Angola became a hot topic in the international media over the weekend, as news outlets around the world wrote about reports that the Southwest African nation had banned Islam and had begun to dismantle mosques.
But an official at the Angolan Embassy in Washington, D.C., who did not want to be identified while discussing the sensitive matter, said that there is no such ban, and that the reports are erroneous.
The official said “The Republic of Angola is a country that does not interfere in religion,We have a lot of religions there. It is freedom of religion. We have Catholic, Protestants, Baptists, Muslims and evangelical people.”
News of Angola’s supposed ban on Islam originated in the African press, which went so far as to quote the nation’s president and minister of culture offering statements that suggested the premise of the reports was accurate.
A second official at the Angolan Embassy in the U.S. reiterated that the diplomatic seat has not been made aware of any ban on Islam in the country.
“At the moment we don’t have any information about that,” the official told IBTimes via phone on Monday. “We’re reading about it just like you on the Internet. We don’t have any notice that what you’re reading on the Internet is true.”
Angolan President José Eduardo dos Santos reportedly weighed in on the controversy, as he was quoted in Nigeria's Osun Defender newspaper on Sunday as saying,
"This is the final end of Islamic influence in our country," according to a report by the website OnIslam.net, which was accompanied by the suspect photo supposedly depicting the Angolan mosque’s minaret being dismantled in October of last year.
The president has been out of the country for a week and as such he could not have made the remarks as they were reported.
Weekly French-language Moroccan newspaper La Nouvelle Tribune published an article on Friday sourcing "several" Angolan officials, including the minister of Culture, Rosa Cruz, who reportedly offered the following remarks, which have been translated from French: "The process of legalization of Islam has not been approved by the Ministry of Justice and Human Rights. Their mosques would be closed until further notice."
OnIslam.net reports that the African economic news agency Agence Ecofin wrote that Cruz made the statement at an appearance last week before the 6th Commission of the National Assembly. The website goes on to note that, "According to several Angolan newspapers, Angola has become the first country in the world to ban Islam and Muslims, taking first measures by destroying mosques in the country."
The first Angolan Embassy official denied knowledge that Cruz had made such comments.
La Nouvelle Tribune also reported that a minaret of an Angolan mosque was dismantled last October, and that the city of Zango "has gone further by destroying the only mosque in the city." The Embassy officials could not authenticate either of these claims.
Angola is a majority-Christian nation of about 16 million people, of whom an estimated 55 percent are Catholic, 25 percent belong to African Christian denominations, 10 percent follow major Protestant traditions and 5 percent belong to Brazilian Evangelical churches. Only 80,000 to 90,000 Angolans are Muslim,according to the U.S. State Department.
Before nko? Is it possible to ban any religion in this 21st century? When we are not in the dark ages
ReplyDeletei wornder how Angola willl bann islam ? thats not possible .
ReplyDeletecheck out www.wendysgist.blogspot.com
I did not believe this story from the jump. No reputable news site was carrying it, just a bunch of blogs and miss road folk (no offense Aunty Stella). When I saw it on OnIslam.net, I knew something was fishy. The photo was suspect, BBC them no carry am as a full story, just Naija, Indian, Malaysian and some Gulf Country bloggers.
ReplyDeleteWho are we to believe? Anyway, time will tell.
ReplyDeleteWhere do all these rumors originate from sef? Som1 will jst sit down nd fabricate a story nd it strts spreading. Nawa o
ReplyDeleteLet this not be true cos I forsee a religious war in angola which might even extend to nigeria.
ReplyDeleteThese are diplomats, I'm not saying diplomats lie but they can tell one to 'go to hell' and one will be looking forward to the journey. I had an angolan flatmate in university and I immediately contacted him to confirm this news on Angola. He told me it's true and that their president Dos Santos doesn't want a situation where moslems will start gaining ground in Angola because at the time of independence, there was no religion like Islam in the constitution and no citizen practised it then. Any moslem in the country in 2013 must be a foreigner and wasn't there at independence. Personally I see reasons with the angolan president, his country has been I a civil war between 1976 to 2005 when Savimbi died, he understands that Islam maybe a peaceful regilion but arabs and niggas abuse religion a lot. To avoid crisis, it would be in the interest of peace to ban Islam in the first since it wasn't there in the beginning, if any citizen prefers Islam, he/she can travel to Northern Nigeria and settle there.
ReplyDeleteAbi o where the zealots and myopic ignorant flourish. Long hiss
DeleteMust the Muslims live there? Can't they go some where else and practice their religion? The aggressive nature of the religion puts me off...and it never gets old.
ReplyDeletedid any reporter go to Angola to verify if Mosques have been closed? torn down? talk to any Muslims to hear from them if they have been stopped from going to mosques?
ReplyDeletethis is something that could have been very easily verified before reporting.
-RVA
Funny enuf,Jehovah's witnesses av bin banned in many coutries 4years......germany under hitler,north n south korean n even some eastern european countries. Armenian jus lifted d ban sef. It's sha a fulfillment of bible prophecies,So no 1 should b shocked. #Jus sayin#
ReplyDeleteShameful how rumour fly-----http://allafrica.com/stories/201311261638.html?aa_source=acrdn-f0
ReplyDelete