The AnswerSleuth: Angola
Got an Opinion?
Get A Free Hive Wiki And Tell The World!
Go Here To Get New Hive Wiki Now!
Home | Edit | Index | Recent Changes

Angola

Search for Angola

  1. CIA - The World Factbook -- Angola - ... of Angola conventional short form: Angola local long form: Republica de Angola local short form: Angola former: People's Republic of Angola ... www.cia.gov Mama
  2. Capoeira- The Jogo de Angola from Luanda to Cyberspace (Capoeira)
    Cover of ISBN 1556436017Capoeira
    The Jogo de Angola from Luanda to Cyberspace (Capoeira):
    • Book by Gerard Taylor.
  3. Angola History and Country Profiles - Once a Portuguese colony, Angola achieved independence in 1975 but has experienced 25 years of civil war since then. During the Cold War Angola acted as a primary base of operations for the Soviet-backed MPLA and Western supported UNITA. Peace was only achieved in 2002. Find out more about Angola fr africanhistory.about.com Mama
  4. Die drei Kriege in Angola - Chronologie, Konfliktparteien, Ursachen, Folgen und Lösungsversuche. www.hls.sha.bw.schule.de Mama
  5. NPA Mine Action in Angola - Information on the activities of Norwegian People's Aid activities in Angola www.angola.npaid.org Mama
  6. ReliefWeb Angola and Southern Africa Maps - Map Centre: Angola and Southern Africa Maps - Menu -Latest [UpdatesComplex]Create? [EmergenciesNatural]Create? [DisastersBy]Create? [CountryMap]Create? [CentreFinancial]Create? ... www.reliefweb.int Mama
  7. afrol News - Angola - Provides regular news and analyses from and about Angola. www.afrol.com Mama
  8. Ernst & Young Africa Group - Angola - Investment Profile - About doing business in Angola. www.mbendi.co.za Mama
  9. Angola, IN A.A. Contacts - A.A. telephone contacts in your state alcoholism.about.com Mama
  10. Angola Metal Suppliers - Metal suppliers of Angola from your About Metals Guide. metals.about.com Mama
  11. Angola- Promises and Lies
    Cover of ISBN 1897959222Angola
    Promises and Lies:
    • Book by Karl Maier.
  12. Angola - Information om Angola sammanställd av Afrikagrupperna www.afrikagrupperna.se Mama
  13. Magic Mobility Wheelchairs - Manufactures a four wheel drive wheelchair. US distributor is in Angola, Indiana. www.magicmobility.com.au Mama
  14. Angola - Visit the link for details. www.fccn.pt Mama
  15. BBC News - Country Profile: Angola - One of Africa's major oil producers, Angola is also one of the world's poorest countries. ... Timeline: Angola A chronology of key events ... news.bbc.co.uk Mama
  16. Angola: International Religious Freedom Report (2004) - American State Department report on religious freedom in Angola for 2004: The Constitution provides for freedom of religion, and the Government generally respects this right in practice. atheism.about.com Mama
  17. Angola: Welcome to the Official Web Site of the Republic of Angola - Informações e recursos sobre o país, em Português e Inglês, providos pela Embaixada de Angola em Washington, EUA. www.angola.org Mama
  18. Angola - Informes sobre el país, mapa, noticias, enlaces y un ensayo sobre artes plásticas. www.upaz.edu.uy Mama
  19. ReliefWeb - Angola - Humanitarian news on Angola www.reliefweb.int Mama
  20. Spared Angola- Memories from a Cuban-American Childhood
    Cover of ISBN 1558851976Spared Angola
    Memories from a Cuban-American Childhood:
    • Book by Virgil Suarez.
  21. Law of Angola - Courts, treaties and related country-specific information. www.business.com Mama
  22. Angola - Visit the link for details. worldnews.about.com Mama
  23. Afromix - Angola - Skip site navigation (1) Skip section navigation (2) Search Peripheral Links Français English Español Header And Logo Site Navigation Accueil Actualité ... www.afromix.org Mama
  24. Commercial Guide to Angola - 1999 Angola commercial guide developed by the US State Department. www.state.gov Mama
  25. Afromix - Angola - Skip site navigation (1) Skip section navigation (2) Search Peripheral Links Français English Español Header And Logo Site Navigation Home News Music ... www.afromix.org Mama
  26. Angola Press News Agency (Angop) - L'Agence de presse propose des nouvelles sur l'actualité nationale et internationale, moteur de recherche des photos et articles. Luanda. www.angolapress-angop.ao Mama
  27. Banco de Poupanca e Credito - Access banking services available from this commerical bank in Angola. www.bpc.ao Mama
  28. Banks in Angola - Banks headquartered in Angola. www.business.com Mama
  29. The Cuban Intervention in Angola, 1965-1991- From Che Guevara to Cuito Cuanavale
    Cover of ISBN 0415350158The Cuban Intervention in Angola, 1965-1991
    From Che Guevara to Cuito Cuanavale:
    • Book by Edward George.

Capoeira- The Jogo de Angola from Luanda to Cyberspace (Capoeira)

Cover of ISBN 1556436017Capoeira
The Jogo de Angola from Luanda to Cyberspace (Capoeira):
Book by Gerard Taylor. North Atlantic Books 560 pages Paperback Published 2005-10-10. Description: The first in a two-volume series on capoeira, Volume One traces the origins of the popular martial art and dance form from the beginning of the slave trade in the Americas in the 1500s to the early years of the Brazilian Republic in the 20th century. Focusing on the people and events that shaped the art form in Brazil prior to the "academy" period of the last century, Capoeira: The Jogo de Angola from Luanda to Cyberspace explores the subject from many vantage points. Author Gerard Taylor explains how the fighting techniques of African forces laid the groundwork for capoeira movements. He shows how work songs, religion, and various percussive traditions and instruments shaped capoeira music over the years. Drawing on archival sources and historical accounts, the book paints a vivid picture of capoeira's dramatic evolution from the sugar plantations of Pernambuco through the brutal backstreets of Rio and the Minas Gerais goldmines on its way to becoming a world-class practice
      • Review:: 'A Thorough Examination of Sources..... This volume is NOT a physical instructional manual. It is a dedicated examination of how Capoeira came to be, from the Continent of Africa from which the root of this combative art hied, to its development in Brazil. The author examines a variety of sources (which he lists). Rather than stopping at the usual cursory description of the original slaves imported to Brazil from Africa, Taylor provides documentary evidence concerning the existence, treatment, and conditions encountered by slaves imported to Brazil from Angola and other regions of Africa. Taylor's descriptions and historical references make the experiences of these peoples very real, and does more than any work I have read thus far to explain the spiritual, cultural and physical reasons behind the development and propegation of Capoeira, at once both a method of personal defense and strength training, and a physical mode of expression. For those with a dedicated interest in the history of Capoeira specifically, or anyone with an interest in the anthroplogical side of combative arts generally, this first volume in a planned two-volume set is a must. I look forward to reading a continuation of this history.

Angola- Promises and Lies

Cover of ISBN 1897959222Angola
Promises and Lies:
Book by Karl Maier. Serif Publishing 224 pages Paperback Published 1996-09. Description: Angola's civil war has been the longest and bloodiest in Africa. What was once a proxy conflict between the Cold War superpowers has become an apparently endless ethnic conflict. While the political leaders struggle to control the country's immense reserves of diamonds and oil, ordinary Angolans have been caught in the crossfire of a quarter of a century of conflict.

There have been many books written on Angola, either by South Africans or by authors who have favored and/or defended South Africa's involvement. Maier, through unbiased eyes, records perhaps the clearest view. In 1992 the country was supposed to, under UN auspices, hold its first ever democratic election-but it all went wrong. UNITA's Jonas Savimbi rejected his defeat. Pik Botha, for many years one of Savimbi's greatest defenders, went to Angola to help bring peace to the country. UNITA owes much of its current military strength to Pretoria, just as the MPLA had a huge debt to the Cubans and the former Soviet Union. Botha's diplomatic efforts were no more successful than those of other international peacekeepers and the diplomatic community eventually negotiated a new, though fragile, peace agreement.

Skeptical of both sides' promises and lies about peace, Maier has written a gripping account of conflict in one of the world's most tragic yet least understood war zones.

      • Review:: 'A good education on the Angolan civil war of the 90's Mr. Maier provides a basic education on the Angolan civil war of the 90's and the circumstances under which it came it be. He has done an admirable job of coupling historical fact and his own experiences into a easily readable memoir of less than 300 pages. However, it would be unfair to the author to compare his writing to that of Rysczard Kapuczinski who's writings about Africa are presented in a style which is closer to poetry than non-fiction.

        I may have just got a bad copy, but it was all I could do to keep the book from disentigrating before I could finish reading it. Every time I opened it 2 or 3 pages would pop out of the binding.........

        Finally, I would like to put a caution out to the potential reader. Please be aware that I do not have the book in front of me at this time and the following quote may not be exact but I promise it is real close. In the closing pages of the book Mr. Maier writes (for reasons that I cannot remember) " the US's failed attempts to impose their new world order on Mogadishu"..........and that was it....no mention of starving people...the UN...or warlords using food as tools of power. Clearly, Mr. Maier is entitled to his views and I would never condemn this well written book for a single misguided statement, but the reader is left wondering if the author may have left other vital pieces of info out of this book in order to further his political agenda.

      • Review:: 'An interesting account of a poorly covered war While this is a better book than "This House Has Fallen" the author's most recent book about Nigeria, it suffers from the same problem of being a series of frequently random encounters with the country in question and the events in it over a period of several years. There is some attempt to give the readers a more structured understanding of the historical and political background, but at the end of the day it is a series of points on a timeline as experienced by the author. His experiences are very interesting, and he is a thoughtful and observant writer who feels an admirable degree of passion for those suffering from the ongoing conflict.
      • Review:: 'A rivetting account of the Angolan civil war Reviewed by MARGARET ANSTEE in International Relations, Volume XIII, No 2, August 1996 -

        Karl Maier describes the long-running Angolan conflict as `the worst war in the world'. During my tenure there in 1992-3 as Special Representative of the Secretary-General and Head of the UN Angolan Verification Mission (UNAVEM II) I also dubbed it `the forgotten tragedy'. Although the horrific armed struggle that engulfed the country once again after Savimbi refused to accept the results of the September 1992 elections claimed more lives than the fighting in Bosnia - 1000 people were dying every day - Angola got scant attention from the media.
        The author was an exception and I respected him for his commitment and his objectivity. Even now it is difficult to lift the veil of silence. Both Karl Maier and I know how hard it is to persuade anyone to publish a book about Angola. The argument is that there is no public interest - and apparently no desire to awaken it either. This book is therefore all the more welcome, and Serif are to be congratulated for making it possible.
        It makes a rivetting read and deserves to reach a wide public. With passionate eloquence Maier depicts the horrendous sufferings of ordinary Angolans, who have known nothing but war for over thirty years - enduring constant bombardments from one side or the other, families divided and uprooted, many thousands mutilated for life by anti-personnel mines, many thousands more, mainly women, children and old people, dying of hunger and malnutrition. The author's moving account of his encounters with individual Angolans of all ethnic and political persuasions brings out the indomitable tenacity and courage of ordinary Angolans, especially the women, as well as the senseless stupidity of the conflict. Maier describes it as `a civil war fought primarily against innocent civilians, the povo (people), by armies of conscripted youngsters on behalf of power-mad politicians'.
        The other great strength of this book is that Maier sets the war in its historic and cultural context. His episodic technique does, however, make it more difficult for those unfamiliar with it, to trace the evolution of the conflict and the reasons for the failure of the various attempts to resolve it. Yet this also serves to underscore the futility of it all. No attempt at rational analysis can justify this degree of suffering.
        Understandably Maier is at his best when recounting his own experience. His attempt to recreate the sanguinary battle for Luanda during the last weekend of October 1992, when he was not in Angola, is less successful. There are errors of chronology and of fact, as well as some internal inconsistencies. This is not surprising since even for those of us who did live through those dreadful events, and were trying to negotiate a cease-fire, there are still mystifying aspects that may never be unravelled.
        Maier has some stern things to say about the United Nations, though he does recognize that the mandate and resources handed out to UNAVEM II as a result of the Bicesse Accords were pathetically inadequate to the enormity of the task, and that the powers for whom Angola had been a desirable pawn during the Cold War, now wanted to get shot of the problem as quickly and cheaply as possible. I agree with many of his comments but regret that he does not always distinguish between the Security Council, UN Headquarters, and the peace-keeping mission on the ground - and thus sometimes mistakenly apportions blame or overestimates what could in practice be done. He contends, for instance, that demobilization delays in the pre-election period could have been solved by UNAVEM threatening to withdraw but such threats could have achieved nothing: if UNAVEM's bluff had been called, the fighting would simply have started earlier. While he shows understanding of the difficulties of my situation he claims that, when the peace process began to crumble after the elections, `she did not use the power she possessed as the focal point of world opinion'. What power? What focal point, given the indifference of world opinion? He himself appears to deny his own thesis by admitting, in the next breath, that `the Western countries, especially the United States, did little to back her up'.
        There is a big difference between being an onlooker and being a player. Cautious public utterances by senior UN officials - and here I refer to his almost contemptuous dismissal of Marrack Goulding's statement, at the end of his visit to Angola in November 1992, that the peace process was `seriously threatened' - should not too easily be dismissed as naive or complacent. According to Mr. Maier, the peace process was already dead, but he gives no clue as to how it might have been revived.
        At that point, the United Nations, in contrast to the marginal role assigned to it in the pre-electoral period, was unceremoniously pushed to centre stage, and expected to resolve the crisis. There were three main options open: to mediate and try to persuade both sides to withdraw from the brink; to send in massive reinforcements - `Blue Helmets' - to prevent the two sides from fighting; or to withdraw altogether. The last was unthinkable, the second impossible because the initial reluctance of the Security Council and the international community to commit any significant resources to resolve the Angolan issue had hardened even further as a result of the Bosnian experience and the growing crisis of peacekeeping in general. Neither the mandate nor the troops would have been forthcoming. Mediation was thus the only course. Even the possibility of bolstering the mediation efforts by sanctions was ruled out because the United States continued to cling to its mistaken belief that it still had influence over UNITA in Security Council resolutions. In any case, as Maier himself writes later, when partial sanctions were eventually applied against UNITA in September 1993, they proved ineffectual.
        Some remarks specific to UNAVEM also require elucidation. Maier's encounter with an American UN electoral observer in Kuito leads him to `wonder where the United Nations finds such people for so important an assignment'. A few observers may not have had the required experience, but his sweeping comment takes no account of the outstanding performance of the majority, many of whom had had valuable experience in Namibia, Nicaragua and Haiti. Moreover, the United Nations had little time in which to mobilize this group and was obliged, because of budgetary constraints imposed by member states, to recruit all but a few from within the existing Secretariat.
        The author's description of myself as `a United Nations diplomat' (whatever that is) and Under-Secretary-General gives the impression of someone who had been catapulted from a desk-bound Headquarters sinecure into this African maelstrom, rather than of someone who had worked in more than a dozen countries, including some of the most underdeveloped, in all regions of the world, among them Africa, had managed large-scale operations in all of them, and had had her (literal) baptism of fire in situations of civil strife in Colombia, Bolivia, Morocco and Chile. More seriously, the comment that UNAVEM `voted with its feet' after the battle of Luanda (referring to the fact that UNAVEM military observers were among those leaving on the first plane) is inaccurate and grossly unfair. It implies that they went of their own volition (an impossibility) out of cowardice and a spirit of self-preservation. It also overlooks that fact that UNAVEM's main mandate ran out on 31 October 1992, coincidentally the day the fighting broke out. While the Security Council had authorized the retention of a smaller mission until the end of the year, several contingents were to leave at the end of October and their routine departure had been held up by the closure of the airport. Contrary to the impression given, UNAVEM was still clinging tenaciously to its 67 team sites all over the country, admittedly in an increasingly thin blue line, but all its members were working tirelessly

From Home

Cached copy until 6:24:11 PM
2305 hits

This Page: Edit | History
This Wiki: Home | Related To Angola | Index | Recent Changes | Random Page | Search
Login | Create New Wiki | Wiki List
7/6/2008 12:42 PM v0.61.106 ADBEFEED
Wiki Site Resource List 46ms