CAPE TOWN, South Africa — Jihadist insurgents in northern Mozambique have launched new attacks in recent weeks, beheading civilians, burning villages and leaving children orphaned and forced to seek help alone, the United Nations and other humanitarian organizations say.
The spike in violence by Islamic State-linked militants led to more than 100,000 people being displaced in November. Around 70,000 of them were children, according to UNICEF, the United Nations' Children's Fund.
''Many children lost their parents and fled on their own, sometimes following an adult that they didn't even know," said Xavier Creach, a United Nations refugee agency representative in Mozambique.
The tens of thousands of newly displaced people join around 1.3 million who were forced to flee their homes since the militants launched their insurgency in 2017 in the province of Cabo Delgado on Mozambique's northeast coast.
Mozambique's government has drawn in help from the Rwandan army to try and stem the insurgency but has made little progress. Humanitarian groups say there's a burgeoning crisis, with hundreds of thousands needing food, water, shelter and healthcare as cholera and other diseases break out in displacement camps.
An independent branch of Islamic State
The insurgents, known as Islamic State-Mozambique, are an independent branch of the Islamic State group and want to impose sharia, or Islamic law, according to an assessment by the office of the United States Director of National Intelligence. It estimates Islamic State-Mozambique has around 300 fighters and one of its key leaders is a Tanzanian national.
The group gained notoriety when it launched a 12-day attack on the coastal town of Palma in 2021, killing dozens of security officers, local civilians, and foreign workers and forcing French energy giant Total to halt a $20 billion offshore liquified natural gas project nearby. Total said it intends to restart the project, which is key to Mozambique's development and believed to be the reason for the attack on Palma.