The Point brings you the first of many political deathmatches: Fikile Mbalula vs Kader Asmal.
Mercenaries 'back in SA'
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Fri, 06 Nov 2009 14:55
The South African mercenaries jailed for their part in an
Equatorial Guinea coup plot are back in South Africa, a security
expert said on Friday.
The men were released on Tuesday after being pardoned by
President Teodoro Obiang Nguema.
"They are back in the country," said Henri Boshoff of the
Institute for Security Studies.
"I don't know where, and how; I just know they're back."
He said the men were probably flown in on Thursday night, and
one could "make assumptions" about how this happened.
He said the Special Forces League, a private South African
organisation that looked after the interests of veterans, had been
arranging transport for the men.
"Nobody knows anything, but they are back"
However, the league was then told by the South African
department of international relations that it would organise the
repatriation.
"Clearly the department made some arrangement," Boshoff said.
"It's all very quiet.
Nobody knows anything, but they are back."
The department was not immediately available for comment.
Spokesperson Nomfanelo Kota told Sapa earlier on Friday: "We have not been advised of anything."
An embassy official in Malabo did not want to be quoted and referred further queries to Kota.
Briton Simon Mann and South Africans Nick du Toit, George
Alerson, Sergio Cardoso and Jose Sundays were convicted in a trial
which implicated Mark Thatcher, the son of former British prime
minister Margaret Thatcher, as the financier of a 2004 plot to
overthrow the oil-rich Equatorial Guinea and oust long-serving
Nguema.
Mann has already returned to the United Kingdom.
The South African department of justice said earlier this week
that the men would not face charges relating to their misadventure
when they returned.