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Prisoners risk starving in Equiatorial Guinea jail, says Amnesty

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  • Prisoners risk starving in Equiatorial Guinea jail, says Amnesty

    Reuters, UK
    April 13 2005

    Prisoners risk starving in Eq. Guinea jail, says Amnesty

    Wed April 13, 2005 2:58 PM GMT+02:00
    By Estelle Shirbon

    MADRID (Reuters) - At least 70 prisoners risk starving to death in an
    Equatorial Guinea prison, where rations have been cut from a daily
    cup of rice to almost nothing, Amnesty International said on
    Thursday.

    The human rights group said those most at risk included six Armenians
    and five South Africans convicted last year, in a trial Amnesty
    described as "grossly unfair", of plotting a coup in the tiny,
    oil-rich West African country.

    "Unless immediate action is taken, many of those detained at Black
    Beach prison will die," said Kolawole Olaniyan, director of Amnesty's
    Africa Programme, in a statement.

    Amnesty said prison conditions had worsened drastically in the past
    six weeks, with authorities providing food only sporadically and
    preventing any visits by relatives, lawyers or consular officials.

    Equatorial Guinea, a former Spanish colony, said the allegations were
    untrue and accused Amnesty of seeking to tarnish its image.

    "Prisoners in Equatorial Guinea are not going hungry. We have assured
    their basic rights," Second Deputy Prime Minister Ricardo Mangue
    Obama Nfube, whose portfolio includes human rights, told Reuters by
    telephone.

    Amnesty said prisoners depended for survival on food handed to guards
    by their families, meaning that detainees with no relatives living
    nearby faced a greater risk of starvation.

    As well as the foreigners, this puts Equatorial Guinean prisoners
    from the country's mainland in danger as Black Beach is in Malabo,
    the capital, which is located on a volcanic island in the Gulf of
    Guinea.

    Equatorial Guinea has been ruled since 1979 by President Teodoro
    Obiang Nguema Mbasogo, who seized power in a coup. It is the
    third-biggest oil producer in sub-Saharan Africa after Nigeria and
    Angola.

    Many foreign critics say Obiang and his allies have pocketed much of
    the country's recently acquired oil wealth, and human rights groups
    say abuses are rife, charges Obiang dismisses.

    Equatorial Guinea briefly came under the international spotlight last
    year when it put on trial 19 suspected mercenaries accused of
    plotting to topple Obiang.

    Amnesty said the Armenians and South Africans jailed at Black Beach
    for their part in the plot had their wrists and ankles chained
    together at all times, and all the prisoners were confined to their
    cells 24 hours a day.

    The rights group also said four Nigerians have been held in Black
    Beach for several months without charge or trial and without the
    Nigerian embassy being notified.
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