Between November 1975 and January 4, 1976, the Cabinda exclave was invaded by soldiers of the People's Armed Forces of Liberation of Angola, the armed forces of the Popular Movement for the Liberation of Angola (MPLA), which was one of the dominant independence movements in Angola, supported by Cuban troops. 21 April 1990, FLEC perpetrated a grenade attack on a market in the city of. The above did not stop UNITA from occasionally collaborating with MPLA in anti-FLEC operations. Thanh-Tâm Lê, 04 March 1999 First question: I don't know, but I don't think so. into FLEC-Renovada (FLEC-R), FLEC-N'Zita, FLEC-Lubota, União Nacional de Libertação de Cabinda (UNLC) and the Communist Committee of Cabinda. an upright star?

29 September 1995, FLEC-Renovada signed a four-month cease-fire with the Angolan government. According to U.S. intelligence services, France and Belgium allegedly supported FLEC by providing training and financial aid, despite the fact that Zaire remained FLEC's main foreign supporter.

FLEC aims at the restoration of the self-proclaimed Republic of Cabinda, located within the borders of the Cabinda province of Angola. [8], "FLEC" redirects here. The area of modern-day Cabinda was first explored by navigator Diogo Cão in 1483, later falling under Portuguese influence. Front for the Liberation of the Enclave of Cabinda, Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization, attack on the Togo national football team, International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, "Angola: Information on an anti-government group called Frente Liberaccion d'Enclave Cabinda (FLEC)", "RUMORED FRENCH AID TO CABINDA LIBERATION MOVEMENT", "Datas principais relacionadas com Cabinda", "Castro in Africa: Cuba's Operation Carlotta, 1975", "G3/S3 – ANGOLA/SECURITY – Angola FLEC leaders call off war in Cabinda", "CABINDAN NATIONALISM AND THE POSSIBLE NEED FOR A U.S. POLICY DECISION", "CABINDA SITUATION/ FNLA & UNITA REPORTED IN BENGUELA AND LOBITO", "ANGOLA – SECOND, "DEFINITIVE" CEASE-FIRE SIGNED IN CABINDA", "ANGOLA – GRA READY TO SIGN PEACE ACCORD IN CABINDA", UNPO Resolution Concerning the Cabinda Enclave, "Angola mantém presença militar reforçada em Cabinda", "Togo footballers were attacked by mistake, Angolan rebels say", AfricaReview – Angola's Cabinda rebels to 'lay down arms', "FLEC-FAC confirma ocupação da principal base militar de Cabinda", "Cabinda: 52 Flec-Fac Rebels Presented To Press", "Cabinda: Ex-FLEC Soldiers Join National Police", "CABINDA: SECURITY INCIDENT PROVOKES STERN REACTIONS", "Re: ANALYSIS FOR EDIT – ANGOLA – FLEC Still Causing Problems in Cabinda", "Fwd: [Africa] ANGOLA/DRC- FLEC assassinations", "Attacks on cargo and military in Angola's Cabinda exclave more likely, but low risk to energy assets", Rebels say kill nine Angolan soldiers in oil-rich Cabinda enclave, More African Freedom Fighters Join COVID-19 Cease Fire, Sudanese conflict in South Kordofan and Blue Nile, Sudanese nomadic conflicts (2009–present), Sudanese conflict in South Kordofan and Blue Nile (2011–present), Communal conflicts in Nigeria (1998–present), Lord's Resistance Army insurgency (1987–present), Eritrean–Ethiopian border conflict (2000–2018), Allied Democratic Forces insurgency (1996–present), https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Cabinda_War&oldid=977765404, Wars involving the states and peoples of Africa, Civil wars involving the states and peoples of Africa, Wikipedia articles in need of updating from February 2019, All Wikipedia articles in need of updating, Articles with unsourced statements from March 2016, Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License, Ceasefire declared by FLEC-Renovada in August 2006. inside and outside Cabinda, all talking in the name of FLEC (or one of During the Portuguese Colonial War (1961–1974), the nationalist movements of Cabinda fought against the Portuguese Armed Forces. was interviewed by telephone by one of the Portuguese TV channels, and to by Jarig clearly show that the red/yellow/blue is in use. 2–26 March 2011, Angolan secret services carried out a number of assassinations targeting FLEC commanders. why they ceased to talk about a state (if they ever talked about it), presumably

[19][20], According to the Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization, Cabinda is under military occupation,[21] reinforced in recent times by Angolan forces.