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Image: Plataforma Decide / X
At least 12 people died and another 34 were shot in the latest phase of demonstrations and stoppages that began on Wednesday to contest the officially announced results of the 9 October general elections, the non-governmental organisation (NGO) Plataforma Eleitoral Decide said this Thursday, in an update report issued at 9:48 am.
According to the report released by the electoral monitoring platform, seven of the fatalities were recorded in Nampula province, one in Maputo province, two in Cabo Delgado, one in Sofala and one in Inhambane.
Of those injured by gunshots, 20 cases were recorded in Nampula province, seven in Cabo Delgado, three in Sofala, two in Inhambane, one in Zambézia and one in Maputo province.
These figures come on top of the 76 deaths and 240 shootings in the 41 days of election protests from October 21 to December 1, according to the platform’s previous report, which also estimated “more than 3,000 arrests”.
Data from the “4×4” phase of the demonstrations in Mozambique.#MozambiqueElections#MozambiqueProtests#DecideEleicoespic.twitter.com/Yrfu9wxSlO
— Plataforma_decide (@PDecide23) December 5, 2024
Presidential candidate Venâncio Mondlane called for a new week-long phase of electoral contestation, starting today, in ‘all neighbourhoods’ in Mozambique, with a halt to car traffic from 8am to 4pm.
“All the neighbourhoods are in strong activity,” said Venâncio Mondlane, who does not recognise the results announced from the general elections on 9 October, in a statement on his official Facebook account, calling for a new period of protest from 4 to 11 December.
“We are going to gather in the neighbourhoods and on the main avenues that cross our neighbourhoods – we don’t need to travel far – and put up our posters,” said Venâncio Mondlane.
As was the case from 27 to 29 November, the presidential candidate is calling for vehicles to stop moving from 8am to 3.30pm local time (two hours less in Lisbon), followed by 30 minutes to sing the anthems of Mozambique and Africa in the streets, which took place today in several central streets, particularly in Maputo.
“We’re going to demonstrate uninterruptedly, without rest. It’s going to be seven full days (…). All vehicles, everything that moves, will be at a standstill,” he insisted, asking motorists to stick protest posters on vehicles travelling until 8am and after 4pm.
The announcement by Mozambique’s National Electoral Commission (CNE) on 24 October of the results of the 9 October elections, in which it awarded victory to Daniel Chapo, supported by the Mozambique Liberation Front (Frelimo, the party in power since 1975) in the election for country’s president, with 70.67% of the vote, triggered popular protests, called by presidential candidate Venâncio Mondlane and which have degenerated into violent clashes with the police.
According to the CNE, Mondlane came second with 20.32%, but the latter does not recognise the results, which still have to be validated and proclaimed by the Constitutional Council.
Data from the “4×4” phase of the demonstrations in Mozambique.#MozambiqueElections#MozambiqueProtests#DecideEleicoes@CDD_Moz @CIPMoz pic.twitter.com/h7MjWRJNQR
— Plataforma_decide (@PDecide23) December 5, 2024
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