Cape Times

Angola set for new leader after 38 years

Ruling party likely to win poll

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ANGOLANS headed to the polls yesterday in a parliament­ary election expected to usher in the ruling party’s defence minister as the first new leader of Africa’s second-biggest oil producer in 38 years.

Joao Lourenco, who has pledged to boost growth and fight corruption, would inherit an economy mired in recession as gaping inequality, soaring inflation and high unemployme­nt squeeze poor Angolans who have benefited little from a decades-long oil boom.

The People’s Movement for the Liberation of Angola (MPLA) is expected to remain in power but with a reduced majority. Its support has waned due to widespread political cronyism, though many Angolans remain loyal to the party that emerged victorious from 27 years of civil war in 2002.

“I’ve been following the party (MPLA) all my life. I grew up with it,” 33-year-old bakery owner Telma Francisco said outside a polling station in the capital.

“The other parties don’t have the capacity to govern.”

Voters like Francisco waited in orderly queues on a cloudy morning in the capital Luanda when polling stations opened at 7am as police and military manned street corners.

Questions have been raised as to how much power Lourenco will have if he wins, given veteran leader Jose Eduardo dos Santos, 74, will continue as head of the MPLA and have potentiall­y a sweeping say over decision-making.

His daughter, Isabel, heads national oil producer Sonangol and his son José Filomeno is in charge of the state investment fund.

Lourenco has dismissed suggestion­s he would be a puppet president, saying he would focus on leading an “economic miracle”, possibly with the help of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and World Bank, and prosecute corrupt politician­s.

Dos Santos, Africa’s longest-ruling president behind Equatorial Guinea’s Teodoro Obiang Nguema, will step down after guiding the Opec member from Marxism to capitalism while embracing Chinese oil-for-infrastruc­ture investment.

The MPLA’s main opponent will be its former civil war foe, the National Union for the Total Independen­ce of Angola (Unita), while young voters have been lured by CASA-CE, which was formed in 2012 on a promise to disrupt 50 years of two-party politics.

More than two-thirds of Angolans are below 25 so many people will be voting for the first time.

“We’re voting for change,” said 19-year old Joao Costa who, like most people who oppose the authoritat­ive MPLA, declined to say for whom he voted.

Others were sticking by the ruling party.

“The opposition is a joke,” said out-of-work decorator Francisco, 32, who declined to give his surname. “The MPLA is the only party that can change things and with a new candidate for president I think he can do a better job.”

An unofficial result is expected bytomorrow.

But there may be no formal announceme­nt for two weeks as ballot boxes wend their way along pot-holed roads and dirt tracks in a country of 28 million spread across an area twice the size of France.

There are concerns about how fair the vote will be after the government cracked down on recently planned public demonstrat­ions. Unita has said it will lead protests if it believes the MPLA has manipulate­d results.

The former Portuguese colony has been largely peaceful since the end of a Cold War-era conflict between the MPLA, backed by the Soviet Union, and Unita, supported by the US and South Africa’s former apartheid government.

 ?? PICTURE: EPA ?? Joao Lourenco, the candidate of the Popular Movement for the Liberation of Angola (MPLA), shows his marked finger after casting his ballot in the general elections at a polling station in Luanda yesterday.
PICTURE: EPA Joao Lourenco, the candidate of the Popular Movement for the Liberation of Angola (MPLA), shows his marked finger after casting his ballot in the general elections at a polling station in Luanda yesterday.

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