Angola

Impact

Last updated: 22 February 2024

COUNTRY SUMMARY

Angola is contaminated with landmines and explosive remnants of war (ERW) as a result of four decades of armed conflict, which ended with a peace agreement in 2002.[1]

Angola’s initial Mine Ban Treaty Article 5 clearance deadline was 1 January 2013. It has since been granted two extensions: a five-year extension until January 2018, and an extension for a further eight years until 31 December 2025.

To improve coordination of mine action activities, the National Intersectoral Commission for Demining and Humanitarian Assistance (Comissão Nacional Intersectorial de Desminagem e Assistência Humanitária, CNIDAH) was replaced by the National Agency for Action Against Mines (Agência Nacional De Acção Contra Minas, ANAM) in 2021. It operates alongside the newly-established National Demining Center (Centro Nacional de Desminagem, CND).[2]

Risk education is conducted by demining operators as an integrated part of survey, clearance, and explosive ordnance disposal (EOD), but is not integrated into the school curriculum.[3]

ASSESSING THE IMPACT

Contamination

Extent of contamination[4]

 

Antipersonnel landmine

Cluster munition remnant

ERW

Extent of contamination

Large

 

Unknown*

 

Unknown

Reported contamination

68km2

CHA: 65.36km2

SHA: 2.64km²

 

N/A

1.31km2

CHA: 1.31km²

SHA: N/R

Note: ERW=explosive remnants of war; CHA=confirmed hazardous area; SHA=suspected hazardous area; N/A=not applicable; N/R=not reported.

*Though the extent of cluster munition remnants contamination is unknown, it is believed to be small.

Landmine contamination

Angola’s landmine contamination is the result of more than four decades of internal conflict. Various foreign and national armed movements, and non-state armed groups (NSAGs), were known to have laid mines, often sporadically, without marking or mapping the minefields.

The worst affected provinces in Angola are those that witnessed prolonged fighting, including Bié, Cuando Cubango, and Moxico. Mine contamination affects both urban and rural areas.[5]

CNIDAH reported in 2017 that the continued presence of mines remained a major impediment to development projects related to economic diversification, agriculture, tourism, and mining.[6]

Minefields in Angola can contain a mixture of antipersonnel and antivehicle mines. Operators have also documented use of improvised landmines, as well as stacking of both antipersonnel and antivehicle mines. 

As of the end of 2022, Angola reported that 68km2 across 16 provinces and 1,142 areas was contaminated by landmines.[7] Included in this total is 3.06km² of new antipersonnel landmine contamination, across 65 confirmed hazardous areas (CHAs), discovered in 2022.[8]

Cluster munition remnants contamination

The extent to which Angola is contaminated by cluster munition remnants is unknown. Cluster munitions were used during the conflict, yet it is unclear when or by whom. Evidence suggests that Angola has a residual threat from cluster munition remnants, though the extent of residual contamination is believed to be small. Unexploded submunitions and remnants of air-dropped cluster bombs have been cleared from eight provinces, mostly in the south and southeast.[9]

Other types of contamination

Angola has a significant problem with contamination by other types of ERW, which in some areas may pose more of a threat than mines.[10] However, the full extent of ERW contamination in the country is unknown. In 2022, 1.31km² of CHA containing ERW was recorded.[11]

Casualties

There is no national data collection or casualty surveillance system in Angola. A census held in 2014 found that 88,716 people were living with a disability as a result of mines/ERW.[12]

5-year casualties total: 2018–2022[13]

Year

Injured

Killed

Unknown

Total

2022

66

41

0

107

2021

9

9

77

95

2020

9

4

0

13

2019

34

26

16

76

2018

16

5

0

21

 

     Casualties in 2022[14]

Injured

Killed

Unknown

Total

Change from previous year

66

41

0

107

Increase from 95 in 2021

 

Casualty demographics in 2022

Adult

Men

Women

Unknown

39

13

26

0

Children

Boys

Girls

Unknown

68

36

32

0

 

     Casualties by civilian status in 2022[15]

Civilian

Military

Deminer

Unknown

102

0

5

0

 

Casualties by device type in 2022

APM

AVM

Improvised mine

Unspecified mine type

CMR

ERW

Unknown

Mine/ERW

N/R

N/R

N/R

N/R

N/R

N/R

107

Note: APM=antipersonnel mine; AVM=antivehicle mine; CMR=cluster munition remnant; ERW=explosive remnant of war; N/R=not reported.

 

COORDINATION

Summary table[16]

Mine action

Main Coordination Body    

Coordination Mechanism

Strategy/plan

National Mine Action Standards      

ANAM

 

Direct

National Mine Action Strategy 2020–2025

Aligned with IMAS

Risk education

Main Coordination Body    

Coordination Mechanism

Strategy/plan

National Mine Action Standards      

ANAM

Direct

None

Aligned with IMAS

Victim assistance

Main Coordination Body    

Coordination Mechanism

Strategy/plan

National Mine Action Standards

ANAM

Direct

None

Aligned with IMAS

Note: ANAM=Agência Nacional De Acção Contra Minas (National Agency for Action Against Mines); IMAS=International Mine Action Standards.

ADDRESSING THE IMPACT

Clearance

Highlights from 2022

Angola reported no major progress during 2022 due to the discovery of additional minefields, particularly in the municipality of Lucala, in Cuanza Norte province.[17]

In 2022, Angola began using mine detection dogs in its technical survey operations.[18]

 

Management and coordination

Management and coordination overview 

The mine action sector in Angola is overseen by ANAM, which had replaced CNIDAH as the national authority in July 2021.[19] The Executive Demining Commission (Comissão Executiva de Desminagem CED), was similarly replaced by the CND.[20]

 

Legislation and standards

Angola reported that its national mine action standards are in line with the International Mine Action Standards (IMAS). In addition to 10 existing standards, new standards on EOD, animal detection systems, and management of residual contamination were developed in 2022, with support from the Geneva International Centre for Humanitarian Demining (GICHD). Updated standards on risk education and victim assistance were also drafted.[21]

 

Strategies and policies 

Angola’s National Mine Action Strategy for 2020–2025 is aligned with the Oslo Action Plan. It covers land release, residual contamination management, risk education, victim assistance, advocacy, communication, and coordination.[22] Its development was supported by GICHD.[23]

A National Demining Workplan for 2020–2025 was developed to support implementation of the national strategy.[24]

Angola reported that its Article 5 implementation plan was updated with the aim of completing clearance of minefields listed in the database by 2025, following the creation of the CND.[25]

 

Information management

In 2016, Angola began using the Information Management System for Mine Action (IMSMA) Next Generation. In 2022, Angola reported that this system is outdated and has requested the help of GICHD to transition to IMSMA Core.[26]

 

Gender and diversity

Gender and diversity are covered in the National Mine Action Strategy 2020–2025 but are not included in Angola’s Article 5 implementation workplan. In November 2019, Angola signed the Working Paper on Gender Equality at the Mine Ban Treaty Fourth Review Conference.[27]

 

In 2022, Angola reported that its mine action sector had made significant strides toward gender balance. More than 30% of ANAM staff are women, with some in managerial positions.[28]

Clearance operators

The number of national and international clearance operators in Angola has decreased since 2017.[29] Several international non-governmental organizations (NGOs) have ceased operations due to lack of funding, and in September 2022, ANAM reported that the CED, and all national operators working under it, had been decommissioned.[30]

 

In 2022, national clearance operators included the CND and the Association of Angolan Mine Action Professionals (Associação de profissionais angolanos de Acção contra as minas, APACOMINAS). International clearance operators working in Angola included APOPO, the HALO Trust, Mines Advisory Group (MAG), and Norwegian People’s Aid (NPA).[31]

Land release: antipersonnel landmines

2022 land release overview: Landmines[32]

Area cleared

(km²)

Area reduced

(km²)

Area cancelled

(km²)

Total area released

(km²)

APM destroyed

5.87

4.72

3.14

13.73

3,340

 Note: APM=antipersonnel mines.

 

In 2022, Angola released a total of 13.73km², destroying 3,340 antipersonnel mines in addition to two improvised mines. During demining operations, a total of 1,523 antivehicle mines and 2,695 ERW were also destroyed. Of the ERW destroyed, 1,721 were reported to be abandoned explosive ordnance (AXO) while 974 were classified as unexploded ordnance (UXO).[33]

Five-year landmine clearance: 2018­–2022[34]

Year

Area cleared (km²)

Area reduced (km²)

Area cancelled (km²)

Total area released

(km²)

APM destroyed

2022

5.87

4.72

3.14

13.73

3,340

2021

5.91

1.55

1.24

8.69

3,617

2020

1.77

1.78

0.12

3.67

426

2019

1.92

0.75

11.19

13.86

1,943

2018

1.04

2.67

10.82

14.53

1,707

 Note: APM=antipersonnel mines.

 

In the five-year period from 2018–2022, Angola released a total area of 54.48km².

Angola has stated that the clearance of contaminated areas close to communities is prioritized. It has also reported that demining work has focused on provinces that are close to completion, so that in turn, resources can subsequently be shifted to the other affected provinces.[35] 

In 2022, ANAM reported that as several forces participated in past armed conflict, and given the atypical nature of mine-laying in Angola, many mined areas were not identified in initial surveys that acted as a contamination baseline. Given these factors, the Angolan government stipulates that technical survey and clearance must be carried out in areas selected for public and private investment projects including roads, hydroelectric dams, airports, electricity lines, industrial estates, land reserves, and agricultural projects.[36]

Mine Ban Treaty Article 5 clearance deadline

 

Summary of Article 5 clearance deadline extension request(s)

Original deadline

Extension period

(no. of request)

Current deadline

Status

1 January 2013

5 years (1st)

8 years (2nd)

31 December 2025

Behind target

Angola’s original Mine Ban Treaty Article 5 deadline was in January 2013. Yet given the size of the contaminated area, the complexity of mine-laying, challenges related to the climate and vegetation, and the absence of mapping, it was not possible to clear all known minefields by this deadline. In March 2012, Angola submitted a first request to extend its clearance deadline by five years, to 1 January 2018. The request was granted by States Parties.[37]

In May 2017, Angola submitted a second extension request, asking for another eight years to complete clearance under Article 5. The request was granted at the Sixteenth Meeting of States Parties, and the new deadline was agreed as 31 December 2025.[38] In November 2018, Angola submitted an updated workplan for the implementation of its Article 5 obligations.[39]

Angola has reported that it is undertaking every effort to meet its 31 December 2025 deadline, yet it is believed that it will realistically be able to complete clearance of all known minefields by 2028, with the possibility of an extension to 2030 depending on availability of funds.[40]

Land release: cluster munition remnants

Angola did not report the release of any cluster munition contaminated land during 2022.[41]

Five-year cluster munition remnant clearance[42]

Year

Area cleared (km²)

Area reduced (km²)

Area cancelled (km²)

Total area released (km²)

CMR destroyed

2022

0

0

0

0

0

2021

0.55

0

0

0.55

29

2020

0

0

0

0

0

2019

0

0

0

0

164

2018

0

0

0

0

1

Note: CMR=cluster munition remnants.

In 2021, a total of 0.55km2 of cluster munition contaminated land in Angola was cleared, with 29 submunitions found and destroyed by the HALO Trust.[43] In 2019, no land was recorded as cleared, but 164 cluster munitions were found and destroyed during EOD callouts.[44]

Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 4 clearance deadline 

Angola signed the Convention on Cluster Munitions in 2008 but has not yet ratified it.[45]

 

Residual hazards

In 2022, Angola prepared a draft strategy on residual contamination. A draft national standard on the management of residual contamination was also prepared with assistance from GICHD. It is thought that the CND will be responsible for managing residual contamination. A forum involving all stakeholders is set to be held before the new strategy and standard are finalized.[46]

 

Risk education

 Highlights from 2022

Due to a lack of funding, risk education was integrated with clearance and victim assistance activities. Resources were insufficient to enable operators to conduct standalone activities.[47]

Management and coordination

Management and coordination overview

Risk education in Angola is overseen by ANAM, though it reported that it is not yet equipped to carry out technical monitoring to evaluate risk education activities by operators.[48]

Risk education is integrated with clearance and EOD tasks. It takes place in urban and rural areas, and focuses mainly on the threat from antipersonnel mines, antivehicle mines, and UXO. Operators conduct risk education alongside clearance operations and collect information on suspected contamination and victims.[49]

 

Legislation and standards 

In 2022, Angola reported that its national risk education standards were in the process of being updated in line with IMAS 12.10 on Risk Education.[50]

 

Strategies and policies

Angola does not have a national risk education strategy. Activities are coordinated by ANAM and implemented by operators. However, there is no in-country technical working group, and a lack of funding was reported to have hindered risk education provision in 2022.[51]

 

Information management

ANAM records data gathered by risk education operators in IMSMA, which is disaggregated by gender, age, and disability. Angola uses Standard Beneficiary Definitions.[52]

 

Gender and diversity 

In the absence of a national risk education strategy, Angola does not have gender and diversity targets for risk education activities. International operators disaggregate their beneficiary data by gender and age, and ensure that community members are consulted on an equal basis.

Risk education operators

International operators conducting risk education in 2022 included APOPO, the HALO Trust, MAG, and NPA.[53]

Beneficiary data

Beneficiary data in 2022[54]

Operator

Men

Boys

Women

Girls

Persons with disabilities

ANAM*

39,146

59,605

46,120

67,242

N/R

*ANAM reported data collected from all risk education operators.

Note: N/R=not reported.

 

Angola reported the disaggregated data collected from all operators conducting risk education activities in 2022, with a total of 212,113 beneficiaries reached across 18 provinces.[55]

Target groups

Communities living in areas where past conflict took place were targeted for risk education in 2022. ANAM also reported that peasants and hunters were vulnerable due to their mobility.[56]

Delivery methods

Risk education in Angola is delivered primarily through face-to-face sessions in communities, which are held in marketplaces, schools, churches, and households.[57] 

Risk education is not integrated into the primary or secondary school curriculum.[58]

Victim assistance

Highlights from 2022

Angola reported that implementation of its overarching National Employment Fund facilitates access to the labor market for mine/ERW victims.[59]

Management and coordination

ANAM is responsible for coordinating and planning victim assistance activities in Angola. It worked with operators, civil society groups, and churches during 2022 to include mine/ERW survivors in the planning of activities, through participation in thematic meetings, workshops, and reports. Angola reported facing constraints in funding for victim assistance activities.[60]

Legislation and standards

In 2022, ANAM collaborated with its partners and stakeholders to develop a national mine action standard (NMAS) in accordance with the International Mine Action Standard (IMAS) on Victim Assistance (IMAS 13.10). It is reported that this NMAS has been drafted and will be approved soon.[61]

 

Strategies and policies

Angola had no specific victim assistance strategy in place in 2022. However, victim assistance was included as a strategic area in the National Mine Action Strategy 2020–2025.[62]

Legal frameworks or policies on disability inclusion

Angola reported that efforts were made to ensure persons with disabilities were integrated into the employment system, with recruitment processes needing to adhere to Presidential Decree No. 12/16. This decree ensures that 4% of employees within government institutions and 2% of employees in private institutions are persons with disabilities.[63]

Angola reported that mine/ERW survivors have been included in the development of relevant national programs and policies, except in rural and remote areas, where more work is needed to ensure their participation.[64]

Victim assistance providers

Governmental victim assistance providers in 2022 included the Neves Bendinha Orthopedic Center, which provided physiotherapy. The Ministry for Assistance and Social Reintegration provided referrals for mobility devices, vocational training, income-generation projects, and subsistence items. The National Council for Social Action engaged in advocacy for victims.

National providers included the National Association of the Disabled of Angola (Associação Nacional dos deficientes de Angola, ANDA), which provided community rehabilitation and engaged in advocacy work. The Lwini Foundation provided physiotherapy and prosthetics.[65]

Medical care and rehabilitation

Few public rehabilitation centers in Angola have the capacity to produce new prosthetics and mobility devices. Rehabilitation services are available at public clinics, including the Neves Bendinha Orthopedic Center in Luanda province, but reporting on beneficiaries is limited.[66] 

Angola’s rehabilitation programs are limited to providing physical rehabilitation and repairing existing prosthetic devices, due to a lack of raw materials. In 2020, the construction of a new facility for the Lwini Foundation in Angola reportedly stalled due to a lack of funding.[67]

In 2022, Angola reported progress in the healthcare sector, with the construction of new health facilities and the improvement of existing centers set to benefit mine/ERW victims. It reported that orthopedic centers were also in operation.[68]

Socio-economic and psychosocial inclusion

The provision of inclusive and special education, as well as computer literacy and braille, were priorities listed by Angola with regard to mine/ERW victim assistance.[69] 

ANDA oversees a community-based rehabilitation program titled “Come with me,” providing training and outreach in the provinces of Bié, Cabinda, Cuanza Sul, Huila, Malange, Moxico, and Uige.[70]



[1] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Leonardo Sapalo, Director General, National Agency for Action Against Mines (Agência Nacional De Acção Contra Minas, ANAM), 10 May 2023.

[2] Angola Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2022), Form A, p. 2. See, Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Database.

[3] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Jean Cortez, Head of Risk Education Department, ANAM, 10 May 2023.

[4] Angola Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2022), Form C; and response to Monitor questionnaire by Leonardo Sapalo, Director General, ANAM, 10 May 2023.

[5] ICBL-CMC, “Country Profile: Angola: Impact,” updated 10 February 2021.

[7] Angola Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2022), Form C, p. 4.

[8] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Leonardo Sapalo, Director General, ANAM, 10 May 2023.

[9] In 2017, Angola stated that eight provinces were suspected to be contaminated with cluster munition remnants: Bengo, Bié, Cuando Cubango, Cuanza Sul, Cunene, Huambo, Huila, and Moxico. Statement of Angola, Convention on Cluster Munitions Seventh Meeting of States Parties, Geneva, 4 September 2017.

[10] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Jeanette Dijkstra, Angola Country Director, Mines Advisory Group (MAG), 13 May 2020.

[11] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Leonardo Sapalo, Director General, ANAM, 10 May 2023.

[12] National Institute of Statistics, “Final results General Population and Housing Census – 2014,” 28 March 2016. See, “Table 8 – Disabled population by province and area or residence, according to the cause of disability and sex.”

[13] Angola Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2022), Form I, p. 16; Angola Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2021), Form F, p. 8; Angola Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2020), Form F, p. 7; and Angola Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2018), Form F, p. 9.

[14] Angola Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2022), Form I, p. 16.

[15] Angola Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2022), Form I, p. 16.

[16] Angola Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2022).

[17] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Leonardo Sapalo, Director General, ANAM, 10 May 2023.

[18] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Leonardo Sapalo, Director General, ANAM, 10 May 2023.

[19] Angola Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2021), Form A, p. 2.

[20] Angola Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2021), Form A, p. 2.

[21] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Leonardo Sapalo, Director General, ANAM, 10 May 2023.

[22] Angola Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form J, p. 11.

[23] GICHD, “Annual Report 2019,” 8 June 2020, p. 20.

[24] ICBL-CMC, “Country Profile: Angola: Impact,” updated 10 February 2021.

[25] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Leonardo Sapalo, Director General, ANAM, 10 May 2023.

[26] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Leonardo Sapalo, Director General, ANAM, 10 May 2023.

[27] Angola Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form J, p. 12.

[28] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Leonardo Sapalo, Director General, ANAM, 10 May 2023.

[30] Angola Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2022), Form J, p. 17.

[31] Angola Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2022), Form F, p. 9.

[32] Angola Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2022), Form F, p. 8.

[33] Angola Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2022), Form F, p. 8.

[34] Angola Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2022), Form F, p. 8; Angola Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2021), Form F, p. 8; Angola Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2020), Form F, p. 7; and Angola Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2018), Form F, p. 9.

[35] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Leonardo Sapalo, Director General, ANAM, 10 May 2023.

[36] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Leonardo Sapalo, Director General, ANAM, 10 May 2023.

[37] Committee on Article 5 Implementation, “Analysis of the request submitted by Angola for an extension of the deadline for completing the destruction of anti-personnel mines in accordance with Article 5 of the Convention,” Mine Ban Treaty Sixteenth Meeting of States Parties, Vienna, 1 December 2017.

[38] Mine Ban Treaty, “Final report,” Sixteenth Meeting of States Parties, Vienna, 22 December 2017.

[39] Committee on Article 5 Implementation, “Preliminary Observations on the Implementation of Article 5 by Angola,” Mine Ban Treaty intersessional meetings, held virtually, 30 June–2 July 2020.

[40] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Leonardo Sapalo, Director General, ANAM, 10 May 2023.

[41] Angola Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2022).

[42] Angola Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2022); Angola Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2020), Form F, p. 7; Angola Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2018), Form F, p. 9; and emails from Daniel Richards, Operations Officer, HALO Trust, 25 June 2022; and from Robert Iga Afedra, Capacity Development Advisor, CNIDAH, 12 August 2020.

[43] Email from Daniel Richards, Operations Officer, HALO Trust, 25 June 2022.

[44]  Email from Robert Iga Afedra, Capacity Development Advisor, CNIDAH, 12 August 2020.

[45] ICBL-CMC, “Country Profile: Angola: Cluster Munition Ban Policy,” updated 13 August 2022.

[46] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Leonardo Sapalo, Director General, ANAM, 10 May 2023.

[47] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Jean Cortez, Head of Risk Education Department, ANAM, 10 May 2023.

[48] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Jean Cortez, Head of Risk Education Department, ANAM, 10 May 2023.

[49] Angola Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form I, p. 9.

[50] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Jean Cortez, Head of Risk Education Department, ANAM, 10 May 2023.

[51] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Jean Cortez, Head of Risk Education Department, ANAM, 10 May 2023.

[52] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Jean Cortez, Head of Risk Education Department, ANAM, 10 May 2023.

[53] Angola Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2022), Form F, p. 9.

[54] Angola Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2022), Form I, p. 16.

[55] Angola Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2022), Form I, p. 16.

[56] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Jean Cortez, Head of Risk Education Department, ANAM, 10 May 2023.

[57] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Carlota Moura, Programme Officer, HALO Trust, 23 April 2020.

[58] Email from Jeanette Dijkstra, Angola Country Director, MAG, 13 May 2020.

[59] Statement of Angola, Mine Ban Treaty Twenty-First Meeting of States Parties, Geneva, 21 November 2023.

[60] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Florinda Andre, Head of Victim Assistance Department, ANAM, 10 May 2023.

[61] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Florinda Andre, Head of Victim Assistance Department, ANAM, 10 May 2023.

[62] Angola Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form J, p. 10.

[63] Committee on Victim Assistance, “Preliminary Observation: Angola: Status of Implementation – Victim Assistance,” Mine Ban Treaty intersessional meetings, Geneva, 19–21 June 2023.

[64] Committee on Victim Assistance, “Preliminary Observation: Angola: Status of Implementation – Victim Assistance,” Mine Ban Treaty intersessional meetings, Geneva, 19–21 June 2023.

[65] Lwini Foundation, “20 Years of Solidarity,” 22 January 2019, pp. 14 and 24.

[66] Madalena Neto, Head of Mine Victim Assistance, CNIDAH, “Victim Assistance in Angola,” presentation at the Mine Ban Treaty Seventeenth Meeting of States Parties, Geneva, 26–29 November 2018.

[67] Teresa Fukiady, “Liwini, A lack of Money paralyzes works of the former First Lady’s Foundation,” Novo Journal, 9 November 2020.

[68] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Florinda Andre, Head of Victim Assistance Department, ANAM, 10 May 2023.

[69] Statement of Angola, Mine Ban Treaty Fourth Review Conference, Oslo, 28 November 2020.

[70] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Enoque Bernardo, ANDA, 4 June 2018.