MAPUTO. – Mozambique’s three main political parties agreed on Tuesday to go ahead with constitutional reforms that will decentralise power as part of efforts to consolidate peace between the government and former rebels.

“We have made significant strides,” said Margarida Talapa of the ruling Frelimo party after it signed an accord with rebel force-turned-political party Renamo and another opposition party, the Democratic Movement of Mozambique (MDM).

She acknowledged however, that “we could have done more”.

Hailing a “consensus document,” Talapa’s counterpart as the head of Renamo’s parliamentary group, Ivone Soares, also said disagreements remained.

The reforms being negotiated would see the governors of Mozambique’s provinces elected directly, not named by the president as is currently the case.

President Filipe Nyusi last month met in the remote Gorongosa mountains with Renamo leader Afonso Dhlakama, who has been in hiding since October 2015, to discuss disarmament and reintegration.

Renamo has long been seeking greater decentralisation of power and better integration of its supporters into the police and military.

The deal would also require the disarmament of Renamo’s armed wing which has been maintained since the end of the civil war in 1992 that marked the end of a 16-year war against Frelimo, but unrest again boiled over between 2013 and 2016.

The violence ended after Dhlakama announced a truce in late 2016.

The truce has largely held but no formal accord has yet been reached.

The process of revising the constitution is set to begin next month.

Local elections are planned for October, with general elections to follow in a year. – AFP

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