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Ambassador says 'mercenaries' won't get death penalty

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  • Ambassador says 'mercenaries' won't get death penalty

    SABC News, South Africa
    Aug 24 2004

    Ambassador says 'mercenaries' won't get death penalty


    Samuel Monaisa, the South African ambassador to Gabon, says he is
    confident that the 14 suspected mercenaries held in Equatorial Guinea
    will not be sentenced to death. Eight South Africans and six
    Armenians were arrested in March and accused of plotting to topple
    the oil-rich nation's president with the help of 70 men detained in
    Zimbabwe.

    The prosecutor called for a maximum sentence on Nick du Toit, the
    alleged mercenary leader yesterday, despite an assurance by the
    government of Equatorial Guinea that the men would not be sentenced
    to death. Monaise says it is common in any such case that the
    prosecutor would be driving for a certain sentence but that does not
    necessarily mean that is how the final judgment will pan out. He says
    furthermore, the fact that what the men had planned was not carried
    out and that the government has already ruled out the death sentence
    makes him confident. In the Equatorial justice system, trial judges
    report directly to the president.

    Monaise says he does not have the jurisdiction to approach the court
    and request that the government assurance be taken into account. "I
    can't do that that would be interfering in the judicial system of
    another country... what we are just trying to do is to ensure that the
    trial is transparent, fair and just."

    The South African government has sent four senior officials to attend
    the trial. Among them are officials from the department of foreign
    affairs, the department of justice and the National Prosecuting
    Authority.
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