Herculano, 64 (in blue t-shirt) fled violence in Quissanga District in Cabo Delgado, with his whole family, including children and grandchildren. © UNHCR/Martim Gray Pereira
Some 670,000 people forced from their homes in Mozambique’s Cabo Delgado province in a crisis that has failed to hold the world’s attention.
By Juliana Ghazi in Cabo Delgado
Herculano and his wife Isabella left everything behind when they fled their village in Quissanga, a district in northern Mozambique’s Cabo Delgado province. They barely managed to flee with their ten children and eight grandchildren as nearby houses were razed.
“Everything I had, I lost it.”
“We fled because of the violence” said Herculano. “Everything I had, I lost it. People’s homes were burned and they were tortured. We saw the insurgents running after children to recruit them. We feared for the lives of our children.”
Herculano and his family are among 670,000 people who have been displaced by an escalating insurgency in parts of northern Mozambique. More than 2,000 people have been killed since the attacks began in 2017, accompanied by widespread reports of human rights abuses and disregard for international humanitarian law.
Herculano, 64, and Isabella, 50, described the moment they fled in February last year as an “episode of horror”. The family ran for hours, fearing the insurgents would catch them. When they stopped, they hid in thick vegetation, where they stayed for almost a week with limited water, no food and no shelter. Eventually, they walked to one of the main roads and begged for a ride on a truck to Pemba, the capital of Cabo Delgado.
“When we reached Pemba, our feet were swollen and we saw many unaccompanied children on the side of the roads,” says Isabella, who felt lucky to have made it out with her whole family.