- According to British charity Save the Children, dozens of children were abducted by jihadists in Mozambique during raids in 2020.
- In its report, it said "at least 51 children, most of them girls" have been captured in Cabo Delgado province.
- In one of the attacks in June last year, 10 girls were taken while drawing water from a well.
Johannesburg – Jihadists plaguing parts of northern Mozambique for the past three-and-half years abducted dozens of children during raids in 2020, British charity Save the Children said in a report published on Wednesday.
The charity said the "abduction of children has become a new and alarmingly regular tactic by armed groups involved in the conflict" and that the numbers involved were likely higher than its estimates, based on data collected by the US conflict tracker ACLED.
It
said "at least 51 children, most of them girls" have been captured in
Cabo Delgado province, where Islamist attacks have displaced some 700 000
people since the violence started in 2017.
In March, the Islamic State (ISIS) linked militants launched a coordinated assault on Palma town, killing dozens and forcing more than 67 000 people to abandon their homes.
Nearly half of those displaced are children, and the true number of child abductions could be far higher than the reported cases.
'Extremely traumatising events'
Militants locally known as Al-Shabab terrorise northern Mozambique, burning houses, beheading people and forcing some into their ranks or holding them as sex slaves.
A jihadist video distributed in August last year, filmed in either Mozambique or the Democratic Republic of Congo according to the US-based SITE Intelligence Group, showed three gun-toting children flanked by adults in front of an ISIS banner.
In one of the attacks in June last year, 10 girls were taken while drawing water from a well, Save The Children said.
The charity's country director Chance Briggs said in the report:
Save the Children called for the immediate release of all abducted children and for the perpetrators to be held to account.