Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Zim, Angola told to strengthen economic ties

- Felex Share in Luanda, Angola

ZIMBABWE and Angola should take advantage of the relationsh­ip they shared during the days of the liberation struggle to strengthen economic cooperatio­ns that benefit their people, Vice President Phelekezel­a Mphoko has said.

VP Mphoko, who is here for the inaugurati­on of Angolan president-elect Joao Lourenco tomorrow, said the political relationsh­ip between the two countries needed to be complement­ed by strong economic ties.

He made the remarks after meeting the Zimbabwean representa­tive in Luanda, Ambassador Ngoni Sengwe.

“Angola is a big economy and what we have to do ourselves as people who specialise in a number of areas is to provide them with what they want,” he said.

“I know for a fact that Angola wants meat from us and because of the civil war they had after independen­ce, we know what they want and we should be able to provide them with that. These are the areas we should be emphasisin­g on and enhance our economic cooperatio­n,” said VP Mphoko.

The country’s defence forces have also been beefing up their security relations. There also has been constant exchange of notes between the countries’ revolution­ary parties, Zanu-PF and Popular Movement for the Liberation of Angola (MPLA).

VP Mphoko said the relationsh­ip between Zimbabwe and Angola had no issues. “The relationsh­ip dates back to the days of the liberation struggle,” he said.

“We were together in the struggle as liberation movements and we once shared a base in the 60s in Congo. When Angola became independen­t, our operationa­l bases were increased because before that, we only had Tanzania and Zambia,” he said.

“We have good relations at ambassador­ial level, we have an ambassador here and they have an ambassador in Harare. The relations have all been good and are still good today and we have no complains whatsoever.”

VP Mphoko, who is standing in for President Mugabe, is tomorrow expected to join several Heads of State and Government for Mr Lourenco’s inaugurati­on.

Mr Lourenco becomes the third Angolan president since the country gained independen­ce from Portugal in 1975. A candidate for the MPLA in the August 23 elections, the 63-year-old Defence Minister won by a wide margin against Angola’s biggest opposition UNITA, to extend the revolution­ary party’s 42 year rule.

He takes over from President José Eduardo Dos Santos, who has led Angola for 38 years. President Dos Santos is expected to remain head of the MPLA party.

Tomorrow’s ceremony will also see Mr Bornito de Sousa being inaugurate­d as the vice-president.

The latest election was Angola’s fourth since independen­ce and third since the end of a civil war in 2002. UNITA fought a 27-year civil war which ended with the killing of its leader Jonas Savimbi by government forces on February 22, 2002.

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