Human Rights Watch (Washington, DC)

Angola: Doubts Over Free And Fair Elections

13 August 2008


press release

Intimidation of opposition parties and the media ahead of parliamentary elections in Angola, as well as interference in the electoral commission, threaten prospects for a free and fair vote in September, Human Rights Watch said today.

"The conditions for free and fair elections start long before election day," said Georgette Gagnon, Africa director at Human Rights Watch. "But less than a month before elections, it's clear Angolans aren't able to campaign free from intimidation or pressure. And unless things change now, Angolans won't be able to cast their votes freely."

Angolans will vote for a new National Assembly on September 5, 2008, in the first elections held since 1992, when the country held simultaneous parliamentary and presidential polls. Civil war between the government and the former rebel movement UNITA (National Union for the Total Independence of Angola) ended in 2002, but elections have been repeatedly delayed. The ruling Popular Liberation Movement of Angola (MPLA) has been in power since 1975. Presidential elections are due in 2009.

Between March and June 2008, Human Rights Watch conducted research missions to Luanda and the provinces of Huambo, Bie, Cabinda and Benguela and found that the Angolan government is failing to fully ensure the right to free elections, and other rights critical to a fair poll, including the freedoms of expression and of assembly. These rights are enshrined in the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights ratified by Angola.

Human Rights Watch said the government is failing to fully meet basic duties set out in the Principles and Guidelines Governing Democratic Elections of the Southern Africa Development Community (SADC), of which Angola is a member. Major areas of concern include the government's obligations to safeguard freedom of assembly and expression and access to the media by all stakeholders, and to establish an impartial national electoral body. The government has also failed to provide adequate security to political parties participating in elections and to ensure political tolerance and full participation of citizens.

"Angolans need to see improvements now if September's poll is to have a chance of meeting the basic requirements of a free election," Gagnon said.

Political intimidation and violence

In spite of President Eduardo dos Santos's public statements that the elections would take place in an environment free of violence, Human Rights Watch documented numerous incidents of political violence involving ruling party supporters through the voter registration period between November 2006 and May 2008. Political violence has occurred mainly in rural areas that were most affected by the civil war. Patterns of violence include sporadic assaults by local MPLA supporters, sometimes involving traditional authorities and local MPLA leaders, against local UNITA party members and their property and party symbols.

Victims and local civil society organizations told Human Rights Watch that law enforcement agencies have failed to take action against MPLA supporters for such violent acts. The lack of accountability has eroded Angolans' trust in the police - despite efforts of some provincial commanders to improve professional performance - and reinforces the perception of local ruling party supporters to have the police on their side.

For example, an eyewitness told Human Rights Watch that on March 2, a group of local MPLA activists beat members of a municipal UNITA delegation with stones and sticks when they arrived at Kafindua village (Chindumbo commune, Balombo municipality, Benguela) to raise a party flag:

"The police arrived and took four aggressors and three injured victims with them for interrogation, but afterwards released all of them. The aggressors came back to the village claiming victory and saying: 'The police are ours.'"

Police officials told Human Rights Watch that they were unable to identify those responsible for the attack because it was a riot with many people involved.

In Huambo, Bie and Benguela, traditional leaders have increasingly come under pressure from the MPLA to prevent UNITA developing party activities in villages, according to credible reports given to Human Rights Watch. For example, Human Rights Watch found that on May 30, a group of 30 MPLA supporters beat the traditional leader Pedro Pomba in the village of Bongue Kandala (Kapupa commune, Cubal municipality, Benguela), together with five UNITA members, on the grounds that he allowed a UNITA flag to fly in the village two days before.

A member of the Catholic Church's Justice and Peace Commission, which has been documenting political violence for several years, told Human Rights Watch in March:

"Traditional authorities have to do now what the MPLA says. Not all do this willingly, but he who resists 'loses his bread'."

Human Rights Watch also received credible reports that local MPLA supporters are intimidating civil society groups monitoring cases of political violence. Another member of the Justice and Peace Commission said:

"If we say the truth, we are accused of being on the side of UNITA."

Human Rights Watch said the authorities' failure to investigate and prosecute ruling party supporters sends the wrong message, because the government should ensure all such allegations are investigated and perpetrators prosecuted regardless of political affiliation.

Government repression in the Province of Cabinda

Human Rights Watch found that despite a peace agreement in 2006 in Cabinda between the Angolan government and a faction of the separatist guerilla group, the Liberation Front of the Enclave of Cabinda (Frente para a Libertação do Enclave de Cabinda, FLEC), a low-intensity, but still violent, separatist conflict and heightened military presence continues in the province. Government intimidation of dissident voices, military detention and other restrictions on freedom of expression and assembly significantly undermine the prospects for free and fair elections there.

Since late 2007, the military have continued to detain civilians for alleged "crimes against the security of the state" for extended periods without bringing them before an independent judicial body to review their detention. For example, the former Voice of America correspondent Fernando Lelo has been detained since November 15, 2007. His trial before the Military Court took place from May-June 2008, and he is awaiting a verdict. His lawyers say no evidence was produced at trial to sustain the accusations against him and six members of the Angolan Armed Forces of being involved in acts of insurgency.

In 1992, many voters in Cabinda abstained during the elections. In January 2008, thousands of residents of Cabinda signed a manifesto calling for dialogue on a political solution for self-determination, in an effort to launch a public debate before the elections. No such discussion had occurred, and there is little space for expressing such opinions.

Human Rights Watch found that authorities are targeting opposition parties proposing autonomy for Cabinda. In August 2007, Mateus Massinga, the provincial secretary of the opposition Frente para a Democracia (Front for Democracy), was sentenced to five months in prison, suspended for two years, for "insubordination and incitement of violence" after attempting to distribute a news release supporting autonomy.

Human Rights Watch also found evidence that police and state security services regularly intimidate and harass journalists and individuals and groups from civil society who have publicly questioned the credibility of the peace agreement.

"The government should allow voters and opposition parties in Cabinda to express their opinions freely if they are to have confidence in the electoral process," Gagnon said.

Government suppression of the media

Human Rights Watch found clear indications that the media environment in Angola, already restricted, has deteriorated since 2007. In May 2008, the state television broadcaster suspended and took disciplinary action against the presenter Ernesto Bartolomeu for supposed breach of professional confidences. Bartolomeu's "offense" was to admit publicly the degree of MPLA interference in the network's editorial policy.

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