February 3, 1961 – Angolan War of Independence: Farm workers protest poor working conditions, starting the rebellion

On February 3, 1961, farm laborers in Baixa do Cassanje, Malanje, rose up in protest over poor working conditions.  The protest quickly spread to many other regions, engulfing a wide area.  The Portuguese were forced to send warplanes that strafed and firebombed many native villages.  Soon, the protest was quelled.

Occurring almost simultaneously with the workers’ protest, armed bands (believed to be affiliated with the MPLA) carried out attacks in Luanda, particularly in the prisons and police stations, aimed at freeing political prisoners.  The raids were repelled, with dozens of attackers and some police officers killed.  In reprisal, government forces and Portuguese vigilante groups attacked Luanda’s slums, where they killed thousands of black civilian residents.

(Taken from Angolan War of Independence – Wars of the 20th Century – Vol. 1)

Background In the late 1400s, Portuguese merchant ships established trading relations with the Kingdom of Congo in West Africa.  Then in 1575, the Portuguese built a settlement in the area of what is present-day Luanda (the Portuguese named the settlement São Paulo da Assumpção de Loanda), starting their involvement in the region that became their future colony of Angola.  During the next 300 years, the Portuguese founded more settlements, as well as fortifications, along the African Atlantic coast.

The Portuguese continued trading relations with the Kingdom of Congo, and built new trading ties with the other tribal kingdoms in the area.  They traded European firearms for the natives’ ivory, minerals, and – of paramount importance in later periods – slaves.  Slave trading in Luanda and other Portuguese ports became important for Portugal in its development of its prized colony of Brazil, and for its huge profits in filling the big demand for manpower in other New World jurisdictions.

Portuguese settlements were situated along the coast, with few settlers venturing into the African interior.  Then in the 1880s, other European powers were jockeying aggressively to gain a share of the large continent, this so-called “Scramble for Africa” soon leading to Africa being carved up into European colonies.  As a result of many treaties signed among the competing European powers, the borders of the African colonies were fixed, with colonial rights for Angola being assigned to Portugal.

By the 1830s, Portugal had lost Brazil and had abolished its transatlantic slave trade.  To replace these two valuable sources of income, Portugal turned to develop its African possessions, including their interior lands.  In Angola, agriculture was developed, with the valuable export crops of coffee and cotton being grown in vast plantations.  The mining industry was expanded.

Portugal’s development of the local economy, including the construction of public infrastructures such as roads and bridges, was carried out using forced labor of black Africans, a system that was so harsh, ruthless, and akin to slavery.  Consequently, thousands of natives fled from the colony.  Indigenous lands were seized by the colonial government.  And while Angola’s economy grew, only the colonizers benefited, while the overwhelming majority of natives were neglected and deprived of education, health care, and other services.

After World War II, thousands of Portuguese immigrants settled in Angola.  The world’s prices of coffee beans were high, prompting the Portuguese government to seek new white settlers in its African colonies to lead the growth of agriculture.  However, many of the new arrivals settled in the towns and cities, instead of braving the harsh rural frontiers. In urban areas, they competed for jobs with black Angolans who likewise were migrating there in large numbers in search of work.  The Portuguese, being white, were given employment preference over the natives, producing racial tension.

The late 1940s saw the rapid growth of nationalism in Africa.  In Angola, three nationalist movements developed, which were led by “assimilados”, i.e. the few natives who had acquired the Portuguese language, culture, education, and religion.  The Portuguese officially designated “assimilados” as “civilized”, in contrast to the vast majority of natives who retained their indigenous lifestyles.

The first of these Angolan nationalist movements was the People’s Movement for the Liberation of Angola or MPLA (Portuguese: Movimento Popular de Libertação de Angola) led by local communists, and formed in 1956 from the merger of the Angolan Communist Party and another nationalist movement called PLUA (English: Party of the United Struggle for Africans in Angola).  Active in Luanda and other major urban areas, the MPLA drew its support from the local elite and in regions populated by the Ambundu ethnic group.  In its formative years, it received foreign support from other left-wing African nationalist groups that were also seeking the independences of their colonies from European rule.  Eventually, the MPLA fell under the influence of the Soviet Union and other communist countries.

The second Angolan nationalist movement was the National Front for the Liberation of Angola or FNLA (Portuguese: Frente Nacional de Libertação de Angola).  The FNLA was formed in 1962 from the merger of two Bakongo regional movements that had as their secondary aim the resurgence of the once powerful but currently moribund Kingdom of Congo.  Primarily, the FNLA wanted to end forced labor, which had caused hundreds of thousands of Bakongo natives to leave their homes.  The FNLA operated out of Leopoldville (present-day Kinshasa) in the Congo from where it received military and financial support from the Congolese government.  The FNLA was led by Holden Roberto, whose authoritarian rule and one-track policies caused the movement to experience changing fortunes during the coming war, and also bring about the formation of the third of Angola’s nationalist movements, UNITA.

UNITA or National Union for the Total Independence of Angola (Portuguese: União Nacional para a Independência Total de Angola) was founded by Jonas Savimbi, a former high-ranking official of the FNLA, over disagreements with Roberto.  Unlike the FNLA and MPLA, which were based in northern Angola, UNITA operated in the colony’s central and southern regions and gained its main support from the Ovibundu people and other smaller ethnic groups.  Initially, UNITA embraced Maoist socialism but later moved toward West-allied democratic Africanism.