Poverty, arrests spark anger in Angola's oil region
* Poverty, police arrests fuel anger in Cabinda
* Governor says trying to improve lives of Cabindans
* Oil companies not at risk
By Henrique Almeida
CABINDA, June 3 (Reuters) - Grinding poverty, human rights abuses and police detentions are fuelling tension in Angola's oil-rich province of Cabinda, but for now, international oil companies have little to fear.
Roughly the size of Puerto Rico and separated from the rest of Angola by a strip of land belonging to the Democratic Republic of Congo, Cabinda accounts for most of Angola's 2 million barrels of oil per day.
For the half a million residents of the impoverished territory, the oil has brought few benefits. The region caught international attention in early January when FLEC rebels ambushed the bus of Togo's visiting soccer team, killing two.
"Cabindans are tired of not seeing the oil money," said Martinho Nombo, a former vice-governor of Cabinda who is now a lawyer and university professor. "Ever since FLEC carried out the attack in January tensions have been rising." Continued...
