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Campaign begins to 'buy' Mann out of prison

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  • Campaign begins to 'buy' Mann out of prison

    Campaign begins to 'buy' Mann out of prison
    By Jane Flanagan in Johannesburg and Philip Sherwell, Chief Foreign Correspondent

    Sunday Telegraph/UK
    (Filed: 12/09/2004)

    A campaign to "buy" Simon Mann out of his Zimbabwean prison cell has
    been launched by wealthy friends who fear for the life of the Old
    Etonian former SAS officer if he has to serve the seven-year term
    handed out in Harare on Friday.

    Family and supporters of the British leader of an alleged coup plot in
    Equatorial Guinea believe that the appalling conditions in Chikurubi
    prison will take a heavy toll on his health.

    "We're also taking as deadly serious the threats against his life
    that some of the other defendants have been making," said a close
    friend. The 66 South Africans jailed with him for between 12 and 16
    months months blame the 51-year-old scion of the Watney's brewing
    empire for their incarceration.

    Friends have told Mann's heavily-pregnant wife Amanda that they
    will try to get him back to the family estate in Hampshire within a
    year. His lawyers are not appealing against the sentence for illegally
    trying to buy weapons for £100,000 in Harare in March.

    Instead, they will approach businessmen and lawyers with access to
    President Robert Mugabe to find out how they can secure Mann's early
    return to Britain. "We are determined to get him out of there,"
    said the friend.

    Although he did not go into details, it is believed that this could
    involve business deals with leaders of the near-bankrupt state and
    political pressure exerted through influential friends. Mr Mugabe's
    regime has already benefited materially from the arrest of Mann with
    the seizure of his Boeing 727, worth about £1.5 million, and $180,000
    (£100,000) in cash found on board.

    Mann's sentence was far more severe than his family and friends had
    anticipated - even with time off for good behaviour, he is expected
    to serve at least four years.

    The arrest of his friend and former Cape Town neighbour, Sir Mark
    Thatcher, in South Africa last month delivered a big setback to
    sensitive behind-the-scenes efforts to secure a deal minimising his
    likely sentence.

    Sir Mark has denied any link to the plot to overthow President Teodoro
    Obiang, the dictator of the small oil-rich west African state.

    At his own request, Mann has been held in solitary confinement in a
    fetid cell measuring 13ft by 4.5ft since his arrest at Harare airport
    on March 7.

    Prison guards have broken up a number of scuffles during previous
    court appearances when the men had access to Mann. Their conviction
    on aviation and immigration charges is likely to make them even more
    hostile, as most had expected to be freed at Friday's hearing.

    Conditions inside the prison are squalid in the extreme. The buckets
    that double as latrines often remain unemptied for weeks; the cells
    lack light or ventilation and are freezing in winter and boil in
    summer; lice and mosquitos thrive, feasting on the bodies of prisoners
    who sleep on concrete floors without blankets or mattresses.

    Inmates normally receive just one meal a day, usually gruel and
    vegetables, while the most basic human comforts such as toothpaste,
    soap and toilet paper are only available to those who can bribe prison
    guards. Beatings are frequent.

    These are now the living conditions of a man who should have been
    sitting on his 20-acre estate on the Beaulieu river awaiting the
    birth of his seventh child this weekend. The pictures of a gaunt
    wild-haired Mann arriving for sentencing on Friday showed the impact
    that six months inside Chikurubi have already had.

    The campaign to free him will be expensive, but Mrs Mann wishes to
    avoid selling Inchmery, the family home. Instead, she is understood
    to hope that after his release, his memoirs would repay the debts.

    Meanwhile, the Telegraph has learnt fresh details of how the ill-fated
    plot fell apart in early March. Mann and some of his men were on
    standby to fly to Equatorial Guinea to provide a "guard force" for
    Severo Moto, the country's Spanish-based opposition leader, after
    what was supposed to be a domestic coup against President Obiang,
    according to another Western businessman involved in the plans.

    At the time, Dr Moto was waiting at a hotel in the Canary islands
    with a group of fellow exiles and a handful of British and South
    African business advisers. They were expecting the arrival of two
    government ministers from Equatorial Guinea with news that there had
    been a rebellion against the Obiang dictatorship. Meanwhile, in Malabo,
    the capital of Equatorial Guinea, several leading members of Obiang's
    regime, including close members of his family, were making their own
    plans to flee.

    However, shortly before the Moto party learnt that Mann had been
    arrested, they were also told, without explanation, that the two
    ministers could not make it as far as the Canaries. So the Moto party
    instead flew to Mali to meet them.

    They arrived at the airfield at Bamako, the Malian capital, but again
    there was no sign of the ministers, so the group reluctantly returned
    to the Canaries.

    There they heard even worse news. Not only were Mann and the other
    alleged mercenaries in prison in Harare, but a party of 15 South
    Africans and Armenians had been arrested in Malabo and accused of
    planning the coup. "We realised the plans were still-born," said a
    member of the group. Dr Moto's King Air jet was flown by Crause Steyl,
    a South African pilot and businessmen who has been questioned by
    police in Cape Town about Sir Mark Thatcher. Mr Steyl has said that
    his company, Air Ambulance Africa, or Triple A Aviation, received
    £140,000 from Sir Mark which was then passed to Logo Logistics,
    a firm owned by Mann. Sir Mark has said that he believed that the
    deal only covered the supply of an air ambulance.

    Friends of Mann insist that his first destination after picking up
    weapons and his men in Harare was eastern Congo, as he has stated. But
    only some of them were to be dropped off there, to guard a mine, while
    Mann and the rest would await the expected call to fly to Malabo to
    provide security for Dr Moto after a coup.

    Indeed, after years of talking about buying his own aircraft to make
    just this sort of logistical "bus run" across Africa, he had only
    just bought the Boeing 727 that was seized in Harare.

    Additional reporting by Katharine Houreld in Malabo
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