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Angola

News alerts, personal stories, and articles on Angola can be sent to angola@genocidewatch.org.

ANGOLA: Luzi – a village free of landmines.

12 Apr 2013

MAG (Mines Advisory Group)

Though Angola’s civil war ended in 2002, the legacy of this quarter-century long conflict means that, for much of the population, daily tasks like fetching water or walking to school can end in tragedy.

Luzi is a village in the eastern province of Moxico. Like many communities in this war-torn part of the country, Luzi was heavily fought over by Government and UNITA forces during the war. Residents began to flee in the 1980s as a result, seeking refuge in neighbouring Zambia, and by 1995 the village had been deserted.

(read more)


Angola: President's Inauguration Elevates Spirit of Trust

AllAfrica25 September, 2012

Caxito — The inauguration of the president of the Republic, José Eduardo dos Santos, Wednesday in Luanda, elevates the spirit of trust of the people of Caxito city, northern Bengo province.

Speaking Tuesday to ANGOP, many expressed satisfaction with the inauguration of the president which they said will help solve many problems that still afflict the communities.David Jose Gomes, a civil servant, said the investiture of the president and its continuity at the head of the Angolan State aims to give greater consistency to construction projects, reconstruction and improvement of basic social conditions of the populations. He emphasised that there is urgent need for people to have trust in their Government programmes, in view of the determination it showed and will to continue to work to get the various problems of the people addressed. (read more)

Copyright BBC

Country Profile Angola: the long-lasting conflict in Cabinda

By Genocide Watch
6 March 2012

After its independence from Portugal in 1975, Angola went through a 27-year civil war which was primarily a struggle between two former liberation movements, the People's Movement for the Liberation of Angola (MPLA) and the National Union for the Total Independence of Angola (UNITA). The war assumed a central role in the Cold War, since the Marxist-oriented MPLA was backed by the USSR and Cuba, while UNITA got support from the Western bloc, including direct intervention by apartheid South African troops, trying to drive back the Soviet influence on the African continent.

After 16 years of fighting, a fragile peace accord led to elections. But Jonas Savimbi, leader of UNITA, rejected the outcome of these elections and resumed the war. In 1994, the war was broken up by another fragile period of peace, when a peace accord was signed and UN peacekeepers were sent. But this peacekeeping mission failed and the war continued until 2002, when Savimbi died.  His death finally brought peace. By that time, an estimated 500 000 people had been killed.

Besides the struggle between UNITA and MPLA, a separatist struggle by the Front for the Liberation of the Enclave of Cabinda (FLEC) also played a role in the civil war.  FLEC fought for the independence of Cabinda. When Cabinda became a part of Angola in 1975, the Cabindans were not consulted. Cabinda is an Angolan province but it is separated from the country’s main territory by a sliver of the Democratic Republic of Congo. While the Angolan war ended in 2002, the status of Cabinda is still disputed by FLEC.  A 2006 peace agreement between the government of Angola and a faction of the FLEC sought to end the conflict, but sporadic attacks by both sides have continued. In 2010, two factions of FLEC claimed responsibility for a deadly attack on Togo's football team in Angola during the Africa Nations Cup.  The attackers did not realize they were attacking the Togo team.

The separatists base their claim for independence on their interpretation of the colonial history of Cabinda. While Angola was a Portuguese colony for hundreds of years, Cabinda became a Portuguese Protectorate in 1885 under the treaty of Simulambuco, which was peacefully negotiated between Portugal and the Cabindan governors.  Separatists often refer to Article 2 of this Treaty, which stated that “Portugal is obliged to maintain the integrity of the territories placed under its protection”.

The refusal of the Angolan government to accept Cabindan claims for independence can largely be explained by the oil wealth in Cabinda, which accounts for half of Angola’s oil production. Because of widespread corruption in Angola, the people in Cabinda do not share in the benefits of their oil wealth.

In a 2009 report, Human Rights Watch showed a disturbing pattern of human rights violations by the Angolan army. Between September 2007 and March 2009 at least 38 people were unlawfully arrested and accused of state security crimes. Many of these people were tortured. (see report HRW). In 2006, FLEC filed a complaint with the African Union (AU) against the Angolan government for government human rights abuses. In December 2011, more than 5 years after FLEC lodged its complaint, the AU still says it “is considering” the claims (see article).

Because of deep-rooted conflict about Cabinda, Genocide Watch considers the country at stage 5 of Genocide: polarization.

 


Updates

26 September 2012 "Angloa: President's Inauguration Elevates Spirit of Trust" By AllAfrica

20 August 2012 "Angolan police arrest opposition members before vote" By Reuters

05 May 2012 "Angola elections threaten instability as government cracks down on dissent" By The Guardian

5 April 2012 "Angola elections threaten instability as government cracks down on dissent," by Kristin Palitza for IPS

2 April 2012 "Violent Crackdown On Critics,"
by Human Rights Watch

6 March 2012 "Country Profile on Angola," by Genocide Watch

1 March 2012 "For an Angolan refugee, a milestone birthday leads to a momentous decision," by Daniela Livia Bîciu,
UNHCR

30 December 2011 "AU considers looking at Cabinda claims," by IRIN

26 August 2010 "Cabindan separatists under new management," by IRIN

22 July 2010 "Cabindan separatists in exile deny end to conflict," by IRIN

26 April 2010 "The death of one man does not end a war," by IRIN

12 January 2010 "Q & A: Cabinda Conflict," by BBC

5 September 2008 "Angola: blood oil and western hypocrisy," by William Gumede, The Guardian


9 June 2008 "Make Forced Marriage a Crime Against Humanity," by Donald Steinberg, The Christian Science Monitor


4 June 2008 "Angolan Elections are Likely in September," by Reuters


18 April 2008 "OHCHR to cease activities in Angola," by OHCHR


30 July 2003 "
Angolans Come Home to 'Negative Peace'," by Lydia Polgreen, The New York Times




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