Overview
Country, southern Africa.
Its northernmost section of coastland, the Cabinda exclave,
is separated from Angola proper by a narrow corridor of Congo
territory. Area: 481,354 sq mi (1,246,700 sq km). Population
(2006 est.): 12,127,000. Capital: Luanda. The population is made
up of mostly Bantu-speaking peoples; the main ethnic groups are
the Ovimbundu and the Mbundu. Languages: Portuguese (official),
indigenous languages. Religions: Christianity (mostly Roman
Catholic; also Protestant); also traditional beliefs. Currency:
kwanza. The country contains several plateau regions, which
separate it into three distinct drainage systems. One in the
northeast drains into the Congo River basin, and another, in the
southeastern sector, drains into the Zambezi system; the
remaining drainage, westward into the Atlantic, provides most of
Angola’s hydroelectric power. About half of the land area is
forest; less than 10% is arable. With the exception of the
development of the country’s substantial petroleum reserves,
Angola’s economy has long been unable to take advantage of its
natural resources because of the devastation caused by the
protracted civil war. Angola is nominally a republic with one
legislative house; its head of state and government is the
president. An influx of Bantu-speaking peoples in the 1st
millennium ad led to their dominance in the area by c. 1500. The
most important Bantu kingdom was Kongo; south of Kongo was the
Ndongo kingdom of the Mbundu people. Portuguese explorers
arrived in the early 1480s and over time gradually extended
their rule. Angola’s frontiers were largely determined by other
European powers in the 19th century but not without strong
resistance by the indigenous peoples. Resistance to colonial
rule led to the outbreak of fighting in 1961, which led
ultimately to independence in 1975. Rival factions continued
fighting after independence. Although a peace accord was reached
in 1994, forces led by Jonas M. Savimbi continued to resist
government control until his death in 2002. A lasting peace
accord was signed shortly thereafter, ending 27 years of civil
war.
Angola made its Olympic debut at the 1980 Summer Games in
Moscow.
Profile
Official name República de Angola (Republic of Angola)
Form of government unitary multiparty republic with one
legislative house (National Assembly [2201])
Head of state and government President assisted by Prime
Minister
Capital Luanda
Official language Portuguese
Official religion none
Monetary unit kwanza (AOA)
Population estimate (2008) 12,531,000
Total area (sq mi) 481,354
Total area (sq km) 1,246,700
1Excludes 3 unfilled seats reserved for Angolans living abroad.
Main
country located in southwestern Africa. A large country,
Angola takes in a broad variety of landscapes, including the
semidesert Atlantic littoral bordering Namibia’s “Skeleton
Coast,” the sparsely populated rainforest interior, the rugged
highlands of the south, the Cabinda exclave in the north, and
the densely settled towns and cities of the northern coast and
north-central river valleys. The capital and commercial centre
is Luanda, a large port city on the northern coast that blends
Portuguese-style colonial landmarks with traditional African
housing styles and modern industrial complexes.
Angola at the beginning of the 21st century was a country
ravaged by war and the related effects of land mines and
malnutrition, and it was often dependent on the international
community for the basics of survival. It is a country that is
nevertheless rich in natural resources, including precious gems,
metals, and petroleum; indeed, it ranks among the highest of the
oil-producing countries in sub-Saharan Africa. It is the largest
and wealthiest of the Portuguese-speaking African states, and
Portuguese influences have been felt for some 500 years,
although Angola acquired its present boundaries only in 1891. An
anticolonial struggle that began in 1961 finally led to
independence in 1975.
In We Must Return, a poem he wrote from prison in 1956, the
Angolan poet Agostinho Neto, who was also the country’s first
president, described Angola as “red with coffee / white with
cotton / green with maize” and as “our land, our mother.”
Unfortunately, Neto’s happiness with a “liberated Angola—Angola
independent” did not last long, and a civil war that went on 27
years left much of the country in ruins. Beginning in 2002,
however, with the ending of the war, Angola had more hope for a
peaceful future than it had in the previous quarter century.
Land
Angola is roughly square in shape, with a maximum width of
about 800 miles (1,300 km), including the Cabinda exclave, which
is located along the Atlantic coast just north of Angola’s
border with the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Angola is
bordered to the far northwest by the Republic of the Congo, to
the north and northeast by the Democratic Republic of the Congo,
to the southeast by Zambia, to the south by Namibia, and to the
west by the Atlantic Ocean.
Relief
From a narrow coastal plain, the land rises abruptly to the
east in a series of escarpments to rugged highlands, which then
slope down toward the centre of the continent. The coastal plain
varies in width from about 125 miles (200 km) in the area south
of Luanda to about 15 miles (25 km) near Benguela. The Bié
Plateau to the east of Benguela forms a rough quadrilateral of
land above the 5,000-foot (1,500-metre) mark, culminating at
about 8,600 feet (2,600 metres) and covering about one-tenth of
the country’s surface. The Malanje highlands in the
north-central part of the country are less extensive and lower
in elevation, while the Huíla plateau in the south is smaller
still but rises steeply to an elevation of approximately 7,700
feet (2,300 metres). The almost featureless plateau that covers
the eastern two-thirds of Angola gradually falls away to between
1,650 and 3,300 feet (500 and 1,000 metres) at the eastern
border. The highest point in the country is Mount Moco, near the
city of Huambo, which reaches an elevation of 8,596 feet (2,620
metres).
Drainage
The Lunda Divide forms a watershed on the plateau,
separating north- and south-flowing rivers. In the northeast,
rivers such as the Cuango (Kwango) flow out of Angola into the
mighty Congo River, which forms the boundary between Angola and
the Democratic Republic of the Congo for the final 90 miles (145
km) of its course. The central part of the plateau is drained by
the Cuanza (Kwanza), the largest river entirely within Angola’s
frontiers, which is about 620 miles (1,000 km) in length. It
runs for roughly half its length in a northerly direction before
bending westward through a break in the escarpment between the
Malanje highlands and the Bié Plateau, and it flows into the sea
about 40 miles (65 km) south of Luanda. The southwestern part of
the country is drained by the Cunene River (Kunene), which heads
south before turning west and breaking through the escarpment at
the Ruacana Falls, after which it marks the boundary between
Angola and Namibia to the Atlantic Ocean. Some rivers in the
southeast of the plateau flow into the Zambezi River, which
itself crosses the Cazombo region in the far eastern extension
of the country. Other rivers in this area feed the Okavango
Swamps of northwestern Botswana. Small rivers in the south run
into the internal drainage system of the Etosha Pan in Namibia,
while others, often seasonal in nature, drain the steep western
slopes of the escarpment.
Soils
The coastal plain consists of alluvia, chalk, and sand,
underlain by oil-bearing formations over the northern
two-thirds. Crystalline bedrock of Precambrian age (between
about 540 million and 3.8 billion years old) emerges along the
escarpment, and mineral deposits sometimes lie close to the
surface. Considerable erosion has occurred in this area, and
laterite formations are common. Most of the plateau in the
eastern two-thirds of the country lies buried under deep
deposits of infertile windblown Kalahari sands. The river
gravels of the northeast contain diamonds, and rare kimberlite
pipes occur in this area.
Climate
Angola has a tropical climate with a marked dry season. The
climate is largely affected by the seasonal movements of the
rain-bearing intertropical convergence zone, the northward flow
of the cold Benguela Current off the coast, and elevation.
Rainfall is the key determinant of climatic differentiation, and
it decreases rapidly from north to south and in proximity to the
coast. The Maiombe forest in the northern part of the Cabinda
exclave receives the greatest amount of rainfall, about 70
inches (1,800 mm) per year, and Huambo, on the Bié Plateau,
receives 57 inches (1,450 mm). In contrast, Luanda, on the dry
coast, receives about 13 inches (330 mm), while the southernmost
part of the coastal plain gets as little as 2 inches (50 mm).
The rainy season lasts from September to May in the north and
from December to March in the south. Droughts frequently afflict
the country, especially in the south. Temperatures vary much
less than rainfall, however, and generally decrease with
distance from the Equator, proximity to the coast, and
increasing elevation. The average annual temperature in Soyo,
for example, at the mouth of the Congo, is 79 °F (26 °C),
whereas in Huambo, on the Bié Plateau, it is 67 °F (19 °C).
Plant and animal life
Until the late 19th century, parts of Angola were covered
with dense rainforest, mainly in the northern part of the
Cabinda exclave, the western edge of the Malanje highlands, the
northwestern corner of the Bié Plateau, and along some rivers in
the northeast. Much of this forest has been greatly diminished
by agriculture and logging, and now most of Angola’s surface is
covered with different kinds of savanna (grasslands with
scattered trees), ranging from savanna-forest mosaic in the
north to thorn scrub in parts of the south. Natural or man-made
fires occur frequently in savanna vegetation, and tree species
are thus usually resistant to fire. True desert is confined to
the Namib in the far southwest, which extends north from Namibia
and is the home of a unique plant, the tumboa (Weltwitschia
mirabilis), which has a deep taproot and two broad, flat leaves
about 10 feet (3 metres) long that lie along the desert floor.
The fauna is typical of the savanna lands of Africa.
Carnivores include leopards, lions, and hyenas, while the
plant-eating animals are represented chiefly by elephants,
hippopotamuses, giraffes, zebras, buffaloes, gnu (wildebeests)
and various other antelopes, and monkeys. Angola is rich in bird
species and has a wide variety of reptiles, including
crocodiles. The numerous insects include mosquitoes and tsetse
flies, both serious pests that carry disease. There are about a
dozen national parks and nature reserves, notably Iona National
Park in the southeast corner of the country and Quicama National
Park just south of Luanda, but checks on hunting largely broke
down with the spread of civil war. The giant sable antelope
(Hippotragus niger variani), found in the south, is particularly
vulnerable. Other endangered populations include the gorillas
and chimpanzees of the Maiombe forest, the black rhinoceros, and
the Angolan giraffe. Marine life is particularly rich along the
southern coast, because the cold Benguela Current provides
nutrients for many temperate-water species.
People
Ethnic and linguistic composition
Apart from a few Europeans and isolated bands of Northern
Khoisan speakers such as the !Kung (a San group) in the remote
southeast, all Angolans speak Bantu languages of the Niger-Congo
language family, which dominates western, central, and southern
Africa. The largest ethnolinguistic group is the Ovimbundu, who
speak Umbundu and who account for about one-fourth of the
population. They inhabit the Bié Plateau, having migrated to
Benguela and Lobito and areas along the Benguela Railway to the
west and east, and live in fairly large numbers in Luanda. The
next-largest ethnic group is the Mbundu (Kimbundu), who speak
Kimbundu and who also make up about one-fourth of the
population. They dominate the capital city and the Malanje
highlands and are well represented in most coastal towns. The
Kongo (Bakongo, Esikongo)—in the far north, including the city
of Luanda and parts of the countries of the Democratic Republic
of the Congo and the Republic of the Congo—speak Kikongo and
account for about one-sixth of the population. Lunda, Chokwe,
and Ngangela peoples live scattered through the thinly populated
eastern part of the country, spilling over into the Democratic
Republic of the Congo and Zambia. The Ovambo (also known as
Ambo) and Herero peoples in the southwest also live in Namibia,
while the closely related Nyaneka-Nkhumbi peoples inhabit only
Angola.
The use of the Portuguese language by indigenous Angolan
groups dates back hundreds of years; in the Kongo kingdom, some
were able to speak and read Portuguese as early as 1491.
Beginning in the 1920s, Portuguese colonial policies sought to
make Portuguese the only language spoken in Angola; these
attempts met with limited success. Portuguese is often the only
language spoken in Luanda and in much of the interior extending
beyond the city and in other parts of the country; in some
areas, however, indigenous languages are used in daily life.
Because Portuguese developed as the lingua franca of the country
and became the language of the present political leadership,
those who did not speak Portuguese were effectively excluded
from the political process. Since independence the government
has recognized the major African languages, including six that
were designated as official languages for educational
instruction. However, widespread use of African languages in
educational instruction never occurred, and the government
continued to employ Portuguese for education, written documents,
and official usage. In the years since the end of the civil war,
there has been a renewed effort to develop a cohesive national
language policy that preserves the country’s indigenous
languages and associated cultural histories; these efforts
include providing language instruction in schools and offering
civic materials in indigenous languages. Other languages spoken
in Angola include English and Afrikaans, which are sometimes
spoken in the south and east, especially by people who have
resided in Namibia and Zambia as workers or refugees, and French
and, to a lesser extent, Lingala, which are often understood
among the Kongo in the north. Kikongo ya leta, a Creole based on
Kikongo, is also spoken in the north.
Religion
Angola’s population is overwhelmingly Christian. About
three-fifths of the population is Roman Catholic, about
one-sixth is Protestant, and the remainder adhere to traditional
beliefs or other religions.
The current religious makeup of Angola has its roots in the
country’s history. In precolonial times, Angolans of various
groups followed broadly similar religious traditions that
revolved around venerating ancestors and worshipping
territorially oriented deities under a creator high god (often
known as Nzambi or Suku). That religious system continues in
some form in many places today. The Portuguese introduced
Christianity into the Kongo kingdom in the 15th century; since
the mid-16th century, most Kongo have regarded themselves as
Christians, although their practice has often mixed Christian
and traditional beliefs. When the colony of Angola was
established in 1575, the Portuguese continued to spread
Christianity in the regions inland of Luanda and in the
surrounding areas.
In the late 19th century, Protestant missionaries entered
Angola and made numerous converts among both the Roman Catholic
population and those who still followed traditional religions.
Baptists operated in the north, Methodists in the
Kimbundu-speaking regions, and Congregationalists in areas of
Ovimbundu settlement and in the east. The Protestants were
especially effective in the Ovimbundu area, despite the efforts
of the Portuguese colonial government, which reinforced and
subsidized Catholic missionary activities, sometimes harassed
Protestants, and served the many Catholic settlers from Portugal
who went to Angola. Since the mid-1950s, African Independent
Churches, especially Our Lord Jesus Christ Church in the World
(Tocoist church), have evangelized from bases mostly in the
Democratic Republic of the Congo. In the 1970s the church
opposed Angola’s Marxist government and was subsequently banned
briefly in the late 1980s.
Nationalist leaders were especially drawn from the Protestant
sections of the population, but, when the Popular Movement for
the Liberation of Angola (Movimento Popular de Libertação de
Angola; MPLA) came to power in 1975, its policy as leader of a
Marxist-Leninist state was antireligious. Religious
organizations were denounced, Roman Catholics for their
collaboration with the colonial state and Baptists and
Congregationalists for their role in the leadership of the rival
National Union for the Total Independence of Angola (União
Nacional para a Independência Total de Angola; UNITA) and the
National Front for the Liberation of Angola (Frente Nacional de
a Libertação de Angola; FNLA). The Methodist Church, however,
from which many MPLA leaders were drawn, was more favourably
treated. Religious institutions, hospitals, and newspapers were
taken over by the state, though sometimes they were actually run
by the religious organizations.
Since the formal abandonment of Marxism and as part of an
attempt at national reconciliation, the government has become
more tolerant of religious organizations. Formal religious
organizations now operate openly again, although there are
restraints imposed by official distrust.
Settlement patterns
The rural population is largely concentrated in the
highlands and along watercourses running off the highlands. The
Bié Plateau alone contains about half the total rural
population. In the north and centre of the country, people live
in villages, whereas in the south, where cattle keeping is
important, there is a tradition of dispersed settlement and
transhumance in search of pastures. A few !Kung live as nomads
in remote areas of the far south. The decades of warfare
affected settlement patterns, resulting in an increase in the
size of village settlements. Settlement patterns have also been
affected by forced labour; a form of this practice existed in
the precolonial period, was continued by the Portuguese, and was
evident in the manner in which both government and rival armies
acquired soldiers during the civil war.
At the end of the colonial period, more than four-fifths of
the population was rural, a figure that had declined to about
three-fifths by the early 21st century. Continuous warfare and
the resultant migration increased the population of Luanda to
more than two million by the mid-1990s; conversely, many towns
in the east and on the Bié Plateau were destroyed. Farther south
along the coastal plain, the historic town of Benguela and the
port and industrial centre of Lobito are traditional rivals,
while Namibe is the port for the south and the country’s largest
fishing centre. Other important northern cities are Malanje, at
the eastern end of the Luanda Railway, and the coastal oil towns
of Cabinda and Soyo. Inland, M’banza Congo is the historic
capital of the Kongo kingdom. Huambo, on the Bié Plateau, is
surrounded by a scattering of smaller towns, while Lubango
dominates the Huíla highlands.
Demographic trends
Angola has never been densely populated, and the export of
at least five million slaves between 1500 and 1850 kept the
population from growing at a greater rate. At the beginning of
the 21st century, the country’s population density was well
below the average for Southern Africa, with vast areas in the
semidesert coastal strip and the eastern two-thirds of the
country almost empty.
During the civil war (1975–2002), it is estimated that
warfare killed about a half million people; famine and disease,
exacerbated by the conflict, are estimated to have killed an
additional half million people as well. However, the population
growth rate remained high during this time and later increased
after the end of the war. Angola’s birth rate is among the
highest in the world; however, so too is the country’s infant
mortality rate. Life expectancy is similar to the average for
Southern Africa but is among the lowest in the world, and
Angola’s population is predominantly young.
It is estimated that about half a million people fled abroad
during the anticolonial war (1961–75), mainly Kongo escaping to
the Democratic Republic of the Congo and some Chokwe, Lunda, and
Ngangela fleeing to Zambia. There was a renewed outflow of
refugees in 1975, with the departure of more than 300,000
Portuguese and an unknown number of Africans. The vagaries of
warfare have affected both the number of Angolans living outside
the country and their situation within the country. Refugee
populations both inside and outside Angola have grown during
times of war—such as in the mid- to late 1980s, after the
elections of 1992, and from 1998 until the end of the civil war
in 2002—and such disruptions have also increased internal
migrations to cities, especially Luanda.
Economy
The Portuguese government regarded Angola as its overseas
crown jewel during the colonial period. It made the colony a
target of ambitious settlement schemes and encouraged investment
in the economy. As a result of these efforts, the Angolan
economy was growing rapidly by the 1970s, with commodities such
as coffee, sisal, diamonds, and petroleum the leading exports.
Some light industry also developed in the major towns. But this
growth was unbalanced, most of the profits being concentrated in
the hands of a small settler class, with the majority of the
population relegated to forced-labour projects or compelled to
sell agricultural goods at artificially low prices to marketing
boards. The resultant inequality of income and opportunity
played a significant role in the development of the nationalist
movements.
There was a large exodus of skilled Portuguese workers at
national independence in 1975, and, because the colonial state
had failed to adequately develop local educational systems and
job opportunities, few Angolans were available to take their
place. The loss of capital and skills had an immediate negative
impact on economic development. In addition, the new government
sought to impose socialist development on a Soviet and Cuban
model that included a high degree of state participation in the
economy, such as collective and state-run agricultural
enterprises. Foreign capital was often nationalized, and
exchange rates were set artificially high.
The economy was further crippled by a postindependence civil
war, which displaced much of the population, ruined physical
plants, and disrupted transportation much more than had the
earlier guerrilla war. The combination of economic
reorganization and warfare caused a virtual economic collapse,
which has scarcely abated since then. In the late 1980s, for
example, defense spending constituted almost half of the total
budget, while the annual rate of inflation exceeded 900 percent
in 1994 and more than 2,500 percent the following year. Food
production reached such low levels that food was either imported
or provided by foreign aid and humanitarian sources, as famine
or near-famine conditions prevailed in much of the country from
the mid-1980s until after the end of the civil war in 2002.
Other agricultural exports such as coffee effectively ceased to
be produced until after the end of the war. Only the petroleum
industry, which was not nationalized or regulated and was
protected from warfare, managed to produce regular income. The
petroleum industry, however, still employs few local people and
invests little in the Angolan economy, with most of the
royalties going to the state. Diamonds also provided a
substantial income, especially to the UNITA forces that
controlled many of the diamond mines during the war.
Although economic reforms beginning in 1988 eliminated many
of the failed socialist experiments, and foreign interests were
allowed to invest capital more freely, the war consistently
discouraged such investment and hampered the rebuilding of basic
infrastructure in most of the country. However, the Angolan
government has focused on reconstruction since the end of the
war in 2002. The overall state of the economy has improved since
then as well, largely owing to the income generated from the
country’s petroleum industry.
Agriculture, forestry, and fishing
Colonial policies favoured the growth of large
Portuguese-owned estates producing export crops and discouraged
production of any but subsistence crops on the small holdings of
the majority of the rural population. Rural people were
subjected to various schemes of forced and contract labour to
provide workers for the estates. Only about 3 percent of the
land area was under cultivation, with less than 1 percent
irrigated. Coffee was of greatest importance, with production
concentrated in the Malanje highlands and along the northwestern
margins of the Bié Plateau near the centre of the country. Prior
to independence, Angola supplied almost one-fifth of world
coffee production, with an annual output of more than 200,000
tons in the early 1970s. Cotton, sisal, and corn (maize) were
also important cash crops, while cassava (manioc), millet,
sorghum, and rice were grown as subsistence crops, and livestock
such as goats, pigs, and chickens were also kept for
subsistence.
Estates were nationalized after independence, and the
creation of state farms followed. The contract-labour system was
replaced by a similar system of forced labour, called voluntary
brigades. The ensuing civil war, however, prevented the
implementation of a state-run estate system, and agricultural
production faltered. Cooperatives replaced marketing boards for
the small holders and proved to be just as inequitable, and the
flight of Portuguese petty traders broke the distribution
system. The transport network deteriorated; insecurity spread
throughout the country; the overvaluation of the currency acted
as an increasingly heavy de facto tax on exports; and the
collapse of manufacturing removed all incentives to sell
agricultural commodities to the towns. As a result, the urban
population came to depend on imported food.
Fertile agricultural land is limited to a few favoured
locations in the highlands and river valleys, and less than
one-tenth of the land area is thought to be arable. The
combination of poor soils and insufficient rainfall over most of
Angola is a severe limitation to crop growing, although the
country does contain both temperate and tropical climates.
However, the country’s agricultural potential remains
underutilized outside the Bié Plateau, the coastal oases, and
the Ovambo floodplain on the Namibian border. Although
pastoralism is inhibited by infestations of tsetse flies, poor
pastures, and the lack of surface water in the Namib zone, the
southwestern quarter of the country has favourable conditions.
The main subsistence crop is cassava. Commercial food crops such
as coffee and sugar are again being grown; the production of
palm oil and tobacco increased in the 1990s; and even cotton
production has increased slightly. The greatest impediment to
agriculture, whether subsistence or commercial, however, is the
number of land mines that were buried throughout the countryside
during years of conflict.
Prior to independence, timber extraction from natural forests
was concentrated in Maiombe in the Cabinda exclave and in Luso
on the eastern stretch of the Benguela Railway. Large eucalyptus
plantations along the western stretches of the Benguela Railway
provided firewood for the steam locomotives and fed the
paper-pulp plant near Benguela. Timber exports ceased at
independence, and available resources came to be used primarily
for fuel. Timber resources remain significant, however, as
nearly one-fifth of the country is forested. The Maiombe forest
in the north of the Cabinda exclave contains the most-valuable
commercial species, notably white tola (Balsamiferum harms) and
limba (Terminalia superba). There are also stands of commercial
timber along the rivers of the southeast, especially mussibi
(Guibourtia coleosperma).
Owing to the beneficial effects of the cold Benguela Current,
Angola has some of the richest fishing grounds in Africa,
especially along the far southern coast. Sticklebacks, sardines,
mackerel, catfish, mullet, and tuna are abundant, as are crabs,
lobsters, and prawns. Before independence, about 700 vessels
were active in fishing, employing some 13,000 people; by the
early 1980s fewer than one-seventh were operational, because
most of the vessels had been owned by Portuguese nationals who
sailed them away at independence in 1975. Namibe was the centre
of this fishing industry, which stretched from Luanda in the
north to the Bay of Tigres in the far south. The great majority
of the catch was processed in modern factories (which either
were destroyed or ceased operating after independence) and
exported to Western markets frozen, canned, or as fish meal,
while a local and African regional market was supplied through
more-traditional fish drying and curing techniques. Foreign
boats overfished the region, and production has declined
precipitously since the 1970s.
Resources and power
Angola’s resources are considerable in comparison with those
of most African countries. There are large reserves of petroleum
and natural gas, concentrated in the maritime zones off the
Cabinda exclave and the Congo River estuary. Production is
largely concentrated off the coast of Cabinda, although there is
some onshore production near Soyo and Luanda, and prospecting
extends as far south as Kuanza Sul. The quality of the crude oil
is generally good, with a low sulfur content.
Petroleum was first discovered in 1955. Angola has become one
of the largest exporters of petroleum in sub-Saharan Africa, and
production has nearly tripled since independence. Because Angola
was not a member of OPEC (Organization of the Petroleum
Exporting Countries) until 2007, for many years the country was
not subject to any restrictive quotas on its exports. Angola has
also benefited from a combination of favourable geologic
conditions, a high rate of exploration success, and relatively
low operating costs. Natural gas has been found both associated
and unassociated with petroleum, but about half of this has been
burned off and the rest injected back into oil wells. A state
company was set up in 1977 to engage in joint ventures and
production-sharing agreements, while management of the oil
business was left largely in foreign hands.
Alluvial diamonds occur widely over the northeastern quarter
of the country, with a high proportion of gem-quality stones,
and there are several kimberlite pipe formations that may be
mined. Before independence, Angola was the fourth largest
diamond exporter in the world in terms of value, but since that
time output has fluctuated. The National Diamond Enterprise of
Angola, a parastatal company, is responsible for approving
diamond concessions, and it also licenses buyers. In 1992–94
most Angolan diamonds on the market were mined and smuggled from
regions controlled by UNITA. The Angolan government gained
control of this area in mid-1994 and tried to halt the
activities of thousands of illegal diamond prospectors. UNITA
retook some diamond regions in the mid- to late 1990s and
controlled them until early 2002, when UNITA’s leader, Jonas
Savimbi, was killed.
There are large reserves of iron ore in the southwestern part
of the country, but they are of low grade. Other
minerals—copper, manganese, gold, phosphates, uranium, feldspar,
and platinum—are known to exist in commercial quantities in
Angola, especially in the area of the escarpment.
Angola’s hydroelectric potential is one of the largest in
Africa. Most electricity comes from dams on the Cuanza, Cunene,
Catumbela, and Dande rivers, at points where they breach the
escarpment to reach the coastal plain. Nonetheless, a large
share of the country’s total generating facilities remained out
of use into the early part of the 21st century because of
attacks by UNITA, although repair, renovation, and new
construction of such facilities began after the civil war ended
in 2002.
Manufacturing
Manufacturing had expanded rapidly prior to independence,
but it was severely disrupted after 1975. Nationalization and
the loss of skilled labour hit the manufacturing sector
especially hard. Industries in Angola produce construction
materials, refined petroleum and equipment for the petroleum
industry, processed food, textiles, and electrical goods. Output
declined severely during the quarter century after independence
because of the continuing threat of warfare, raw material
shortages, and disruptions of power and the transportation
infrastructure. In the 1990s Angola attempted to counteract
these problems by privatizing many businesses and industries and
by introducing a new foreign investment code. The construction
industry saw an increase of activity after the end of the civil
war, as reconstruction was a priority of the government.
Finance
The National Bank of Angola, which issues Angola’s
currency, the kwanza, acts as the central bank. Banks were
nationalized after independence, but in 1985 foreign banks
reentered the country, and in 1995 the government allowed the
formation of private banks. Most savings are held in informal
banking structures outside the cumbersome state system. Foreign
investment is highly concentrated in oil, diamonds, and fishing,
but it is beginning to spread more widely through the economy as
liberalization proceeds and nationalized assets are returned to
the private sector.
Trade
Hydrocarbons account for the largest proportion of exports;
more than half goes to the United States and China, where
low-sulfur crude oil is sought by refineries. The economy is
thus highly vulnerable to shifts in the price of oil. A small
quantity of diamonds are also exported. Imports come mainly from
South Korea, Portugal, and the United States. Angola imports
consumer goods and capital goods and some transport equipment.
It generally has a positive balance of trade.
Services
Although Angola has rural beauty and the economic resources
to develop a thriving tourist industry, the long-term civil war
prevented the development of this sector. Nevertheless, the
country does have a national tourist agency, and some 40,000
tourists entered Angola annually in the late 1990s; in the years
following the end of the civil war, that number increased
dramatically.
Labour and taxation
Several trade unions operate in Angola. Women form the
majority of the rural workforce, and as such they have been
disproportionately affected by the numerous land mines found
throughout the country. Several national women’s organizations
exist, and women are theoretically guaranteed equal rights, but,
in reality, they are still often discriminated against. Many
women, especially rural women, belong to the Organization of
Angolan Women, which was founded in the 1960s and has
established literacy and social programs. National revenue is
derived from taxes on income and on petroleum.
Transportation and telecommunications
Angola achieved independence with an excellent transport
network for an African country so large and thinly populated, in
part because of Portuguese military imperatives after 1961. But
this sector of the infrastructure has suffered more than any
other from the effects of war and the lack of maintenance. A
rehabilitation plan, backed by foreign aid, was launched in the
last decade of the 20th century. Since the end of the civil war
in 2002, other rehabilitation and reconstruction plans have also
been initiated to improve the country’s transportation
infrastructure.
Roads
A grid of roads links the major geographic centres of
economic activity, although only about one-fourth of these roads
are paved. Numerous bridges were destroyed during the civil war,
and travel on the roads generally was possible only in convoys
with armed escorts. In 1997 a state agency responsible for road
construction and maintenance estimated that four-fifths of the
roads and bridges needed repair. Another challenge was the lack
of spare parts available to repair the country’s limited number
of motor vehicles. Both of these issues began to see some
improvement after the war ended, although in the case of road
repair, the progress was slow moving.
Railways
The Benguela Railway is the longest of the country’s
railways, extending from Lobito on the coast to the Congolese
frontier. Owned partly by foreign interests, it once provided
sea access for landlocked Zambia and transported minerals from
the Democratic Republic of the Congo, on which the railway’s
profitability depended; but, after the start of the civil war,
it did not function east of Huambo and often was completely out
of use. The Luanda Railway, which was nationalized in 1918,
depended on coffee and cotton for its traffic. The Namibe
Railway, which has been owned by the state from the outset,
depended on the shipment of iron ore. Both railways have
functioned only episodically since independence, owing to
disruptions from the civil war. Since the end of the war,
sections of all three railways have undergone repairs and some
have reopened for use; construction has also been initiated on
new railway lines.
Ports
Lobito is the finest and best-equipped port in the country,
but it has been underutilized since corn exports from the Bié
Plateau and mineral traffic from the Republic of the Congo
ceased, with traffic reduced to about one-fifth of
preindependence levels. Although Luanda has a good harbour, it
has been poorly managed and by the end of the 20th century
handled less than half the cargo it did before 1975. Following
the end of the civil war in 2002, renovation began on Luanda’s
port facilities. Since the cessation of iron ore shipments,
Namibe’s activity has been based essentially on its role as the
country’s major fishing port. Cabinda is the major port for
loading petroleum shipments; Malongo and Soyo have also grown in
importance with the oil boom, although they have much poorer
natural harbours. The lower Congo River is used by seagoing
vessels up to Nóqui on the Congolese frontier, and small craft
ply the lower Cuanza River for about 140 miles (225 km).
Air travel
Travel by air was the only safe means of transport during
the civil war, and the network of airfields left by the
Portuguese has been intensively used. The national airline
(Linhas Aéreas de Angola; TAAG) travels to Africa, Europe, South
America, and the Caribbean, while air-cargo services are the
main focus of Transafrik International. There is an
international airport in Luanda, and several domestic airports
are located throughout the country.
Telecommunications
Like other parts of the country’s infrastructure, the
telephone system was badly damaged by war. In the late 1990s,
domestic and foreign investment repaired and expanded Angola’s
communications infrastructure. The state monopoly on
telecommunications ended in 2001, the same year a new cellular
communications system became operational in the country. Mobile
cellular phones have existed in Angola since the mid-1990s, and
use has skyrocketed. Broadband Internet service has been
available in Angola since 2003, although access is extremely
limited beyond the city of Luanda.
Government and society
Constitutional framework
Portugal granted independence to Angola on Nov. 11, 1975,
without establishing a new government. The Popular Movement for
the Liberation of Angola (Movimento Popular de Libertação de
Angola; MPLA), led by Agostinho Neto and based in Luanda, took
power, an act that was internationally, though not universally,
recognized. The constitution of 1975 established a one-party
state headed by a president who was also chairman of the MPLA,
which declared itself a Marxist-Leninist vanguard party in 1977.
The positions of prime minister and deputy prime minister were
abolished in 1978, with a prime minister not appointed again
until 1991; a National People’s Assembly was created in 1980.
President Neto died in Moscow in 1979 and was replaced by the
minister of planning, José Eduardo dos Santos. Early in 1990 the
government proposed separating the offices of chairman of the
party and president of state, a division already mandated by the
constitution.
A new constitution, essentially an extensively amended
version of the 1975 document, was promulgated in 1992. Prepared
with the acquiescence of the National Union for the Total
Independence of Angola (União Nacional para a Independência
Total de Angola; UNITA), it provides for a multiparty system.
Under the terms of the constitution, the president, elected for
a five-year term, is the head of state and government. The prime
minister is appointed by the president, as are the members of
the Council of Ministers. Legislative power is vested in the
National Assembly, whose members are elected to four-year terms.
The new constitution abolished the death penalty and emphasized
the rights of the people.
Local government and justice
Angola is divided into 18 provinces, each of which is headed
by a governor appointed by the central government. Provinces are
further divided into councils, communes, circles,
neighbourhoods, and villages.
The judiciary consists of municipal and provincial courts,
with the highest body being the Supreme Court. Operations of
lower courts were disrupted by the civil war, and, in the years
immediately following the end of the war, the majority of
municipal courts were still not functioning.
Political process
The major parties in Angola are the MPLA, UNITA, the
National Front for the Liberation of Angola (Frente Nacional de
a Libertação de Angola; FNLA), the Liberal Democratic Party, and
the Social Renewal Party. The FNLA was one of three groups that
fought for the independence of Angola beginning in the 1960s.
Its leader, Holden Roberto, left Angola after 1975 and did not
return until 1991. Until 1992 the MPLA was the only legal
political party in the country. Multiparty elections in that
year gave seats in the National Assembly to representatives from
12 political parties, including UNITA. In the early 21st
century, women made up about 15 percent of the National
Assembly. They have served as ministers in the Angolan
government, and a woman has also held the office of vice
president of the Supreme Court.
The Organization of Angolan Women came under the control of
the MPLA in the late 1970s but still maintained some degree of
independence. It served as an outlet for female participation in
society, because MPLA membership was overwhelmingly male. The
Popular Movement for the Liberation of Angola–Youth Movement
served as a conduit to party membership in the late 1970s.
Security
Angola’s military, the Armed Forces of Angola (Forças
Armadas de Angolanas; FAA), includes the army, navy, and air
force. The army is by far the largest segment of the FAA, with
the navy and air force maintaining far fewer troops. The FAA was
created by a 1991 agreement between the Angolan government and
UNITA and was to draw equally from existing government forces
(largely the armed branch of MPLA) and those of UNITA; the
agreement has been abrogated and resumed several times since
then. Following the end of the civil war, more than 5,000 UNITA
forces were integrated into the FAA.
Health and welfare
The Portuguese made a major effort to win over African
Angolans after 1961 by expanding health and welfare programs, as
they had done with education. The MPLA government came to power
with even more ambitious schemes, but initial successes were
followed by an almost complete collapse of services, especially
in the rural areas, owing to the long-term civil war. Many
doctors and other medical personnel fled abroad. Those who
stayed were reluctant to work in remote and dangerous parts of
the country, although traditional doctors remained in most parts
of Angola. After the end of the war, the government was faced
with the arduous challenge of rebuilding the health care
infrastructure and attracting health care workers. Medicines and
other medical supplies remain in short supply. Malaria,
diarrheal diseases, and severe malnutrition—sometimes bordering
on starvation—are rife, and cholera epidemics, owing to
unsanitary conditions, frequently occur. Although AIDS is
present in Angola, the country has a lower prevalence rate of
HIV/AIDS than many African countries, which is attributed to the
many years of warfare that kept the Angolan population somewhat
isolated.
Urban housing, social conditions, and the health situation in
Luanda have declined because of the flood of refugees from the
countryside, a situation that did not immediately abate in the
years following the end of the war. Unemployment, inflation,
acute shortages of water, empty shops, and the collapse of
public transport have all contributed to the plight of the poor,
while the political and bureaucratic elite have benefited from a
network of special shops, good housing, and other advantages
financed from the proceeds of the oil economy.
Housing
Settlements called musseques house the urban poor in Luanda
and other large towns. They became crowded with hundreds of
thousands of refugees during the 1980s and ’90s. In the years
immediately following the end of the civil war, conditions in
the musseques remained poor, especially from a health
perspective. Even though residents of musseques made tremendous
efforts to keep their immediate living areas clean, mountains of
garbage could be found beyond personal living areas because of
the sheer amount of refuse generated by the overcrowded housing
conditions and inadequate trash disposal efforts of the
government; such unsanitary conditions contribute to frequent
outbreaks of cholera.
Rural villages tend to be small in size. Housing is generally
kept clean and is often constructed of adobe or brick and roofed
with sheet metal. More-traditional construction techniques are
still known to some, but for the most part, fewer homes are made
with the traditional wattle and daub walls and thatched roofs.
There is virtually no electricity in smaller rural villages, and
most towns only have it intermittently. Running water is also
intermittent or unavailable in many areas.
Education
Portuguese colonial policy did not favour education for the
ordinary African citizens of Angola. Until 1961, when a revised
education program was enacted by the colonial administration,
most education was left to religious institutions—with the Roman
Catholic Church focusing on the Portuguese settlers and a small
number of Africans, while Protestants were most active among the
African population. After independence, the MPLA’s policy of
primary education for all tripled primary school enrollment
between 1976 and 1979, although this declined by half during the
1980s. Owing to the many years of civil war, conditions in
schools declined dramatically, with an acute shortage of
teachers and a lack of even the most basic teaching materials.
However, enrollment in secondary schools and in Agostinho Neto
University (1963) expanded continuously after 1975. These
institutions suffered less than primary schools from political
insecurity and conflict. But there was also a severe lack of
teachers and teaching materials at these schools, and most
faculties in the university were closed for long periods because
of alleged political agitation. During this time, it is
estimated that recruitment into the armed forces of the MPLA and
UNITA had a greater impact than Angola’s school system on the
spread of literacy, the increased use of Portuguese, and the
acquisition of technical skills. Many Angolans trained abroad,
especially in Cuba and the Soviet Union.
Angola’s government continues to provide free education,
which is compulsory for eight years. Primary education,
beginning at age seven, continues for four years. Secondary
education comprises two cycles; beginning at age 11, students
complete a four-year cycle, which can then be followed by a
three-year cycle. In addition to Agostinho Neto University,
higher education in Angola is provided by such institutions as
the Catholic University of Angola (1997) and Jean Piaget
University of Angola (1998).
Almost three decades of civil war have taken a toll on
Angola’s educational system. In the early 21st century, some
four-fifths of all schools in the country were thought to be
deserted or destroyed, and the vast majority of Angolan children
were not able to attend classes. Since the end of the conflict
in 2002, an effort has been made to construct more schools and
increase the training and number of teachers in the country.
Angola’s literacy rate is lower than that of most
neighbouring countries, despite dramatic improvement during the
last quarter of the 20th century. At independence, less than
one-fifth of the adult population was literate, but by 1990 the
rate had more than doubled. In the early 21st century, about
three-fifths of the population was literate.
Cultural life
Cultural milieu
Precolonial culture in Angola was broadly similar from one
end of the country to another, albeit with local variations and
some differences stemming from the many, though mostly related,
languages spoken in the area. A common traditional culture is
still noticeable in Angola.
Portuguese contact beginning in the late 15th century
produced an overlay of European culture that was accepted to
varying degrees in much of the northwestern part of the country.
The Portuguese settled at Luanda in 1575 and established the
core of colonial Angola in the area approximately 90 miles (150
km) inland from Luanda. By the mid-17th century a mixture of
Mbundu and Portuguese culture had emerged in the region, and in
18th-century Luanda, Kimbundu (the language of the Mbundu)
predominated as the language of the elite; even Portuguese of
considerable stature who resided locally spoke Kimbundu, often
in preference to Portuguese. In the 19th century the Luanda
elite embraced both Kimbundu and Portuguese culture and language
and valued their blended nature, and the eventual cessation of
Kimbundu as the language of the elite did not occur until after
1910. In contrast, a class of mixed origin (including government
officials, the assimilated African and mulatto population, and,
later, the settlers that moved to the country after 1945) that
was strongly Portuguese in language and cultural expression
developed after 1850 with the Portuguese conquest of the rest of
Angola and with the programs of assimilation that were begun in
1910 and intensified after 1926. This predominantly Portuguese
culture coexisted with a less-assimilated rural population that
harkened back to the mixed culture of earlier times (especially
in the Kongo areas) or to the traditional cultures (in those
regions brought under Portuguese control after 1850). Protestant
missionaries introduced North American and British influences;
they were anxious to promote significant cultural
change—including the introduction of many Western norms under
the guise of modernization—as well as religious conversion,
although they preferred to teach in indigenous languages.
After independence the propaganda of the emerging nationalist
movements placed a greater value on the purely African culture,
but, because of the colonial policy of assimilation, most
educated Angolans were more Portuguese than African in their
general cultural orientation. This created considerable cultural
conflict and had political implications as well, because those
who were assimilated were generally the educational and
political leaders. Although rigorous censorship ceased in the
1990s, both the cultural ambiguity of many in the government and
the desire to discourage the “tribalism” that endured initially
made Angola, in spite of official positions, less supportive of
cultural expressions that were not Portuguese based. However,
this began to change in the first decade of the 21st century, as
the government appeared to be somewhat more accommodating.
Daily life
The mixture of Portuguese and African culture has made urban
Angola, especially the Luanda region, more like a Latin American
than an African country. Its nightclubs, restaurants, and annual
Carnival might seem at home in Brazil had not war and security
measures made this sort of social life difficult. Nevertheless,
the country has much to celebrate in its cuisine, festivals, and
artistic traditions.
As in much of sub-Saharan Africa, palm oil is an
indispensable part of many Angolan dishes, and a number of
dishes emphasize the Angolan population’s love of seafood. The
feast of Nganja, usually celebrated in April, is a harvest
festival during which children roast corn. The Futungo market,
near Luanda, provides craftsmen with a place to sell their
handicrafts.
The arts
Wood, clay, copper, reeds, ivory, shells, and the human
body are the main media for Angolan decorative arts. The wooden
sculptures of the Chokwe people, the carved ivories of Cabinda,
and the elaborate hairstyles of the Nyaneka and Nkhumbi peoples
are especially famous. A number of modern artists and graphic
designers work with both African and Western motifs in the
general realm of modern African art. Music and dancing play a
central role in cultural life, with the drum as the basic
instrument; there is also a rich oral literature. Since
independence various government research agencies have tried to
collect ethnographic material and to do archaeological studies,
but their work has been sporadic and limited by the war.
Western influences, which tend to predominate in the towns,
have increasingly overshadowed traditional culture. During the
19th century, a dynamic group of educated Africans emerged in
Angolan towns. These individuals wrote newspaper articles,
histories, novels, and poems in Portuguese and also explored
Mbundu folklore and ethnography. The right-wing dictatorship in
Portugal drove much of this literary activity underground after
1926 but failed to destroy it altogether. Although the leader of
the MPLA at independence, Agostinho Neto, was renowned
throughout the Portuguese-speaking world for his poetry, his
government too curtailed artistic freedom, implementing a
rigorous system of censorship. Additional artistic outlets
emerged by the mid-1990s with the rise of a national television
service and the beginnings of a national film industry.
Angola has many traditional instruments, including the ngoma,
a bongo drum, and the mpwita, a drum originally found in Kongo.
Also noteworthy are the mpungu, a trumpet, and the Luandan
hungu, equivalent to the mbulumbumba of southwestern Angola,
both types of gourd-resonated musical bow. These stringed
instruments traveled with slaves to Brazil, where they developed
into the berimbau.
Contemporary music in Angola combines the African influences
in the music of the Caribbean, the United States, and the
Democratic Republic of the Congo with the Latin influences of
Cuba and Brazil. Angola’s poverty and civil unrest have provided
few opportunities for professional musicians, especially because
the Ministry of Culture has exerted much control over commercial
music production since independence; despite this, musical
expression has flourished in informal sectors.
Cultural institutions
An ambitious program to expand museums, libraries, and
archives, initiated in the postindependence era, has borne
little fruit. A National Institute for Cultural Heritage does
exist in Luanda, but material from other local museums was
either looted or removed to Luanda during the course of the war.
The National Historical Archive, also in Luanda, houses material
dating to the 17th century. The Kongo Kingdom Museum in M’banza
Congo is home to many cultural artifacts. Many other fine
collections built up in colonial times were destroyed,
dispersed, or made unavailable to the public. Following the end
of the civil war in 2002, the government and private
organizations began the process of renovating or rebuilding
cultural institutions damaged in the war.
Sports and recreation
Sports are largely dominated by football (soccer), which is
a national passion and is played by people of every social
stratum. Some Angolans have become players of distinction, but
they tend to compete professionally in Portugal or elsewhere in
Europe, where there are more opportunities. In 2006 Angola was
one of four sub-Saharan African countries that participated in
the World Cup finals. Basketball is growing in popularity in
Angola, especially owing to the influence of foreign armed
forces fighting on Angolan soil. The sport is played by people
of all ages and both sexes, and, because of government support,
the men’s national team has done well at African championships
and participated in the 2004 Olympics in Athens.
Media and publishing
The press was nationalized in 1976; several newspapers and
periodicals are published, mainly in Luanda. The state-run radio
station broadcasts in Portuguese, English, French, Spanish,
Chokwe, Kikongo, Kimbundu, and Umbundu, as well as a few other
African languages. The television station, founded in 1975, is
also state-controlled. Although the constitution provides for
freedom of the press, it is not always enforced, and some
journalists have practiced self-censorship.
History
This discussion mainly focuses on Angola since the late
15th century. For a treatment of earlier periods and of the
country in its regional context, see Southern Africa.
Early Angola
Most of the modern population of Angola developed from the
agricultural cultures that appeared there from about 1000 to 500
bc, which by the first centuries ad were also working iron.
These people probably spoke the ancestral versions of Angola’s
present languages. Complex societies also may have been
established at that time, and by 1500 several large kingdoms
occupied the territory of Angola. Of these, Kongo, situated in
the northern part of the country, south of the Congo River, was
the largest and most centralized. Ndongo, with its centre in the
highlands between the Cuanza (Kwanza) and the Lukala rivers, was
an important rival. Other states, such as the kingdom of
Benguela on the Bié Plateau, are less well known. Smaller
states, including Bailundu, Ciyaka, and Kwanhama, were scattered
between the larger kingdoms, sometimes remaining independent,
sometimes falling under control of the larger kingdoms. The
Chokwe, although they did not have a centralized government,
established an important cultural centre in the northeastern
part of the country.
The Kongo kingdom and the coming of the Portuguese
The Kongo kingdom, the most powerful state to develop in the
region, emerged in the 14th century as the Kongo people moved
southward from the Congo River region into northern Angola.
There they established Mbanza Kongo as their capital. Portuguese
navigators reached Kongo, in the northwest, in 1483 and entered
into diplomatic relations with the kingdom after that. Moreover,
Kongo’s king converted to Christianity, and his son Mvemba a
Nzinga took the Christian name of Afonso I, establishing the
religion permanently in the country, along with literacy in
Portuguese and European customs. Disputes over control of trade,
particularly regarding slaves from Kongo and its neighbours, led
the Portuguese to look for new allies, especially the Ndongo
kingdom. After undertaking several missions there, the
Portuguese established a colony at Luanda in 1575. Subsequent
wars with Ndongo, particularly after 1617, brought the
Portuguese significantly more territory, despite the resistance
of Queen Njinga Mbande of Ndongo and Matamba. Portuguese
expansion was largely over by 1670, and further conflict
involved attempts to redirect or tax trade.
Slaves were Angola’s major export, and Portugal was actively
involved in their acquisition, more so from the late 17th
century. People were also enslaved through inter-African
conflicts, such as the civil wars in Kongo after 1665, and
conflicts that occurred during the rise of the great Lunda
empire after 1750, in the Dembos region between Kongo and
Matamba, and on the Bié Plateau. Population losses were
considerable, and the demography was badly distorted; censuses
from the late 18th century show that there were twice as many
adult females as males.
The expansion of the slave trade was but one of several
factors that played a role in the rise and fall of the region’s
kingdoms. Beset by civil wars, Kongo entered into a steep
decline in the 17th century. The Loango kingdom flourished north
of the Congo estuary until it was decentralized by the late 18th
century. The Ndongo kingdom in the Malanje highlands reached its
height in the late 16th century but was destroyed when the
Portuguese pushed inland in the 17th century and was replaced by
the Kasanje kingdom in the Cuango (Kwango) River valley.
Colonial transition, 1820s–1910
In the 18th and 19th centuries, the port of Cabinda was a
major entrepôt, where slaves were an important commodity. The
export of slaves was banned in Angola in 1836, but the trade did
not end until the Brazilian market was closed in the early
1850s. Slavery itself was legally abolished in the Portuguese
empire in 1875, but it continued in thinly disguised forms until
1911 and in many cases into the 1960s. Slaves were exported to
the coffee and cocoa plantations of São Tomé from the 1860s and
were used in Angola to produce coffee, cotton, sugar, and fish.
But from the 1850s, exports came to be dominated by products
hunted or collected by Africans, first ivory and wax and later
wild rubber. These changes came about as the industrial
revolution reorganized the world economy, and items such as
cloth and metal goods were now available for import and at less
expense than in the past. Africans responded to this by ceasing
local production of these goods and instead paying for the
imported versions with commodity exports of peanuts and wild
products such as honey, animal skins, ivory, and eventually
rubber.
The slave trade had primarily been a state business and did
not greatly affect the local communities from an economic
standpoint. In contrast, this new trade involved the whole
population: hundreds of thousands of people were employed in the
transport and production of these commodities, and their
increasing wealth, involvement in the international economy, and
interest in commercial policies led to many problems for both
indigenous and colonial governments. The Ovimbundu turned from
slave raiding to long-distance trade, and their caravans
penetrated as far east as the East African coast. The Chokwe
were expert hunters of elephants and collectors of wax and
rubber, and they used their accumulated firearms to overthrow
the Lunda empire in the 1880s. The Kasanje kingdom collapsed
when illicit slave trading undermined the king’s central slave
market and newly enriched commoners demanded a stronger voice in
government.
Angolans closer to the coast were more affected by the slow
expansion of Portuguese colonialism and by the loss of land to
settlers. Cotton and sugar were grown from the 1840s on oasis
plantations along the coastal strip, and immigrants from the
Algarve built up the fishing industry. Spontaneously occurring
stands of coffee led the Portuguese to carve out plantations in
the Malanje highlands beginning in the 1830s, and work on the
railway from Luanda to Malanje commenced in 1885. Construction
began in 1902 on the Benguela Railway, which was intended to
serve the Katanga mines in the Belgian Congo (now the Democratic
Republic of the Congo). Portuguese small farmers were settled in
the Huíla highlands from the 1880s to counterbalance an influx
of Boer trekkers from South Africa, and the southern railway was
begun in 1905. In the Maiombe forest of the far north,
plantations of cacao and oil palms were laid out in the 1900s.
Angola’s borders, including those for Cabinda (an exclave
located in the country of the Democratic Republic of the Congo),
had been finally determined by negotiations in Europe in 1891,
but the Portuguese focused exclusively on administering areas
with plantations and railways and introduced systematic taxation
of Africans only in 1906. Many positions in the colonial
administration were held by Angolan Creoles, who were initially
accepted as full Portuguese citizens. The spread of British and
American Protestant missions from the 1870s was countered by
government-subsidized French Roman Catholic missions.
From colonial conquest to independence, 1910–75
The proclamation of the Republic of Portugal in Lisbon in
late 1910, followed in 1926 by the creation of the authoritarian
New State (Estado Novo), marked the advent of modern Portuguese
colonialism. The authorities stamped out slavery and undertook
the systematic conquest of Angola. By 1920 all but the remote
southeast of the colony was firmly under Portuguese control.
Kingdoms were abolished, and the Portuguese worked directly
through chiefs, headmen, and African policemen. Conversions to
Christianity increased, and by 1940 there were about a million
Christians in Angola, some three-fourths of them Roman
Catholics. Angolan “natives” were taxed and subjected to forced
labour and forced cultivation, with a stringent set of tests
imposed on the few nonwhite “assimilated persons” who applied to
be exempted from these impositions. Increasingly, Portuguese
immigrants replaced Creoles in the administration. This trend
continued, forcing Creoles into positions with lower pay and
prestige and ultimately leading to the growth of Creole-led
nationalism.
Angola’s economy was modernized and bound to that of Portugal
by a system of protective tariffs. A network of dirt roads was
built, and the Benguela Railway was completed to the boundary of
the Belgian Congo in 1928. Lorries (trucks) and fixed stores
replaced trading caravans. Coffee, sugar, palm products, and
sisal came mainly from the estate sector, and corn (maize) and
cattle from smallholders. The cultivation of cotton for
Portuguese textile mills was imposed by force. Alluvial diamond
mining dominated the northeast from 1912; the fishing industry
expanded; and import-substitution industries were started.
After the independence of the Belgian Congo in 1960, a major
revolt rocked northern Angola in 1961; it was followed by a long
guerrilla war. Land alienation and forced labour sparked
rebellion in the coffee zone, while in the Cuango valley the
peasants rose against forced cotton cultivation. An attack on
the prison in Luanda was led by frustrated Creoles. To contain
the revolt, the Portuguese deployed large numbers of troops, set
up strategic hamlets (forced settlements of rural Angolans),
and, by encouraging Portuguese peasants to immigrate to Angola,
raised the European population to about 330,000 by 1974. At the
same time, they tried to improve relations with Africans by
abolishing forced cultivation, forced labour, and the stringent
tests to gain assimilated status. They also improved education,
health, and social welfare services and protected peasants from
land alienation. The economy entered into a period of sustained
boom, marked by rapid industrialization and the growth of oil
production, and the standard of living rose for both urban
workers and rural producers.
The armed struggle continued, but the anticolonial guerrillas
were seriously weakened by dissension. The Popular Movement for
the Liberation of Angola (Movimento Popular de Libertação de
Angola; MPLA) was founded in 1956 with the help of the
clandestine Portuguese Communist Party, and from 1962 it was led
by Agostinho Neto. It was popular in Luanda and among some rural
Mbundu, drawing foreign support from the Soviet Union. Initially
based in the Republic of the Congo, the MPLA moved to Zambia in
1965. The National Front for the Liberation of Angola (Frente
Nacional de Libertação de Angola; FNLA), founded in 1957 under
another name and led by Holden Roberto, drew its support from
the Kongo and some rural Mbundu. Based in Congo (now the
Democratic Republic of the Congo; called Zaire from 1971 to
1997), the FNLA obtained aid from the United States and China.
In 1966 Jonas Savimbi set up a third movement, the National
Union for the Total Independence of Angola (União Nacional para
a Independência Total de Angola; UNITA), with a predominantly
Ovimbundu leadership and with some support from the Chokwe and
Ovambo (Ambo). UNITA enjoyed little official foreign backing
(although China provided some aid) and lacked a secure foreign
base because Zambia leaned toward the MPLA. The divisions
between and within these three movements, which at times
degenerated into armed conflict, allowed the Portuguese to gain
the upper hand by the early 1970s. When a military coup in
Portugal overthrew that country’s dictatorship in April 1974,
all three guerrilla movements had been almost entirely expelled
from Angolan soil.
Independence and civil war
The three liberation movements proved unable to constitute a
united front after the Portuguese coup. The FNLA’s internal
support had dwindled to a few Kongo groups, but it had strong
links with the regime in Zaire and was well armed; it thus made
a bid to seize Luanda by force. The MPLA, with growing backing
from the Portuguese Communist Party, Cuba, and the Soviet Union,
defeated this onslaught and then turned on UNITA, chasing its
representatives out of Luanda. UNITA was militarily the weakest
movement, but it had the greatest potential electoral support,
given the predominance of the Ovimbundu within the population,
and it thus held out most strongly for elections. But the
Portuguese army was tired of war and refused to impose peace and
supervise elections. The Portuguese therefore withdrew from
Angola in November 1975 without formally handing power to any
movement, and nearly all the European settlers fled the country.
The MPLA, in control of the capital city, declared itself the
government of independent Angola and managed to win recognition
from many African countries. UNITA and the FNLA set up a rival
government in Huambo and called on South African forces to eject
the MPLA from Luanda. Cuba poured in troops to defend the MPLA,
pushed the internationally isolated South Africans out of
Angola, and gained control of all the provincial capitals. The
Cuban expeditionary force, which eventually numbered some 40,000
to 50,000 soldiers, remained in Angola to pacify the country and
ward off South African attacks. In 1977 the MPLA crushed an
attempted coup by one of its leaders and, after a thorough
purge, turned itself officially into a Marxist-Leninist party,
adding Partido Trabalhista (Party of Labour) to their name
(MPLA-PT). The transformation of the economy along communist
lines was pursued, with disastrous results. The major exception
was the oil industry, which, managed by foreign companies, grew
rapidly enough to enable Angola to stave off economic and
military collapse. President Neto died in 1979 and was succeeded
by the former minister of planning, José Eduardo dos Santos.
The FNLA withered away in exile, but UNITA reorganized itself
with foreign backing as an effective guerrilla force. South
Africa became a strong supporter in hopes that UNITA could
counter the guerrilla campaigns of the South West Africa
People’s Organization into Namibia, actions supported by the
MPLA-PT. In 1985 UNITA began receiving military aid from the
United States, and its campaigns became more effective. When the
MPLA-PT launched several large campaigns against UNITA in 1987,
using armour and aircraft, South African forces returned to the
region, and a military stalemate resulted as fighting engulfed
the country. But late in 1988 the South Africans promised to
grant independence to Namibia and to cease supporting UNITA,
while the Cubans agreed to withdraw their expeditionary force
from Angola by mid-1991. The MPLA-PT’s initial response to the
South African withdrawal was to try to capture the airfield at
Mavinga, from which it would be able to launch an attack against
UNITA’s headquarters. The failure of this costly campaign and
the increasingly effective UNITA attacks on oil installations
forced the MPLA-PT to adopt a more conciliatory posture. In June
1989 a historic meeting between Santos and Savimbi during
negotiations brokered by Zaire produced a cease-fire, although
it did not last; but with communist regimes collapsing in
eastern Europe, the MPLA-PT lost its support and began
negotiating more seriously. In mid-1990 the MPLA-PT abandoned
the one-party state and produced a new constitution that
included elections and participation by all, including UNITA.
They also abandoned their strict Marxist-Leninist stance and
dropped the words Partido Trabalhista (PT) from their name.
Elections were held in 1992 under United Nations supervision;
Dos Santos was elected president, and the MPLA gained a majority
in the parliament, but UNITA made a strong showing, especially
on the Bié Plateau. Charging election fraud, UNITA renewed the
civil war, while its delegates in Luanda were massacred in a
popular uprising that many believe had government backing.
The exclave of Cabinda became another focus of attention for
postindependence government. Although this region is situated
geographically within the country of the Democratic Republic of
the Congo, Portugal gained control of it at the end of the 19th
century. Cabinda was specifically made a part of Angola in 1975,
but the Angolan government had to contend with independence
movements there until the late 1980s. The region is particularly
valuable because a significant amount of Angola’s oil is found
there.
At the end of 1992, UNITA controlled approximately two-thirds
of the country, including valuable diamond mines that were used
to pay for the continuing costs of the war. Fighting raged
throughout 1993 as the government gradually regained territory
and won greater support abroad; both South Africa and the United
States recognized the government of Angola in 1993, as did the
United Kingdom by ending an arms embargo that had existed since
1975. Meanwhile, international pressure mounted on the two sides
to reach a peaceful solution. Sanctions against UNITA were
imposed by the UN in September 1993 after it disregarded a
cease-fire it had accepted earlier, but it appeared that UNITA
could continue the war for some time with its vast stockpile of
weapons. Eventually, an agreement called the Lusaka Accord was
signed by the government and UNITA on Nov. 20, 1994. The
agreement allowed UNITA to be reintegrated into the government,
provided fighting ceased on that date. Although minor fighting
between the two groups continued, dos Santos and Savimbi met
several times over the next three years to resolve issues
relating to the final form of the combined government. In August
1996 Savimbi finally agreed to accept the title of “leader of
the opposition,” but he declined to attend a ceremony in April
1997 at which UNITA delegates formally joined the government.
Relations between the two groups were further complicated that
year by the civil war in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
UNITA supported the crumbling Zairean regime because the group
had been able to transport its diamonds through the country,
while the Angolan government supported the victorious rebels led
by Laurent Kabila.
Angola in the 21st century
By the beginning of the 21st century, hostilities between
the government and UNITA had resumed, and the UNITA delegates
had been expelled from the government. With the killing of
Savimbi by government forces in February 2002, talks began again
between the UNITA leadership and the government, finally
culminating in a peace agreement in April. Although the country
breathed a collective sigh of relief with the end of 27 years of
civil war, the Angolan government was faced with the daunting
challenge of rebuilding the country’s physical and social
welfare infrastructure, much of which was completely destroyed.
In the early 21st century, there were repeated outbreaks of
illness, such as cholera, due to poor sanitary conditions; there
was also an epidemic of hemorrhagic fever caused by the deadly
Marburg virus in 2005. It was estimated that the civil war had
displaced more than four million people, and hundreds of
thousands of Angolan refugees still needed to be resettled in
the country. The resumption of agricultural production was also
a challenge, further complicated by the thousands of land mines
that were strewn haphazardly throughout the country during the
conflict. The Angolan government also had to address the
long-standing issue of separatist groups in oil-rich Cabinda and
their demands for independence, which intensified in 2004. When
the government and the main separatist group reached a peace
agreement in 2006, Angolans looked to the future, hopeful that
peace had finally come.
William Gervase Clarence-Smith
John Kelly Thornton