Dos Santos, 79, has been receiving medical treatment since 2019,
but his health deteriorated and he was admitted to an intensive
care unit, Lusa reported on Thursday, without saying when this
occurred.
The Angolan government did not respond immediately on Friday to
a request for comment on the former president's condition.
One of Africa's longest serving leaders, dos Santos stepped down
five years ago. His rule was marked by a brutal civil war
lasting nearly three decades against U.S.-backed UNITA rebels -
which he won in 2002 - and a subsequent oil-fuelled boom.
Between 2002 and 2014, as oil production grew and prices boomed,
Angola's economy expanded tenfold, from $12.4 billion to $126
billion. But little of that wealth trickled down to the poor,
while those closest to dos Santos became super-rich -- including
his daughter, Isabel, whom Forbes labelled Africa's richest
woman and youngest billionaire, worth about $3 billion.
Dos Santos was replaced in 2017 by President Joao Lourenco, who
despite being from the incumbent's People's Movement for the
Liberation of Angola (MPLA), swiftly moved to probe allegations
of multi-billion dollar corruption during the dos Santos era,
targeting the former leader's children.
Last year dos Santos returned home for the first time since he
went into exile in Barcelona in April 2019.
(Reporting by Anait Miridzhanian in GdanskEditing by Tim Cocks
and Gareth Jones)
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