Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
09LUANDA751
2009-12-14 10:46:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Luanda
Cable title:
DESPITE TALK OF RENOVATION, MPLA CONGRESS YIELDS
VZCZCXRO5191 PP RUEHBZ RUEHDU RUEHMR RUEHRN DE RUEHLU #0751/01 3481046 ZNY CCCCC ZZH P 141046Z DEC 09 FM AMEMBASSY LUANDA TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 5841 INFO RUCNSAD/SOUTHERN AF DEVELOPMENT COMMUNITY COLLECTIVE
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 LUANDA 000751
SIPDIS
E.O. 12958: DECL: 12/11/2024
TAGS: PGOV AO
SUBJECT: DESPITE TALK OF RENOVATION, MPLA CONGRESS YIELDS
LITTLE LEADERSHIP CHANGE
REF: LUANDA 00740
Classified By: Ambassador Dan Mozena, Reasons 1.4(b) and (d).
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 LUANDA 000751
SIPDIS
E.O. 12958: DECL: 12/11/2024
TAGS: PGOV AO
SUBJECT: DESPITE TALK OF RENOVATION, MPLA CONGRESS YIELDS
LITTLE LEADERSHIP CHANGE
REF: LUANDA 00740
Classified By: Ambassador Dan Mozena, Reasons 1.4(b) and (d).
1. (C) SUMMARY. The ruling MPLA had characterized its Sixth
Party Congress as a time of change and continuity. However,
by the time the Congress closed on December 10, continuity
clearly had won out. There were no changes whatsoever in
senior party leadership, the Congress simply rubber stamped
President Dos Santos's proposed membership lists for the
Party's Central Committee and Political Bureau, and it added
nothing discernible to the debate over the new constitution.
The key question of succession to Dos Santos does not seem to
have figured in the four day session. During his speech to
the closing session of the Congress, Dos Santos said the
government should finish its mandate -- a comment many
interpret to mean that presidential elections would not
happen until 2012, when new parliamentary elections would
choose not only members of parliament but presumably also the
next president, who, according to the constitutional plan Dos
Santos favors, would be the head of the list of parliamentary
candidates of the party that wins the most seats in the
National Assembly. END SUMMARY.
--------------
LIP SERVICE TO CHANGE
--------------
2. (C) During a Dec 10 meeting at the Embassy, Minister of
Housing and Urban Development Sita Jose stressed to the DCM
the importance of the Congress's bringing new faces to the
party. He said the party had been dominated for too long by
"velhos" (old guys) and that the party now needed "new
blood." He said one of the party's key objectives in
developing the central committee list was to bring in more
30- and 40- year olds into the leadership, putting more
emphasis on rejuvenation of the party, rather than
continuity.
3. (C) Having said that, however, he also admitted that the
new Central Committee and Political Bureau membership lists
would contain few surprises. In this regard, the Minister
was right on the mark as there were no changes in senior
party leadership with Dos Santos, MPLA Vice President de
Almeida and Party Secretary General Dino Matross all keeping
their seats. Membership of the new Political Bureau was
replete with the old guard, including Prime Minister Paolo
Kassamo, President of the National Assembly Fernando da
Piedade Dias Dos Santos, Defense Minister Kundi Paihama, Head
of the Party International Division Paulo Jorge, Minister of
Economy Manuel Jose Nunes Jr, MPLA Spokesman Kuata Kanawa,
and MPLA's leader of the National Assembly Bornito de Sousa
Baltazar Diogo. The Central Committee, too, kept lots of old
hands, including Angolan Ambassador to the U.S. Josefina
Perpetua Pires Domingos Pitra Diakite, and did not include
Dos Santos' son, Jose Filomeno "Zenu" dos Santos, as some had
predicted. President Dos Santos, who expressed surprise at
winning though he was the only candidate for party president,
garnered 98.7 percent of the votes (1,964 votes for and 26
votes against out of a possible 2,080 votes in a secret
ballot). In previous party elections, which were done by a
show of hands, Dos Santos had on 100 percent. (COMMENT: US
Embassy contacts joked that Dos Santos was probably
surprised, wondering who the 26 persons were. END COMMENT)
-------------- --------------
DOS SANTOS SPEECH RAISES QUESTIONS ABOUT ELECTION TIMETABLE
-------------- --------------
4. (C) As he had the opening session of the Congress, the
Ambassador attended the closing session, where Dos Santos
gave a relatively short and uninspiring speech that
recommitted the party to the promises it had made during the
campaign for the 2008 legislative elections. He spoke to the
need for food self-sufficiency, the eradication of famine,
and the need to improve education, health, and other human
development indicators. He also spoke of boosting employment
and economic growth, building one million houses, and
distributing the country's national revenues in a more
equitable fashion. Echoing his opening speech, he
underscored the need for greater transparency and good
governance, gradual integration of Angola into the world
economy, and gaining respect internationally.
5. (U) Dos Santos said he wanted the MPLA to serve out its
four-year mandate and that, "Everything indicates that the
new constitution will change the current government system
and set new times for the mandates of elected bodies."
(NOTE: Dos Santos is literally referring to the party's
legislative mandate; the MPLA won Angola's first
parliamentary election in 2008 and holds 81 percent of the
seats. The party's proposed version of the constitution
LUANDA 00000751 002 OF 002
would have the president be the head of the parliamentary
list of candidates of the party that wins the most seats in
parliament. END NOTE) Domestic and international
commentators interpret Dos Santos's comments to mean that
electing the next president would be put off until the next
parliamentary elections, which are slated for 2012.
--------------
WOMEN ON THE RISE
--------------
6. (C) The emotional highlight of the open sessions of the
Congress was a precisely orchestrated procession by the
MPLA's women's wing, consisting of several hundred
traditionally attired women, carrying large baskets and
basins of fruits, vegetables and fresh fish as they danced
and sang through the aisles of the conference center. In the
only non-scripted moment of the open sessions, delegates and
observers stood as a body to recognize the moving impact of
this dazzling display of woman power.
--------------
COMMENT
--------------
7. (C) Although party leaders who chatted with the Ambassador
on the margins of the Congress and subsequently all evinced
grand satisfaction with the Congress, the reality is that the
four-day conference, judging from the information available
at this point, was entirely scripted with delegates simply
endorsing decisions that had already been made. If the
Congress had been meant to inject new blood and fresh
thinking into the leadership councils of the body, that was
not evident as the senior ranks of the party remained
unchanged. Nor did the Congress bring any new thinking to
the debate on the country's draft constitution or the looming
issue of succession to Dos Santos. So, in the end, the
Congress was more show with all delegates clad in matching
party t-shirts (though the President's was covered by a suit
coat) and hats (only the President was bare-headed) than
substance, and the big issues facing the country -- poverty,
constitutional reform, and succession to Dos Santos -- remain
for another day.
MOZENA
SIPDIS
E.O. 12958: DECL: 12/11/2024
TAGS: PGOV AO
SUBJECT: DESPITE TALK OF RENOVATION, MPLA CONGRESS YIELDS
LITTLE LEADERSHIP CHANGE
REF: LUANDA 00740
Classified By: Ambassador Dan Mozena, Reasons 1.4(b) and (d).
1. (C) SUMMARY. The ruling MPLA had characterized its Sixth
Party Congress as a time of change and continuity. However,
by the time the Congress closed on December 10, continuity
clearly had won out. There were no changes whatsoever in
senior party leadership, the Congress simply rubber stamped
President Dos Santos's proposed membership lists for the
Party's Central Committee and Political Bureau, and it added
nothing discernible to the debate over the new constitution.
The key question of succession to Dos Santos does not seem to
have figured in the four day session. During his speech to
the closing session of the Congress, Dos Santos said the
government should finish its mandate -- a comment many
interpret to mean that presidential elections would not
happen until 2012, when new parliamentary elections would
choose not only members of parliament but presumably also the
next president, who, according to the constitutional plan Dos
Santos favors, would be the head of the list of parliamentary
candidates of the party that wins the most seats in the
National Assembly. END SUMMARY.
--------------
LIP SERVICE TO CHANGE
--------------
2. (C) During a Dec 10 meeting at the Embassy, Minister of
Housing and Urban Development Sita Jose stressed to the DCM
the importance of the Congress's bringing new faces to the
party. He said the party had been dominated for too long by
"velhos" (old guys) and that the party now needed "new
blood." He said one of the party's key objectives in
developing the central committee list was to bring in more
30- and 40- year olds into the leadership, putting more
emphasis on rejuvenation of the party, rather than
continuity.
3. (C) Having said that, however, he also admitted that the
new Central Committee and Political Bureau membership lists
would contain few surprises. In this regard, the Minister
was right on the mark as there were no changes in senior
party leadership with Dos Santos, MPLA Vice President de
Almeida and Party Secretary General Dino Matross all keeping
their seats. Membership of the new Political Bureau was
replete with the old guard, including Prime Minister Paolo
Kassamo, President of the National Assembly Fernando da
Piedade Dias Dos Santos, Defense Minister Kundi Paihama, Head
of the Party International Division Paulo Jorge, Minister of
Economy Manuel Jose Nunes Jr, MPLA Spokesman Kuata Kanawa,
and MPLA's leader of the National Assembly Bornito de Sousa
Baltazar Diogo. The Central Committee, too, kept lots of old
hands, including Angolan Ambassador to the U.S. Josefina
Perpetua Pires Domingos Pitra Diakite, and did not include
Dos Santos' son, Jose Filomeno "Zenu" dos Santos, as some had
predicted. President Dos Santos, who expressed surprise at
winning though he was the only candidate for party president,
garnered 98.7 percent of the votes (1,964 votes for and 26
votes against out of a possible 2,080 votes in a secret
ballot). In previous party elections, which were done by a
show of hands, Dos Santos had on 100 percent. (COMMENT: US
Embassy contacts joked that Dos Santos was probably
surprised, wondering who the 26 persons were. END COMMENT)
-------------- --------------
DOS SANTOS SPEECH RAISES QUESTIONS ABOUT ELECTION TIMETABLE
-------------- --------------
4. (C) As he had the opening session of the Congress, the
Ambassador attended the closing session, where Dos Santos
gave a relatively short and uninspiring speech that
recommitted the party to the promises it had made during the
campaign for the 2008 legislative elections. He spoke to the
need for food self-sufficiency, the eradication of famine,
and the need to improve education, health, and other human
development indicators. He also spoke of boosting employment
and economic growth, building one million houses, and
distributing the country's national revenues in a more
equitable fashion. Echoing his opening speech, he
underscored the need for greater transparency and good
governance, gradual integration of Angola into the world
economy, and gaining respect internationally.
5. (U) Dos Santos said he wanted the MPLA to serve out its
four-year mandate and that, "Everything indicates that the
new constitution will change the current government system
and set new times for the mandates of elected bodies."
(NOTE: Dos Santos is literally referring to the party's
legislative mandate; the MPLA won Angola's first
parliamentary election in 2008 and holds 81 percent of the
seats. The party's proposed version of the constitution
LUANDA 00000751 002 OF 002
would have the president be the head of the parliamentary
list of candidates of the party that wins the most seats in
parliament. END NOTE) Domestic and international
commentators interpret Dos Santos's comments to mean that
electing the next president would be put off until the next
parliamentary elections, which are slated for 2012.
--------------
WOMEN ON THE RISE
--------------
6. (C) The emotional highlight of the open sessions of the
Congress was a precisely orchestrated procession by the
MPLA's women's wing, consisting of several hundred
traditionally attired women, carrying large baskets and
basins of fruits, vegetables and fresh fish as they danced
and sang through the aisles of the conference center. In the
only non-scripted moment of the open sessions, delegates and
observers stood as a body to recognize the moving impact of
this dazzling display of woman power.
--------------
COMMENT
--------------
7. (C) Although party leaders who chatted with the Ambassador
on the margins of the Congress and subsequently all evinced
grand satisfaction with the Congress, the reality is that the
four-day conference, judging from the information available
at this point, was entirely scripted with delegates simply
endorsing decisions that had already been made. If the
Congress had been meant to inject new blood and fresh
thinking into the leadership councils of the body, that was
not evident as the senior ranks of the party remained
unchanged. Nor did the Congress bring any new thinking to
the debate on the country's draft constitution or the looming
issue of succession to Dos Santos. So, in the end, the
Congress was more show with all delegates clad in matching
party t-shirts (though the President's was covered by a suit
coat) and hats (only the President was bare-headed) than
substance, and the big issues facing the country -- poverty,
constitutional reform, and succession to Dos Santos -- remain
for another day.
MOZENA