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Last modified: 2014-06-29 by bruce berry
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The Liberation Front of Mozambique (Frente de Libertaçâo de Moçambique) has been the ruling political party in Mozambique since independence in 1975 and led the struggle for independence by waging a guerilla war against the Portuguese in the 1960s and 1970s.
FRELIMO was founded in Dar es Salaam (Tanzania) on 25 June 1962, when three regionally based nationalist organisations, the Mozambican African National Union (MANU), the National Democratic Union of Mozambique (UDENAMO) and the National African Union of Independent Mozambique (UNAMI) merged into one broad based guerilla movement. Under the leadership of Eduardo Mondlane, FRELIMO fought a guerilla war for independence and was in control of the northern region of the country by 1964. After the new reformist government in Portugal granted independence to its African colonies, FRELIMO established a one-party state (no elections were held) based on Marxist principles with Samora Machel as President. The new government received diplomatic and some military support from Cuba and the Soviet Union.
The new government was engaged in a civil war with the anti-Communist faction
known as RENAMO which was sponsored by the then
minority regimes in Rhodesia and South Africa. Samora Machel was killed in
a suspicious aircraft crash in 1986 and was succeeded by Joaquim Chissano as
leader of both the party and the state. The civil war ended with the Rome
General Peace Accords in 1992, following which elections were held in 1994 which
although won by FRELIMO, ended single-party rule. FRELIMO also won the 1999
elections. Chissano was succeeded by Armando Guebuza as President of
Mozambique and leader of the party following the December 2004 elections when
FRELIMO won 62.0% of the popular vote.
Bruce Berry, 07 Dec 2005
image by Antonio Martins, 21 Sep 1997
The second flag of FRELIMO (Frente de Libertaçâo de Moçambique) is
red with a rifle and a hoe crossed saltire under a star, all yellow, in
the canton (upper hoist).
Antonio Martins, 21 Sep 1997
"ARTICLE 3
PARTY symbols
3. The flag of FRELIMO is a red rectangle with, at the upper left corner,
a star topping a hammer and a hoe, crossed, all in gold."
Source: the FRELIMO
homepage.
Dov Gutterman, translated by Jorge Candeias, 7 Aug 2002
According to William Crampton in the World of Flags (Studio, 1990) the
original
flag of FRELIMO was inspired by that of the African National Congress
(ANC), with white fimbriations added between the stripes
and a red hoist triangle extending about 1/3. The proportions are said
to be 5:8.
Antonio Martins, 21 Sep 1997
image by Antonio Martins, 30 Dec 2004
image by Antonio Martins, 30 Dec 2004image by Antonio Martins, 30 Dec 2004
image by Antonio Martins, 30 Dec 2004These FRELIMO flags were seen during the parliamentary election campaign in
November 2004 and were also featured on campaign posters. It is not clear
whether these are official flags or not.
Bruce Berry, 29 Nov 2004
The logo is a tall white rectangle with the lettering "FRELIMO" in red
bold narrow sans capitals below a square image which portrays an ear of
corn (green leaves and stalk, white grains) over a native drum (white with
red and black ornament around its belly); the background is red with diagonal
stripes along the lower right corner: Almost in the middle of the square
a white (wide) stripe, then red (wide), white, green, white (thin), black,
white (thin), yellow, white (thin) and red. These come from the national
flag (both current and pre-1983 versions), which in turn come from the
first Frelimo flag.
Antonio Martins, 30 Dec 2004
In the book "Unterwegs am Sambesi" published in the German Democratic
Republic in the early 1980s there is a colour photo of this flag. The
colour differs from the first FRELIMO flag. It
could not be this flag, because this is shown on the same picture near
this unidentified flag.
Falko Schmidt, 23 Mar 2001
On the photo in this book the top stripe is blue. The accepted flag
of FRELIMO is shown flying alongside it, so a mistake in the colour is not possible.
Jens Pattke, 24 Mar 2001
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