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Mozambique wants to prosecute an opposition leader for unrest after the election

A document that prosecutors presented to Venancio Mondlane showed the Mozambique's intention to prosecute Mondlane for civil unrest following a disputed vote last year.

Mondlane was summoned on Tuesday by the prosecutors. Mondlane claims that President Daniel Chapo, of the long-ruling Frelimo Party, won the election via vote-rigging. The 40-page document, which lays out a number of allegations including that Mondlane incited unrest, was presented to him.

A Mondlane adviser shared the document on Wednesday, stating that the opposition politician denies all the accusations of the prosecutors.

The Southern African nation's resource-rich country's prosecutors declined to comment.

The protests against Frelimo after the elections, which resulted in more than 300 deaths, were by far the most violent since 1975, when Portugal gained independence.

Frelimo denies accusations of electoral fraud, although Western observers claim that the October vote was not fair.

In March and May, the two politicians had met to discuss their differences. Chapo launched a national dialogue and invited Mondlane as a member of a presidential advisory group.

Louw Nel is a political analyst with Oxford Economics Africa. He said that attempts to prosecute Mondlane "would weigh on the political compromis Mozambique’s political actors achieved in March". (Reporting and editing by Aidan Lewis; Additional reporting from Kopano Gumbi; Writing by Alexander Winning)

(source: Reuters)