From the Los Angeles Times
Flawed vote further entrenches Angola's ruling party, critics warn
The West's muted reaction to the oil-rich
nation's election is called a double standard.
By Robyn Dixon
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
September 11, 2008
JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AFRICA —
Angola's first election in 16 years was seen by some analysts and
observers as a halting, if not entirely free and fair, step toward
democracy. But the results announced Wednesday left others worried that
the African nation had tilted dangerously toward becoming a one-party
state.
According
to official provisional results, the ruling MPLA won 81.8% of votes and
the main opposition UNITA party won 10.4% in Friday's balloting, giving
the ruling party well over the two-thirds parliamentary majority
required to change the constitution.
While the ruling party
has not made clear plans for constitutional change, critics fear it
could further entrench the powers of the president and the dominance of
the MPLA.
In the oil-rich southern African nation, which has
massive Western investments, praise for the election was lukewarm.
Relief that the balloting was largely peaceful and did not lead to
renewed civil war was tempered by criticism that the election failed
basic international standards.
Angola's only previous election,
held in 1992, was a botched attempt to end decades of war. UNITA
rejected the results, and the country endured 10 more years of fighting.
There
was disappointment this week among Angola's civil society groups that
the West, with huge oil interests in Angola, was not more critical of
the election's shortcomings.
But according to a Western diplomat
who declined to be named, there was never an expectation that the vote
would be free and fair. The best that could be hoped for was that the
country would take a peaceful step toward democracy.
Angola
rivals Nigeria as Africa's biggest oil producer, and is ranked by the
watchdog group Transparency International as equally corrupt. In recent
years, Human Rights Watch has said that billions of dollars in oil
revenue have disappeared, while Transparency International has reported
the finances of the state oil company, Sonangol, to be extremely opaque.
Many
Western observers found the advantages of incumbency -- access to state
resources and control of the media -- gave the ruling party an
overwhelming advantage in the election.
European Union observers
said the election fell short of international standards. They were
critical of the chaotic voting process, particularly in the capital,
Luanda, which saw some polling stations open late and others not at all.
Criticism
by U.S. diplomatic observers was muted. A statement issued by the U.S.
Embassy said that no cases of voter intimidation had been observed but
that "state control of major media gave the ruling party an advantage."
But
investigative Angolan journalist Rafael Marques charged that the West's
reaction to the election demonstrated a double standard, leading it to
condemn the failures of democracy in Zimbabwe under President Robert
Mugabe but ignore similar shortcomings in Angola because of the
latter's massive oil resources. He said in a telephone interview that
the election result entrenched a one-party state and legitimized a
corrupt regime.
"With the full and unflinching support from the
international community for anything this regime does, it can safely
privatize the whole country without any fear of criticism. It will be a
free ride in terms of awarding most of the prizes to the presidential
family and government officials," he said.
The MPLA has ruled
Angola since independence from Portugal in 1975. President Jose Eduardo
dos Santos, whose wife and daughter won seats in parliament, is widely
expected to run in presidential elections planned for next year,
despite a previous statement that he would not enter the race.
Members
of the president's family and top government officials have shares in
the country's top oil, diamond, banking and telecommunications firms.
No foreign company can do business in Angola unless it teams up with an
influential local company.
The country's economic growth reached
24% last year largely because of high oil prices. Its oil exports in
2007 earned about $43 billion. But unemployment is more than 50%, and
nearly three-quarters of the population lives on less than $2 a day,
according to U.N. figures. Most homes have no running water or
electricity.
Despite massive foreign investment and oil
production of 2 million barrels a day, the country remains firmly
embedded at the bottom end of the U.N. human development index, which
measures living standards and poverty, ranked 147 of 180 countries.
"The
West has completely colluded in this [election result], not just
because of oil but because Angola is a sort of a cafeteria for Western
companies to do business without ethics," said Marques, in a reference
to the country's high levels of corruption. "It's in the interests of
the Western oil companies and many other business interests that Angola
remains as it is."
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times