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The power
of oil and the state of democracy in Angola
Rafael
Marques
The civil war in Angola ended in 2002. In this speech,
given at Harvard University, Rafael Marques argues that the
peace agreement signed in April 2002 has failed to promote
democratic values or engage citizens in public affairs.
Elections that the government promised the people since 1999
have not materialized. Instead, Angola is undergoing a
process of commercialization as a substitute
to democratization, writes Marques.
It is a privilege for me to be here at
Harvard, a center of intellectual and scientific
excellence. I am here simply as a student to have a
conversation and share some ideas about Angola.
I am also in the US to learn from you about the merits of an
open-minded and uncompromised debate about democracy,
international relations and solidarity.
Currently, preparations are being made for the registration
of voters in Angola, as a major leap forward towards the
holding of elections in 2007, 2008 or 2009. There have been
hints of elections ever since 1999.
These elections would be the second ever held in the
country. The only other ones, the 1992 general elections,
led to war breaking out again.
What is at stake at the moment is whether holding elections
could be a measure of democratization for Angola or not?
That is the first of several questions to be asked.
After a devastating 27-year conflict, a military peace deal
signed in April 2002 has not been fostering the promotion of
democratic values in society and engaging citizens in public
affairs. Angola has been described as a “state without
citizens.” Despite recent promises of increased
transparency, accountability and democratization, little has
yet been accomplished to bridge the gap between the rulers
and the ruled. The underlying causes of this situation are
many and interlinked. Political power is highly centralized
and some would argue that historically this power was
further consolidated through the control of resource flows
by three institutions – the Presidency, the National Bank
and SONANGOL, the national oil company.
The reality is of opportunity, but for whom? For those who
hold power and sway, it means dividends from the
privatization of the state, according to the hierarchy in
the regime. For outsiders, it means a rush to promote their
economic interests, cut new deals or explore new market
opportunities.
This prompts the second question. What does the present
situation mean for the majority of Angolans? Put in a
different way, is the country just open for business or is
there some scope for democracy as well?
What are the prospects of change, defining a new future for
Angola? This is the third question I shall try to elaborate
on as part of this conversation.
Electoral Democracy
The first indication of democracy in the country would be
the establishment of checks and balances in the state
institutions, as well as their openness to public scrutiny.
This is essential for the process of nation-building,
To demonstrate the absurd contradictions of the system,
justice is still administered through the former colonial
Portuguese Penal Code of 1886. Portugal itself has reformed
the Penal Code a number of times since then.
Many of the state institutions have not
been altered to fit the new political system. For instance,
the office of the Attorney-General is still governed by a
one-party Marxist-Leninist law (cf Law 5/90, of 5 April) to
safeguard not democracy but the "socialist legality”.
This office is, by law, under the presidency and the
President of the Republic gives direct instructions to the
Attorney-General, which must be complied with in accordance
with article 5, clause 2, of law 5/90.
Unfortunately, this situation, which is unconstitutional,
cannot be challenged in court. The Constitutional Court,
which is required to safeguard the Constitution, has not
been established since 1992. Three members of the
Constitutional Court are supposed to be elected by a
two-thirds majority of Members of Parliament (article 135,
clause 1b). The ruling MPLA does not have such a two-thirds
majority and has found it risky to bring up the issue
because it might wake up the opposition.
So far, the judges of the Supreme Court, appointed by the
President of the Republic, perform the duties of the
Constitutional Court in violation of the Constitution. The
vice-president of the Supreme Court, Mr. Caetano de Sousa,
is also currently the head of the National Electoral
Commission, appointed by the President of the Republic.
On July 22, 2005, the Supreme Court decided that the
President has been performing interim duties since 1992, the
year he failed to win in the polls. Back then the second
round of the presidential elections never took place because
war broke out again. As such, none of his periods as
President count. So, after 25 uninterrupted years in power,
he can run again for three more consecutive periods.
Another important aspect to take into account is the
effectively subordinate role of the National Electoral
Commission, which also includes opposition members, in
relation to the Inter-Ministerial Commission for Elections,
all of whose members come from the MPLA government.
And why does the opposition not rally behind the issue? As I
speak, the 220 parliamentarians, whose constitutional
mandates expired 10 years ago, are lavishing upon themselves
luxury cars of their own choice from a special budget of
over US$16.5 million which they granted to themselves.
Moreover, some of the main opposition parties represented
in Parliament, like UNITA, PRS and PLD, also hold
ministerial portfolios in the government and the due
privileges. That’s how the patronage system works. The
political opposition becomes part of the problem and not of
the solution.
Along with the control of the judicial power by the
political powers comes control of the State media, which
comprises the only radio and TV broadcasters with national
coverage and the only daily newspaper in the country. The
Minister of Information, from the MPLA, also heads the
National Radio of Angola. I worked for the state media,
and
I can say from experience that there was more room for some
innocuous criticism 12 years ago than there is today. These
media outlets only reproduce the orders of the political
establishment.
The six privately owned weekly newspapers, as critical as
they are, remain ineffective in expressing the thoughts and
wishes of the majority. They circulate almost exclusively in
the capital, Luanda, at an average price of US$2.50 for a
24-page tabloid, which is too expensive for the average
citizen. Altogether these papers only print
up to 25,000 copies per week, while there are over four
million people living in the capital alone.
Both the judiciary and the media are fundamental to the
exercise of democracy, one by upholding the rule of the law
and the other to serve as a vehicle for freedom of
expression. But they are, in fact, instruments of
partisanship.
Moreover, the regime has produced a state class, in which
figures of the ruling MPLA accumulate wealth rapidly by
robbing the state coffers. That’s how the President’s
family, without a record of labour, has amassed a vast
fortune and is a major shareholder in
the telecommunications, banking, mining and other most
profitable
enterprises. Other high-ranking families of the regime are
also entitled to such fortunes.
These brief examples illustrate that the time of peace is
being used neither for serious institutional reform nor to
establish a proper transitional platform to a fully fledged
democracy. To put it simply, there are no functioning
institutions for the formal democratic participation of
citizens.
How can elections change this state of affairs? The absence
of a transitional mechanism, to mitigate abuses of power,
leaves little room for peaceful change and risks a showdown
between the government
and the people for lack of alternative and buffer
institutions.
The Power of Oil
Any change will put at risk not just the ruling party, but
the business interests of the state class, who are the
partners for foreign governments and enterprises in oil,
diamonds, construction, etc. Foreign interests fight for
privileged access to the state class.
The interests of the Presidential family in remaining in
power, to safeguard their business interests, coincide, for
instance, with the U.S. policy to ensure stability and
safeguard a continuous flow of Angolan oil into the U.S. By
2007, Angola’s oil output is forecast to surpass 2 million
barrels a day and continue to increase until 2010.
The international view of Angola has been narrowed down to
business interests. Angola is undergoing a process of
commercialization as a substitute to democratization.
International pressure has mainly been self-serving and the
call for good governance has focused more on issues of
transparency and an improved climate for foreign investment
than on poverty alleviation and democratization. Countries
with a strategic interest in Angolan oil, especially China,
have been willing to provide Angola with
concessional, oil-backed loans, which carry no conditions on
improved governance.
In the past, the U.S. led Western countries in fomenting
guerrilla warfare in the country in the name of a global
fight against communism while, at the same time, allowing
Cuban soldiers to guard Chevron oil facilities. Then it
switched sides to annihilate the
guerrillas in the name of helping to achieve peace and
democracy.
Such international leverage in the country’s affairs has
robbed the people of external solidarity in the fight for
change. Reality shows that it is all about access to the
country’s natural resources and profitable dealings. In 2005
Angola could boast the highest rate of growth in Gross
Domestic Product in the Southern African Development
Community (SADC) area (if not all of Africa), according to
IMF figures. In stark contrast, Angola has some of the worst
poverty levels in Africa. Last year Angola was ranked 160
out of 177 countries on the UNDP Human Development Index.
According to the statistics, 67% of the population lives
below the poverty line. Of those living in rural areas, 90%
are estimated to live below the poverty line. Illiteracy and
infant and maternal mortality rates are very high. The
shares of the government budget allocated to health (4.4% in
2006) and education (3.8%) are lower than average in the SADC
area and have declined steadily since 2004. In general,
there has been a bias against spending on initiatives to
improve broad-based primary education and primary health
care.
In principle, elections will not provide people with
alternative choices because the political opposition is
either incorporated into the system, tamed or too marginal
to have the resources and the ability to make itself known
to a wider audience. This explains why the pressure for
elections from civic organizations and society at
large has gone quiet.
Thus the holding of elections will by no means be a measure
for democracy. The regime has already prepared itself for an
eventual alternative, which it calls an agenda of national
consensus. From time to time, when pressure mounts, it takes
it out of its pocket to lure people into an idea of broad
dialogue to give a new direction to the country.
For there to be a space for democracy, Angolans have to find
a more balanced and sustainable way of dealing with the
openness to foreign investors, which is used as an
international public relations tool to re-legitimize the
regime and dodge the pressing need for dialogue on the
country’s situation.
We must be forceful in explaining that one issue must not
obscure the other. We must have them both, and democracy
should be a priority to establish the rule of law that turns
the institutions of state into the safe keepers of
transparency, fair competition and greater safety for
foreign investments. Currently, businesses have to rely
on powerful individuals for protection, but sooner or later
this will come to an end.
Prospects of Change
As a citizen, I always wonder why my political leaders
always prefer to take the most difficult and treacherous
routes of war, violence, corruption and denial to govern the
country?
My country is drifting towards a political dead end. The
growing detachment between the rulers and the ruled, in the
formation of the state class, can only lead to profound
resentment and an unpredictable outcome.
Dialogue and compassion are not new ideas, but that’s what
Angolans have always needed most from their rulers, and been
denied.
There must be the political will by the regime to open up
and allow the establishment of a “state of citizens” as the
best option to avoid the perils of anarchy, for its own good
and because time is running out.
Thank you to the Harvard Law School Human Rights Program and
its co-sponsors. And thanks to the Northcote Parkinson Fund
for sponsoring my trip here as part of the Civil Courage
Prize.
Rafael
Marques de Morais, an Angolan journalist and a human
rights activist, is the winner of the 2006 Civil Courage
Prize. Through his writing, Rafael Marques de Morais has
exposed the corruption of the Angolan government, the tragic
impact that diamond extraction has on the lives of local
populations and the abuses committed by the industry’s
private security companies.This article was first published
in Pambazuka, an email newsletter about Africa. The original
article can be seen at
http://www.pambazuka.org/en/category/comment/38121
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