Mozambique about to elect a thug as president?

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<table border="0" width="100%" cellpadding="7" cellspacing="0"><tbody><tr><td height="52">Afonso Dhlakama rides Mozambique’s poll wave </td> </tr> <tr> <td align="left" height="30" valign="bottom"> By AFP | Updated: 10 Oct,2014 ,16:38:55 | 409 Views | 0 Comments [ - ] [ + ] </td> </tr> <tr> <td align="left" height="30" valign="bottom"><table style="border-top:1px solid #999999;background-color:#F0F0F0" border="0" width="100%" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0"> <tbody><tr> <td valign="bottom">
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Dhlakama.

Mozambique’s former rebel leader Afonso Dhlakama is pulling huge crowds on his presidential election campaign, to the surprise of observers who wrote him off after his long exile in the bush.

Dhlakama emerged just a month ago from the remote Gorongosa mountains in central Mozambique to sign a peace pact with the government.

That deal ended an insurgency lasting nearly two years and allowed him to join the race for presidential elections on October 15.

That vote will decide who runs a country still emerging from a brutal civil war that killed an estimated one million people, but which is now rapidly growing thanks to vast coal and gas deposits.

Despite hitting the campaign trail later than his opponents, Dhlakama’s rallies have drawn massive crowds.

Thousands packed the airport of the second largest city of Beira on Sunday, broke through security cordons and streamed onto the tarmac when his plane landed.

In similar scenes last week, crowds massed on the landing strip in the remote northwestern Angonia region, near the Malawi border, initially preventing his plane from landing.

Footage broadcast on national television showed capacity crowds in the coal-rich Tete province where people crowded onto rooftops to see Dhlakama.

“I have never seen this before,” Dhlakama said in Tete.

In Sofala province, where civilians bore the brunt of the recent unrest, largely blamed on Renamo, the turnout at Dhlakama’s rallies was just as overwhelming.

“There were more people than you ever saw,” said Muxungue resident Obete Samuel. “They welcomed him as the messiah.”

Dhlakama saw his electoral support wane from 47 per cent in 1999 to 16 percent a decade later, leaving political analysts with no choice but to write him off a “has-been”.

Dhlakama, 61, is arguably the best-known of the three presidential candidates, having run in all four presidential polls since the end of the civil war in 1992.

Mozambique Democratic Movement candidate Daviz Simango, the mayor of Beira, has also run for the presidency before.

The candidate for the ruling Frelimo party, former defence minister Felipe Nyusi, is probably the least-known politically.

Despite his relative obscurity, Nyusi is widely expected to win as Frelimo has been in power since Mozambique won independence from Portugal in 1975.

The incumbent, Armando Guebuza, is stepping down after serving the maximum two terms.

Dhlakama is presenting himself less as a naysayer than in his previous campaigns, appearing relaxed and exuding a conciliatory tone towards his political foes.

He has even promised that, if elected he would offer Frelimo some cabinet posts.

Among his campaign pledges, Dhlakama is telling residents of coal-rich areas he will ensure they benefit from resources being extracted under their feet.

“It is a concrete, relevant, positive message,” said political analyst Joseph Hanlon. That is “an attitudinal change that will make him more attractive to voters.”

Whether the mass numbers at rallies will translate into votes is far from certain.

Most observers say there is a strong element of “curiosity” driving attendance.

Many are desperate to see Dhlakama in the flesh after long months during which he was rumoured to be dead.

While Dhlakama might be riding high at the moment, his campaign machinery remains weak compared to that of Frelimo.

“It is a one-man show. That is his problem,” said Hanlon.

One concern is that the mass turnouts could build expectations of a win among Renamo’s supporters that could prove dangerous if the party loses.


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I don't care about people ignoring my posts. I get the info/news I need from here. I read your post and its something that I didn't know and probably something 90% of the population wasn't aware of. If it every come up in conversation, I can respond with what i read and thats thanks to you.

However, I don't care about who they elect as President in Mozambique because it has no direct influence on my life. I can only change MY World and Im choosing to focus on changing my career path, getting married, having children etc.

So again, with no ill will or intent let him thug out of there. Most Africans don't even want to eff with black Americans so.....*kanye shrug*

then you should not have said anything, just as some of us ignore your posts
 
I don't care about people ignoring my posts. I get the info/news I need from here. I read your post and its something that I didn't know and probably something 90% of the population wasn't aware of. If it every come up in conversation, I can respond with what i read and thats thanks to you.

However, I don't care about who they elect as President in Mozambique because it has no direct influence on my life. I can only change MY World and Im choosing to focus on changing my career path, getting married, having children etc.

So again, with no ill will or intent let him thug out of there. Most Africans don't even want to eff with black Americans so.....*kanye shrug*

ok...whatever. Now go away.
 
Mine was better. Sorry. Try again!!!! I'll give you another shot.

Ebola is a disease, crack cocaine is a choice

Precisely!!!! :cool:

:itsawrap:

Oh, and also, better choices have to be made globally concerning our leaders, however this type of choice affect other countries more in my opinion because they have less of a profile with the court of public opinion world wide, and have less global influence politically so a 'thug' can run more rampant there than here. This will not end well for them in my opinion... :smh:
 
Frelimo won't get outed but the parliament may be lost to him.
I am humbled by you....How do you even know about Frelimo?

The people of Mozambique should be ashamed for even entertaining
the election of this thug as their president. This bugger has their blood
on his hands, and was the tool of apartheid for many years//
 
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inside
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kitchen
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Courtesy of Bar Lounge 1908




PS: I think that the house dates back to 1908. Hence, the name given to the bar. They just transformed an old structure into a really nice bar! It looks nice from inside and outside
 
I don't care about people ignoring my posts. I get the info/news I need from here. I read your post and its something that I didn't know and probably something 90% of the population wasn't aware of. If it every come up in conversation, I can respond with what i read and thats thanks to you.

However, I don't care about who they elect as President in Mozambique because it has no direct influence on my life. I can only change MY World and Im choosing to focus on changing my career path, getting married, having children etc.

So again, with no ill will or intent let him thug out of there. Most Africans don't even want to eff with black Americans so.....*kanye shrug*

I love it when you kick this ignorant rhetoric about Africans not caring it's the biggest bullshit ever :lol:, Africans love African Americans they're not as disconnected at y'all :smh: Africans main gripe with blacks is their lack work ethic, their stance on educating yaselfs and overall ghetto lifestyle, an African will move here and in a decade get a degree or two while probably saving at least 40% of their income while securing properties and businesses in their homeland while y'all waiting for a savior or the latest iPhone. Africans are more Jewish than a the person you know as a Jew, you guys are going for the okey doke and don't even know it
 
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Dude, although I appreciate your attempt to kill off ignorant stereotypes of the capital, Maputo isn't popping. That area is quite small upscale area. In fact, I've been on that street where you posted the first photo.

I've give you this: I'd rather be there instead of South Africa when safety is concerned. But the skyline is a dead giveaway. I hope the urban development is in the works though. Anyways, Maputo is in better condition than Beira. :smh:
 
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