Mozambique's president says the security situation in jihadist-plagued Cabo Delgado has returned to normal and that energy giant TotalEnergies can restart its lucrative gas projects. But many locals are skeptical.
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The French energy company Total withdrew its workers from a multi-billion dollar liquefied natural gas (LNG) project in 2021 because of a worsening security situation in Mozambique's Cabo Delgado province.
In 2023, two years later, TotalEnergies' CEO Patrick Pouyanne paid a visit to the southern African nation to discuss conditions for a possible restart.
The "environment" in the gas-rich province has improved for "the company to resume activity at any time," Mozambican President Filipe Nyusi said at a recent mining and energy conference in Mozambique's capital, Maputo.
TotalEnergies should now restart its $20 billion (around €18 billion) gas project, Nyusi added.
Escalating extremist violence
But Cabo Delgado has been struggling with a militant insurgency which, during the last five years, has claimed at least 4,683 lives — nearly half of them civilians — and forced around 1 million people to flee their homes.
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When the jihadist activities began in 2017, the Mozambican government was slow to react.
The situation escalated, and it became clear that the local security forces were not capable of handling the insurgency issue without international assistance.
Rwanda was not only the first country to send troops to Cabo Delgado — it also provided the largest contingent of foreign troops in the restive province, to the tune of around 1,000 soldiers.
Since the end of 2021, other countries — such as South Africa, Angola, Tanzania, Zimbabwe and Botswana — have also participated in the Southern African Development Community Mission in Mozambique (SAMIM), whose 3,000 soldiers provide security in northern Mozambique.
The European Union and the United States have also sent military advisers.
Africa's largest investment
The international investment plan for Cabo Delgado envisages the construction of a huge onshore LNG plant. Investors would likely gain influence in a region that could potentially gain a key position in Africa's economy.
Mozambican authorities said there are plans to produce nearly 13 million tons of LNG per year.
Investments in the project are expected to exceed $20 billion and generate a profit to the tune of $60 billion in the medium term.
The main investors are France's TotalEnergies, the United States' Anadarko, and Italy's Eni. Other smaller companies from Europe, China, Brazil, India, Japan and Australia also announced their financial involvement.
Exploration was originally scheduled to begin in 2023. But Total's departure dealt a major blow to the plan.
Uganda: A battle for sacred lands as nature wins new rights
In Uganda's Albertine Rift, an immense network of grasslands and mountains that supports great biodiversity, two energy giants are preparing to extract the largest onshore oil deposit in sub-Saharan Africa.
Image: Jack Losh
Guardians of the land
Alon Kiiza, an elder of the area's Indigenous Bagungu community, lives in the rural Buliisa district at the epicenter of this ongoing, foreign-led scramble for the continent's natural resources. The 88-year-old is among many there watching the industrial hubbub with concern. "Drilling for oil will disturb the ecosystem," he said. "The spirit of the land does not connect well with these machines."
Image: Jack Losh
Wildlife under siege
A serious cause for concern is the wildlife inhabiting the area. Some drilling will take place within Murchison Falls National Park which is home to elephants, leopards, lions and giraffes, as well as more than 450 bird species, from blue-headed coucals to red-throated bee-eaters. Environmentalists worry about the possible impact of oil drilling on animals here, especially in the event of a spill.
Image: Jack Losh
Rocky outlook
But the megaproject is already underway. In April, Uganda and Tanzania signed final agreements with the French oil multinational, TotalEnergies, and the China National Offshore Oil Corporation to extract about 1.7 billion barrels from a 425-square-mile drilling zone. Given its remote location, a Chinese construction firm has been brought in to build a 70-mile (112-kilometer) road to reach the oil.
Image: Jack Losh
An international endeavor
Following its planned, first extraction in 2025, the oil will be pumped 900 miles through the East African Crude Oil Pipeline — the world's longest heated conduit — to Tanzania's port city of Tanga, surrounded by mangroves and coral reefs on the Indian Ocean. Not only will the crude oil cross critical wildlife habitats, campaigners say the pipeline will displace thousands of farmers.
Image: Jack Losh
Dying light or new dawn?
Even as the Ugandan government pushed ahead with this oil project on the shores of Lake Albert, it has also adopted a groundbreaking environmental law that could protect fragile habitats. The law formally recognizes the rights of nature in the same ways that human rights are recognized, treating ecosystems as living beings and allowing them to sue in court cases through guardianship bodies.
Image: Jack Losh
Ancient roots
Kiiza sits next to Dennis Tabaro, a Ugandan environmentalist who is helping revive Indigenous environmental practices here that were eroded by the colonial era. The rights-of-nature law is rooted in ancient, Indigenous thought like of the Bagungu. The world's 370 million Indigenous peoples account for 5% of the global population, yet live on lands that shelter 80% of the planet's biodiversity.
Image: Jack Losh
A reawakening
As part of their renaissance, Bagungu elders have drawn maps of their ancestral land, complete with precolonial calendars showing changing seasons, breeding cycles, harvest time and rituals. One map visualizes old customs, another shows present-day disorder and third offers an optimistic, biodiverse vision for the future. The map-making process has rekindled memories of their heritage.
Image: Jack Losh
Black gold?
Despite environmental fears, the government is promoting the oil reserves as a way to boost living standards for Ugandans, more than half of whom live in poverty. This child had missed school to help his family collect crops. TotalEnergies says its project will create 6,000 jobs, mostly for locals, and that social and environmental risks had been mitigated in line with international standards.
Image: Jack Losh
Driving ahead
There is no guarantee that Uganda's rights-of-nature law will put a brake on the oil project. For one, it contains a clause stating that the government may choose which natural places are to be protected by the law and which are not — a worrisome loophole. Likewise, nature's rights are not guaranteed forever. Such rulings in both India and the US have later been overturned by judges.
Image: Jack Losh
An uncertain future
Chinese and Ugandan workers rest during a hot day of construction. Lawyers believe the rights-of-nature law may offer a chance to limit the impact of the oil project, but not stop it. "[It] is a fait accompli — we should focus on the mitigation plan,” said Frank Tumusiime, whose environmental nonprofit lobbied for the law and is now helping write regulations to give it teeth in the courts.
Image: Jack Losh
Natural temples
Bagungu elder Julius Byenkya walks toward a hallowed grove of trees in the savannah outside Buliisa. This is one of many sacred natural sites which take the form of lakes, rivers or woods — providing important wildlife habitats that are also revered by the community. "This is our spiritual center," said Mr. Byenkya. "Our prayer is that this place remains undisturbed."
Image: Jack Losh
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Has the region's security situation improved?
There is a lack of reliable information about the security situation in the region, according to Delfim Anacleto, DW's correspondent in Cabo Delgado. "The government said the situation is normalizing."
"People on the ground that I interviewed say energy companies like TotalEnergies should wait before sending their employees back to Cabo Delgado," Anacleto noted. "It has calmed down, but it may be that it is just a tactical withdrawal of the jihadists."
Anacleto said he cannot move freely in the province and is only rarely invited to on-site inspections, but is then not allowed to leave a radius specified by the military leaders.
There are fewer attacks, and also fewer refugees who come to the capital Pemba, and some even make their way back to their villages," said Anacleto. "That's our impression, but it's not certain because we have hardly any access to the areas."
"People must be able to return to the areas from which they fled," said Anchina Abdul from Kwendeleya, an NGO which helps internally displaced persons in Cabo Delgado.
"The government and security forces must ensure that people can return to their homelands," she said. "There are currently other priorities than the return of employees of international energy companies."
Aly Caetano, who also travels to the region frequently, agreed.
"The situation is still chaotic," Caetano said. "The priority is not for TotalEnergies to resume the gas projects, but for ordinary people, small traders to be able to resume their businesses, fishermen to resume fishing, farmers to plant crops without danger, and young people to have access to their schools and education so that they can soon take care of themselves."
"In many areas, it is still not possible to travel from A to B without armed security personnel," said Abudo Gafuro, who added that there are occasional attacks by jihadists who target vehicles carrying food.
"If I were the boss of TotalEnergies, I would definitely wait a bit longer, two or three months," he suggested. "Clearer guarantees would be needed from the security forces that security is truly ensured. Perhaps the work could be resumed partially, step by step."
Edited by: Keith Walker
Scores dead after disastrous Rwanda floods
At least 130 people have lost their lives after heavy rainfall hit Rwanda. Thousands of homes have been destroyed, roads cut off by landslides, and fields flooded in the east African country.
Image: JEAN BIZIMANA/REUTERS
Getting to safety
At least 130 people have died so far in Rwanda's disastrous flood. "There are 77 injured people, 36 of whom are being treated in hospital, five people are also missing," deputy government spokesman Alain Mukuralinda told AFP news agency on Thursday.
Image: JEAN BIZIMANA/REUTERS
Weeks of heavy rain
A man transports charcoal on a bicycle in Karongi district, western Rwanda. The African country has endured heavy, persistent rainfall since late March. The downfall was particularly ferocious on Wednesday night. Ensuing landslides and floods destroyed 17 roads, 26 bridges, a hospital and five health centers, Rwandan government spokesman Mukuralinda said.
Image: AP Photo/picture alliance
Thousands of homes destroyed
A man shovels water from his intact house in Rubavu district. Others were not so lucky: some 5,000 houses were completely destroyed by the flooding, the Rwandan government said on Thursday. Another 2,500 houses were damaged in the disaster. All affected residents must now relocate.
Image: JEAN BIZIMANA/REUTERS
Waiting for help
Two women lay on a patch of grass, with other survivors nearby, their possessions strewn around them. The Rwandan government has pledged to help all those hit hard by the flooding. Disaster Management Minister Marie Solange Kayisire said "relief efforts have begun immediately, including assisting with victims' funerals and caring for those whose homes have been destroyed."
Image: JEAN BIZIMANA/REUTERS
End of the road
After a landslide, debris and earth cover a road in Rubengera, western Rwanda. The country's western and northern provinces, as well as the capital Kigali, are particularly hilly, which makes them susceptible to landslides during prolonged rainfall.
Image: MARIAM KONE/AFP
Salvaging crops
A woman salvages the remains of her crops from a flooded field in Musanze, northern Rwanda. Neighboring Uganda has also endured days of heavy rainfall. According to the Red Cross, at least six people were killed in a landslide in the southern region of Kisoro, bordering Rwanda. Last week, three people drowned after a river burst its banks.
People whose homes were destroyed cross a bridge in Rwanda's western district of Rubavu. These are the worst floods the country has seen in years. In 2019, however, heavy rainfall led to the death of at least 265 people, with tens of thousands of locals displaced.
Image: JEAN BIZIMANA/REUTERS
Disaster far from over
A woman does her best to free household items, furniture and a mattress of mud. But Rwanda's weather authority warns that further rainfall is coming. Meanwhile, the death toll is expected to rise further, as more victims will be found once the mud has been cleared. According to experts, extreme weather events are increasing in frequency and intensity due to the climate crisis.