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Govt calls for mediation in Cabinda

[Angola] Cabinda town – Sept 2003. IRIN
Cabinda town – Sept 2003
The Angolan government is seeking a mediator to resolve the separatist crisis in the enclave of Cabinda, according to news reports. Interior Minister Osvaldo Serra van Dunem announced on Wednesday that the government wanted a "real and suitable mediator to commence a transparent dialogue" about the future of the oil-rich province. A secessionist conflict has continued in Cabinda since Angola's independence in 1975. The "Front for the Liberation of the Cabinda Enclave" (FLEC) and its various factions want it to be recognised as an independent state, while the Angolan government regards the enclave as part of its territory. The province, divided from the rest of Angola by a strip of the Democratic Republic of Congo, was added to Angola by the Portuguese. FLEC began fighting for the province's independence in 1963 and continued the conflict when the MPLA took over in 1975. Angolan President Jose Eduardo dos Santos has promised greater autonomy to the province on several occasions, but has refused to accept an independent Cabinda. "The government would be seeking an internal mediator, someone who would understand the dynamics of Cabinda", explained the Angolan ambassador to South Africa, Isaac Maria dos Anjos. "FLEC is split up into so many factions, with each claiming to be the original organisation, an outsider will not understand it." According to dos Anjos, the government would possibly consider representatives of the church as prospective mediators.

This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions

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