Daniel
Chapo of Mozambique's long-ruling Frelimo party was sworn in as president on
Wednesday at a sparsely attended ceremony after months of protests against his
disputed election victory.
A
local civil society monitoring group says more than 300 people have been killed
in clashes with security forces since the Oct. 9 vote, which the opposition says
Frelimo won through vote-rigging and Western observers say was not free and
fair.
Frelimo
denies accusations of electoral fraud.
It
has ruled Mozambique since the end of the war against Portuguese colonial rule
in 1975, clinging on throughout a 15-year civil war that killed a million
people before a 1992 truce.
Chapo
told a group of about 1,500 supporters from a stage in the capital Maputo that
social and political stability would be his government's top priority.
He also promised to shrink the size of the government
by reducing the number of ministries, tackle youth unemployment and prioritise
health and education.
The
city centre was largely deserted with a heavy police and army presence, Reuters
witnesses said.
Cyril
Ramaphosa, president of neighbouring South Africa, was one of the few heads of
state attending Chapo's inauguration.
Opposition
leader Venancio Mondlane, who official results say
came second to Chapo in the presidential election, returned from self-imposed exile last week and has
urged his supporters to continue demonstrating.
The post-election protests amount to the largest
against Frelimo in Mozambique's history and have affected foreign businesses
operating in the resource-rich southern African country of 35 million people.
They have also disrupted cross-border trade and forced some to flee to neighbouring countries.