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Equatorial Guinea coup suspects claim they were tortured

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  • Equatorial Guinea coup suspects claim they were tortured

    The New Zealand Herald
    Saturday November 20, 2004

    South African Nick du Toit arrives in court in Malabo. Picture / Reuters

    Equatorial Guinea coup suspects claim they were tortured

    19.11.2004
    12.30pm
    MALABO - A South African arms dealer who could face death for plotting to
    overthrow the president of Equatorial Guinea told a court on Thursday he and
    his comrades had been chained like animals and tortured into confessing.

    Equatorial Guinea's state prosecutor demanded the death penalty for Nick du
    Toit and decades in jail for 13 other suspected foreign mercenaries.

    However, in a dramatic final day of submissions in a trial that began in
    August, the defendants stood up in ankle chains and hand-cuffs to plead
    their innocence.

    "No weapons, no arms, no explosives were found on us," du Toit said.

    "We have done nothing wrong. Since our arrest, we have been chained like
    wild animals ... We have been tortured by the police ... There hasn't been
    any coup attempt."

    State Prosecutor Jose Olo Obono rejected any allegations of mistreatment,
    saying all prisoners' rights had been respected.

    "Any statement to the contrary ... is not admissible in this trial," he told
    the court.

    He demanded jail terms ranging from 26 to 86 years for seven other South
    Africans, six Armenians and two Equatorial Guineans. He dropped charges
    against three other Equatorial Guineans.

    Until this week, du Toit was the only one of the defendants who admitted
    involvement in the plot to oust President Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo.
    However, he retracted his confession on Tuesday, saying it was extracted
    through torture.

    Obono said the men were working for an international web of financiers
    aiming to install exiled politician Severo Moto in power in the country,
    sub-Saharan Africa's third-biggest oil producer. Moto, who lives in Spain,
    denies involvement.

    His name and those of eight members of his self-proclaimed government in
    exile were added to the original charge sheet on Tuesday, and the prosecutor
    asked for death for Moto and 102 years in jail for the others, to be
    convicted in absentia.

    Fourteen people, including Mark Thatcher, the son of former British Prime
    Minister Margaret Thatcher, are also listed in court documents read out by
    Obono as financiers of the plot.

    Thatcher is accused of providing the alleged plotters with $275,000,
    ($394,000) while Lebanese oil tycoon Eli Calil is alleged to have
    contributed US$750,000. Both deny any involvement.

    Lawyers for Equatorial Guinea denied media reports that the country had
    charged Thatcher. Equatorial Guinea has yet to say whether it will seek his
    extradition from South Africa.

    The verdict in the trial will be announced on November 26. Defence lawyers
    on Thursday said all the suspects in the courtroom were innocent and should
    be acquitted.

    The lawyer for the eight South Africans, Fabian Nsue Nguema, said his
    clients had suffered physical abuses including beating, trampling and a
    torture session in a room with blood-stained walls, and mental torment
    including death threats.

    Several of the South Africans spoke of torture when given a chance to speak
    at the court session's end. They said their wrists and ankles had been
    chained since their arrest in March.

    "Please, please remove these handcuffs...We've been like this for eight
    months 24 hours a day," Joao Americo Pimentel Riveiro told the presiding
    judge.

    Equatorial Guinea says the plot was organised by Simon Mann, a former
    British special forces officer jailed by Zimbabwe in August on weapons
    charges related to the alleged coup.

    A number of British businessmen are also named in the list of financiers
    handed out in the court, including a J H Archer. He is alleged to have
    provided US$240,000 to the coup plotters.

    Disgraced British politician and best-selling novelist Jeffrey H Archer, who
    spent time behind bars for perjury in a libel case, has denied links to any
    coup plot.

    "Lord Archer emphatically denies any involvement with the alleged coup in
    Equatorial Guinea," his lawyers said in London.

    - REUTERS
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