This book uses a multidisciplinary approach to examine the ongoing conflict in Mozambiques Cabo Delgado province, which has killed thousands and displaced a million people since 2017.
This book uses a multidisciplinary approach to examine the ongoing conflict in Mozambiques Cabo Delgado province, which has killed thousands and displaced a million people since 2017.
The book investigates how the conflict developed, the regional and international responses and its wider implications. From a broad range of African perspectives, the book addresses issues related to the conflict including international humanitarian law, regional security and terrorism. Part I assesses the regional security concerns of the conflict, the success of cross-border counter-terrorism operations and their implications for the southern African region. Part II focuses on the conflict in relation to international humanitarian law. It discusses the Islamic State's presence in the region, the trajectory and issues pertaining to sexual and gender-based violence and the relationship between the conflict and the environment. Finally, Part III examines regional and continental responses to the conflict, from the military intervention by the Southern African Development Community and Rwanda, to the perceived inaction of the African Union.
The first comprehensive analysis of the conflict in Cabo Delgado, this book will be of interest to scholars and practitioners of international humanitarian law, security, African politics, war and conflict studies, terrorism and human rights.
Chapter 1: Introduction
Egna Sidumo, Marko Svicevic and Martha M Bradley
Part I: Regional Security Dimensions
Chapter 2: Tanzania and Mozambique: Cooperation to Counteract a Cross-Border
Islamist Insurgency
Eric Kabendera
Chapter 3: South Africas Security Concerns in Mozambique and the Growing
Threat of Domestic Terrorism
André Smit
Chapter 4: Armed Conflict, Climate Change and the Preparedness of
International Law Through the Lens of Mozambique
Jessie Phyffer
Chapter 5: The Relationship Between Ansar al-Sunna in Mozambique and the
Islamic State: A Transactional Alliance?
Aniel de Beer
Part II: International Humanitarian Law Perspectives
Chapter 6: The Law of Armed Conflict and the Classification of the Situation
in Cabo Delgado as a Non-International Armed Conflict
Najimdeen Bakarae and Ayodele Odjedokun
Chapter 7: Ansar al-Sunna (IS-affiliates) Engaging in a Mosaic of Violence in
Mozambique: Terrorist, Rebels, or Both Legal Implications and Challenges
Gus Waschefort, Jessie Phyffer and Martha M. Bradley
Chapter 8: Sexual and Gender-Based Violence in Cabo Delgado: Implications for
International Humanitarian Law and International Criminal Law
Emmah Lubaale and Brenda Akia
Chapter 9: Towards the Protection of the Environment in Cabo-Delgado: Looking
Beyond the Existing Legal Framework and Engaging Ansar al-Sunna
Quillene M Vertue
Chapter 10: The Conflict in Cabo Delgado and the Relationship Between
International Disaster Response Law and International Humanitarian Law
Treaties
Jeanique Pretorius
Chapter 11: Covid-19 and its Implications on the Law of Non-International
Armed Conflict: The Case of Mozambique
Annelize McKay, Chazanne Grobler and Martha M Bradley
Part III: Regional and Continental Responses to the Conflict
Chapter 12: The Potential for Rights-Based Third-Generation Disarmament,
Demobilisation, and Reintegration Programmes in Cabo Delgado
Josephat M Kilonzo
Chapter 13: The Use of Private Military Companies to Counter the Insurgency
in Northern Mozambique
Hennie Strydom
Chapter 14: The SADC Mission in Mozambique: Contextualising the Historical
Role of SADC Military Operations under International Law
Marko Svicevic
Chapter 15: The Military Intervention Against Ansar Al-Sunna in Cabo Delgado:
A Primer on the Law on the Prohibition on the Use of Force and Applicable
Exceptions
Dire Tladi
Chapter 16: Revisiting the African Unions Right to Intervene (Militarily) 20
Years on and the Conflict in Mozambique: A Missed Opportunity?
Ntombizozuko Dyani-Mhango
Marko Svicevic is Lecturer and Researcher at the Centre for International Humanitarian and Operational Law at Palackż University in Olomouc, Czech Republic, and Post-doctoral Research Fellow with the South African Research Chair in International Law at the University of Johannesburg, South Africa.
Martha M. Bradley is Associate Professor in the Department of Public Law at the University of Johannesburg, South Africa, and External Expert at the Centre for International Humanitarian and Operational Law at Palackż University in Olomouc, Czech Republic.