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New York, June 16, 2000 -- Journalist Isidoro Natalício
was ordered to vacate his home by state authorities because he filed
reports for the Voice of America (VOA), Radio Ecclesia and the Portuguese
News Agency LUSA, according to CPJ's sources in Angola's Kwanza Norte
province. Natalício is the Ndalatando correspondent for the
state-owned daily, Jornal de Angola, in Kwanza Norte.
An eviction notice served by the state-operated Housing Department
which owns Natalício's home, claims that the journalist fraudulently
converted his subsidized apartment into a bureau for VOA, LUSA and
Radio Ecclesia in Ndalatando. Natalício was given five days
to move or face legal action.
The eviction suit brought against Natalício by the office of
the Attorney General in Kwanza-Norte charges that the journalist violated
his lease by engaging in for-profit activities while residing in state-owned
housing. The Government of Angola has been the largest real estate
owner in the war-plagued country since independence in 1975, when
all land was nationalized by the ruling party. Despite a liberalization
of the real estate market introduced in the early 1990s around the
capital of Luanda, the state -- through the Housing Department --
remains the most important land owner throughout the rest of the country.
Natalício has also faced other forms of harassment in recent
months, according to the Media Institute of Southern Africa (MISA).
He has been banned from covering official functions in the province
and has been forbidden from entering any property belonging to Kwanza
Norte Governor Manuel Pedro Cacadira, including a pension (hotel)
compound that also houses a popular night club, MISA reported.
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