I'm a scapegoat: Angola's Isabel dos Santos decries
corruption 'witch hunt'
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[January 10, 2020] By
Noah Browning and Dmitry Zhdannikov
LONDON (Reuters) - Angolan billionaire and
former first daughter Isabel Dos Santos decried a New Year's Eve court
order to freeze her vast assets as a "witch hunt" engineered to weaken
her father's influence and distract from economic failures.
Dos Santos, named Africa's richest woman by Forbes with a fortune
estimated at over $2 billion, is a highly divisive figure in Angola,
where she is nicknamed "the Princess". Supporters see an inspirational
entrepreneur while detractors say she embodies the kind of nepotism and
corruption that has hamstrung the continent.
Since President Joao Lourenco succeeded dos Santos's father José Eduardo
in 2017, after a nearly four-decade grip on power, he has cracked down
on the role of his predecessor's children in state enterprises. He fired
dos Santos from her job chairing oil firm Sonangol and her brother from
the sovereign wealth fund.
In the latest step of what Angolan authorities say is one of Africa's
most successful anti-corruption drives, dos Santos's assets were frozen
on Dec. 31, threatening to turn a titan of African business into a
pariah.
In an interview with Reuters, the 46-year-old rejected the corruption
allegations leveled at her.
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"This is a political trial, you have a persecuting state and servile and
partisan magistrates. Then you have a woman who has been chosen to set
an example as a scapegoat. That's me." Dos Santos told Reuters in an
interview in London.
"In an attempt to mask and distract people from the real economic
challenges, (Lourenco) is praising this very selective witch hunt that
he is portraying as a fight against corruption."
The Angolan government and the state prosecutor's office did not
immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.
Court documents allege dos Santos and her husband steered payments of
more than $1 billion from Sonangol and official diamond trading group
Sodiam to companies in which they held stakes.
Dos Santos said she and her colleagues were not contacted about any
investigation or asked to provide any defense, and she learned of the
court action via journalists over WhatsApp.
Prosecutors pushed the case forward based on "lies, false testimony and
also false documents", she said.
PRIVATISING SONANGOL?
Angola's government is considering privatising key state firms including
Sonangol, which has struggled with output declines as power blackouts
have repeatedly hit the capital.
But Dos Santos said Lourenco "might have no choice" but to privatize
Sonangol due to its poor performance.
She also said efforts to split a joint stake she shared with Sonangol in
a Portuguese oil company, Galp Energia <GALP.LS>, had been scuppered by
the asset freeze.
Sonangol did not respond to a request for comment.
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Isabel Dos Santos, daughter of Angola’s former President and
Africa's richest woman, sits for a portrait during a Reuters
interview in London, Britain, January 9, 2020. REUTERS/Toby Melville
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Buoyed by high oil prices in the last decade, Angolan businesses bought up
sizeable assets in former colonial master Portugal, with dos Santos acquiring
stakes in Portuguese firms, including Eurobic bank, telecoms company NOS <NOS.LS>
and engineering company Efacec.
The Bank of Portugal told Reuters it was evaluating dos Santos' suitability as a
shareholder of Portuguese banks, but she said she did not fear for her financial
interests abroad because, unlike Angola, they have "a state of law".
RICHEST, POOREST
Dos Santos says her mission is to encourage entrepreneurship and galvanize the
private sector to drive growth in Angola, Africa's second-biggest oil exporter,
a major diamond producer and sub-Saharan Africa's third-largest economy.
But her critics say her vast fortune amassed by the businesswoman and her family
is offensive in one of the world's poorest countries, where the World Bank has
estimated two-thirds of the population live on less than $2 a day.
Her jet-setting across the international lecture circuit, which she advertises
to her large Instagram following, rankles with many of her detractors.
While she declined to elaborate on her personal wealth, Dos Santos said
investments in her Angolan companies run into the billions of dollars, ranging
from telecoms firm Unitel to Banco de Fomento Angola, a new brewery and bottling
plant, a TV satellite operator and stores.
The asset freeze endangered tens of thousands of employees in her firms, she
said, and threatened to lock billions of dollars in private and commercial bank
accounts underpinning mortgages and imports of basic foodstuffs.
Dos Santos said the moves by Angolan authorities against her were an attempt to
erase her father's influence within the ruling MPLA party, as internal elections
loom in 2021 for the party leadership.
The MPLA triumphed in a 1975-2002 civil war with help from Cuba and the Soviet
Union over groups backed by the United States and apartheid-era South Africa.
Isabel, born in Soviet Azerbaijan while the future president and his Russian
wife were petroleum engineering students, recalls taking her first steps in an
MPLA camp deep in the Angolan bush among guerrilla "freedom fighters".
"What's happening now is a move to neutralize anyone who could influence a
change of course within the MPLA," she said.
(Reporting by Noah Browning and Dmitry Zdhannikov; Additional reporting by Joice
Alves and Karin Strohecker in London and Sergio Goncalves in Lisbon; Editing by
Pravin Char)
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