Yahoo – AFP,
Daniel Garelo Pensador, November 15, 2017
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| Angola's newly elected president Joao Lourenco delivers his first speech at the Angola Nation Assembly in Luanda on October 16, 2017 (AFP Photo/AMPE ROGERIO) |
Luanda
(AFP) - Angolan President Joao Lourenco on Wednesday fired his predecessor's
daughter from her influential post as head of the Sonangol state oil company,
the presidency said in a statement.
The sacking
marks a watershed moment in Lourenco's young presidency as he seeks to assert
his authority and clear-out the legacy of his controversial predecessor Jose
Eduardo dos Santos, who ruled with an iron grip for 38 years.
Lourenco
swept to power as the ruling party's candidate in August elections after
pledging to clean up Angola's endemic graft, tackle nepotism and revive its
listless economy.
"Under
the powers vested in him by the constitution, the president... has decided to
relieve the following directors who make up the board of Sonangol," said
the statement, which named the former president's daughter Isabel.
During his
campaign to win the presidency, Lourenco, the 63-year-old former defence
minister, vowed to distance himself from his all-powerful predecessor who
remains head of the ruling party.
"Nobody
will be above the law," he told foreign media on the eve of his election
victory.
Known
derisively as "the princess", 44-year-old Isabel became the public
face of the Dos Santos business empire during her father's presidency.
'I want
to continue'
Isabel dos
Santos described herself as an "entrepreneur" on her Twitter account
and the US-based Forbes magazine claims that she is Africa's richest woman.
It
estimates that her personal fortune could be as much as $3.3 billion (2.8
billion euros).
She is also
active in the telecoms sector and notably controls Unitel, Angola's leading
mobile phone operator, as well as satellite TV network Zap.
She also
holds 25 percent of the capital of Portuguese media giant NOS and has invested
heavily in the banking sector.
Isabel's
removal from Sonangol's top job comes as a surprise, for she had often stated
that she wanted to remain in the top job.
"The
job of Sonangol is not dependent on the electoral process... I want to
continue," she said ahead of the August elections.
The
opposition accuses the ruling People's Movement for the Liberation of Angola
(MPLA) party of suppressing dissent and the Dos Santos family of bleeding the
country dry through corruption and decades of mismanagement.
Black gold
provides 70 percent of Angola's revenues and almost all of its hard currency,
but many of the country's citizens are mired in poverty.
Even
through the collapse in the oil price in recent years, crude has remained
Angola's leading revenue source.
Angola,
which along with Nigeria is one of Africa's top oil producers, has been in the
grip of an economic crisis since 2014 as the global price of oil has remained
flat.

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