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AI: Men jailed over 'Thatcher plot' being starved to death in jail

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  • AI: Men jailed over 'Thatcher plot' being starved to death in jail

    The Telegraph, UK
    April 15 2005

    Men jailed over 'Thatcher plot' are being starved to death in jail,
    claims Amnesty

    By Christopher Munnion in Johannesburg
    (Filed: 15/04/2005)

    Foreigners alleged to be part of a coup plot linked to Sir Mark
    Thatcher are among dozens of inmates facing death by starvation in
    Equatorial Guinea, Amnesty International said yesterday.

    Authorities in the notorious Black Beach prison reduced the daily
    food ration in December from a cup of rice to one or two bread rolls.
    But since February prisoners have been without food for up to six
    days at a time.

    "Many are extremely weak because of torture or ill-treatment and
    because of chronic illnesses," said Kolawole Olaniyan, the director
    of Amnesty's Africa programme. "Unless immediate action is taken,
    many of those detained there will die."

    Some receive food only from relatives who hand it to the prison
    guards. In the past six weeks, however, relatives, lawyers and
    consular officials have been denied access to the alleged
    mercenaries.

    The men are Armenians and South Africans alleged to have been the
    advance party of a group of mercenaries led by Simon Mann, a former
    British SAS officer. The group of 70 was arrested in Zimbabwe as its
    aircraft landed to pick up arms. Mann was jailed for seven years,
    reduced to four, and the rest, mostly apartheid-era special forces,
    to lesser terms.

    Nick du Toit, a former South African special forces soldier and
    allegedly the leader of the Equatorial Guinea advance party, at first
    admitted taking part in the coup attempt but withdrew his statement
    claiming it was extracted under torture.

    He was jailed for 34 years after what Amnesty and other international
    observers condemned as a grotesquely unfair trial. Thatcher was
    arrested at his Cape Town home in connection with the Equatorial
    Guinea plot which was uncovered and reported to the governments
    involved by the South African intelligence service.

    Lady Thatcher's son denied any knowledge of the coup attempt, saying
    he had agreed to purchase a helicopter for the group. He later
    pleaded guilty to helping to finance the mission and was fined
    £265,000 and given a four-year suspended jail term by a South African
    court. He has left South Africa having agreed to co-operate with
    investigators "in any way I can".

    Ricardo Nfube, Equatorial Guinea's second deputy prime minister,
    accused Amnesty of tarnishing his country's image. "Prisoners are not
    going hungry," he said. "We have assured their basic rights."
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