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/ 23 February 2006
A powerful earthquake struck Mozambique early on Thursday morning, shaking buildings and forcing people from hundreds of kilometres around to dash into the streets for safety. There were no immediate reports of injury. The United States Geological Survey said the magnitude 7,5 quake had an epicentre 224km southwest of Mozambique’s main port of Beira.
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/ 21 February 2006
Muslims throughout Mozambique are meeting this week to discuss how to respond to the publishing by local newspaper Savana of the controversial cartoons depicting the Prophet Muhammad, which has stirred violent protest around the world. The independent weekly on Friday reprinted eight of the 12 cartoons.
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/ 18 January 2006
France has removed Mozambique’s national carrier from a blacklist of airlines prohibited from using its airports, aviation officials said on Tuesday. National Director of Civil Aviation Antonio Pinto welcomed the decision, saying the ban had hurt Linhas Aereas de Mocambique financially and damaged the country’s reputation abroad.
Floods in central Mozambique have killed at least 15 people in two central provinces and left thousands homeless after heavy rains in the Southern African country since Christmas, officials said on Wednesday. The heavy rains in the former Portuguese colony follow a lengthy drought that has left nearly one million people in need of food aid, mostly in the south of the country.
Storms and flooding have killed at least 13 people in the central Mozambique province of Sofala since torrential rains hit Southern Africa last week, state-run radio reported on Tuesday. Eight of the victims were struck by lightning and five drowned in floods unleashed by the storms, Radio Mozambique reported.
Storms and flooding have killed at least 13 people since torrential rains started in the central Mozambique province of Sofala last week, state-run radio reported on Tuesday. Eight of the victims were struck by lightning and five drowned in floods unleashed by the storms, Radio Mozambique reported.
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/ 9 December 2005
Mozambique has to develop a more systematic response to chronic drought, which is having a devastating effect on the food security and livelihoods of around 800Â 000 people, according to a recent assessment. The government, with help from bilateral partners, has been carrying out relief operations, and plans to expand the number to 534Â 000 this month.
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/ 2 December 2005
A man accused of masterminding the killing of Mozambique’s leading investigative journalist went on trial on Thursday after twice escaping from jail. Anibal Dos Santos Junior, known here as Anibazinho, was convicted in 2003 of murdering Carlos Cardoso and sentenced to 28 years in prison.
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/ 30 November 2005
In the sandy compound of his extended family’s home, six-year-old Manuel Rafael is playing with his cousins. He doesn’t know he is HIV-positive, and doesn’t understand his grandmother’s explanation in Portuguese about how he could have died but for the anti-retroviral treatment he began when he was just a year old.
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/ 30 October 2005
Mozambique’s livestock authorities announced a ban on Saturday on poultry imports from several European countries that have reported cases of the deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu. A ban already in place on imports from Asia will be extended to cover several countries in Europe.
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/ 24 October 2005
At the tender age of 12, Pedro Moniz is already a veteran when it comes to observing the regimen of anti-retroviral drugs that keeps Aids-related illnesses at bay. "I take one tablet at 6am, another at 1.45pm just before school, another at 5.45pm when I return from school — and the last at 10pm," he says, without pausing to think.
African health ministers meeting in Mozambique on Wednesday described a planned 30% increase in spending on their continent by the UN’s World Health Organisation as important, but not enough, given the massive problems to be faced.
For children in Mozambique who are orphaned by Aids, burying parents may simply signal the start of their battle with the pandemic. All too often, these orphans also find themselves among those most at risk of contracting HIV. A conference was held recently in Maputo to discuss support for the elderly in caring for orphans.
A new, independent anti-corruption office will be created to stamp out graft in the public sector, Mozambique’s attorney general said on Saturday. Francisco Madeira told state radio that the National Council for the Fight against Corruption will be autonomous, with no interference from the government.
More than one million Mozambicans are reeling from a drought that has hit the south of the country and only little more than a tenth are getting food aid. Silvano Langa, head of the National Disaster Management Institute, said he hoped the shortage would not be as ”acute as in past years when we had to ward off the combined effects of drought and war”.
Mozambique’s Minister of Industry and Trade, Antonio Fernando, expressed concern on Saturday that European Union plans to reform its sugar price regime could destroy local producers. Fernando said 30 000 jobs in Mozambique are at risk because of the planned changes.
Lying outside her hut on a tattered mat, 20-year-old Maria struggled with her breathing as she tried to explain why she and her five orphaned nieces and nephews in her charge had not eaten. Maria was dying from Aids-related diseases, as well as from severe malnutrition. "I had to sell my plot of land to survive," she said through her gasps for breaths.
The success of the first mass immunisation campaign against cholera in Mozambique’s port city of Beira has prompted calls for greater access to an oral vaccine. Needle-administered cholera vaccines have generally provided about 50% protection for just two months, but the oral vaccine has proven far more effective.
At 9am on a Monday morning, the used clothing vendors at Chiquelene Market in Mozambique’s capital, Maputo, are still unpacking their wares. The sale of clothing donated to charities in Europe and North America has supported Angelina Arnaldo and her seven children for 17 years. On a good day, she takes home around $10. "It’s easier than selling food because it doesn’t go off," she explained.
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/ 2 February 2005
Mozambique’s newly elected President, Armando Guebuza, on Wednesday took over the reigns from long-serving leader Joaquim Chissano with a pledge to step up the fight against poverty, bureaucracy and corruption. ”We want to bring about a more accelerated rhythm towards a better future, which translates in a sharp reduction of poverty,” Guebuza said.
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/ 31 January 2005
Louisa is a non-professional community worker with the Portuguese chapter of Doctors of the World, who has participated in Mozambique’s home-based care programme since September last year. In a country where doctors and nurses are scarce, she –- and others like her –- are increasingly on the front line of efforts to provide care for the 1,4-million Mozambicans who are living with HIV.
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/ 23 December 2004
There were few surprises this week when the final results for Mozambique’s general elections on December 1 and 2 were announced. On Tuesday, the National Elections Commission said the presidential poll had been won by Armando Guebuza of the ruling Frelimo party. This group also garnered a majority of seats in Parliament.
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/ 22 December 2004
Armando Guebuza, one of Mozambique’s richest businessmen and a stalwart of the ruling party and the country’s fight against Portuguese colonial rule, crowned his political career on Tuesday by being elected president in key polls. Guebuza inflicted a crushing defeat on main opposition leader Afonso Dhlakama in the polls.
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/ 15 December 2004
Mozambique’s ruling party and its presidential candidate, Armando Guebuza, have secured a landslide victory in polls to choose a successor to veteran leader Joaquim Chissano amid opposition outrage and demands for new elections. Opposition party Renamo and 20 smaller parties on Tuesday demanded fresh elections.
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/ 10 December 2004
Former rebel leader and opposition candidate Afonso Dhlakama on Friday demanded fresh elections in Mozambique, accusing the ruling Frelimo party of ”criminal fraud” during two days of voting for a new president and Parliament. Dhlakama accused Frelimo of preventing millions from casting their ballots.
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/ 7 December 2004
Mozambican electoral officials on Tuesday blamed heavy rain, muddy roads and spoilt ballot papers for the delay in counting the vote from last week’s presidential and parliamentary elections. The main opposition Renamo leader Afonso Dhlakama has accused the National Electoral Commission of trying to fix the vote.
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/ 3 December 2004
Former United States president Jimmy Carter gave Mozambique’s third multi-party elections a tentative thumbs-up on Friday despite a poor turnout, saying the two days of voting appeared to have gone off well. Carter said of the polls, which were held on Wednesday and Thursday: ”We interrogated any obsevers who were there, especially from the opposition parties… and we have found that they had no complaints.”
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/ 3 December 2004
Mozambican President Joaquim Chissano, who is stepping down after 42 years in politics and at the forefront of a liberation struggle against Portuguese rule, says although he wants to ”be free” now, he will be on call to help resolve ”terrible problems” anywhere in the world.
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/ 2 December 2004
As Mozambique calmly voted on a second and final day on Thursday for a new president and parliament, foreign observers and voters said the strength of its maturing democracy will be measured by the transparency of the count – and the reaction to the outcome. With 17 parties running for Parliament and five contesting the presidential race, many here believe the county is moving toward a presidential runoff next month.
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/ 2 December 2004
Just hours before the closing of polls in Mozambique, the elections commission called on citizens to vote, reminding them of their civic duty. The elections were marked by controversy over observers’ access to the final stages of the count.
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/ 1 December 2004
Mozambican President Joaquim Chissano voted on Wednesday in a landmark election which will see him step down after 18 years in power, saying he was proud of his role in cementing peace after helping end a brutal civil war that killed about one million people.
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/ 30 November 2004
One of Mozambique’s richest businessmen and leading candidate in this week’s presidential race, Armando Guebuza is a stalwart of the ruling party who was at the forefront of his country’s fight for independence from Portugal and negotiations to end the civil war.