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Eq. Guinea: Presidential pardon for six Armenians jailed for coup

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  • Eq. Guinea: Presidential pardon for six Armenians jailed for coup

    Reuters AlertNet, UK
    June 7 2005

    EQUATORIAL GUINEA: Presidential pardon for six Armenians jailed for
    coup


    Source: IRIN

    LIBREVILLE, 7 June (IRIN) - President Teodoro Obiang Nguema has
    pardoned six Armenian pilots who were sentenced to between 14 and 24
    years in prison last November for allegedly taking part in a
    mercenary plot to overthrow him.

    In a decree read on national radio on the occasion of his 63rd
    birthday on Sunday, the head of the tiny oil-rich West African state
    said the pardon was "a humanitarian gesture" and ordered their
    immediate release and "repatriation to their homeland."

    According to a translated report on the BBC monitoring service, the
    Armenian TV AL+ website said the six Armenians, who repeatedly
    proclaimed their innocence, are to be brought home this week and are
    currently being treated in hospital.

    The group, who made up an aircrew, were among 15 foreign nationals
    arrested in March 2004 for allegedly taking part in a coup involving
    around 70 mercenaries, most of them South Africans.

    A German arrested with them died in detention about 10 days later.

    According to Amnesty International, the six Armenians and five South
    Africans who were finally convicted of plotting against the president
    have spent the last 15 months handcuffed and shackled 24 hours a day,
    including during the trial.

    News of their release came as Amnesty International released a
    20-page report summing up its comments on the November trial against
    the alleged coup instigators in the capital Malabo.

    "This trial did not respect international laws and standards for fair
    trials, and breached national law," the report said.

    Among its recommendations, the rights watchdog called for a quick and
    fair hearing of a defence appeal and an investigation into
    allegations of torture and human rights abuse.

    Nick Du Toit, a former South African soldier alleged to be the leader
    of the group, said on the last day of the trial: "We were arrested
    and chained and treated like wild animals and tortured by the
    police."

    He was the sole defendant to have initially confessed to a role in
    the conspiracy. He later said that his admission of guilt had been
    obtained by torture.

    The prisoners have been held in Equatorial Guinea's notorious Black
    Beach prison outside Malabo where Amnesty said last April they faced
    starvation.

    Obiang went on air at the time to deny the allegation, saying on
    national radio "although there are many prisoners incarcerated at
    Black Beach, they are well treated."

    The head of state has been widely accused of corruption and human
    rights abuse during his 25-year rule of what used to be one of the
    world's poorest nations.

    Equatorial Guinea now produces 350,000 barrels per day of oil and has
    become Africa's third-biggest oil producer after Nigeria and Angola,
    but most of its 500,000 people still live in dire poverty.

    Although oil generates US $30,000 per year for every one of the
    Equatorial Guinea's 500,000 inhabitants - giving the country a gross
    domestic product per capita equivalent to that of Switzerland or
    Denmark - life expectancy remains low at 49 and less than half the
    population have access to clean drinking water, according the UN
    Human Development Index.
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