Mozambicans have been outraged at the
government's failure to end kidnappings for ransom after a child was murdered
by his abductors.
A rights group has called for the interior minister to resign
after about 10 abductions in the past eight days.
Kidnappers have demanded ransoms of hundreds of thousands of
dollars.
Six people, including a presidential guard, were sentenced to 16
years in prison on Monday for their involvement in abductions.
The guard, Arsenio Chitsotso, was a member of the elite police
unit that protects President Armando Guebuza, reports the BBC's Jose Tembe from
the capital, Maputo.
Two other policemen were jailed with him by a court in Maputo.
The government said police involvement in kidnappings was
regrettable.
If I were the interior minister, I
would resign and get rid of the whole ministry, starting with the general
police command”
'Assassination'
Kidnappings have become common in Mozambique over the past two
years - gangs initially targeted wealthy businessmen, but are now also
kidnapping people from middle-class backgrounds, our reporter says.
Most kidnappings have taken place in Maputo, but the port city
of Beira in central Mozambique and Nampula in the north have also been
affected, he says.
Mozambique's economy has been booming in recent years, following
the discovery of a major off-shore gas field.
The 13-year-old boy, named as Abdul Rashid, was found dead on
Monday in the town of Dondo, about 30km (20 miles) from Beira, our
correspondent says.
The boy's mother, who has not been named by the local media,
accused police of conniving with the kidnappers.
The family reported his abduction to the police and immediately
thereafter received a telephone call from the kidnappers who objected that
"we had put the police in the middle of the deal", the mother said.
"They ended up assassinating the child," she said.
The kidnappers had originally demanded $1m (£620,000) in ransom,
but lowered it to about $30,000 in negotiations, the mother said.
"We did not have this amount either. We had to pawn some of
our assets, including tricycles and houses to be able to secure over $30,000 in
local currency and they agreed," she is quoted by local media as saying.
Interior Minister Alberto Mondlane has promised to look into the
family's allegations, our reporter says.
On Tuesday, he announced that he sacked the police criminal
investigations director in Maputo, Januario Cumbana, amid a growing public
outcry over the abductions.
Religious leaders and civil society groups have called a protest
march for Thursday in Maputo to demand an end to the kidnappings and conflict
between the army and the Renamo movement, which pulled out of a 1992 peace
accord with the government last week.
Mozambican Human Rights League head Alice Mabota said the
government had failed to tackle crime such as as kidnappings and drug-dealing.
"If I were the interior minister, I would resign and get
rid of the whole ministry, starting with the general police command," she
said.
"The problem of drugs, weapons, kidnapping - this is a very
serious issue."
Mr Mondlane said he was confident that that "all police
criminals will be found and taken to court".
"One measure we are taking is to provide the police force
working in this area with technical skills to investigate, find the suspects
and bring together material evidence to back the criminal process," he
said.
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