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Old Etonian gets seven years for Guinea coup plot

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  • Old Etonian gets seven years for Guinea coup plot

    Old Etonian gets seven years for Guinea coup plot
    By Peta Thornycroft in Harare and David Blair, Africa Correspondent

    The Daily Telegraph/UK
    (Filed: 11/09/2004)

    Simon Mann, an old Etonian and former SAS officer, stood expressionless
    in khaki prison fatigues yesterday as he was sentenced to seven years
    in a Zimbabwean jail for trying to buy weapons.

    The biggest mercenary trial in Africa's recent history ended in the
    capital Harare with Mann's 67 accomplices receiving prison sentences
    of between 12 and 18 months for immigration and aviation offences. Two
    other men were acquitted.

    The court reserved its harshest sentence for 51-year-old Mann, who
    holds British and South African citizenship.

    "The accused [Mann] was the author of the whole transaction," said
    Mishrod Guvamombe, the magistrate, imposing sentence in a makeshift
    court inside Harare's maximum security prison. "He was caught while
    trying to take the firearms out of the country."

    Mann had admitted trying to buy weapons valued at more than £100,000
    from the state-owned defence company in Zimbabwe.

    Prosecutors said the arms would have been used to overthrow the regime
    of Equatorial Guinea. Mann and the 69 other men, all South Africans,
    were arrested at Harare airport in March, supposedly bound for the
    oil-rich West African dictatorship.

    They were on board a Boeing 727, valued at about £2 million, which
    Mr Guvamombe turned over to the Zimbabwean state.

    Explaining his decision to impose a sentence on Mann nearing the
    maximum of 10 years laid down in Zimbabwean law, the magistrate said
    the offences "were well planned and well executed and that must be
    reflected in the penalty".

    Mann's lawyer, Jonathan Samkange, described the sentence as
    "excessive". But he ruled out an appeal to the supreme court.

    Mann is likely to serve his sentence in Chikurubi maximum security
    prison, where he has been held since his arrest six months ago.

    After serving across the world with the SAS, he helped found Executive
    Outcomes, a South African-based mercenary company in 1989. Despite his
    experience, his last operation was a bungled and amateurish venture.

    Maps of Equatorial Guinea and vital details about the operation were
    found on the aircraft. The coup plot had been widely discussed for
    months by former members of South Africa's special forces before it
    went into action. Mann and his colleagues were arrested after South
    Africa's intelligence service learned of their plans and alerted
    Zimbabwe.

    The men he hired for the operation were treated far more leniently. The
    court sentenced 65 of them to a year behind bars for breaching aviation
    and immigration laws. The remaining two were sentenced to 18 months.

    The men testified that Mann agreed to pay them £3,300 each for taking
    part in the operation. Mann's family in Britain has given the men's
    relatives a one-off payment of £550.

    Executive Outcomes was wound up in 1999 after South Africa banned
    mercenary activity. But Mann remained active in the security business.

    He lived in the expensive Cape Town suburb of Constantia, a few
    streets away from Sir Mark Thatcher, the former prime minister's son,
    who has also been charged with involvement in the Guinean plot.

    Fifteen other men, all South African or Armenian, are still on trial
    in Malabo, the capital of Equatorial Guinea. One, Nick du Toit,
    whose evidence implicated Sir Mark, faces a possible death sentence.
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