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Equatorial Guinea coup trial "grossly unfair"-Amnesty

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  • Equatorial Guinea coup trial "grossly unfair"-Amnesty

    Reuters AlertNet, UK
    Nov 30 2004

    Equatorial Guinea coup trial "grossly unfair"-Amnesty
    30 Nov 2004 19:13:41 GMT

    By Estelle Shirbon

    MADRID, Nov 30 (Reuters) - Equatorial Guinea's trial of 19 suspected
    mercenaries accused of plotting a coup in the oil-rich African
    country was "grossly unfair" and the court ignored allegations of
    torture, Amnesty International said on Tuesday.

    A court in the Equatorial Guinean capital Malabo last Friday
    sentenced 11 foreigners it said were involved in an attempt to topple
    President Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo to jail terms ranging from 14
    to 34 years.

    Two Equatorial Guineans were sentenced to 16 months' imprisonment.
    Three other Equatorial Guineans and three South Africans were
    acquitted.

    "No evidence was presented in court to sustain the charges against
    the accused other than their statements, which the defendants said
    had been extracted under torture," Amnesty said.

    "However, defendants' protestations to this effect were ignored by
    the bench ... No court can ignore allegations as serious as these,"
    the human rights group said in a statement.

    Authorities in Equatorial Guinea say the men on trial were an advance
    party of mercenaries bent on killing Obiang and replacing him with
    exiled opposition politician Severo Moto, who has denied any role in
    the plot.

    They say a web of foreign financiers hungry for a share of Equatorial
    Guinea's oil wealth backed the scheme.

    The widely respected human rights group's condemnation could
    complicate any possible attempt by Equatorial Guinea to obtain the
    extradition of the alleged financial backers of the plot.

    They include Mark Thatcher, son of former British Prime Minister
    Margaret Thatcher, who faces trial in South Africa on charges he
    helped finance the scheme. Thatcher denies any role.

    DEFENDANTS' RIGHTS VIOLATED-AMNESTY

    Amnesty said the rights of the eight South Africans and six Armenians
    on trial had been violated from the moment of their arrest on March
    8.

    "All defendants were held incommunicado, handcuffed and shackled 24
    hours a day," it said. "They did not receive an adequate diet, and
    only rarely received medical treatment for the many ailments that
    afflicted them in prison."

    The state prosecutor told the court during the trial that all the
    suspects' rights had been respected.

    Those convicted will remain in the same jail where they have been
    held so far, Malabo's infamous Black Beach prison.

    Amnesty said a question mark remained over the fate of Gerhard Merz,
    a German also arrested on March 8 who died in Black Beach nine days
    later. Authorities said he was killed by cerebral malaria but two
    defendants in the trial told the court he died as a result of
    torture.

    Amnesty said the men did not see their defence lawyers until two days
    before the start of the trial.

    It also said the statements presented in court were in Spanish -- a
    language the defendants did not understand -- and that the English
    translation provided to the South African suspects missed out or
    distorted vital pieces of information.

    "Neither the verdict not the sentences were translated, and the
    defendants left the court with no knowledge of their fate."

    The foreign suspects appeared in court with their wrists and ankles
    chained together at all times, which Amnesty said was "cruel,
    degrading and inhumane treatment".
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