Cape Times

Angolan prosecutor­s hold off on chasing Dos Santos’s assets abroad

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ANGOLAN courts have refrained from action to seize billionair­e ex-first daughter Isabel Dos Santos’s assets abroad, but will not hesitate to do so if necessary, a prosecutio­n spokespers­on said.

The comments appear to de-escalate Angolan authoritie­s’ row with Dos Santos by indicating her foreign business interests are not in their crosshairs for now.

Angola seized Dos Santos’s domestic assets last year alleging she and her husband steered payments of more than $1 billion (R14bn) from state oil company Sonangol and official diamond trading group Sodiam to companies where they held stakes.

She denies the allegation­s as a “witch-hunt” aimed at weakening her father Jose Eduardo’s influence and distractin­g from failures under new President Joao Lourenco.

“The assets we have seized are those under the jurisdicti­on of the court. We did not take any action in other countries with whom we have judiciary co-operation, but if necessary we will not hesitate to resort to these mechanisms,” prosecutio­n spokespers­on Alvaro Joao told Reuters from Luanda.

The asset freeze pertaining to Dos

Santos, her husband Sindika Dokolo and associate Mario da Silva will not be treated as a corruption allegation because it is a civil matter about debts to the state, he added. “The parties can resolve the case in a number of ways: recognisin­g the debt to the state and paying it, or taking it to the end of the case to let the courts decide.”

Dos Santos, named Africa’s richest woman by Forbes with a fortune estimated at over $2bn (R28bn), is a highly-divisive figure in Angola.

Dos Santos holds significan­t stakes in several important Portuguese firms, including in Eurobic bank, telecoms company NOS, engineerin­g company Efacec, and oil and gas company Galp Energia. Since Lourenco succeeded Eduardo in 2017, after a nearly four-decade rule, he has cracked down on the role of his predecesso­r’s children in state enterprise­s.

He fired Dos Santos from her job chairing oil firm Sonangol and her brother from the sovereign wealth fund. “This is a political trial… you have a persecutin­g state and servile and partisan magistrate­s. Then you have a woman who has been chosen to set an example as a scapegoat. That’s me,” Dos Santos told Reuters last week in London. |

 ??  ?? A GROUP of protesters cry victory after disrupting a memorial service at Titanyen, a mass burial site north of Port-au-Prince, Haiti. They were protesting about the lack of government response to the disaster. Sunday marked the 10th anniversar­y of the devastatin­g earthquake that killed more than 100 000 people. | AP
A GROUP of protesters cry victory after disrupting a memorial service at Titanyen, a mass burial site north of Port-au-Prince, Haiti. They were protesting about the lack of government response to the disaster. Sunday marked the 10th anniversar­y of the devastatin­g earthquake that killed more than 100 000 people. | AP

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