunting opposition fighters attacked his village this week, 10-year-old Wit Messenger ran away, leaving behind parents he may never see again.

Messenger is among thousands of Mozambicans who have fled to refugee camps in Malawi in the last month, saying Frelimo government forces are burning homes and killing civilians in a campaign against Renamo guerrillas in an escalation of a simmering conflict between civil war foes.

Spokesmen for Frelimo and Renamo each said the other side was responsible for attacks on their members in various parts of the country but would not give details about the violence that prompted the refugee exodus.

Child refugees

The first Mozambicans arrived in the Malawian village of

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Kapise

last June but the UN refugee agency, the UNHCR, says the flow of migrants has rapidly increased this month and predicts the number could rise from 3,500 now to 5,000 in coming days, more than it can handle.

More than half the refugees are children who walked for days from villages in Mozambique’s western Tete province with just the clothes they were wearing. “I could see the houses burning up ahead, then I heard the gunshots and I ran,” said Wit, waiting with hundreds of other children to be given food in a sprawling hilltop camp of makeshift tents.

Security sources say Renamo fighters have been attacking police outposts in recent weeks near the Malawi border where they have public support. Frelimo forces retaliate by torching villages where they believe rebels are hiding.

Guerrilla force

Renamo started out as a guerrilla force backed by neighbouring powers – the white-minority government in what was then Rhodesia and later by apartheid South Africa – to counter the communist Frelimo movement.

The violence has stirred memories of a civil war fought between Renamo and Frelimo from 1976 to 1992 in which a million people died and another million fled to Malawi.

Renamo's leader, Afonso Dhlakama (63) has said he will in March seize control of six northern provinces, declaring autonomy in areas where his party won majorities in 2014's national election. He has not explained how this would be done but experts believe it would be unconstitutional.

Frelimo won 57 per cent of the 2014 vote against 37 per cent for Renamo. Renamo disputes the result and says Frelimo is to blame for the violence. Both sides say they are democrats but also resort to violence which they are unwilling to acknowledge.

– (Reuters)