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"Despite the terrorist attack, Cabinda will remain a hosting city," Angolan President Jose Eduardo dos Santos said in a speech at the opening ceremony before the Mali-Angola match. "There is no need to be afraid." Mingas, who calls himself FLEC's leader, said Monday his group was behind the attack. But another FLEC official in Cabinda has denied responsibility. In a telephone interview with the AP on Sunday, Tiburcio Tati Tchingobo said his group had no objection to the tournament, even with play in Cabinda. "The tournament can go on, but we are worried about security. We don't have any problem with our fellow African brothers," said Tchingobo, minister of defense in the self-declared Federal State of Cabinda, when reached on a satellite phone number. Portugal's state-run Lusa news agency said FLEC claimed responsibility in a message on Friday. The conflicting reports could stem from divisions among Cabinda's pro-independence groups. Several claim the name FLEC. Cabinda's armed groups have been weakened by the factional fighting. But periodic announcements from the Angolan government that the Cabinda uprising has been quelled
-- either by force or negotiations -- have been followed by new outbreaks of violence. The Angolan government has denied charges from international human rights groups its military has committed atrocities in Cabinda. In Sunday's exclusive interview, Tchingobo said he feared the attack on the Togolese team would spark a crackdown by Angolan forces in Cabinda after the tournament ends. Angola has been struggling to climb back from decades of violence, and its government was banking on the tournament as a chance to show the world it was on the way to recovery. Cabinda's unrest is unrelated to -- and often overshadowed by -- a broader civil war that lasted nearly three decades and ended in 2002.
[Associated
Press;
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