Following the independence of Angola in 1975, the Amílcar Cabral Committees (; CAC) emerged into an environment of lively political debate, alongside several action committees, trade union committees, women's committees and youth committees. The CAC, which had a
Maoist and
anti-imperialist tendency, held a strong influence in the popular committees of
Luanda's slums. After the outbreak of the
Angolan Civil War, the CAC fought to expel the
National Liberation Front of Angola (FNLA) from Luanda. Although political debate was initially seen by the ruling
People's Movement for the Liberation of Angola (MPLA) as a sign of the newly independent state's strength, by 1976, it began to crack down on
freedom of speech with the aim of establishing a
one-party state. In March 1976, President
Agostinho Neto began
nationalising property and bringing the
economy of Angola under
state ownership. This move was resisted by
African nationalists and the
far-left, including the CAC and Henda Committees. The CAC were the first organization to face
political repression, under accusations of
factionalism. Interior minister
Nito Alves, who had previously sympathised with the far-left Maoists of the CAC and Henda Committees, directed the suppression of them. Alves first attempted to integrate the committees into his own structures, then forcibly dissolved those that refused and arrested their members. ==Communist Organization of Angola==