Son of Garcia Diasiwa Roberto and Joana Lala Nekaka, and a descendant of the royal family of the Kongo Kingdom,[1] Roberto was born in São Salvador in the far north of Angola. His family moved to Léopoldville, in the Belgian Congo, in 1925. In 1940, he graduated from a Baptist mission school. He worked for the Belgian Finance Ministry in Léopoldville, Costermansville, and Stanleyville for eight years. In 1949, Roberto moved back to Léopoldville, where he joined his uncle in playing for the local "Nomads" football side.[2] Roberto went on to play for Daring Club Motema Pembe, alongside the later Congolese Prime Minister, Cyrille Adoula.[2] In 1951, he visited Angola and witnessed Portuguese officials abusing an old man, inspiring him to begin his political career.[3][4]
The United States National Security Council began giving Roberto aid in the 1950s, paying him $6,000 annually until 1962 when the NSC increased his salary to $10,000 for intelligence-gathering.[7]
National Liberation Front of Angola
After visiting the United Nations, he returned to Kinshasa and organized Bakongo militants.[4][8] He launched an incursion into Angola on March 15, 1961, leading 4,000 to 5,000 militants. His forces took farms, government outposts, and trading centers, killing everyone they encountered. At least 1,000 whites and an unknown number of natives were killed.[9] Commenting on the incursion, Roberto said, "this time the slaves did not cower". The men killed everyone in sight.[10]
On the eve of Angola's independence from Portugal, Zaire, in a bid to install a pro-Kinshasa government and thwart the People's Movement for the Liberation of Angola's (MPLA) drive for power, deployed armored car units, paratroops, and three battalions to Angola.[16] However, the FNLA and Zaire's victory was narrowly averted by a massive influx of Cuban forces, who resoundingly defeated them.[17][18]
While Roberto and Agostinho Neto's proposed policies for an independent Angola were similar, Roberto drew support from western Angola and Neto drew from eastern Angola. Neto, under the banner of nationalism and communism, received support from the Soviet Union while Roberto, under the banner of nationalism and anti-communism, received support from the United States, China, and Zaire. Roberto staunchly opposed Neto's drive to unite the Angolan rebel groups in opposition to Portugal because Roberto believed the FNLA would be absorbed by the MPLA. The FNLA abducted MPLA members, deported them to Kinshasa, and killed them.[4]
In 1991, the FNLA and MPLA agreed to the Bicesse Accords, allowing Roberto to return to Angola. He ran unsuccessfully for president, receiving only 2.1% of the vote. However, the FNLA won five seats in Parliament but refused to participate in the government.[3]
Roberto died on August 2, 2007, at his home in Luanda.[19][20][21] After Roberto's death, President José Eduardo dos Santos eulogized, "Holden Roberto was one of the pioneers of national liberation struggle, whose name encouraged a generation of Angolans to opt for resistance and combat for the country's independence," and released a decree appointing a commission to arrange for a funeral ceremony.[22] Upon his death, he left an unfinished memoir.[3]
^ abMarcum, John (1969). The Angolan Revolution, Vol. I: The Anatomy of an Explosion (1950-1962). Massachusetts Institute of Technology Press (Cambridge. p. 65.
^ abcdefJames, W. Martin (2004). Historical Dictionary of Angola. pp. 141–142.
^ abcdeHamann, Hilton (2001). Days of the Generals. p. 13.
^Rensburg, Abraham Paul Janse Van (1075). Contemporary Leaders of Africa. p. 303.
^Current Biography. H.W. Wilson Company. 1991. p. 499.
^ abcWalker, John Frederick (2004). A Certain Curve of Horn: The Hundred-Year Quest for the Giant Sable Antelope of Angola. pp. 146–148.