Luanda, 23 November, 2025 / 8:48 pm (ACI Africa).
Members of the Bishops' Conference of Angola and São Tomé and Príncipe (CEAST) have warned that moral decline, weak institutions, and the prioritization of private interests over the common good are deepening the countries’ social and political crisis.
Presenting the Commitment Charter from the recently concluded National Reconciliation Congress at a press conference in Luanda on November 22, CEAST President, Archbishop José Manuel Imbamba, said that Angola requires a unified and sustained national effort to address the structural weaknesses undermining social cohesion.
Archbishop Imbamba explained that the conclusions contained in the Charter arose from a broad consultative process involving dialogues, testimonies, and reflections gathered during the November 6–9 congress.
According to the Catholic Archbishop, “the insufficiency of civic responsibility, the political instrumentalization of institutions, and the normalization of impunity” were identified as causes perpetuating tensions, inequalities, and cycles of social and political violence.
He denounced the “persistent expressions of disrespect for human dignity,” manifested in practices of exclusion, hostile rhetoric, and attitudes that undermine dialogue.






