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-7- A LONG WAY TO GO. . . BUT. . . GUERRILLA MOVES WORRY LISBON AS BLAST IN MOZAMBIQUE KILLS 9 Thc Portuguese arc troubled ever an upsurge of nationalist guerrilla activity in western Mozambique, where the vast Cabora Bassa hydroelectric dam is being built en thc Zambeizi River.•..Portuguese military headquarters in Nampula announced in a communique that the guerrillas has wen the "complicity" of part cf the population to carry out their action. This v/as a serious admission for the Portuguese, who have been arduously trying tc win over the people and regroup them into strategic settlements. CAETANO UNLEASHES HIS FASCIST FURY* A ware of political repression is sweeping through Portugal, the like cf which has net been seen since the days of Dr. Salazar. Over the past four months, a hundred or more people have been arrested throughout Portugal, according to information given to Amnesty International. Faced with an upsurge cf political demonstrations, sabotage and arson, Premier Marcello Caetano is adopting the tactics of his ruthless predecessor But it is not the regimes' African pclicies that makes its opponents and some of its erstwhile supporters angry. V/hen Premier Caetano took office in 1968, he promised political reforms, including a Press law to modify the censorship and the abolition of "security measures" where by political offenders can be imprisoned indefinitely. Times of Zambia September 9i 1971 ITALIAN MPs WANT "RACIST" AMBASSADOR RECALLED> Three Communist parliamentary deputies have demanded the recall cf the Italian ambassador in Lisbon, Girolamo Messeri. They have accused him of supporting Portuguese efforts to block international recognition of African liberation movements. Times of Zambia March 11, 1972 "TIME TO TALK. PORTUGAL"\ Foreign Affairs Minister, Mr. Elijah Mudenda, said Portugal should negotiate a settlement in her African ^territories with leaders of liberation movements. He told Danish Foreign Minister Knud Andersen at Lusaka reception that this was the only way loss of life would be avoided....He called on Denmark and other progressive countries to tell Portugal there was no need for a bloody struggle in her countries....Mr. Andersen, who was in Zambia, said his country would continue to oppose racial discrimination and colonialism, Times cf Zambia March 14, 1972
Object Description
Title | Comité Revolucionário de Moçambique/Mozambique Revolutionary Committee (COREMO) Newsletter, no. 2 (1972 Apr.) |
Description | Contents: Press release by Mr. P. J. Gumane, President of COREMO (p. 3); Statement delivered by COREMO representative to members of the Africa Dept., Division of Overseas Ministries, the National Council of Churches (p. 4); A long way to go, but...- news from Zambia Times (p. 7); Self determination for African people? (p. 8); Nixon concept of self determination (p. 9). The document also includes a clipping from Zambia Times warning rival liberation movement FRELIMO that further provocations could lead to war, titled: Don't push us too far, says COREMO. |
Subject (lcsh) |
Nationalism -- Mozambique Self-determination, National Mozambique -- History Portugal -- Politics and government -- 1933-1974 |
Geographic Subject (Country) | Mozambique |
Geographic Subject (Continent) | Africa |
Geographic Coordinates | -18.6696821,35.5273451 |
Coverage date | 1968/1972-03-02 |
Creator | Comité Revolucionário de Moçambique (COREMO); Mozambique Revolutionary Committee (COREMO) |
Publisher (of the Original Version) | Comité Revolucionário de Moçambique (COREMO); Mozambique Revolutionary Committee (COREMO) |
Place of Publication (of the Origianal Version) | New York, New York, USA |
Publisher (of the Digital Version) | University of Southern California. Libraries |
Date issued | 1972-04 |
Type |
texts images |
Format | 13 p. |
Format (aat) | newsletters |
Language | English |
Contributing entity | University of Southern California |
Part of collection | Emerging Nationalism in Portuguese Africa, 1959-1965 |
Part of subcollection | Mozambique Collection |
Rights | The University of Southern California has licensed the rights to this material from the Aluka initiative of Ithaka Harbors, Inc., a non-profit Delaware corporation whose address is 151 East 61st Street, New York, NY 10021 |
Physical access | Original archive is at the Boeckmann Center for Iberian and Latin American Studies. Send requests to address or e-mail given. Phone (213) 821-2366; fax (213) 740-2343. |
Repository Name | USC Libraries Special Collections |
Repository Address | Doheny Memorial Library, Los Angeles, CA 90089-0189 |
Repository Email | specol@usc.edu |
Filename | CENPA-330 |
Description
Title | CENPA-330~09 |
Filename | CENPA-330~09.tiff |
Full text | -7- A LONG WAY TO GO. . . BUT. . . GUERRILLA MOVES WORRY LISBON AS BLAST IN MOZAMBIQUE KILLS 9 Thc Portuguese arc troubled ever an upsurge of nationalist guerrilla activity in western Mozambique, where the vast Cabora Bassa hydroelectric dam is being built en thc Zambeizi River.•..Portuguese military headquarters in Nampula announced in a communique that the guerrillas has wen the "complicity" of part cf the population to carry out their action. This v/as a serious admission for the Portuguese, who have been arduously trying tc win over the people and regroup them into strategic settlements. CAETANO UNLEASHES HIS FASCIST FURY* A ware of political repression is sweeping through Portugal, the like cf which has net been seen since the days of Dr. Salazar. Over the past four months, a hundred or more people have been arrested throughout Portugal, according to information given to Amnesty International. Faced with an upsurge cf political demonstrations, sabotage and arson, Premier Marcello Caetano is adopting the tactics of his ruthless predecessor But it is not the regimes' African pclicies that makes its opponents and some of its erstwhile supporters angry. V/hen Premier Caetano took office in 1968, he promised political reforms, including a Press law to modify the censorship and the abolition of "security measures" where by political offenders can be imprisoned indefinitely. Times of Zambia September 9i 1971 ITALIAN MPs WANT "RACIST" AMBASSADOR RECALLED> Three Communist parliamentary deputies have demanded the recall cf the Italian ambassador in Lisbon, Girolamo Messeri. They have accused him of supporting Portuguese efforts to block international recognition of African liberation movements. Times of Zambia March 11, 1972 "TIME TO TALK. PORTUGAL"\ Foreign Affairs Minister, Mr. Elijah Mudenda, said Portugal should negotiate a settlement in her African ^territories with leaders of liberation movements. He told Danish Foreign Minister Knud Andersen at Lusaka reception that this was the only way loss of life would be avoided....He called on Denmark and other progressive countries to tell Portugal there was no need for a bloody struggle in her countries....Mr. Andersen, who was in Zambia, said his country would continue to oppose racial discrimination and colonialism, Times cf Zambia March 14, 1972 |
Archival file | Volume20/CENPA-330~09.tiff |