The President of Angola’s daughter, Isabel dos Santos, known as the richest woman in Africa, has taken control of Angola’s largest bank Banco de Fomento Angola (BFA). The controlling stake was bought from a Portuguese bank by Angola’s largest phone operator Unitel which is run by Ms dos Santos. She already runs the state oil company. Portugal's BPI bank ceded control of the bank following months of pressure from the European Central bank, which said BPI's exposure to Angolan government debt was too risky under new European banking laws. Ms dos Santos also owns a large stake in BPI. She is seen as being more likely to support a takeover bid by another BPI shareholder, Spain's CaixaBank, following the sale of the controlling stake in BFA to Unitel.
The result is that Africa’s richest woman is now reported to have taken control of another key piece of Angola’s economy. The move has left observers pondering whether to applaud a savvy female entrepreneur or to bemoan the enduring power of the continent’s entrenched elites. Isabel dos Santos is 43, ambitious, successful and unusual in a region where men still rule most boardrooms.
But Mrs dos Santos is also the oldest daughter of Angola’s President Jose Eduardo dos Santos, a man who has run the country since 1979.
Angola is one of the world’s least developed nations. In recent years it has benefited from an oil boom and Chinese investment. But corruption and poverty remain huge challenges.
The president’s daughter has repeatedly tried to shrug off allegations of nepotism, of the first family looking to form an economic and political dynasty that will live on after the President steps down, as he’s recently promised to do.
But Mrs dos Santos already controls Angola’s state oil company, and it’s largest telephone company. Now, with those extra shares, she’s added the country’s largest bank - BFA. The family’s dominant role in the country seems likely to endure.
I am a metro reporter on Gistmania, I have been publishing news materials for over 5 years
Posted: at 6-01-2017 04:35 PM (8 years ago) | Hero
I see. So just in-case the man steps down as he promised, the entire country's economy still remains under his family's control. Africans and their primitive greed
Posted: at 6-01-2017 06:16 PM (8 years ago) | Newbie
Too much Power Corrupts, especially if self interest is too dominant, i hope she thinks about ways to empower her people, so that anyone with a good head can possess that power.
Posted: at 6-01-2017 08:04 PM (8 years ago) | Gistmaniac
let our society be such that even the poor man's child has the potential and chance to rule a country, it doesn't have to be from one side. we are still living in the primitive age.
Posted: at 6-01-2017 08:09 PM (8 years ago) | Gistmaniac