20100719 africanews
LUANDA (Reuters) - Oil-producing Angola owes $6.8 billion -- twice what was previously estimated -- to foreign firms involved in its post-war reconstruction, President Jose Eduardo dos Santos admitted on Monday.
But in a rare news conference, the head of one of Africa's most secretive governments said it would start repaying the debts later this year.
Small and medium-sized building firms would be paid in full in about two months, he said, while big building firms, many of which are Portuguese and Brazilian, would receive 40 percent of their demands later this year, he added.
"The rest of the payment will be made in one or two years," dos Santos said, standing alongside Portuguese President Anibal Cavaco Silva who had come to Angola with 130 businessmen to press for payment.
Despite the huge sums, which amount to nearly half of the southern African nation's foreign exchange reserves, analysts said Angola should have no problem paying up because of relatively high international oil prices.
"Higher oil prices and exports will help Angola pay the building firms although the amount now is much higher than our estimates," said Alves da Rocha, an economics professor at Luanda's Catholic University.
HIGHER OIL PRICES
Angola, which rivals Nigeria as Africa's biggest oil producer, began delaying payments after last year's slump in global oil prices. Their subsequent rise lifted its foreign exchange reserves by 30 percent in the first five months of the year to $15.64 billion and helped stabilise the local currency at around 92 kwanzas to the dollar.
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