Angola Effects of the Insurgency
Young victims of the insurgency
Courtesy International Committee of the Red Cross (Yannick Müller)
The UNITA insurgency had a far greater impact on
Angola's
social fabric than the government's socialist policies.
Hundreds of
thousands of displaced persons were forced not only to
seek refuge
in towns and military protected resettlement areas but
also to
disrupt traditional life-styles. Intensive military
recruitment
drained urban and rural areas of much of the young adult
male
population as well. UNITA frequently reported avoidance of
government military conscription and battlefield
desertions, and
its spokespersons also claimed in late 1988 that large
numbers of
teachers in rural areas had been recruited by the
government,
depleting the schools of trained instructors. It was not
clear to
what extent, if any, this disruption changed the social
order in
families, or if village social structures remained intact.
Another significant influence on the population caused
by the
UNITA insurgency was the emphasis on defense. Two militia
forces
were created: the ODP in 1975 (renamed the Directorate of
People's
Defense and Territorial Troops in 1985), and the People's
Vigilance
Brigades (Brigadas Populares de Vigilância--BPV) in 1984
(see War and the Role of the Armed Forces in Society; Internal Security Forces and Organization
, ch. 5). The Directorate of
People's
Defense and Territorial Troops, operating as a backup
force to the
Angolan armed forces, had both armed and unarmed units
dispersed
throughout the country in villages to protect the
population from
UNITA attacks. Although the Directorate of People's
Defense and
Territorial Troops had an estimated 50,000 official
members in
1988, as many as 500,000 men and women may have been
participating
in reserve functions. The BPV, organized more as a mass
organization than as a branch of the armed forces, had an
estimated
1.5 million members in 1987. Designed to function in urban
areas,
the BPV had broader responsibilities than the Directorate
of
People's Defense and Territorial Troops, including
political and
military training of the population and detection of
criminal
activities.
The consequences of war-related economic failure also
disrupted
Angolan society profoundly. The government had been
compelled to
expend enormous economic and human resources to fight
UNITA,
denying the population basic goods and services as well as
diverting those with the skills badly needed for national
development into military positions. The toll was heaviest
among
children, who suffered the most from substandard health
conditions
and the underfunded and understaffed school system. The
insurgency
also contributed heavily to underproduction in the
agricultural
sector, resulting in dangerous food shortages, especially
in rural
areas, and in the country's dependence on external food
sources.
Data as of February 1989
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