Title: Political Police Control Power and Justice in Angola
Author: Rafael Marques de Morais
Category: Angola
Date: 8/6/2015
Source: Maka Angola
Source Website: http://www.makaangola.org/index.php?
African Charter Article# 13: Every citizen shall have the right to participate freely in the government of their country and to equal access of public services .
Summary & Comment: "Reading descriptions of the events of 29 July past - police jumping over walls to break down doors and arrest people without warrants, secret service giving orders to police, secret service commanders setting up prisons, large-scale police operations directed by secret service - it looks like the Angolan `tough guys' (like Russian KGB agents) have taken over the key positions of power, driving the country towards autocracy...."a massive and intense solidification of the regime far beyond the putative dismantling of the revolutionary youth movement, which has been used as ascapegoat" . JK
General Zé Maria, head of Military Intelligence Service, is a key player in controlling power and justice.
Police release prisoners who are immediately followed by armed, plainclothes men, who bundle them into vehicles, kidnap them and drive them around in circles, dumping them out in the back of beyond. They all thought they were going to be killed.
This description did not come out of a work of fiction. It happened las week in Angola, where the government praises itself to abide by the rule of law.
Reading descriptions of the events of 29 July past - police jumping over walls to break down doors and arrest people without warrants, secret service giving orders to police, secret service commanders setting up prisons, large-scale police operations directed by secret service - it looks like the Angolan siloviks are taking control, as in Putin's Russia. The "tough guys" - or siloviks, as KGB agents are called - have taken over the key positions of power, driving the country towards autocracy.
All these acts could have been taken straight out of the Tcheka's manual of bad practice, the Soviet dictator Josef Stalin's political police, and constitute the usual prelude to the beginning of a witch-hunt.
When one reads descriptions of the activities of the chief of Central Command of Military Counter-Intelligence, of the Military Intelligence and Security Service (SISM), Lieutenant-General José Afonso Peres "Filó" directing operations and interrogating prisoners, when one takes note of the conversations held between this high-ranking director of the Secret Service and the chief of SISM, General Zé Maria, what one discovers is that the Angolan State of Lawful Democracy, protected by the Constitution, now has a different source of legal authority: the orders of the secret police.
At the same time, a surprising level of disorientation and security is in evidence where police action is concerned. Operating without a legal mandate and without clear orders from the normal chain of command, police officers may be seen to hesitate, equivocate, beat and apologise, arrest and release. Anarchy is setting in within the power structure, opening the door for the "durões", whose mission it is to impose order through force.
Meanwhile, public speaking has become contaminated with Orwellian euphemisms, a clear sign of the drift into a police autocracy. For example, instead of saying "arrested" the term "collected" is used. Soon, "free" will mean in custody, "democracy" will mean dictatorship and "good" will mean bad.
It is becoming clearer all the time: a massive and intense solidification of the regime led by the siloviks is taking place, far beyond the putative dismantling of the revolutionary youth movement, which has been used as a scapegoat.
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The hate of men will pass, and dictators die, and the power they took from the people will return to the people. And so long as men die, liberty will never perish.
I have loved justice and hated iniquity: therefore I die in exile.
The price good men pay for indifference to public affairs is to be ruled by evil men.
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