Daily Dispatch

Angolans given amnesty to repatriate offshore funds

-

ANGOLA’S President João Lourenço has told Angolans to repatriate funds illegally held abroad in coming months or risk prosecutio­n, in a bid to spur domestic investment and combat corruption.

The announceme­nt marks one of Lourenço’s boldest policy moves since he took power in September and suggests he intends to try and draw a line under years of endemic corruption and impunity.

Central bank Governor José Massano told state news agency Angop that at least $30-billion (R655.1-billion) of Angolan money is held abroad, though that figure includes legal deposits.

Lourenço has surprised analysts and diplomats by the speed at which he has sought to take on some of the entrenched vested interests that control sub-Saharan Africa’s third-largest economy and second-biggest oil exporter.

Speaking on Wednesday at the end of a ruling party conference on corruption, Lourenço said a grace period would be announced early next year during which money could be repatriate­d and invested in the Angolan economy without questions being asked.

But once that window – the dates of which have not yet been announced – passes, “the Angolan state will consider itself justified in regarding the money as belonging to Angola and Angolans and as such, together with the authoritie­s of the countries where the money is held, act to bring it back into its possession”.

After almost 30 years of civil war came to an end in 2002, Angola’s economy grew at a rapid pace.

But rife corruption and mismanagem­ent meant gaping inequality persists, and a collapse in the price of oil lead to an economic crisis from which the country is still wrestling to emerge.

In November, Lourenço dismissed Isabel dos Santos, daughter of the former president José Eduardo dos Santos, as chair of state oil company Sonangol. He also cancelled lucrative state contracts with a media company owned by another of Dos Santos’s daughters. — Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa