Insurgency in Cabo Delgado

Insurgency in Cabo Delgado
Part of the war against the Islamic State, Islamic terrorism in Africa and the war on terror

Situation as of September 2025
Date5 October 2017 – present
(8 years, 5 months, 1 week and 2 days)
Location11°21′S 40°20′E / 11.350°S 40.333°E / -11.350; 40.333
Status Ongoing (Map of the current military situation)
Territorial
changes
Mozambican and Rwandan troops launch counteroffensive, taking back many towns and cities
Belligerents

Bandits
Commanders and leaders
Filipe Nyusi
(2017–25)
Daniel Chapo
(since 2025)
Atanasio M'tumuke
Bernadino Rafael
Paul Kagame
Cyril Ramaphosa
John Magufuli
(2020–21)
Samia Suluhu
(since 2021)
Brig. Gen. Nuno Lemos Pires (since 2021)
Abu Yasir Hassan
Farido Selemane Arune
Abu Zainabo
Abu Munir
Mahamudo Ibrahim Dade
Rafael Mazubo
Abdala Likongo
Ibn Omar 
Abu Dardai Jongo
Abdul Rahmin Faizal (POW)
Abdul Remane
Abdul Raim
"Muhamudu" 
Nuno Remane
Sileimane Nguvo Toto
Abdul Aziz
Rajab Awadhi Ndanjile 
Twahili Mwidini  
Units involved
Strength
1,495
1,000
304
296
60
20
12
200 Wagner personnel
200–300 (2025)
Casualties and losses
Hundreds killed and hundreds wounded
12 Wagner personnel killed
2 killed
2 killed
4+ killed, several wounded
1 killed
3 deaths (2 non-combat, 1 combat)
Hundreds killed and hundreds wounded
470+ arrested[a]
Total: 6,038 killed including 2,509 civilians
400,000 displaced
a 314 Mozambicans, 52 Tanzanians, 3 Ugandans, 1 Somali and 100 unknown.

The insurgency in Cabo Delgado is an ongoing Islamist insurgency in Cabo Delgado Province, Mozambique, mainly fought between militant Islamists and jihadists attempting to establish an Islamic state in the region, and Mozambican security forces. Civilians have been the main targets of terrorist attacks by Islamist militants. The main insurgent faction is Ansar al-Sunna, a native extremist faction with tenuous international connections. From mid-2018, the Islamic State's Central Africa Province has allegedly become active in northern Mozambique as well, and claimed its first attack against Mozambican security forces in June 2019. In addition, bandits have exploited the rebellion to carry out raids. As of 2020, the insurgency intensified, as in the first half of 2020 there were nearly as many attacks carried out as in the whole of 2019.

Ansar al-Sunna (English: "Supporters of the Tradition") is known locally as al-Shabaab but they are not formally related to the better known Somali al-Shabaab. Some of the militants are known to speak Portuguese, the official language of Mozambique, however others speak Kimwane, the local language, and Swahili, the lingua franca language spoken north of that area in the Great Lakes region. Reports also state that members are allegedly mostly Mozambicans from Mocimboa da Praia, Palma, and Macomia districts, but also include foreign nationals from Tanzania and Somalia.