Angola
The veteran leader of Angola’s largest opposition party said on Wednesday he would step down to allow someone else keep the new government of President Joao Lourenco to account.
Isaias Samakuva, who has led UNITA since 2003, said a new leader should take the party forward through the “new political cycle”.
He announced his departure a day after Lourenco was sworn in as only the third president of Angola since independence from Portugal in 1975, ending 38 years of rule by Jose Eduardo dos Santos.
Samakuva had previously said he planned to step aside, but had appeared to seesaw on the decision in recent months.
“During the campaign, I said I would leave the presidency of UNITA to serve the party in another function. I maintain and reaffirm that decision,” Samakuva told a meeting of the party.
Samakuva took over the leadership of UNITA – the National Union for the Total Independence of Angola – after the death of founder Jonas Savimbi who led the movement during 27 years of civil war.
Savimbi’s death brought peace and the transition of UNITA into a political party.
Under Samakuva’s leadership UNITA increased its proportion of the national vote from 10 percent in 2008 to 27 percent in 2017.
Among those slated to succeed him are Adalberto da Costa, who was the party’s leader in parliament under the previous administration, Rafael Massanga Savimbi, son of UNITA’s founder, and Lukamba Paulo, a former secretary general of the party who lost a leadership election against Samakuva in 2003.
REUTERS
Go to video
CAR officials issue statement claiming president is not seriously ill
01:09
Ivory Coast president set to announce whether he will seek a fourth term
01:09
Cameroon’s civil society calls on voters to sanction Biya in upcoming elections
11:16
Angola hosts U.S.-Africa summit amid calls to revive trade ties {Business Africa}
Go to video
Funeral standoff halts repatriation of former Zambian president's body
01:29
Ramaphosa concludes G7 summit visit, no meeting with Trump