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  • Suspected mercenaries 'chained like animals'

    Daily News , South Africa
    Nov 19 2004

    Suspected mercenaries 'chained like animals'

    By Beauregard Tromp

    Malabo: A South African arms dealer who could face death for plotting
    to overthrow the president of Equatorial Guinea told a court
    yesterday 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.

    But in a dramatic final day of submissions in a trial that began in
    August, the defendants stood up in chains and handcuffs 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.

    After closing arguments yesterday the fate of the eight alleged South
    African mercenaries and their co-accused is now in the balance with
    the very real threat of every man spending the rest of his life in
    prison.

    Yesterday the men shuffled to the front of the courtroom in Atepa
    International Convention Centre constrained by their leg-irons, and
    one by one pleaded to the judge for their lives. Judgment is set to
    be delivered next Friday.

    First to enter the courtroom was Jose Domingos, one of the
    naturalised South African Angolans, followed by Mark Smit, the
    youngest of the group, who was brought in at the last minute to work
    as a cook.

    Some have visibly lost weight since a month ago. Most were wearing
    shorts, T-shirts and sandals with the eight South Africans and six
    Armenians still in handcuffs and leg irons.


    After the judge and his two magistrates were seated, the alleged
    ringleader of the mercenaries, Nic du Toit, was brought in, escorted
    by six soldiers.

    When the men were taken away later Du Toit was driven away alone in a
    police van. He was kept away from the rest of the group who are all
    seated behind eight defence attorneys.

    The Equatorial Guinea authorities say there has been at least one
    attempt to free the prisoners. It also emerged that while the
    attention was focused on the trial of Mark Thatcher in Cape Town,
    there had been another coup attempt.

    The latest plot, EG authorities said, apparently was a local attempt
    that was quickly quashed before it came to fruition.

    Inside the courtroom a photographer and video cameraman moved around
    the floor, photographing everybody present at the trial.

    Even young Mark, who seemed teary-eyed and bewildered a few months
    ago, has changed, now sporting a beard and a steely look was visible
    from under his furrowed brow.

    During the half-hour recess the men were glad for the opportunity to
    speak to the South African officials attending the trial.

    For Du Toit and Bones Boonzaaier it was another rare opportunity to
    see their wives.

    As they sit in an adjoining room, staring into their partners' eyes
    like young, starry-eyed lovers, they seem to relish every tidbit of
    information they receive.

    There was no talk of the trial, the horrendous prison conditions or
    their health but rather of family, children and home. - Foreign
    Service and Reuters
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