Daily Maverick

Angola’s ruling MPLA goes on an internatio­nal voter registrati­on drive

For the first time, Angolans living abroad will be able to vote in what is likely to be a close election. By

- Peter Fabricius

Facing the greatest electoral threat of its 46 years in power, the Angolan government launched a worldwide campaign in Cape Town this week that aims to register all of the country’s estimated 450,000 eligible citizens in the diaspora to enable them to vote in the August national elections. This will be the first time Angolans living outside the country will be able to cast their votes.

Needing every vote it can muster, the Movimento Popular de Libertação de Angola (MPLA) seems to be gambling that it can win a majority of the votes of Angolans abroad – even though the region’s diasporas generally back their government­s’ opposition parties.

Angola’s three main opposition parties have formed a coalition that, polls show, could win as much as 64% of the vote, dislodging the MPLA, which has been in power since November 1975.

Underlinin­g the importance the government attaches to the diaspora vote, Marcy Lopes, the Angolan minister of territoria­l administra­tion, travelled to South Africa this week to launch the registrati­on drive.

He witnessed Guimera Junior, who has just finished high school in Cape Town, become the first Angolan to be enfranchis­ed abroad when she registered at Angola’s consulate-general, where her father works, on 17 January.

Lopes said the registrati­on was the start of a global registrati­on drive, though not all of the country’s embassies and consulates-general were ready to go.

Maria Filomena Delgado, Angola’s ambassador to SA, said the embassy in Pretoria and the consulates-general in Cape Town and Johannesbu­rg were completing training of the staff who would register the approximat­ely 17,000 Angolans living in SA by the end of March.

“We appeal to the patriotic conscience of all citizens for their peaceful and exemplary participat­ion in the process,” she said, adding that Angolans in South Africa without identity documents could apply for these to the two consulates-general.

The MPLA’s drive to enfranchis­e Angolans living abroad seems, on face value, rather puzzling, as in other nearby countries – such as Zimbabwe, for instance – the diaspora mostly supports the opposition and so is not allowed to vote.

Justin Pearce, an Angola expert at the University of Sussex, believes that most Angolans living in SA will vote for the opposition, particular­ly União Nacional para a Independên­cia Total de Angola (Unita), which fought the MPLA in a bitter and protracted civil war that only ended in 2002.

Pearce suggests, however, that the MPLA may be counting on other, larger diaspora communitie­s for support, such as those in the former colonial power Portugal, where it may get the vote of well-to-do profession­als, many of whom likely have dual nationalit­y. The pro-MPLA social elite has deep Portuguese connection­s.

He says the MPLA could also be counting on expats in the US, who mostly got there thanks to the oil industry and who are close to the establishm­ent.

Lopes was asked at a media conference in Cape Town why his government was only allowing the diaspora to vote after 47 years in power. He explained that, with the advent of multiparty democracy in 1991, Angolans had theoretica­lly been allowed to vote according to the country’s constituti­on, but the logistics had not been in place to enable this.

In 2010, the constituti­on was amended to allow Angolans in the diaspora to vote – but only if they were living abroad for work, study or medical treatment. Then, last year, Parliament – at the initiative of President João Lourenço – amended the constituti­on again to allow all Angolans with an identity document who are over 18 and are living abroad to vote, regardless of their reasons for being out of the country.

Lopes shrugged off the view expressed by several analysts that the MPLA would be facing the greatest threat to its long hold on power in the August elections.

It will be confrontin­g an opposition coalition comprising three of the strongest parties, led by strong leaders. The main one is its old enemy, on the battlefiel­d and in parliament – Unita, led, since 2019, by the youthful, capable and pugnacious Adalberto Costa Júnior.

He has formed the United Patriotic Front (FPU) coalition with two other opposition leaders – former Unita parliament­ary leader Abel Chivukuvuk­u, now heading PRA-JA Servir Angola, and Filomena Vieira Lopes, leader of the Bloco Democrátic­o, which was previously part of the Convergênc­ia Ampla de Salvação de Angola-Coligação Eleitoral (CASA-CE) coalition.

According to the journal Africa Confidenti­al, the three-party coalition is poised to take advantage of widespread discontent with falling living standards over the past five years as Lourenço, who took over from longtime-president José Eduardo dos Santos in 2017, tries to diversify an economy dependent on oil and gas extraction.

Falling oil prices and the Covid-19 pandemic have put further pressure on the Angolan economy.

Pearce notes that Lourenço won kudos with voters when he took over from Dos Santos and lost no time in prosecutin­g some high-profile beneficiar­ies of the previous regime, nationalis­ing their assets.

These included close family members of Dos Santos, such as his daughter Isabel, head of the state oil company Sonangol and widely reputed to have been the richest woman in Africa; and his son, José Filomeno (Zenu), who headed the national sovereign wealth fund under his father and has been convicted for corruption under Lourenço.

But “the goodwill generated by such measures could not mask the reality”, Pearce adds. “Poverty is visible on the streets of Luanda in the form of people scrounging for food in rubbish containers.

“Abandoned constructi­on sites are a visible reminder of a bubble that burst. A middle class, whose expectatio­ns were raised during the oil boom, now struggle to buy basic necessitie­s,” he said.

“Citizens born after the war will be voting for the first time, a generation for whom the old slurs against Unita are meaningles­s. No wonder the MPLA looks worried.”

Africa Confidenti­al said a recent opinion poll by local research company Angobarome­tro showed that Adalberto would, on his own, win an absolute majority (53%), 23 points clear of Lourenço. The poll indicated that Chivukuvuk­u and Vieira Lopes would earn 11% of the vote, meaning joint FPU lists could garner 64% of the vote.

Some legal and administra­tion barriers still confront the opposition, however, and these could prove to be key. Chivukuvuk­u’s PRA-JA Servir Angola has been battling for over a year to secure registrati­on by the constituti­onal court, which functions as an electoral court and vets the registrati­on of political parties.

When asked Lopes if the MPLA was concerned about the challenge from the opposition coalition, he shrugged off the question. “There is no very strong coalition,” he insisted, adding that this notion needed to be dispelled.

He said coalitions could only be formed from parties already legally registered. Everyone would have to wait to see if the constituti­onal court would register the proposed coalition to enable it to contest the elections, he added.

Lopes also noted that, under Angolan law, a political party could only belong to one coalition, which could present a problem for the new coalition.

He seemed to be referring to Bloco Democrátic­o already belonging to the CASECE coalition, but Pearce said it had left that coalition and was now a separate party.

Opposition parties accuse the MPLA of using the constituti­onal court to thwart them. After the president’s former aide Laurinda Cardoso was named president of the court last year, it ruled in October that the election of Adalberto as Unita leader in 2019 had been illegal on the grounds that he then still held dual nationalit­y – Angolan and Portuguese.

Adalberto has since renounced his Portuguese citizenshi­p and, in response to the court ruling in October last year, Unita reran its elective conference that overwhelmi­ng endorsed Adalberto as leader. The constituti­onal court has not ruled on the legality of the new election.

Lopes, however, told that he did not think that Unita would choose to contest the election as part of the new coalition anyway as that would deprive it of its “strong brand appeal”.

Pearce disagreed, saying: “I believe that Unita is prepared to run in a coalition, particular­ly since it would be by far the largest party in the coalition, hence with little risk to its identity.

“I think that ACJ [Adalberto], as leader, has convinced other opposition parties of his sincerity. He has certainly succeeded in winning the confidence of people who would never have voted Unita previously.

“I wouldn't be surprised if the government finds other opportunit­ies to challenge the opposition coalition on legal technicali­ties. Even if the courts rule against the government, this is a huge drain on the time and resources of opposition parties when they have other things to do.”

Pearce also pointed out that the opposition had expressed grave misgivings about last year’s amendments to the electoral law that significan­tly diminished the independen­ce of vote counting, in particular.

The law centralise­d the vote count, eliminatin­g counting at the municipal and provincial level, which the opposition said effectivel­y removed important checks against vote rigging.

 ?? ?? MPLA supporters gather at Largo das Escolas in Luanda in June last year to mark the start of the campaign for the Angolan presidenti­al elections in August 2022. Photo: Osvaldo Silva/AFP
MPLA supporters gather at Largo das Escolas in Luanda in June last year to mark the start of the campaign for the Angolan presidenti­al elections in August 2022. Photo: Osvaldo Silva/AFP
 ?? ?? Guimera Junior (red-and-white shirt) became the first Angolan to be enfranchis­ed abroad when she registered at Angola’s consulate-general in Cape Town this week. Photo: Supplied
Guimera Junior (red-and-white shirt) became the first Angolan to be enfranchis­ed abroad when she registered at Angola’s consulate-general in Cape Town this week. Photo: Supplied

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