×

We've got news for you.

Register on SowetanLIVE at no cost to receive newsletters, read exclusive articles & more.
Register now

Total pulls staff from natural gas site in Mozambique amid clashes — sources

A Dyck Advisory Group helicopter lands in Palma, Mozambique, in this picture taken between March 24 and March 27 2021. Total has withdrawn all its staff from its Afungi natural gas project site in northern Mozambique.
A Dyck Advisory Group helicopter lands in Palma, Mozambique, in this picture taken between March 24 and March 27 2021. Total has withdrawn all its staff from its Afungi natural gas project site in northern Mozambique.
Image: Dyck Advisory Group/Handout via REUTERS

French energy major Total has withdrawn all its staff from its Afungi natural gas project site in northern Mozambique, two sources with direct knowledge of the site's operations told Reuters, as clashes between Islamic State-linked insurgents and the Mozambican army continue.

Total, which last week called off the planned resumption of construction at the $20bn (R294bn) development due to the violence, declined immediate comment when contacted by Reuters.

Mozambique's government has confirmed dozens of deaths in the assault by Islamist militants that began last week in the coastal town of Palma, in a district near gas projects worth tens of billions of dollars that are meant to transform Mozambique's economy.

The situation around Palma is still highly volatile, with insurgents staging attacks on two security posts south of the town on Thursday, a source involved in providing support for humanitarian organisations on the ground told Reuters.

A spokesperson for Mozambique's military was quoted by a local radio station as saying Total's Afungi site was beyond the reach of the militants.

“It is protected, ... at no time was its integrity at stake,” Radio Mozambique cited army spokesperson Chongo Vidigal as saying. The radio station added in its report published late on Thursday that the area around the Total project was being patrolled day and night to repel any threat.

Mozambique's defence ministry did not respond to a Reuters request for comment.

Aid groups believe the attack displaced tens of thousands of people, many of whom fled to safety in dense forest areas nearby or by boat.

Reuters has not been able to independently verify the accounts from Palma. Most means of communication were cut off after the attack began on March 24.

Islamic State-linked insurgents have been increasingly active in the surrounding province of Cabo Delgado since 2017, though it is unclear whether they have a unified aim or what specifically they are fighting for.

At least 9,150 people have fled to other districts of Cabo Delgado during the latest violence, with thousands more believed displaced within the Palma district, the UN said on Friday.

“The new wave of displacement has uprooted many people who had fled their places of origin due to the conflict in other parts of Cabo Delgado and had been seeking shelter in Palma,” it said, adding the majority of those displaced were being accommodated by host families.

Total's project is among energy developments worth a combined $60 billion that would revolutionise Mozambique's $15bn (R220bn) economy.

Reuters

'What affects Mozambique will affect neighbouring countries,' warns UN Refugee Agency

Subscribe for free: iono.fm | Spotify | Apple Podcasts | Pocket Casts | Player.fm

Would you like to comment on this article?
Register (it's quick and free) or sign in now.

Speech Bubbles

Please read our Comment Policy before commenting.