Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
07LUANDA700
2007-07-11 16:11:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Luanda
Cable title:  

ANGOLA PROVINCIAL NOTES: IN LUNDA NORTH, DIAMONDS

Tags:  PGOV PHUM EMIN ECON PREF PINR SOCI KDEM AO 
pdf how-to read a cable
VZCZCXRO9511
RR RUEHMR RUEHRN
DE RUEHLU #0700/01 1921611
ZNY CCCCC ZZH
R 111611Z JUL 07
FM AMEMBASSY LUANDA
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 4152
INFO RUCNSAD/SOUTHERN AFRICAN DEVELOPMENT COMMUNITY
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 LUANDA 000700 

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 07/09/2017
TAGS: PGOV PHUM EMIN ECON PREF PINR SOCI KDEM AO
SUBJECT: ANGOLA PROVINCIAL NOTES: IN LUNDA NORTH, DIAMONDS
ARE A TOWN'S ONLY FRIEND (PART 2 OF 3)


Classified By: CDA Francisco Fernandez for reason 1.4 (b) and (d)

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 LUANDA 000700

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 07/09/2017
TAGS: PGOV PHUM EMIN ECON PREF PINR SOCI KDEM AO
SUBJECT: ANGOLA PROVINCIAL NOTES: IN LUNDA NORTH, DIAMONDS
ARE A TOWN'S ONLY FRIEND (PART 2 OF 3)


Classified By: CDA Francisco Fernandez for reason 1.4 (b) and (d)


1. (C) Summary: Residents in Caito, a small village in Lunda
Norte province, faced with limited economic opportunities and
no government assistance, have turned to the diamond trade as
a means of survival. Village leaders tried to sell Emboffs
diamonds during their visit, and stated that the police did
not interfere with their small-scale diamond trade. The
village remains impoverished and undeveloped despite this
trade, but political activity and party representation in the
village is robust and diverse. End summary.


2. (U) This cable is part two of a three part series on Lunda
Norte province. Poloff visited Lunda Norte province from
June 6-8th, 2007 with Dutch and British Emboffs. This cable
focuses on village economic and political life; septels cover
economic development, voter registration and human rights.

Village Life: Isolation and Underdevelopment
--------------


3. (SBU) Leaders and residents in Caito, a village of
approximately 450 people, 37 miles south of the provincial
capital of Dundo, expressed their frustration over the slow
pace of reconstruction, saying that "nothing has changed" in
five years of peace. Village residents fled to Dundo during
the war and returned in 2002 to find the schoolhouse
completely destroyed and the village's only other permanent
structures - a small shop, a medical clinic, and a house -
damaged beyond repair. Though the GRA encouraged them to
return, they were not provided with resettlement assistance.
The village lies on the province's main north-south road, but
the road has not been maintained and becomes practically
impassable during the rainy season. It took Emboffs almost
two hours to travel the 37 miles to the village.


4. (U) Residents have slowly rebuilt their village of thatch

and mud huts without government support. Leaders laid out
their needs - a medical center, a school, and a house for
their teachers. Residents must travel to Dundo for medical
assistance, and no one in the village has a car or motorbike.
Classes are currently held in the shell of a war-damaged
building, and the village's five teachers live in one mud and
thatch hut. The teachers confirmed that the state pays their
salary, but that living conditions are so poor in the village
that they often think of leaving. The village has no
electricity and is far outside of cellphone range; its only
contact with the outside world comes through passing trucks
and Angolan National Radio.

Diamonds to the Rescue
--------------


5. (C) The villagers are generally unable to cultivate beyond
the subsistence level and have limited means to move goods to
market. With no other employment options, villagers have
turned to the diamond trade as a means of survival. Village
garimpeiros (diamond prospectors) pan for diamonds in two
nearby rivers; their area of activity is far from any
concession areas and garimpeiros said that they do not have
problems with police activity or harrassment. Though diamond
prospecting outside of concession areas is illegal, diamonds
are accepted for sale through middle men back to Endiama, the
state diamond parastatal, with no questions asked. The lack
of police presence, however, also facilitates trade outside
official channels. The soba (village chief) tried to sell
Emboffs rough diamonds during the visit, and was hopeful that
a lasting trading relationship could be established. To his
disappointment, the offer was declined.


6. (C) Villagers live in extreme poverty despite their
diamond "cash crop" and have been unable to convert the
proceeds into permanent housing or other long-term
investments. High prices - a bag of cement costs four times
more in Lunda Norte than in Luanda - and lack of
transportation contribute to their continuing poverty.
Village women told Polloff that they keep the village and its
fields running, as the men are generally off panning for
diamonds in nearby rivers.

Viva MPLA! Viva PRS! Viva UNITA!
--------------


7. (U) Though economic development is slow, political
activity in the village is robust. Angolan, MPLA, PRS and
UNITA flags adorn separate flagpoles, and the village is
visited regularly by representatives from the various
parties. Villagers laughed at questions about political
tensions between the villagers affiliated with different
parties, saying that people are free to choose and meet with
their political parties. A voter registration brigade had
already visited the village, and residents stated that all

LUANDA 00000700 002 OF 002


eligible voters had been registered.


8. (C) Comment: The diamond trade is necessary for the
villagers' survival, a fact that is true for most rural
villages in Lunda Norte. The lack of viable economic
alternatives reflects the extent of development and
rebuilding required in the province. The government's
ability to monitor the diamond trade is clearly limited by
the province's wide open spaces and lack of development,
especially in non-concession areas. Economic desperation
leads citizens to do business with all takers and go outside
of the law as necessary to survive. Until they receive more
government assistance or have other economic opportunities,
villagers will see little reason and have no incentive to
restrict their labor and trade to government channels. End
comment.
FERNANDEZ