Manuel Vicente seen as likely successor to Dos Santos

LUANDA – Angolan president Jose Eduardo dos Santos, who has been in power since 1979 and is one of Africa’s longest-ruling leaders, said on Friday he intended to step down in 2018, but gave no reason for his decision and did not name a preferred successor.

Angola, a member of Opec and Africa’s second-largest oil exporter after Nigeria, has been hit hard by the slump in global crude prices.

Oil export revenues account for more than 90% of foreign exchange revenues.

“I took the decision to leave active political activity in 2018,” Dos Santos (73), said in a speech to members of his ruling MPLA party’s key decision-making body.

He did not elaborate.

Angola holds its next parliamentary election in 2017, and the leader of the winning party will then become president.

MPLA leader Dos Santos was re-appointed to a new five-year term as Angolan president in 2012 after his party scooped a landslide win.

Some Luanda residents expressed surprise that Dos Santos had decided not to step down before the next election.

“The elections are in 2017, not in 2018.

He should quit before the elections in 2017,” said Afonso Kangulo (42), who is jobless and blamed the government for the weak economy.

But Frank Francisco (48), a public service worker, said: “If he were to quit before the election, maybe people would say he ran away because he would have lost.”

Weak oil prices have hammered Africa’s third-largest economy, and the government is in discussions with the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund about possible financial assistance.

Dos Santos’ mild, inscrutable public demeanour belies his tight control of Angola, a former Portuguese colony where he has overseen an oil-backed economic boom and the reconstruction of infrastructure devastated by a 27-year-long civil war which ended in 2002.

Critics accuse him of mismanaging Angola’s oil wealth and making the elite, mainly his family and political allies, vastly rich in a country ranked amongst the world’s most corrupt.

Dos Santos, a Soviet-educated former petroleum engineer, is Africa’s second-longest ruling leader after Equatorial Guinea’s president Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo.

Vice-president Manuel Vicente – former head of state oil firm Sonangol – is seen as a likely successor to Dos Santos.

“(Dos Santos) has been grooming Vicente for quite a while now … He has deputised for him on a number of important occasions, which sent a strong signal,” said Gary van Staden, a Johannesburg-based political analyst with NKC African Economics.

But another analyst said the president was grooming his son, Jose Filomeno de Sousa dos Santos, to succeed him.

The younger Dos Santos currently heads Angola’s sovereign wealth fund.

“It may mean the succession is in progress, and that it will be a dynastic one,” said Nelson Bonavena, an economics lecturer at the Catholic University of Angola and political analyst.

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