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Saturday, 12 March 2016

ANGOLA PRESIDENT DOS SANTOS 'TO STEP DOWN IN 2018'

Jose Eduardo dos Santos is one of Africa's longest-serving leaders
Angola's President Jose Eduardo dos Santos has announced he will step down in 2018, having ruled since 1979.
"I took the decision to leave and end my political life in 2018," he told a congress of the ruling MPLA party.
In 2001, Mr Dos Santos said he would not seek office in the next presidential elections, which were then abolished under the new constitution.
He is Africa's second longest-serving leader, after Equatorial Guinea's Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo.

General elections are due in Angola, Africa's second largest oil producer, in August 2017.
Critics accuse long-serving President Jose Eduardo dos Santos of being authoritarian and his government of committing human rights abuses.
The southern African state is rich in diamonds, which fuelled a 27-year civil war in the country.

Will Dos Santos really leave? By Angola analyst Justin Pearce
I remember Jose Eduardo dos Santos saying in 2001 that he was to step down.
That wasn't the only time he's spoken of an exit, but then allowed himself to be persuaded otherwise.
The problem is there is no obvious successor. Mr Dos Santos has run the MPLA in a manner that rules out any challenge to his leadership.
With the wealth he has amassed, if he relinquishes power it has to be to someone who will keep the business interests in the family.
Since 2011, attention has turned to Manuel Vicente, the state oil company boss who was hurriedly elevated to vice-president, then to Mr Dos Santos' son Jose Filomeno, and most recently to his wealthy businesswoman daughter Isabel.
None of these people will find favour with an increasingly restless public, or with MPLA old timers, who will resent a political newcomer being appointed simply because of connections with the veteran leader.
So two years hence, the president might again present himself as the least bad option. But, aged 73, he must know the question cannot be put off forever.

The former Portuguese colony the biggest military spender in sub-Saharan Africa, according to the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute.
Since the end of the conflict in 2002, the country has witnessed an economic boom, though critics of the elected government say the wealth has only benefited a small elite.

President: Jose Eduardo dos Santos

Angolan President Jose Eduardo dos Santos
Jose Eduardo dos Santos, of the ruling MPLA, has been in power since 1979, and is Africa's second-longest serving head of state after Equatorial Guinea's Teodoro Obiang. He keeps tight control over all aspects of Angola's political life.
Many Angolans credit the president for leading the country to recovery after the end of its 27-year civil war in 2002, and for turning the country's formerly socialist economy into one of the world's fastest-growing - mainly on the back of Angola's prodigious oil wealth.
Some, however, accuse him of authoritarianism, staying in office for too long and failing to distribute the proceeds from the oil boom more widely.
In 2008, his party won the country's first parliamentary elections for 16 years in 2008. A new constitution approved in 2010 substituted direct election of the president with a system under which the top candidate of the largest party in parliament becomes president.
It also strengthened the presidency's powers, prompting the Unita opposition to accuse the government of "destroying democracy".

Political ferment

In early 2011 a social media campaign calling for protests to end Mr Dos Santos' rule gathered momentum, but petered out amid what the New York-based campaign group Human Rights Watch called a "campaign of intimidation" against demonstrations.
The MPLA won the 2012 parliamentary election comfortably, guaranteeing My Dos Santos another five-year term in office.
Isabel dos Santos, daughter of the Angolan president
Image captionIsabel dos Santos, the president's daughter and reportedly Africa's wealthiest woman
Born in 1942, Mr Dos Santos joined the MPLA's guerrilla army at the age of 19. In the former Soviet Union he trained in oil engineering and radar technology. He held ministerial posts before becoming president.
He came to office when the country's first post-independence president, Agostinho Neto, died, inheriting the civil war with the Unita party.
After a peace deal signed in 1991, Mr Dos Santos beat Unita leader Jonas Savimbi in the first round of Angola's first contested presidential election in 1992, but Savimbi rejected the result and resumed guerrilla war. No second round was held, but Mr Dos Santos was recognised internationally as president.
The president's daughter Isabel was named Africa's first billionaire by Forbes, the financial magazine.
''Though her representatives deny that her holdings have any connection with her father, Forbes research shows that the president has transferred stakes in several companies to his daughter," the magazine said, describing her as Africa's richest woman.
The anti-corruption organisation Transparency International ranks Angola near the bottom of its corruption perception index.
CREDIT: BBC


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