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| Food Prices Spark Riots in Mozambique | | Print | |
| Written by Dennis Behreandt |
| Thursday, 02 September 2010 14:10 |
|
The violence began on September 1, following government mandated increases in prices of commodities like food and water. London's Telegraph newspaper reported that "Mozambicans have seen the price of a loaf of bread rise by 25 percent, from four to five meticais (from about 11 cents to about 13 U.S. cents) in the past year. Fuel and water prices also have risen." The rising prices are not the result of market forces. The Mozambican government of President Armando Emilio Guebuza controls the pricing of food, water, and electricity. This is not the first time similar government action has led to riots in the country. In 2008, riots led to the death of three people. Prior to that, decades of war sparked by the Marxist and Soviet supported Liberation Front of Mozambique (FRELIMO) left the nation wrecked and beset by extreme poverty and illness. Trackback(0)
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Rising food prices have led to violence as protestors clash with police in the impoverished nation of Mozambique.


