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Lawyers make final appeal for release of 'mercenaries' in Zimbabwe

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  • Lawyers make final appeal for release of 'mercenaries' in Zimbabwe

    Agence France Presse -- English
    August 20, 2004 Friday 2:12 PM GMT

    Lawyers make final appeal for release of 'mercenaries' in Zimbabwe

    HARARE

    Lawyers representing 70 suspected mercenaries held on charges of
    plotting a coup in oil-rich Equatorial Guinea asked a Zimbabwe court
    to acquit most of the men in a final appeal.

    The men were arrested in March when their Boeing 727 landed in Harare
    to pick up a consignment of weapons, including rifles, grenades,
    rocket-launchers and mortar bombs which Zimbabwe says were to be used
    to overthrow the regime in Equatorial Guinea.

    In his closing arguments, defense lawyer Jonathan Samkange said
    charges of "conspiracy to possess dangerous weapons" against 66 of
    the men should be dropped as the alleged soldiers of fortune knew
    nothing of the arms purchases in Harare.

    "The charge is incompetent and therefore I ask that the accused be
    acquitted on that basis," said Samkange.

    Magistrate Mishrod Guvamombe ajourned the trial until August 27 but
    gave no indication as to whether a verdict would be handed down at
    that hearing.

    The trial opened on July 27 at a makeshift court in the Chikurubi
    maximum security prison where the men have been held since their
    arrest almost six months ago.

    The detained group included three crew members, and three men on the
    ground who allegedly went to Harare International Airport to inspect
    the firearms to be purchased from Zimbabwe's state arms manufacturer.

    The court has heard that the weapons were needed to guard diamond
    mines in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), where most
    of men claim they were going to do security work after being
    recruited in South Africa.

    But Zimbabwe has accused them of plotting to overthrow President
    Teodoro Obiang Nguema's 25-year regime in the small central African
    state of Equatorial Guinea, a former Spanish colony.

    Eight other South Africans and six Armenians are due to go on trial
    in Equatorial Guinea's capital Malabo on Monday, charged with taking
    part in an advance force that was to be later joined by the 'Harare
    70' to carry out the coup.

    State prosecutor Lawrence Phiri argued the men could not have
    possibly been going on ordinary security duties considering the
    manner they behaved at Harare airport, the nature of the equipment
    they were supposed to collect and some of the documents and supplies
    found on their plane.

    The group stayed on board an aircraft with no cabin lights, remained
    silent with some of them even lying down on the aisle, to avoid
    detection, according to Phiri, obeying instructions that were
    contained on a piece of paper allegedly found on the plane.

    Phiri also argued that some items found on the plane such as
    camouflage cream and survival kits could not possibly be for use by
    security guards.

    He said mortar bombs and grenades could not have been used for
    guarding mines.

    "These items are exclusively of military use, not for a security
    company," he said.

    "One is inclined to conclude that in fact these persons knew that
    whatever expedition they were going on, was illegal," Phiri argued.

    Some of the men have testified that they knew nothing about landing
    in Harare to pick up weapons, and Samkange argued Friday that they
    could therefore not be charged with conspiracy.

    Samkange said the state should have called witnesses from South
    Africa to say whether a meeting took place to discuss and agree on
    the conspiracy.

    "In this case there is deafening silence as regards the form of
    agreement, and the court cannot therefore find any way of convicting
    these people," he added.

    "I would ask this court to act judiciously and when it acts
    judiciously and in fairness to all parties, it has no option but to
    acquit the accused," said Samkange.

    "It is wrong to suggest that there was any conspiracy," he said.

    If convicted under Zimbabwe's Public Order and Security Act (POSA)
    the men could face a 10-year jail term.
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