The Point brings you the first of many political deathmatches: Fikile Mbalula vs Kader Asmal.
'Justice' for Thatcher?
Article By:
Wed, 04 Nov 2009 18:39
British coup-plotter Simon Mann returned home from prison Wednesday after saying he wants the son of Britain's former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and others to face justice for a
conspiracy to oust Equatorial Guinea's government, the AP news service reported.
Mann left the steamy island capital of the tiny oil-rich Central African nation early Wednesday after serving 15 months of a 34-year sentence. He and the four South African mercenaries who also were pardoned Tuesday had been given 24 hours to leave and can never return.
Mann did not speak to reporters upon his arrival in Britain. But AP report that his spokesperson, Ian Monk, said Mann was "hugely grateful" to President Teodoro Obiang Nguema for the pardon after more than five tough years in prison and called the return the "most wonderful homecoming."
Mann testified in a trial last year that Mark Thatcher had
provided $350 000, which was used to buy a small plane that was to transport
Equatorial Guinea's exiled opposition leader Severo Moto from Madrid to Malabo, the capital of Equatorial Guinea.
His testimony had implicated Thatcher as chief bankroller along with Nigerian-born British citizen Eli Calil — allegations both men denied. Thatcher pleaded guilty in a South African court to
unwittingly helping fund the operation. He was fined and given a
suspended sentence.
"Calil, Thatcher should face justice"
Mann said after his release from prison in Malabo that he was "happy that we did not succeed in 2004."
"But as far as I'm concerned, I am very anxious that Calil,
Thatcher and one or two of the others, should face justice," Mann
said.
Mann said he had made statements to British investigators while
he was in jail and added: "I am very happy to restate those things
in court in the UK as a witness for the prosecution."
Scotland Yard said it was investigating whether any offenses were committed in Britain
in connection with the coup plot and confirmed that a "small team" of detectives visited the country
three times last year.
Mann has said he met with Thatcher and Calil in London to plot the coup — an offense under Britain's terrorism laws.
Did the US blow the whistle?
The former Spanish colony is the continent's third largest oil producer.
The US government reportedly got wind of the plot and blew the
whistle, though no US government official ever confirmed that.
Several leading US oil companies, including Exxon Mobil, Amerada
Hess and ChevronTexaco, operate in Equatorial Guinea.
Mann and his co-defendants were convicted in a trial that aired a plot in which well-connected Britons and others sought to install
Moto. The coup unraveled before it even began, when Mann and a
planeload of other mercenaries were arrested in Zimbabwe where they
were to buy assault rifles, grenades and anti-tank rockets.
Supreme Court Chief Justice
Jose Obono Olo said Tuesday that the
president had granted the five men full pardons on humanitarian
grounds.
South Africa's role in the men's release remained unclear. The
pardon came the day before South African President Jacob Zuma
arrived on an official visit, Zuma's government said it had not
sought the men's release.
However, the leader among the South African mercenaries, Nick du
Toit, credited Zuma for their freedom.
"We were told that Zuma and his government were involved in the
negotiations for our release," du Toit told The Star newspaper of
Johannesburg.
Equatorial Guinea's Information Minister Jeronimo Osa Osa Ekoro
told the AP that the presidential pardon was aimed at "extending a
hand of friendship and democracy to South Africa, with which we
have good relations, and was a demonstration of humanity to forgive
these men who really tried to damage our country."
Mann was born into a life of wealth and privilege, a
former
officer in Britain's elite SAS who was educated at Eton, a
prestigious British private school whose alumni include Princes
William and Harry. Mann is the son of former England cricket
captain George Mann and heir to the Watley Ale brewing fortune.
Simon Mann later helped found two South African private security
companies — Executive Outcomes and Sand-line — that were involved
in some of Africa's bloodiest civil wars. Executive Outcomes made
millions guarding Angolan oil installations and helping rout rebels
in Sierra Leone with brutal actions.