Angola has declared 5 days of mourning following the passing of former President Eduardo dos Santos. He had been battling a long illness. Dos Santos passed away in a clinic in Barcelona, Spain. He had ruled Angola for 40 years.
Angolan President Joao Lourenco has paid tribute to Dos Santos saying he was a unique figure who took part in the fight against Portuguese rule. He says the late statesman played an instrumental role in the country’s peace and reconciliation.
Angola will have its national flags flying at half-mast and all public demonstrations must be cancelled to honour the late President.
But his critics say Dos Santos was a despot who only acquired wealth for his family and associates while millions of Angolans languished in poverty. One of Africa’s longest serving leaders, dos Santos stepped down five years ago.
He frequently described himself as an accidental president, taking the reins after Angola’s first leader, Agostinho Neto, died during cancer surgery in 1979.
His rule was marked by a civil war lasting nearly three decades against U.S.-backed UNITA rebels – which he won in 2002 – and a subsequent oil-fuelled boom.
He was replaced in 2017 by Lourenco, who despite being from the incumbent’s People’s Movement for the Liberation of Angola (MPLA), swiftly moved to investigate allegations of multi-billion dollar corruption during the dos Santos era. Dos Santos had been receiving medical treatment since 2019.
Portuguese news agency Lusa reported last month that the former president was admitted to an intensive care unit in Barcelona.
His daughter Tchizé dos Santos said in an Instagram post that “fathers never die because they are the truest love that children know in all their lives. They live forever within us”.
Her lawyer, Carmen Varela, said she has asked the clinic where he died to keep his body in Spain for a full autopsy rather than it being returned directly to Angola. The clinic declined to comment.
Angolan journalist and rights activist Rafael Marques de Morais, an outspoken critic of dos Santos, wrote earlier this week on an anti-corruption website that the former president’s political legacy was tarnished and “will not be missed but it leaves suffering”.
Tributes and criticism also came from ordinary citizens. Júlia João, a 44-year old homeworker in Luanda said dos Santos had presided well over the peaceful transition after the war, but squandered the chance to transform Angola.
Source: SABC
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