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Armenian pilots sentenced in Equatorial Guinea coup place appeal

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  • Armenian pilots sentenced in Equatorial Guinea coup place appeal

    Armenian pilots sentenced in Equatorial Guinea coup place appeal

    Agence France Presse -- English
    December 7, 2004 Tuesday 12:20 AM GMT

    YEREVAN Dec 7 -- Six Armenian pilots who last month were given stiff
    jail sentences by a court in Equatorial Guinea for plotting to oust
    President Teodoro Obiang Nguema have appealed to that country's supreme
    court, a senior Armenian foreign ministry official said late Monday.

    Although Armenia did not expect the appeal to be successful, this
    would open the possibility of then turning to international instances
    for help, Ambassador Sergei Manaserian told a press conference.

    "We do not expect (the supreme court) to overrule the court's verdict,
    but this move will enable us to turn to international instances in
    the near future," said Manaserian, who heads the foreign ministry
    delegation trying to obtain the pilots' release.

    "We hope to receive an answer from the supreme court within two
    months," said Manaserian, who added that the appeal had been placed
    by the pilots' lawyer.

    Armenian President Robert Kocharian sent his Equatorial Guinean
    counterpart a message asking him to pardon the pilots, or to extradite
    them to Armenia, Manaserian added.

    "Armenia is continuing to do all it can, including through bilateral
    negotiations and negotiations with international organizations, to
    secure the release of our fellow citizens, who are not guilty and have
    absolutely nothing to do with the attempted coup in that country,"
    Manaserian said.

    Two of the pilots were suffering from malaria and typhoid fever,
    he said.

    The six Armenian pilots were arrested last March. Three of them were
    sentenced to 24 years in jail, while the other three received a 14
    year sentence.

    Five south Africans also received jail sentences for plotting against
    the Equatorial Guinean authorities, and eight members of a government
    in exile set up in Spain, Equatorial Guinea's former colonial ruler,
    were tried in their absence and sentenced to 52 years in prison each.

    Exiled Equatorial Guinean opposition leader Severo Moto was sentenced
    in his absence to 64 years in jail and fined two billion CFA francs
    (three million euros).

    The son of former British prime minister Margaret Thatcher, Mark,
    was also heard by a South African court for allegedly bankrolling
    the conspiracy.

    Obiang's regime, which has ruled since 1979 with an iron hand over
    one of the world's poorest countries turned major oil producer,
    announced it had foiled a complex coup bid in March, which appeared to
    have tentacles reaching across Africa and into Europe and the former
    Soviet bloc.

    Armenia slammed the verdict, saying the court had produced no proof
    of the Armenians' guilt.
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