Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Trial resumes in alleged E Guinea coup plot

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Trial resumes in alleged E Guinea coup plot

    Independent Online, South Africa
    Nov 15 2004

    Trial resumes in alleged E Guinea coup plot

    By Rodrigo Angue Nguema

    Malabo - The trial of 19 defendants accused of seeking to overthrow
    the president of this small, oil-rich West African nation, Teodoro
    Obiang Nguema, was scheduled to resume on Tuesday after a two-month
    recess.

    The second act of this judicial saga opens two weeks before the
    hearing in South Africa of charges against Mark Thatcher, son of
    former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, who is accused of
    bank-rolling the alleged coup plot here.

    The prosecution asked for the case to be suspended in August, hoping
    to obtain more information from Thatcher. But he has denied having
    anything to do with the alleged coup, and has made it known through
    his lawyers that he would not cooperate with the Equatorial Guinea
    authorities.

    They have denied seeking to overthrow Obiang
    The defendants include eight South Africans, a six-man Armenian air
    crew and five Equatorial Guineans, including a former deputy
    minister.

    They have denied seeking to overthrow Obiang, who has ruled over one
    of the world's poorest country with an iron hand since 1979

    when he deposed and executed his uncle, and who has stashed millions
    of dollars in oil revenues in a US bank, according to a US
    Congressional report.

    South African Nick du Toit told the court in August that he had
    recruited personnel and taken charge of logistics for an attempted
    coup, which authorities claim was masterminded from Madrid by exiled
    oppositionist Severo Moto Nsa.

    Du Toit said he had accepted the job at the request of Simon Mann,
    the alleged leader of an alleged mercenary band arrested in Zimbabwe
    in March while reportedly on its way to Equatorial Guinea.

    Called for the death sentence against Du Toit
    A Zimbabwean court sentenced Mann to seven years in jail on weapons
    charges, 65 others to one year in prison for breaching immigration
    rules and the two pilots of their aircraft to 16 months.

    According to the prosecution, the defendants were in charge of plans
    to receive 70 mercenaries from Zimbabwe and guide them to their
    targets.

    Only Du Toit, head of an air transport and fisheries company here,
    has acknowledged having a marginal and non-operational role in the
    alleged plot and has exculpated his fellow defendants, one of whom, a
    German citizen, died in prison. They have categorically denied
    knowing about any plot against Obiang.

    In the absence of confessions, the only evidence against the
    defendants is fragmentary - mysterious contracts they were supposed
    to have signed and examples of weapons supposed to have been acquired
    for the operation.

    Nevertheless, prosecutor Jose Olo Obono has called for the death
    sentence against Du Toit, and prison terms ranging from 26 to 86
    years for the others.

    Their outlook took a turn for the worse last month when Obiango, who
    calls himself God, said "exemplary" sentences would be pronounced
    against them. - Sapa
Working...
X