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Angola's ex-first daughter says 'justice denied' in graft case

By AFP
Angola Isabel dos Santos is accused of diverting billions of dollars from state companies.  By MIGUEL RIOPA AFPFile
JUN 29, 2020 LISTEN
Isabel dos Santos is accused of diverting billions of dollars from state companies. By MIGUEL RIOPA (AFP/File)

Angolan billionaire businesswoman and former first daughter Isabel dos Santos on Monday said she had been "denied justice" after losing an appeal against an asset freeze for alleged corruption.

Described by Forbes magazine as the wealthiest woman in Africa, she is accused of diverting billions of dollars from state companies during her father Jose Eduardo dos Santos's nearly 40-year rule of the oil-rich southern African nation.

Since her father retired in 2017, her business empire has been targeted by Angola's new leader Joao Lourenco who has vowed to tackle corruption.

"I have been denied justice from the courts in Angola and Portugal," dos Santos said in a statement.

"This denial of justice comes from the Angolan courts which have rejected my appeal on the grounds that it was not filed on time.

"It is disappointing not to be allowed a day in court to prove my innocence and establish the truth," she said.

In December a court in Luanda issued an order to freeze her business assets as part of a crackdown on graft.

That set off a flurry of developments, including the so-called "Luanda Leaks" papers alleging she funnelled Angolan state funds to offshore assets.

But Isabel dos Santos, 47, has vehemently denied the allegations and denounced Luanda's actions as a politically-motivated "witch-hunt".

In the aftermath, Angola's former colonial ruler Portugal froze her assets in that country, where she has invested mainly in the banking and telecommunications sectors.

Dos Santos said the judge had overlooked what she claimed was false evidence, including a false passport bearing the signature of late martial arts star Bruce Lee used to justify the freeze order.

Last week Angola's attorney general Helder Pitta Gros said Luanda, working in tandem with Lisbon, was mulling the possibility of issuing an arrest warrant.

Dos Santos said this was "manifestly unjustified" because she had displayed a "readiness to cooperate" with authorities.

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