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  • EG trial 'unlikely to be fair'

    EG trial 'unlikely to be fair'

    www.news24.com
    15/07/2004 14:38 - (SA)


    Cape Town - The DA says it "cautiously welcomes" an announcement by
    Foreign Affairs Minister Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma that government
    officials will travel to Equatorial Guinea to monitor the trial of
    eight South Africans accused of plotting to overthrow the regime in
    that country.

    "However, the DA remains deeply concerned about the prospects of a
    fair trial actually taking place," Democratic Alliance foreign affairs
    spokesperson Douglas Gibson said in a statement on Thursday.

    This is in contrast to reports earlier in the day that the eight
    alleged mercenaries will receive a fair trial, following assurances
    made in this regard to President Thabo Mbeki by his counterpart in the
    West African country, President Teodoro Obiang Nguema.

    According to South Africa's foreign affairs, officials from their own
    and three other local government departments - justice, safety and
    security, and correctional services - will go to the former Spanish
    colony and monitor the trial of the eight alleged mercenaries.

    The trial will take place within a month, but no firm date has been
    set.

    Gibson said Equatorial Guinea had a notorious history of gross human
    rights violations.

    "President Teodoro Obiang Nguema has for many decades been viewed as
    the one of the worst dictators in the world.

    "He has instigated waves of repression, including killings and torture
    in prisons, which has resulted in Equatorial Guinea becoming one of
    the most corrupt, oppressive and anti-democratic states in the world.

    "In April this year, Jan Henning of the national prosecuting authority
    stated that South Africa should take no part in legal proceedings in
    that country, as there is no chance that a fair trial can take place.

    "This assessment has been echoed by Amnesty International, who stated
    in May this year that it has 'documented for years the routine use of
    torture in detention facilities in Equatorial Guinea'.

    "Furthermore, Amnesty raised the concern that 'accused persons in that
    country are subjected to trial proceedings which routinely fail to
    meet international standards of fair trial'."

    A further cause for concern was that when the death penalty was
    imposed in that country, it was swiftly applied.

    "These grave concerns about Equatorial Guinea's justice system are
    borne out by the fact that since their arrest more than four months
    ago, the alleged mercenaries have not appeared in court, nor been
    allowed access to their lawyers. This in itself constitutes a serious
    violation of the men's basic legal rights," he said.

    Eight South Africans and six Armenians, accused of being the advance
    party in a planned coup, are being detained in Black Beach Prison,
    outside Equatorial Guninea's capital city, Malabo.
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