Daily Dispatch

New sheriff in town rids Angola of nepotism

President quick on the draw to sack Dos Santos family

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THE first major scalp claimed by Angola’s new President Joao Lourenco in his war on corruption and nepotism was that of his predecesso­r’s daughter, who was sacked as head of the state oil company.

The next big name linked to former president Jose Eduardo dos Santos was that of his son, Jose Filomeno, who was removed from his post at the top of the African nation’s $5-billion (R62-billion) sovereign wealth fund.

Quick work for a president with barely 100 days on the job.

Lourenco’s manoeuvrin­g against the nepotistic­al vestiges of Angola’s last president began in earnest in November with the toppling of Isabel dos Santos – said by Forbes to be Africa’s richest woman.

The shake-up at the Sonangol oil giant marked a watershed moment in Lourenco’s young presidency as he sought to assert his authority and clear out the legacy of his controvers­ial predecesso­r.

During his presidenti­al campaign, the former defence minister vowed to distance himself from Dos Santos who remains head of the ruling People’s Movement for the Liberation of Angola (MPLA) party.

Just a month after Isabel was fired, Sonangol announced it was opening an investigat­ion into possible misappropr­iation of funds during her time as chief executive.

But although her sacking caught some Angola watchers off-guard, Lourenco’s dismissal this week of Jose Filomeno as head of the oil-rich country’s vast wealth fund did not.

Lourenco, 63, had hinted he might sack Filomeno during a speech to mark his first 100 days in office after winning August’s election on an antigraft, reformist platform.

Like his sister, Filomeno was the embodiment of the political-financial empire built by their father that funnelled the nation’s wealth to friends and relatives of the Dos Santos clan.

But the new sheriff in town appears determined to end the family’s grip on the nation’s purse strings.

“No one is above the law,” Lourenco said before being sworn in.

For weeks, Angolan media have been running stories alleging corruption by the Dos Santos family, which had previously been seen as untouchabl­e.

As well as the corruption probe facing Isabel, her half-brother was implicated in the “Panama Papers” scandal which showed how the world’s wealthy shift profits around the globe to drasticall­y cut tax.

Also this week, state television revealed the lavish terms of a government contract awarded to another of Dos Santos’s daughters, Welwitschi­a.

Facing official scrutiny is proving to be an uncomforta­ble new experience for the former first family. Isabel has denied the allegation­s against her and accused her critics of a “campaign of defamation” and “fake news”.

And even Dos Santos himself waded in, admitting in a rare public appearance last month that while “the changes are necessary, they should not be so radical”.

Angola’s opposition has been quick to praise the government’s campaign against “nepotism”, urging Lourenco see the process through to the end.

“All of these sackings will be irrelevant if they aren’t followed by legal action,” said Lindo Bernardo Tito, vice-president of the Casa-CE party.

Few observers thought that Lourenco would push his fight against nepotism and corruption as far as he has.

“I don’t imagine any serious case will emerge against the family [although] the Sonangol probe is clearly a warning of what could happen,” said Alex Vines, an analyst at Britain’s Chatham House think-tank.

Keen to keep the peace with his one-time mentor, Lourenco has denied any kind of vendetta against the Dos Santos family.

But Vines said the new president needed to be cautious.

“Dos Santos had planned to step down from the MPLA presidency in 2018 – but if he senses there is a witch hunt again his family and friends, he might dig his feet in.” —

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JOAO LOURENCO

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