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UNITA (Angola)
União Nacional para a Independência Total de Angola
Last modified: 2005-04-23 by jarig bakker
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by António Martins-Tuválkin, 16 Jun 2002
See also:
União Nacional para a Independência Total
de Angola (UNITA)
UNITA, the third of the three guerrilla movements which fought the Portuguese
(and each other) for control of Angola was formed in 1966 when its leader,
Jonas Savimbi, broke with the FNLA. UNITA is an 'Africanist' party emphasising
ethnic and rural rights in distinction to the urbanized Marxism of the
MPLA. UNITA was also 'Maoist' - not in the sense that it followed Chinese
Communism but that Savimbi learned from Mao how to fight a successful guerrilla
war. The CIA regarded UNITA as the most radical and the weakest of the
three guerrilla movements. This proved to be a grave underestimate. Over
20 years after its 'defeat' in 1975-76, UNITA was still in the field and
by 1989 had, with intermittent South African and USA support, fought to
a standstill up to 40,000 Cuban troops plus the MPLA army. After losing
the 1992 elections, UNITA took up arms again. However, it is involved in
negotiations with the MPLA government on the future of the country and
an uneasy ceasefire appears to be holding.
The flag of UNITA is a red over green over red tri-bar. On the green
stripe is a 16-pointed rising sun (Angola had 16 provinces at independence;
the subsequent creation of two more has not been recognized in the UNITA
flag). Crowning the dawn is a black cockerel, placed to the left of the
sun. The top red stripe stands for the revolution against Portugal, the
bottom one for the 'second liberation struggle' against the Cubans. (Since
the UNITA flag was used before 1975, this symbolism must have been added
later). The green stands for hope, victory, and agriculture. The flag is
popular amongst Angolan emigrés and was frequently seen in Lisbon
during the 1992 Angolan election period.
Stuart Notholt,10 Jan 1996
The UNITA, União Nacional para a Independência Total de
Angola (National Union for the Total Independence of Angola), fought since
1975 a bloody civil war against the recognized government of MPLA. UNITA
is older than that, of course, and its flag was already flown before independence.
With peace slowly returning to Angola, it may be also the source of co-inspiration
for a still unheard of but anyway predictable, new flag.
António Martins, 30 June 1997
The colours of the UNITA flag are: green Pantone 340 (CMYK 100-0-69-15,
RGB 0-136-94, browser safe RGB 0-153-102)
Stuart Notholt,10 Jan 1996
Since the image from the UNITA homepage
(link is dead, ed.)appears to be more accurate than the one from Flagmaster
(originally drawn by Stuart), even if there is little substantive difference,
I remade the UNITA flag.
António Martins-Tuválkin, 16 Jun 2002
The seco