Angola POPULATION STRUCTURE AND DYNAMICS
Figure 4. Population Distribution by Age and Sex, Mid-1986
Source: Based on information from African Statistical Yearbook,
1986, Pt. 3, Addis Ababa, 1986.
As of late 1988, the last official census in Angola had
been
taken in 1970. As a result, most population figures were
widely
varying estimates based on scanty birth and death rate
data.
According to the United States Department of Commerce's
Bureau of
the Census, Angola's 1988 population was about 8.2
million. The
United States Department of State gave a 1986 figure of
8.5
million, while the United Nations (UN) Economic Commission
for
Africa estimated the mid-1986 population at 8.9 million.
The
Angolan government estimated the 1988 population at almost
9.5
million (see
table 2, Appendix A). The government figure,
however,
may have included Angolan refugees in neighboring
countries.
According to the U.S. Committee for Refugees, a private
agency, in
mid-1987 more than 400,000 Angolan refugees resided in
Zaire and
Zambia. There were about 50,000 Cuban soldiers and
civilians and
about 2,000 military and civilian advisers and technicians
from the
Soviet Union and the German Democratic Republic (East
Germany)
stationed in Angola. There were also about 10,000 South
African
refugees, most associated with the antigovernment African
National
Congress (ANC); 70,000 Namibian refugees, most associated
with the
South West Africa People's Organization (SWAPO); and
13,200 Zairian
refugees. There was no officially reported immigration or
emigration.
In spite of warfare, poor health care, and the large
number of
Angolans in exile, the population was growing steadily in
the late
1980s. Like population estimates, however, growth rate
calculations
varied considerably. According to a 1987 estimate by the
United
States Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), the growth rate
was 3.6
percent. The UN 1986 estimate of 2.7 percent was a good
deal lower,
while the government, whose demographic estimates
typically
exceeded those of Western governments and international
organizations, announced a 1986 growth rate of almost 4.9
percent.
The CIA figured the infant mortality rate in 1987 at 167
per 1,000,
and the United States Bureau of the Census calculated the
death
rate at 21 per 1,000.
According to UN figures, Angola had a very young
population. In
1986 the UN estimated that about 46 percent of the
population was
under age fifteen
(see
fig. 4). At the other end of the
age scale,
only 4.8 percent of the population was sixty years of age
or older.
The government estimated the median age at 17.5 years.
Life
expectancy in 1987, according to United States government
sources,
was forty-one for males and forty-four for females.
The 1970 census showed the most densely settled areas
of Angola
to be the plateau, those coastal zones including and
adjacent to
the cities of Luanda, Lobito, Benguela, and Moçâmedes
(present-day
Namibe), and the enclave of Cabinda. The most densely
settled
province in 1970 was Huambo. The other large area of
relatively
dense settlement included much of Cuanza Norte Province
and the
southern part of Uíge Province. This area was the major
center for
coffee cultivation and attracted a number of Europeans and
migrant
workers. Except for Zaire Province in the far northwest,
the most
thinly populated areas of Angola lay in its eastern half.
Since the start of the independence struggle in the
early
1960s, an almost continuous process of urbanization has
taken
place. This process was accelerated in the 1980s by the
UNITA
insurgency, which induced hundreds of thousands of
Angolans to
leave the countryside for large towns. Angola's urban
population
grew from 10.3 percent in 1960 to 33.8 percent in 1988
(according
to government statistics). Much of the growth occurred in
Luanda,
whose population more than doubled between 1960 and 1970,
and which
by 1988 had reached about 1.2 million. Other towns had
also
acquired larger populations: Huambo grew from less than
100,000
residents in 1975 to almost 1 million in 1987, and
Benguela's
population increased from 55,000 to about 350,000 over the
same
period.
After independence in 1975, there were a number of
changes in
the structure of the population. The first was the exodus
of an
estimated 350,000 white Portuguese to their homeland. Yet,
by 1988
there were an estimated 82,000 whites (representing 1
percent of
the population), mostly of Portuguese origin, living in
Angola.
The second change was brought about by large-scale
population
movements, mostly among the Ovimbundu who had migrated in
the 1950s
and 1960s to work on coffee plantations in northwestern
Uíge
Province. Panic-stricken by the onset of civil war in
1975, most
Ovimbundu workers fled to their ethnic homelands in the
central
provinces. Another large-scale population movement
occurred as many
of the Bakongo who had fled to Zaire during the
nationalist
struggle returned to Angola
(see Coalition, the Transitional Government, and Civil War
, ch. 1).
The third and most striking population shift, most
notable in
the late 1970s and 1980s, had been the flight of
increasing numbers
of internal migrants out of the central provinces, where
the
effects of the UNITA insurgency had been most destructive.
Most of
this massive migration had been toward urban areas. From
1975 to
1988, millions of rural civilians were displaced,
including more
than 700,000 forced from their villages since 1985 by
armed
conflict. Many of these migrants relocated to ramshackle
displacement camps, many of which were run by West
European private
voluntary organizations. Although these camps were less
vulnerable
to attacks by UNITA guerrillas, conditions in them were
poor. Food
and water were in short supply, and health care was
limited.
Many of the displaced persons living in Benguela
Province were
Ovimbundu from the plateau regions of eastern Benguela and
Huambo
provinces. The officially registered displaced population
of 21,478
in Benguela Province (1988 figure) lived in nine camps and
one
transit center, but there were probably thousands more
living with
family members in the province's urban areas, including
Lobito and
Benguela. The estimated 116,598 displaced persons living
in several
camps in Cuanza Sul Province had been forced to flee from
the
province's eastern rural areas or from the plateau regions
of
Benguela, Huambo, and Bié provinces because of intense
guerrilla
activity. Because access to many rural areas was limited
and
sometimes impossible, most of these displaced persons were
forced
to rely on other local populations and some limited and
sporadic
outside assistance. Most displaced persons fled from the
more
fertile and wetter highlands to the less hospitable
coastal zone
and would be expected to return to their homes when the
security
situation improved.
In 1988, however, the majority of displaced persons had
become
integrated into the larger urban population, especially
around
Luanda. Many displaced persons who sought refuge in urban
areas did
so through family or other relations to circumvent
government
registration procedures and so avoid taxation,
conscription, or
forced resettlement. Consequently, the exact numbers of
these
people could not be computed. In Luanda much of the
destitute
population, estimated at 447,000 and mostly consisting of
displaced
persons, lived in vertical shantytowns (large apartment
blocks in
the center of the city with inadequate or nonexistent
water sources
or sanitary facilities) or in huge, maze-like
neighborhoods known
as musseques, the largest of which housed an
estimated
400,000 people.
Data as of February 1989
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