LUANDA, June 2 (Reuters) - Angolan President Jose Eduardo
dos Santos has appointed his daughter as head of state oil firm Sonangol,
Angola National State Radio (RNA) reported on Thursday, as the government aims
to turn around the struggling company after low crude prices hit revenue.
Citing a presidential decree, RNA said Isabel dos Santos
would head the company, after the president fired the entire Sonangol board and
appointed a new one.
Angola said in April it would restructure Sonangol to
"increase efficiency and profitability".
Sonangol said in February that debt owed to foreign oil
companies had soared and it expected a very difficult year.
Angola imports around 6 million cubic metres of refined
products a year, according to national statistics.
Angola, a member of OPEC, is currently Africa's largest oil
producer because of militant attacks and other problems that have cut output in
Nigeria.
Dos Santos, who has been in power since 1979 and is one of
Africa's longest-ruling leaders, said in March he intended to step down as
president in 2018 but gave no reason for his decision and did not name a
preferred successor.
Critics accuse him of mismanaging Angola's oil wealth and
making an elite, mainly his family and political allies, vastly rich in a
country ranked amongst the world's most corrupt.
Oil sales account for more than 90 percent of Angola's
foreign exchange earnings, making Sonangol the biggest source of state funding.
(Reporting by Herculano Coroado; Writing by Olivia Kumwenda-Mtambo; Editing by
Andrew Roche and Alistair Bell)
No comments:
Post a Comment