PROFILE
OFFICIAL NAME:
Republic of Mozambique
Geography
Area: 801,590 sq. km.; slightly less than twice
the size of California.
Major cities: Capital--Maputo
(pop. 1.2 million--2005 est.); Beira, Matola,
Nampula, Quelimane, Tete, Nacala.
Terrain: Varies from lowlands to high plateau.
Climate: Tropical to subtropical.
People
Nationality: Noun
and adjective--Mozambican(s).
Population (2006 est.): 19.7 million; 48.2% male
and 51.8% female.
Population annual growth rate (2006): 1.3%.
Ethnic groups: Makua, Tsonga, Makonde, Shangaan,
Shona, Sena, Ndau, and other indigenous groups,
and approximately 10,000 Europeans, 35,000
Euro-Africans, and 15,000 South Asians.
Religions: Christian 40%, Muslim 20%, indigenous
African and other beliefs 40% (1997
census--recent estimates give a higher Muslim
percentage).
Languages: Portuguese (official), various
indigenous languages.
Education: Mean years of schooling (adults over
25): men 2.1, women 1.2. Primary
net enrollment rate (2003)--61%.
Adult illiteracy rate (2003)--53.6%.
Health: Infant
mortality rate (2006)--129/1,000. Life
expectancy (2006)--40
years.
Work force (9.4 million est. 2006): Agriculture--81%; industry--6%; services--13%
(1997 estimate).
Government
Type: Multi-party democracy.
Independence: June 25, 1975.
Constitution: November 1990.
Branches: Executive--President,
Council of Ministers. Legislative--National
Assembly, municipal assemblies. Judicial--Supreme
Court, provincial, district, and municipal
courts. Administrative subdivisions: 10
provinces, 224 districts, and 33 municipalities,
of which Maputo City is the largest.
Political parties: Front for the Liberation of
Mozambique (FRELIMO); Mozambican National
Resistance (RENAMO); numerous small parties.
Suffrage: Universal adult, 18 years and older.
Economy
GDP (2006): $6.4 billion.
Annual economic (GDP) growth rate (2006): 7.9%.
Per capita gross domestic product (2006): $320.
Natural resources: Hydroelectric power, coal,
natural gas, titanium ore, tantalite, graphite,
iron ore, semi-precious stones, and arable land.
Agriculture (21% of GDP; annual growth 7.9%): Exports--cotton,
cashew nuts, sugarcane, tea, cassava (tapioca),
corn, coconuts, sisal, citrus and tropical
fruits, potatoes, sunflowers, beef and poultry.Domestically
consumed food crops--corn, pigeon peas,
cassava, rice, beef, pork, chicken, and goat.
Industry (31% of GDP; annual growth 10%): Types--food,
beverages, chemicals (fertilizer, soap, paints),
aluminum, petroleum products, textiles, cement,
glass, asbestos, and tobacco.
Services (39.7% of GDP; annual growth 4.7%).
Trade: Imports (2006)--$2.82
billion. Import
commodities--machinery and equipment,
vehicles, fuel, chemicals, metal products,
foodstuffs and textiles. Main
suppliers--South Africa, Netherlands,
Portugal.Exports (2006)--$2.43
billion. Export
commodities--aluminum, cashews, prawns,
cotton, sugar, citrus, timber, bulk electricity,
natural gas. Main
markets--Belgium, South Africa, Zimbabwe.
PEOPLE
Mozambique's major ethnic groups encompass
numerous subgroups with diverse languages,
dialects, cultures, and histories. Many are
linked to similar ethnic groups living in
neighboring countries. The north-central
provinces of Zambezia and Nampula are the most
populous, with about 45% of the population. The
estimated 4 million Makua are the dominant group
in the northern part of the country--the Sena
and Ndau are prominent in the Zambezi valley,
and the Tsonga and Shangaan dominate in southern
Mozambique.
Despite the influence of Islamic coastal traders
and European colonizers, the people of
Mozambique have largely retained an indigenous
culture based on small-scale agriculture.
Mozambique's most highly developed art forms are
wood sculpture, for which the Makonde in
northern Mozambique are particularly renowned,
and dance. The middle and upper classes continue
to be heavily influenced by the Portuguese
colonial and linguistic heritage.
During the colonial era, Christian missionaries
were active in Mozambique, and many foreign
clergy remain in the country. According to the
national census, about 40% of the population is
Christian, at least 20% is Muslim, and the
remainder adheres to traditional beliefs.
Under the colonial regime, educational
opportunities for black Mozambicans were
limited, and 93% of that population was
illiterate. In fact, most of today's political
leaders were educated in missionary schools.
After independence, the government placed a high
priority on expanding education, which reduced
the illiteracy rate to about two-thirds as
primary school enrollment increased.
Unfortunately, in recent years school
construction and teacher training enrollments
have not kept up with population increases. With
post-war enrollments reaching all-time highs,
the quality of education has suffered.
HISTORY
Mozambique's first inhabitants were San hunter
and gatherers, ancestors of the Khoisani
peoples. Between the first and fourth centuries
AD, waves of Bantu-speaking peoples migrated
from the north through the Zambezi River valley
and then gradually into the plateau and coastal
areas. The Bantu were farmers and ironworkers.
When Portuguese explorers reached Mozambique in
1498, Arab trading settlements had existed along
the coast and outlying islands for several
centuries. From about 1500, Portuguese trading
posts and forts became regular ports of call on
the new route to the east. Later, traders and
prospectors penetrated the interior regions
seeking gold and slaves. Although Portuguese
influence gradually expanded, its power was
limited and exercised through individual
settlers who were granted extensive autonomy. As
a result, investment lagged while Lisbon devoted
itself to the more lucrative trade with India
and the Far East and to the colonization of
Brazil.
By the early 20th century the Portuguese had
shifted the administration of much of the
country to large private companies, controlled
and financed mostly by the British, which
established railroad lines to neighboring
countries and supplied cheap--often
forced--African labor to the mines and
plantations of the nearby British colonies and
South Africa. Because policies were designed to
benefit white settlers and the Portuguese
homeland, little attention was paid to
Mozambique's national integration, its economic
infrastructure, or the skills of its population.
After World War II, while many European nations
were granting independence to their colonies,
Portugal clung to the concept that Mozambique
and other Portuguese possessions were overseas
provinces of the mother country, and emigration
to the colonies soared. Mozambique's Portuguese
population at the time of independence was about
250,000. The drive for Mozambican independence
developed apace, and in 1962 several
anti-colonial political groups formed the Front
for the Liberation of Mozambique (FRELIMO),
which initiated an armed campaign against
Portuguese colonial rule in September 1964.
After 10 years of sporadic warfare and major
political changes in Portugal, Mozambique became
independent on June 25, 1975.
The last 30 years of Mozambique's history have
reflected political developments elsewhere in
the 20th century. Following the April 1974 coup
in Lisbon, Portuguese colonialism collapsed. In
Mozambique, the military decision to withdraw
occurred within the context of a decade of armed
anti-colonial struggle, initially led by
American-educated Eduardo Mondlane, who was
assassinated in 1969. When independence was
achieved in 1975, the leaders of FRELIMO's
military campaign rapidly established a
one-party state allied to the Soviet bloc and
outlawed rival political activity. FRELIMO
eliminated political pluralism, religious
educational institutions, and the role of
traditional authorities.
The new government gave shelter and support to
South African (ANC) and Zimbabwean (ZANU)
liberation movements while the governments of
first Rhodesia and later apartheid South Africa
fostered and financed an armed rebel movement in
central Mozambique called the Mozambican
National Resistance (RENAMO). Civil war,
sabotage from neighboring states, and economic
collapse characterized the first decade of
Mozambican independence. Also marking this
period were the mass exodus of Portuguese
nationals, weak infrastructure, nationalization,
and economic mismanagement. During most of the
civil war, the government was unable to exercise
effective control outside of urban areas, many
of which were cut off from the capital. An
estimated 1 million Mozambicans perished during
the civil war, 1.7 million took refuge in
neighboring states, and several million more
were internally displaced. In the third FRELIMO
party congress in 1983, President Samora Machel
conceded the failure of socialism and the need
for major political and economic reforms. He
died, along with several advisers, in a
suspicious 1986 plane crash.
His successor, Joaquim Chissano, continued the
reforms and began peace talks with RENAMO. The
new constitution enacted in 1990 provided for a
multi-party political system, market-based
economy, and free elections. The civil war ended
in October 1992 with the Rome General Peace
Accords. Under supervision of the ONUMOZ
peacekeeping force of the United Nations, peace
returned to Mozambique.
By mid-1995 the more than 1.7 million Mozambican
refugees who had sought asylum in neighboring
Malawi, Zimbabwe, Swaziland, Zambia, Tanzania,
and South Africa as a result of war and drought
had returned, as part of the largest
repatriation witnessed in Sub-Saharan Africa.
Additionally, a further estimated 4 million
internally displaced people returned to their
areas of origin.
GOVERNMENT AND POLITICAL CONDITIONS
Mozambique is a multi-party democracy under the
1990 constitution. The executive branch
comprises a president, prime minister, and
Council of Ministers. There is a National
Assembly and municipal assemblies. The judiciary
comprises a Supreme Court and provincial,
district, and municipal courts. Suffrage is
universal at 18.
In 1994 the country held its first democratic
elections. Joaquim Chissano was elected
President with 53% of the vote, and a 250-member
National Assembly was voted in with 129 FRELIMO
deputies, 112 RENAMO deputies, and 9
representatives of three smaller parties that
formed the Democratic Union (UD). Since its
formation in 1994, the National Assembly has
made some progress in becoming a body
increasingly more independent of the executive.
By 1999, more than one-half (53%) of the
legislation passed originated in the Assembly.
After some delays, in 1998 the country held its
first local elections to provide for local
representation and some budgetary authority at
the municipal level. The principal opposition
party, RENAMO, boycotted the local elections,
citing flaws in the registration process.
Independent slates contested the elections and
won seats in municipal assemblies. Turnout was
very low.
In the aftermath of the 1998 local elections,
the government resolved to make more
accommodations to the opposition's procedural
concerns for the second round of multiparty
national elections in 1999. Working through the
National Assembly, the electoral law was
rewritten and passed by consensus in December
1998. Financed largely by international donors,
a very successful voter registration was
conducted from July to September 1999, providing
voter registration cards to 85% of the potential
electorate (more than 7 million voters).
The second general elections were held December
3-5, 1999, with high voter turnout.
International and domestic observers agreed that
the voting process was well organized and went
smoothly. Both the opposition and observers
subsequently cited flaws in the tabulation
process that, had they not occurred, might have
changed the outcome. In the end, however,
international and domestic observers concluded
that the close result of the vote reflected the
will of the people.
President Chissano won the presidency with a
margin of 4% points over the RENAMO-Electoral
Union coalition candidate, Afonso Dhlakama, and
began his 5-year term in January 2000. FRELIMO
increased its majority in the National Assembly
with 133 out of 250 seats. RENAMO-UE coalition
won 116 seats, one went independent, and no
third parties are represented.
The opposition coalition did not accept the
National Election Commission's results of the
presidential vote and filed a formal complaint
to the Supreme Court. One month after the
voting, the court dismissed the opposition's
challenge and validated the election results.
The opposition did not file a complaint about
the results of the legislative vote.
The second local elections, involving 33
municipalities with some 2.4 million registered
voters, took place in November 2003. This was
the first time that FRELIMO, RENAMO-UE, and
independent parties competed without significant
boycotts. The 24% turnout was well above the 15%
turnout in the first municipal elections.
FRELIMO won 28 mayoral positions and the
majority in 29 municipal assemblies, while
RENAMO won 5 mayoral positions and the majority
in 4 municipal assemblies. The voting was
conducted in an orderly fashion without violent
incidents. However, the period immediately after
the elections was marked by objections about
voter and candidate registration and vote
tabulation, as well as calls for greater
transparency.
In May 2004, the government approved a new
general elections law that contained innovations
based on the experience of the 2003 municipal
elections.
The third general elections occurred on December
1-2, 2004. FRELIMO candidate Armando Guebuza won
with 64% of the popular vote. His opponent,
Afonso Dhlakama of RENAMO, received 32% of the
popular vote. The estimated 44% turnout was well
below the almost 70% turnout in the 1999 general
elections. FRELIMO won 160 seats in Parliament.
A coalition of RENAMO and several small parties
won the 90 remaining seats. Armando Guebuza was
inaugurated as the President of Mozambique on
February 2, 2005. The government has scheduled
provincial and municipal elections in 2008, and
presidential and parliamentary elections in
2009.
Principal Government Officials
President--Armando Guebuza
Prime Minister--Luisa Diogo
Minister of Foreign Affairs and
Cooperation--Oldemiro Baloi
Minister of Finance--Manuel Chang
Minister of National Defense--Filipe Jacinto
Nhussi
Minister of the Interior--Jose Pacheco
Minister of Industry and Commerce--Antonio
Fernando
Minister of Justice--Maria Benvinda Levi
Ambassador to the United States--Armando
Panguene
Mozambique maintains an embassy in
the United States at 1525 New Hampshire Avenue,
NW, Washington, DC 20036; tel: 202-293-7146;
fax: 202-835-0245.
ECONOMY
Macroeconomic Review
Alleviating poverty. At
the end of the civil war in 1992, Mozambique
ranked among the poorest countries in the world.
It still ranks among the least developed nations
with very low socioeconomic indicators. In the
last decade, however, Mozambique has experienced
a notable economic recovery. Per capita GDP in
2006 was estimated at U.S. $320, a significant
increase over the mid-1980s level of U.S. $120.
With high foreign debt and a good track record
on economic reform, Mozambique was the first
African nation and sixth country worldwide to
qualify for debt relief under the World Bank and
International Monetary Fund (IMF) initial HIPC
(Heavily Indebted Poor Countries) Initiative. In
April 2000, Mozambique qualified for the
Enhanced HIPC program and reached its completion
point in September 2001. This led to the Paris
Club members agreeing in November 2001 to
substantially reduce the remaining bilateral
debt, resulting in the complete forgiveness of a
considerable volume of bilateral debt. The
United States already finished the process and
has forgiven Mozambique's debt.
During their summit in Scotland in July 2005,
the G8 nations agreed to significant
multilateral debt relief for the world's least
developed nations. On December 21, 2005, the IMF
formalized the complete cancellation of all
Mozambican IMF debt contracted prior to January
1, 2005, worth U.S. $153 million.
Rebounding growth. The
resettlement of civil war refugees, political
stability and continuing economic reforms have
led to a high economic growth rate. Between 1994
and 2006, average annual GDP growth was
approximately 8%. Mozambique achieved this
growth rate even though the devastating floods
of 2000 slowed GDP growth to 2.1%. The World
Bank is predicting average growth of 7% through
2008. Future strong expansion requires continued
economic reforms, major foreign direct
investment, and the resurrection of the
agriculture, transportation and tourism sectors.
Focusing on economic growth in the agricultural
sector is a major challenge for the government.
Although more than 80% of the population engages
in small-scale agriculture, the sector suffers
from inadequate infrastructure, commercial
networks and investment. However a majority of
Mozambique's arable land is still uncultivated,
leaving room for considerable growth.
Low inflation. The
government's tight control of spending and the
money supply, combined with financial sector
reform, successfully reduced inflation from 70%
in 1994 to less than 5% in 1998-1999. Economic
disruptions resulting from the devastating
floods of 2000 caused inflation to jump to 12.7%
that year. The government is still working to
bring inflation down to those lower numbers. In
2004 inflation was 9.1%; in 2005 it climbed to
11.2%; in 2006 it dropped back down to 9.4%. As
of March 2007, the floating exchange rate was
approximately 26 meticais per dollar. (Note: In
July 2006 the government revised its currency,
dropping three zeros. Thus a coin formerly worth
1,000 meticais was from then on worth only one
metical. And thus, where a dollar previously had
been worth, for example, 26,000 meticais, it was
from July onward worth 26.)
Extensive economic reform. Economic
reform has been extensive. More than 1,200
state-owned enterprises (mostly small) have been
privatized. Preparations for privatization
and/or sector liberalization are underway for
the remaining parastatals, including
telecommunications, electricity, ports, and the
railroads. The government frequently selects a
strategic foreign investor when privatizing a
parastatal. Additionally, customs duties have
been reduced, and customs management has been
streamlined and reformed. The government
introduced a value-added tax in 1999 as part of
its efforts to increase domestic revenues.
Improving trade imbalance. In
2006 Mozambique exported U.S. $2.43 billion
worth of goods and imported U.S. $2.82 billion
worth of goods. Support programs provided by
foreign donors and private financing of foreign
direct investment mega-projects and their
associated raw materials have largely
compensated for balance-of-payment shortfalls.
The medium-term outlook for exports is
encouraging, as a number of recent foreign
investment projects have improved the trade
balance. This export growth is expected to
continue. MOZAL I, a large aluminum smelter that
commenced production in mid-2000, greatly
expanded Mozambique's trade volume. In April
2001, the International Finance Corporation
(IFC) approved financing assistance for MOZAL
II, which doubled overall production capacity.
Phase two went online in April 2003, five months
ahead of schedule, using primarily Mozambican
workers during construction. Traditional
Mozambican exports include cashews, shrimp,
fish, copra, sugar, cotton, tea and citrus and
exotic fruits. Most of these industries are
being rehabilitated. In addition, Mozambique is
less dependent upon imports for basic food and
manufactured goods as the result of steady
increases in local production.
SADC trade protocol. In
December 1999, the Mozambican Council of
Ministers approved the Southern African
Development Community (SADC) Trade Protocol. The
Protocol will create a free trade zone among
more than 200 million consumers in the SADC
region. Implementation of the Protocol began in
2002 and has an overall zero-tariff target set
for 2008; however, Mozambique's country-specific
zero-tariff goal is currently 2015. Mozambique
joined the World Trade Organization (WTO) on
August 26, 1995.
FOREIGN RELATIONS
While allegiances dating back to the liberation
struggle remain relevant, Mozambique's foreign
policy has become increasingly pragmatic. The
twin pillars of Mozambique's foreign policy are
maintenance of good relations with its neighbors
and maintenance and expansion of ties to
development partners.
During the 1970s and early 1980s, Mozambique's
foreign policy was inextricably linked to the
struggles for majority rule in Rhodesia and
South Africa, as well as superpower competition
and the Cold War. Mozambique's decision to
enforce UN sanctions against Rhodesia and deny
that country access to the sea led Ian Smith's
regime to undertake overt and covert actions to
destabilize the country, including sponsoring
the rebel group RENAMO. After the change of
government in Zimbabwe in 1980, the apartheid
regime in South Africa continued to finance the
destabilization of Mozambique.
The 1984 Nkomati Accord, while failing in its
goal of ending South African support to RENAMO,
opened initial diplomatic contacts between the
Mozambican and South African Governments. This
process gained momentum with South Africa's
elimination of apartheid, which culminated in
the establishment of full diplomatic relations
in October 1993. While relations with
neighboring Zimbabwe, Malawi, Zambia, and
Tanzania show occasional strains, Mozambique's
ties to these countries remain strong.
In the years immediately following its
independence, Mozambique benefited from
considerable assistance from some western
countries, notably the Scandinavians. Moscow and
its allies, however, became Mozambique's primary
economic, military, and political supporters and
its foreign policy reflected this linkage. This
began to change in 1983; in 1984 Mozambique
joined the World Bank and International Monetary
Fund. Western aid quickly replaced Soviet
support, with the Scandinavians, the United
States, the Netherlands, and the European Union
becoming increasingly important sources of
development assistance. Italy also maintains a
profile in Mozambique as a result of its key
role during the peace process. Relations with
Portugal, the former colonial power, are complex
and of some importance as Portuguese investors
play a visible role in Mozambique's economy.
Mozambique is a member of the Non-Aligned
Movement and ranks among the moderate members of
the African Bloc in the United Nations and other
international organizations. Mozambique also
belongs to the Organization of African
Unity/African Union and the Southern African
Development Community. In 1994, the government
became a full member of the Organization of the
Islamic Conference, in part to broaden its base
of international support but also to please the
country's sizeable Muslim population. Similarly,
in early 1996 Mozambique joined its Anglophone
neighbors in the Commonwealth. In the same year,
Mozambique became a founding member and the
first President of the Community of Portuguese
Language Countries (CPLP), and maintains close
ties with other Lusophone states.
U.S.-MOZAMBICAN RELATIONS
Relations between the United States and
Mozambique are good and steadily improving. By
1993, U.S. aid to Mozambique was prominent, due
in part to significant emergency food assistance
in the wake of the 1991-93 southern African
drought, but more importantly in support of the
peace and reconciliation process. During the
process leading up to elections in October 1994,
the United States served as a significant
financier and member of the most important
commissions established to monitor
implementation of the Rome General Peace
Accords. The United States is the largest
bilateral donor to the country and plays a
leading role in donor efforts to assist
Mozambique.
The U.S. Embassy opened in Maputo on November 8,
1975, and the first American ambassador arrived
in March 1976. In that same year, the United
States extended a $10 million grant to the
Government of Mozambique to help compensate for
the economic costs of enforcing sanctions
against Rhodesia. In 1977, however, largely
motivated by a concern with human rights
violations, the U.S. Congress prohibited the
provision of development aid to Mozambique
without a presidential certification that such
aid would be in the foreign policy interests of
the United States. Relations hit a nadir in
March 1981, when the Government of Mozambique
expelled four members of the U.S. Embassy staff.
In response, the United States suspended plans
to provide development aid and to name a new
ambassador to Mozambique. Relations between the
two countries languished in a climate of
stagnation and mutual suspicion.
Contacts between the two countries continued in
the early 1980s as part of the U.S.
administration's conflict resolution efforts in
the region. In late 1983, a new U.S. ambassador
arrived in Maputo, and the first Mozambican
envoy to the United States arrived in
Washington, signaling a thaw in the bilateral
relationship. The United States subsequently
responded to Mozambique's economic reform and
drift away from Moscow's embrace by initiating
an aid program in 1984. President Samora Machel
paid a symbolically important official working
visit to the United States in 1985, where he met
President Reagan. After that meeting, a full
U.S. Agency for International Development
(USAID) mission was established, and significant
assistance for economic reform efforts began.
President Chissano met with President Bush in
September 2003; previously, he had met with
Presidents Reagan (October 1987), Bush (March
1990), and Clinton (November 1998), and also
with Secretaries of State Powell (February 2002)
and Baker (July 1992). Since taking office in
February 2005, President Guebuza has visited the
United States on five occasions. In June 2005,
President Guebuza visited Washington, DC to take
part in President Bush's mini-summit on Africa,
along with the leaders of Ghana, Namibia,
Botswana, and Niger. Later that month, he
attended the Corporate Council on Africa (CCA)
Business Summit in Baltimore. President Guebuza
returned in September 2005 for the UN General
Assembly in New York and in December 2005
attended the Fourth Development Cooperation
Forum at the Carter Center in Atlanta. In 2006
he visited New York for the UN General Assembly,
and in 2007 he visited Washington, DC for the
signing of Mozambique's Millennium Challenge
Corporation compact.
Principal U.S. Embassy Officials
Ambassador--vacant
Chargé d’Affaires, a.i.--Todd Chapman
USAID Mission Director--Todd Amani
Public Affairs Officer--Kristin Kane
Defense Attaché--Lt. Col. John Roddy
Peace Corps Director--David Bellama
Centers for Disease Control Director--Lisa
Nelson
Management Officer--Jeremey Neitzke
Regional Security Officer--Harland Rex
Economic/Political Chief--Matthew Roth
Consular Officer--Sarah Horton
Millennium Challenge Corporation Country
Director--Cassia Carvalho-Pacheco
The U.S.
Embassy is
located at 193 Avenida Kenneth Kaunda; P.O. Box
783; tel: (258-21) 49-27-97, after hours
(258-21) 49-07-23; fax: (258-21) 49-01-14. USAID
Mission: Av. 25 de Setembro (Predio JAT); tel:
(258-21) 352-000, after hours (258-21) 49-16-77;
fax: (258-21) 352-100. The Public Affairs
Office/Martin Luther King Library: 542 Avenida
Mao Tse Tung; tel: (258-21) 49-19-16; fax:
(258-21) 49-19-18.