Source: Human Rights Watch
Increasing Violence and Threats Raise Concerns about 2012 Elections
(Johannesburg) – The Angolan government should immediately end its use
of unnecessary force against peaceful anti-government protesters, human
rights activists, journalists, and opposition politicians, Human Rights
Watch said today. Ensuring that people can exercise their basic rights
to freedom of association, expression, and peaceful assembly, and
prosecuting those who violate those rights, is crucial for creating a
peaceful environment for parliamentary elections slated for later in
2012, Human Rights Watch said. On April 4, Angola will celebrate 10
years of peace since the end of the decades-long civil war.
Since January 2012, Angolan authorities have banned and cracked down on
five anti-government rallies and arrested at least 46 protesters, 11 of
whom courts sentenced to prison terms of up to 90 days. This appears to
be an attempt by the government to curb an incipient protest movement
promoted by youth groups and others since March 2011, Human Rights Watch
said. Human Rights Watch also expressed concern that state media appear
to be promoting anonymous groups that incite violence against
anti-government protesters.
“The increasing violence against protesters, observers and opposition
politicians signals a deteriorating rights environment ahead of the
upcoming parliamentary elections,” said Leslie Lefkow, deputy Africa
director at Human Rights Watch. “The Angolan government should take
urgent steps to end this crackdown on peaceful protest and activism.”
Uniformed police, in apparent coordination with armed police in
civilian clothes and other security agents, violently attacked
anti-government protesters in the capital, Luanda, on January 27,
February 3 and March 10. In Benguela, on March 10, police arbitrarily
arrested a demonstration leader, a human rights activist, and a
bystander, and on March 17 police prevented a further protest from
taking place. In Cabinda, on February 4, police violently attacked
striking health workers.
Uniformed and plainclothes police and people believed to be allied to
the government have acted with increasing violence and total impunity
during peaceful protests, Human Rights Watch said. The police have not
intervened to protect peaceful demonstrators and opposition politicians
who were being violently attacked by armed individuals, seemingly acting
in coordination with and under the protection of the police.
Interior Minister Sebastião Martins recently denied any police
involvement in the violence. The evening after the March 10 crackdown,
state television aired threats by anonymous groups that claimed they
were defending the peace against anti-government protesters.
Investigations announced by the authorities into the violence have not
resulted in prosecutions of attackers identified by demonstrators and
eyewitnesses. And new politically motivated assaults, threats and
harassment against protesters and observers have been reported.
On March 10, youth groups called for demonstrations in Luanda’s Cazenga
neighborhood and in the city of Benguela, to protest the appointment in
January by the Superior Council of Magistrates of Suzana Inglês as
chairperson of the National Electoral Commission. Opposition parties
contend that her profile does not comply with legal requirements for the
position and that she lacks impartiality as a senior member of the
ruling party’s women’s mass organization. Some opposition parties had
agreed to join the protests.
In the days before the March 10 demonstrations, groups of unknown
individuals harassed, intimidated and beat several protest leaders in
Luanda. In the afternoon of March 9, a dozen people wearing sunglasses
and hats forced their way into the home of Dionísio Casimiro “Carbono,” a
rap musician and protest leader, and beat him and other youth
protesters, injuring three of them. On March7, six people in several
cars abducted, beat and injured two protest organizers, Mario Domingos
and “Kebamba,” who were on their way to the demonstration site in
Cazenga. The victims filed complaints with the police.
In Benguela and Luanda, days before the planned protests, pamphlets
were circulated, allegedly from unknown youth groups that claim to
defend peace. The pamphlets called on people not to join the protests,
which they allege were aimed at creating instability in the country.
On the morning of March 10, in Cazenga, a dozen police in plainclothes,
including sunglasses and hats, and armed with wood and metal clubs,
knives and pistols attacked a crowd of 40 demonstrators and a number of
bystanders, injuring a protest leader, Luaty Beirão “Mata Frakus,” and
two other protesters. Demonstrators and three journalists covering the
event - from Voice of America, Rádio Despertar and a freelance
journalist - sought refuge in nearby private residences to escape the
violence.
Witnesses told Human Rights Watch that the police agents at the site
withdrew when the armed police in civilian clothes arrived, and did not
intervene against their assaults, despite calls for help. Journalists
and demonstrators heard shots being fired behind them while they were
fleeing.
That afternoon, unknown people attacked and seriously injured Filomeno
Vieira Lopes, a senior leader of the opposition party Bloco Democrático,
and Ermelinda Freitas, the party’s municipal secretary, in Luanda’s
city center. Both were waiting for a colleague who had volunteered to
rescue journalists and injured demonstrators in Cazenga. Freitas told
Human Rights Watch that two police agents were present during the
attacks but did not intervene, ignoring calls for help by the victims
and bystanders.
That evening, the state television, Televisão Pública de Angola (TPA),
aired, during prime time, a phone call from an anonymous person alleging
to speak for a group of citizens who claimed responsibility for the
crackdown. Denying any link to the police and the authorities, the
caller threatened to “react” again “with determination” to any
anti-government demonstration. State television did not, at any time,
air a statement from protesters, opposition parties or the civil society
organizations that publicly condemned the violent crackdown.
On the morning of March 10 in Benguela, police deployed rapid
intervention units, dog squads, and water cannons, around the city.
Uniformed and plain-clothes police, armed with pistols, dispersed a
crowd of around 60 peaceful demonstrators and arrested three men: Hugo
Kalumba, a demonstration leader; Jesse Lufendo, an activist from the
human rights organization Omunga, who was taking pictures, and a taxi
driver who was there as a bystander.
On March 16, a court in Benguela sentenced the three men to 45 days in
prison on charges of disobedience and aggression against police agents,
despite the lack of any evidence against them. In court, the organizers
showed evidence that they had informed the authorities about the protest
in advance, according to legal requirements, and had requested police
protection. They said the authorities responded only orally, two days
before the planned rally, banning the protest under the pretext that the
initially planned site was less than 100 meters away from the seat of a
political party. The detained men were later released on bail.
On the following day, the authorities banned another protest in
Benguela called by Omunga, demanding the right to peaceful assembly,
under the pretext that the organization had not completed its legal
registration. Faced with massive police deployment on March 17, the
organization called off the protest.
Harassment, intimidation, and violence against participants and
supporters or perceived sympathizers with the protests have continued
since.
In a second attack on Freitas, the municipal secretary for Bloco
Democrático, seven people one of them masked, forced their way into her
home on March 23. They threatened her and her family and stole
computers, flash drives, photo cameras, and personal documents.
On March 21, Coque Mukuta, a journalist at the privately owned Rádio
Despertar, found a pamphlet at his residence in Cazenga from an alleged
“movement of the youth organized to defend peace.” Human Rights Watch
saw the pamphlet, which contained a hand-written note addressed
personally to the journalist: “You should move to another neighborhood.
Beware, bandit. You are not afraid, but beware.”
Earlier in the year, police violently cracked down on a strike in
Cabinda and on two protests in Luanda’s peripheral Cacuaco neighborhood.
On February 4, police arrested 21 health workers union strikers in
Cabinda city, including two senior union officials. The health workers
had gone on strike in the whole province on January 30, to press for
improvements of working conditions and the disbursement of overdue
subsidy payments. Police deployed rapid intervention police, water
cannons, and dog squads, dispersed and violently attacked the strikers
in front of union’s office, where the strikers had withdrawn after being
forced to move from in front of the hospital. They were released on the
same day without formal charges. A union official told Human Rights
Watch that police also temporarily arrested, jailed, and mistreated a
striking nurse in Cabinda’s interior city Buco Zau on the same day.
On January 27, police dispersed a demonstration by Cacuaco residents
demanding water and electricity and arrested 12 demonstrators. On
January 31, a court sentenced eight of them to 90 days in prison plus
fines and acquitted the others. The imprisoned demonstrators were later
released on US$400 bail.
On February 3, public order and rapid intervention police armed with
military assault rifles dispersed a crowd of around 50 youth, local
residents, and family members of the jailed protesters, calling for
their release. A protest organizer told Human Rights Watch that a dozen
police in civilian clothes, armed with pistols, violently beat
participants. Police arrested 10 demonstrators, but released them on the
same day without charge. The organizers said they had informed the
authorities in advance about the demonstration, but had not received any
response.
Human Rights Watch has reported extensively on unnecessary or excessive
use of force by police at antigovernment protests, and threats,
intimidation, and arbitrary arrests of journalists and political
activists by police and other security agents in Angola, in the past
year, including a crackdown on an anti-government rally on December 5, 2011in Luanda.
Many demonstrators involved in demonstrations since March 2011 have
told Human Rights Watch that they have been subjected to intimidation,
received anonymous phone calls threatening them and their families, and
been followed by people in cars. Some said theyfiled complaints, but
have not been able to get any information from the police about whether
an investigation had taken place.
“The Angolan government should respect people’s fundamental rights to
peaceful assembly and free speech rather than punishing critics and the
political opposition,” Lefkow said, “The repressive actions of the
government do not bode well for peaceful parliamentary elections.”