Angola Africa
Africa Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor Releases [Read More]
Countries and Other Areas ... Information about countries (including dependencies and areas of special sovereignty) under the Bureau of African Affairs is available through the clickable map below and through links in the navigation bar at left. The list is sorted alphabetically by short-form names. For long-form names, please refer to the Background Notes or see the list of Independent States of the World. Note that the Bureau of African Affairs deals with countries in Sub-Saharan Africa, not those in North Africa. ... [Read More]
Africa Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor Releases [Read More]
IV. Country Narratives: Africa South Africa lacks an anti-trafficking statute and has no comprehensive law enforcement programs targeting trafficking. Some government agencies have developed their own anti-trafficking programs. Traffickers are prosecuted under a variety of statutes, including the Child Care Act, the Sexual Offences Act, the Prevention of Organized Crime Act, and the general criminal law. Approximately 10 investigations and four prosecutions involving trafficking are underway. Government officials are moving expeditiously to address the trafficking problem on several fronts. The South African Law Commission is preparing comprehensive draft legislation on trafficking for consideration in 2004. The National Directorate for Public Prosecutions formed an inter-agency task force that drafted a national action plan on trafficking in persons. Police officials formed an anti-trafficking team at the Johannesburg airport. Police resources to address trafficking are limited in South Africa, which has am ... [Read More]
Africa Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor Releases [Read More]
Africa Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor Releases [Read More]
Angola (06/05) Colonial economic development did not translate into social development for native Angolans. The Portuguese regime encouraged white immigration, especially after 1950, which intensified racial antagonisms. As decolonization progressed elsewhere in Africa, Portugal, under the Salazar and Caetano dictatorships, rejected independence and treated its African colonies as overseas provinces. Consequently, three independence movements emerged: the Popular Movement for the Liberation of Angola (MPLA) led by Agostinho Neto, with a base among Kimbundu and the mixed-race intelligentsia of Luanda, and links to communist parties in Portugal and the East Bloc; the National Front for the Liberation of Angola (FNLA), led by Holden Roberto with an ethnic base in the Bakongo region of the north and links to the United States and the Mobutu regime in Kinshasa; and the National Union for the Total Independence of Angola (UNITA), led by Jonas Malheiro Savimbi with an ethnic and regional base in the Ovimbun ... [Read More]
U.S. Department of State Websites of U.S. Embassies and Consulates AFRICA Africa Regional Services - Paris ... MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICA Algeria: Algiers ... [Read More]
Africa Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor Releases [Read More]
Information about Angola News about Africa: 11Africa Confidential 11AfricaOnline 11AllAfrica News Online11 BBC News Africa11 11CNN World Africa 11 ... [Read More]
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