Angola WAR AND THE ROLE OF THE ARMED FORCES IN SOCIETY
The Costs of Endemic Conflict
A government soldier is fitted for a prosthesis at a
hospital in Huambo.
Courtesy International Committee of the Red Cross (Yannick Müller)
Persistent internal and external conflict have wrought
havoc on
Angola. The human cost has been awesome and tragic. It was
estimated that as a consequence of war, between 60,000 and
90,000
people had died, and 20,000 to 50,000 persons had become
amputees
as of 1988
(see Effects of the Insurgency
, ch. 2). From
1975 to
1988, almost 700,000 people were forced to flee their
rural homes
for relative safety in displacement camps or in burgeoning
cities
and towns, where they suffered gross deprivations in the
absence of
basic services. About 400,000 Angolans became refugees in
neighboring states. Moreover, in 1986 some 600,000 people
needed
nutritional assistance.
The Angolan economy was also ravaged by wartime
destruction and
the heavy defense burden. Iron production virtually
stopped,
diamond mining and timber harvesting were severely
curtailed, and
smuggling siphoned off needed export earnings. Economic
sabotage
and attacks on infrastructure by UNITA and South Africa
damaged or
destroyed hundreds of facilities and made development
impossible.
The destruction attributed to South African military
actions alone
was estimated at US$20 billion. Devastation of the
once-prosperous
agricultural sector was forcing the government to import
about 80
percent of its food requirements in the mid-1980s, at a
cost of
US$250 million to US$300 million annually. It was only
because of
oil production in relatively secure Cabinda Province that
the
country could pay the high cost of defense and keep itself
from
total economic ruin
(see Background to Economic Development;
Structure of the Economy
, ch. 3).
Military recruitment placed a growing burden on the
Angolan
population. According to statistics published by the
United States
Arms Control and Disarmament Agency (ACDA), the number of
soldiers
per 1,000 people increased from five in 1975 to more than
seven in
the 1980s, which ranked Angola fifty-seventh among 144
countries in
1985. Any reckoning of the military burden borne by the
Angolan
people, however, must also take into account UNITA's armed
forces.
And because both FAPLA and UNITA expanded considerably in
the late
1980s as the internal war intensified, the number of
combatants per
1,000 people was actually twenty (based on 1988 population
and
combined armed forces estimates), a figure that moved
Angola's
global ranking into the top fifteen.
Data as of February 1989
|