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How oil brought the dogs of war back to Malabo

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  • How oil brought the dogs of war back to Malabo

    How oil brought the dogs of war back to Malabo

    As eight alleged coup plotters languish in jail, Raymond Whitaker reports
    from Equatorial Guinea, where the President and his friends have lined their
    pockets at the expense of their
    countrymen

    Independent/uk
    02 September 2004

    When Frederick Forsyth was looking for a suitable setting in which to
    write The Dogs of War, his 1974 thriller about white mercenaries in
    Africa, he chose this island capital. That was three decades ago but
    not much has changed in Malabo since. Beneath green-draped volcanic
    slopes, 200-year-old Spanish cannon still guard the palm-fringed
    harbour and the damp-stained shopfronts. An air of "malarial lethargy",
    VS Naipaul's phrase, still prevails.

    But look out to sea from the terrace of the Bahia Hotel, where Eddie
    the Eel practised in the comma-shaped swimming pool, one of only two on
    the island, for his moment of glory at the Sydney Olympics, and there
    is a sight Forsyth would not have seen. At night, the horizon glows
    red; here and there a pinpoint of flame pierces the darkness. These
    are the flares of the offshore platforms which have transformed
    Equatorial Guinea into sub-Saharan Africa's third-largest oil exporter.

    When Forsyth was writing, there was little to lure soldiers of
    fortune to this tropical dictatorship, which consists of a few,
    lush, volcanic islands and a jungle-covered strip of the African
    mainland. Its population of 500,000 subsisted mainly on cocoa exports,
    so the novelist, who rechristened the country Zangoro, endowed it
    with valuable deposits of platinum. But the oil is real enough, and
    it appears to have attracted a band of adventurers who imagined that
    the 1970s had never gone away.

    Languishing since March in the island's Black Beach prison are eight
    former members of South Africa's apartheid-era special forces, six
    Armenian aircrew and five local men. They are accused of being the
    advance guard for a coup planned by Simon Mann, a former SAS officer
    turned mercenary soldier, allegedly supported by his friend Sir Mark
    Thatcher, Lord Archer and his friend Ely Calil, a Lebanese-born oil
    trader based in London, who is said to have commissioned the whole
    operation.

    He is said to have wanted to put Severo Moto, an exiled Equatorial
    Guinea opposition politician, in power in exchange for favourable
    oil deals.

    Apart from Mr Mann, who is in Zimbabwe awaiting sentence for illegally
    attempting to buy arms, all have denied having anything to do with the
    affair. But in Equatorial Guinea, unaccustomed to world attention, the
    alleged involvement of internationally known figures in a conspiracy
    against it is more exciting than anything else that has happened
    since the Spanish loosened their colonial grip in the 1960s.

    Not only is there an English lord whose book sales outstrip even those
    of Frederick Forsyth, but the Iron Lady herself is now reported to
    have put up bail for her son, who has been under house arrest in Cape
    Town on suspicion of having helped to finance the plot.

    Even Equatorial Guinea's President, Teodoro Obiang Nguema, appears to
    have been caught up by the mood. When the alleged mercenaries were put
    on trial last week, the death sentence was demanded by the prosecution
    for their leader, Nick du Toit, who has confessed to his role. The
    case was moved to a recently built conference centre and the world's
    press, normally excluded from the country, given access. On Tuesday,
    the trial was suspended until the alleged role of Sir Mark and a number
    of other accused coup supporters abroad can be explored. The judge said
    yesterday it would resume in 30 days but Mr Obiang summoned the foreign
    press for what turned out to be little more than an opportunity for
    him to be photographed giving them an audience. The men on trial, he
    said, were "individuals without morals who attempted a crime against
    our country which would have resulted in blood being spilt".

    The journalists would have welcomed the opportunity to ask the
    President about his own reputation for spilling blood. Since he deposed
    and killed his despotic uncle, Macias Nguema 25 years ago - opinion
    varies on whether he pulled the trigger himself - his opponents charge
    him with having had several enemies disposed of. There are even claims
    that he ate the testicles of some, to imbibe their masculinity. But,
    while conceding that President Obiang permits no dissent, winning his
    last election by the customary 97 per cent, nearly everyone agrees
    his uncle was infinitely worse.

    As we had dinner at an outdoor restaurant in Malabo, with ample bar
    girls half-heartedly trying to chat up a couple of grizzled European
    bush pilots, a government adviser said: "Look, we have had at least
    five other coup attempts. One of them even involved Moto but nobody
    was killed in any of them. The President just kept them in jail
    for a while then let the plotters go, telling them to change their
    ways. Moto went to Spain when he was released.

    "This one was different. Simon Mann said they had taken account of the
    possibility that Mr Obiang might be killed in the operation. That's
    why the death sentence was demanded for Nick du Toit, to show the
    seriousness of the whole business, but the President would never let
    it be carried out."

    That may be little consolation to the South African, who faces the
    prospect of months more in Black Beach before he learns his fate,
    but the oil, discovered in the mid-1990s, has raised the stakes
    heavily. President Obiang and his clan have always run Equatorial
    Guinea as a private enterprise, but the advent of American oil majors
    such as Conoco and Amerada Hess has turned a trickle of agricultural
    earnings into a torrent of oil dollars.

    American congressional committees are said to be upset at human rights
    abuses in Equatorial Guinea, and tales of contracts which provide for
    oil revenues to be paid directly into personal bank accounts. Oil
    wealth has given the country the sixth highest income per head in
    the world, but the run-down state of the capital testifies that very
    little of it trickles down.

    The country has been refused aid by major donors because of
    misappropriation of funds, and US government reports state openly
    that the President and his circle control nearly all official revenues.

    But in a world where Washington faces threats to its strategic
    oil supplies across the Middle East, it is not likely to be too
    fastidious about events in a country few of its citizens could find on
    a map. Indeed, the US is mulling plans to build its biggest military
    base in Africa right here. The arrival of American warships, aircraft
    and service personnel would heighten the already surreal contrasts
    that exist in Equatorial Guinea.

    Hefty oilmen with Texan accents live in isolated compounds with
    their equally hefty spouses and offspring, while African villagers a
    few miles away live the way they always have, practising subsistence
    agriculture and animist beliefs. There, it is said, one can hear dark
    mutterings about certain omens concerning the President.

    When his uncle was killed, Mr Obiang apparently took custody of the
    clan's most precious ritual object, a skull, which should have passed
    to his eldest brother. And when his wife had twins - considered an
    evil event in many African societies - he failed to have the younger
    one killed. No good will come of it, traditionalists say. Hearing
    such tales, and bearing in mind that many of the ruling "elite"
    are illiterate, must have convinced anyone plotting a coup that they
    could not fail. "But just because someone is illiterate does not mean
    that he is stupid," the government adviser said. "There was a lot of
    white arrogance towards black people in this."

    Indeed, the accused conspirators are the ones who look stupid: not
    only was their security appalling, with a paper trail a mile wide,
    but they seemed oblivious to Equatorial Guinea's strategic importance
    having changed since the 1970s, when it had Cold War ties to the
    Soviet Union and China. African governments are also working far more
    closely with each other these days.

    As Mr Mann arrived at Harare airport to meet a planeload of former
    soldiers arriving from South Africa, the government of Zimbabwe,
    tipped off by South African intelligence, was ready. Equatorial
    Guinea was warned after the arrests, and rounded up Mr du Toit and his
    co-accused. Britain and the US were also aware of what was happening;
    a source in Malabo said American oil workers had been told to stay
    in their compounds the night the mercenaries were supposed to go
    into action.

    Equatorial Guinea has pointed no fingers at London or Washington but
    government sources have accused the right-wing former government in
    Spain, ousted in the election later in March, of complicity in the
    plot. Rumours persist that Spanish warships, with commandoes, were
    in the vicinity of Equatorial Guinea at the time, only to sail away
    when the coup fell apart.

    As for Mr Moto, the putative beneficiary, reports from South Africa
    say he was lucky not to have ended up in Black Beach with Mr du Toit
    and the rest. Sources said a light aircraft with two South African
    pilots had taken him as far as the Canary Islands on his way back to
    Equatorial Guinea. From there, the plane was supposed to refuel in
    Mali and continue to Malabo, landing just after Mr Mann and his men
    had arrived.

    What saved Mr Moto from testing the quality of President Obiang's
    mercy a second time, it appears, was a motor race being held on the
    runway at Las Palmas. It delayed his departure from the Canaries,
    and when the plane landed in Mali the pilots were warned by a text
    message that Mr Mann's aircraft and everyone aboard had been seized
    in Zimbabwe. Equatorial Guinea has launched a High Court action
    in London, accusing Greg Wales, a British businessman, of being
    involved in the plot. South African newspapers say they have found
    registration records which show he stayed at a hotel in Las Palmas
    with David Tremain, a South African businessmen, at the same time as
    Mr Moto and the two pilots. Mr Wales and Mr Tremain deny involvement.

    For President Obiang, who is used to being treated somewhat
    circumspectly by other African leaders, let alone the rest of the
    world, the unfolding saga is a windfall as welcome as the oil under
    his country's seabed. The value of the unexpected gift increases with
    every revelation and allegation, particularly if it concerns someone
    as famous as Sir Mark Thatcher.

    And since the former Prime Minister's son is not due to appear in
    court until November, there is little risk of interest fading. The
    only people for whom this is not good news is Mr du Toit and his
    colleagues in Black Beach.
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