The
main entrance to the offices of Angolan State oil firm SONANGOL pictured in
Luanda on June 2, 2016 ©Benjamin Sheppard (AFP)
|
Angolan President Jose
Eduardo dos Santos's daughter, reportedly Africa's richest woman, has been
cleared to head the national oil company SONANGOL, after a court rejected a
legal challenge.
AFP
report continues:
Isabel
dos Santos was put in charge of SONANGOL in June in a move some analysts said
was the first sign of succession plans for the country's long-time ruler.
The
president, in power since 1979, later announced that he would stand down in
2017, though no successor has officially been named.
His
daughter's appointment was disputed by 12 lawyers who said the law did not
allow public officials to nominate family members, but the Supreme Court ruled
in her favour on December 22, an official said Thursday.
"According
to the decision... the appointment of Isabel dos Santos by her father does not
violate the law on public probity or the Angolan Constitution," said David
Mendes, a spokesman for the lawyers.
The
country's opposition had equated her SONANGOL appointment with nepotism,
prompting the legal challenge.
Mendes
said the lawyers would appeal the decision at the country's Constitutional
Court.
"The
judgement of the Supreme Court has many shortcomings and does not
satisfactorily answer the questions we asked," he said.
Nicknamed
the "Princess", the president's 43-year-old daughter has been ranked
by Forbes magazine as the richest woman on the continent with a fortune of
around US$3 billion (€2.87 billion).
She
owns stakes in several companies in Angola and former colonial power Portugal,
notably in the banking and telecommunications sectors.
Three
years ago the president appointed his son Jose Filomeno dos Santos to chair the
country's US$5 billion Sovereign Wealth Fund.
SONANGOL has been mired in financial difficulties since the fall in global oil prices.
Since her appointment in the summer the president's daughter has pledged to
turn the company around.
Earlier
this month SONANGOL announced it would not pay dividends to the state this year
-- a first for the country's main source of foreign currency.
Angola's vast oil wealth has not trickled down to the masses and critics accuse both dos Santos and his family of amassing huge wealth by siphoning off state funds.
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