Angola lauded for fighting raft of graft
Visiting Pompeo says reforms need to stick
JOHANNESBURG — Secretary of State Mike Pompeo in his latest Africa stop on Monday praised Angola’s president for his dramatic actions to recover billions of dollars looted by corrupt officials, saying it would help attract investment to one of Africa’s largest economies.
“This country has been held hostage to that corruption for far too long,” Pompeo told reporters. “This reform agenda that the president put in place has to stick.”
Since taking office in 2017, President Joao Lourenco has acted even against family members of former leader Eduardo dos Santos, who ruled for nearly four decades. A recent investigation by a global consortium of journalists into dos Santos’ daughter Isabel, reputedly Africa’s richest woman, led to allegations of widespread mismanagement of state funds, which she has denied.
The United States also sees oil-rich but largely impoverished Angola as a prime country in which to counter the influence of China. The southern African nation borrowed $40 billion from China between 2005 and 2019, representing about half of its external debt, according to the Africa Center for Strategic Studies.
Pompeo and Lourenco discussed China’s role in Africa, State Department spokeswoman Morgan Ortagus said, without giving details.
In a joint press conference with Pompeo, Angolan Foreign Minister
Manuel Augusto said the secretary of state’s visit is a sign that the Trump administration supports the government of Lourenco, a former defense minister, and his reforms.
Asked when President Donald Trump might visit Africa, Pompeo told reporters he will take back to Washington an invitation from Lourenco but warned that this election year is very busy.
Pompeo’s visit to Africa is the first by a Cabinet official in 18 months.
The secretary of state was expected to arrive late Monday in Ethiopia, Africa’s second-most-populous country and a key U.S. security ally in the Horn of Africa region.
Its Nobel Peace Prize-winning Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed is under pressure to uphold his dramatic political reforms amid rising ethnic tensions ahead of a major election in August.