Last modified: 2006-03-11 by bruce berry
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This flag was attributed to the COREMO.
Jens Pattke, 24 Mar 2001
COREMO (Comité Revolucionário de Moçambique) or the Mozambique
Revolutionary Committee is a small FRELIMO splinter group,
and is possibly affiliated with
Renamo.
Source: Political Handbook of the World, 1997.
Jarig Bakker, 24 Mar 2001
COREMO was created in Lusaka in 1965. Their ethnic base was the Makwa.
Jaume Ollé, 26 Mar 2001
FUMO stands for Frente Unida de Moçambique (United Front of Mozambique),
a guerilla liberation movement that operated in the west of Mozambique. In 1964
it merged into FRELIMO along with
UDENAMO,
leaving a two party opposition (FRELIMO and RENAMO)
fighting against Portuguese domination until 1974 and against each other
since then.
Antonio Martins, 18 Nov 1997
Prior to 1963, UDENAMO favoured an independent
Mozambique under the name of Monomotapa -- name of a 16th century kingdom
in modern Zimbabwe. This plan was dropped after
UDENAMO merged with FRELIMO.
Antonio Martins, 18 Nov 1997
In "Vlaggen; symbool - traditie - protocol" (1963)
[sie63], Klaes Sierksma gives
in the chapter about history of some flags the flag of Monomotapa:
"The
national flag was designed by the delegate for international affairs and
propaganda of the National-Democratic Union of Mozambique, Jaime R.Sigauke,
with directions by Whitney Smith Jr. in 1961. The flag is an analogue to
that of Angola - bend sinister light green and black.
In the centre is a blue disk, with a red five pointed star, surrounded by a
golden garland of sugar-cane stems. The black color stands for Africa,
the dark continent. Green symbolizes the agriculture. The red star stands
for the the struggle for freedom by the unity of the people. Before independence
of Monomotapa the territory was known as Mozambique."
Mark Sensen, 24 Sep 1997
When in 1961 the first liberation movement was born two flags were designated:
one for the party (UDENAMO) and other for a future
independent Moçambique, that would receive the name of Monomotapa, an old
African kingdom in that region.
Later (1964 probably) UDENAMO merged with other two parties and became
FRELIMO.
The name elected for the future independent country was reverted to Moçambique
and the name Monomotapa was abandoned. Monomotapa (in fact a King and not
a kingdom) was only independent in the XVI-XVIII centuries.
Jaume Ollé, 25 Sep 1997
This is the flag of the "Partido para a Paz, Democracia e Desenvolvimento"
(literally Party for Peace, Democracy and Development). Antonio Teixeira
reported to the Lusovex-mailing list about this Mozambican party.
The flag shown at this website,
and is a horizontal triband of red, yellow and light blue, with white fimbriation
(approx. 19+3+22+3+19) with the party logo issuant from the blue stripe
(diameter c. half flag height). The party logo is a circle, cut at the blue
stripe, and shows a pangolin proper, on a shaded green background, from
dark at the edge to light in the center, fimbriated yellow and black; this
fimbriation lacks at the cut out portion, on which rest the lettering "PDD",
set in white sans capitals.
António Martins-Tuválkin, 09 Nov 2004
Agency Panapress, 8 February 2006, quoted by "Jeune Afrique"
and quoting the Mozambican agency AIM, reports that an official of the
administration of the district of Nhamatanda was arrested by the police after
having thrown to the ground the flag of the opposition party PDD (Party for
Peace, Democracy and Development). The opposition complained that the officials
of the district, who are members of the ruling party FRELIMO, harass them very
often. Ernesto Rudicha, aged 70, was accused of having hit the PDD flag with a
machete in order to disturb a political meeting of the party; he was reported by
Jose Juga, the local
leader of the PDD, to have worn a T-shirt with the FRELIMO colours when he
committed the offense.
Ivan Sache, 08 Feb 2006