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Dubiously convicted prisoners may starve: amnesty group

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  • Dubiously convicted prisoners may starve: amnesty group

    National Post, Canada
    April 14 2005

    Dubiously convicted prisoners may starve: amnesty group


    MADRID - At least 70 prisoners risk starving to death in a prison in
    Equatorial Guinea, where rations have been cut from a daily cup of
    rice to almost nothing, Amnesty International said yesterday. The
    human rights group said those most at risk included six Armenians and
    five South Africans convicted last year of plotting a coup in the
    tiny, oil-rich West African country, in a trial Amnesty described as
    "grossly unfair."

    "Unless immediate action is taken, many of those detained at Black
    Beach prison will die," said Kolawole Olaniyan, director of Amnesty's
    Africa program, in a statement. 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. Equatorial
    Guinea, a former Spanish colony, said the allegations were untrue and
    accused Amnesty of seeking to tarnish its image.
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