Mark Thatcher ARRESTED!!!!!!!! (user search)
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  Mark Thatcher ARRESTED!!!!!!!! (search mode)
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Author Topic: Mark Thatcher ARRESTED!!!!!!!!  (Read 4667 times)
Jens
Jr. Member
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Posts: 1,526
Angola


« on: August 25, 2004, 03:13:02 PM »

I think it's funny that you guys are laughing at him for this. That's like Rick Santorum attempting to start a coup against Saddam's government and laughing at him becuase he was arrested. I think it's quite heroic of Thatcher.
He and his playmates has to stop reading "The Dogs of War." Politics are not decided by a bunch of brave young crusaders/samurais/cowboys who beat the evil king/mogul/dictator/schoolteacher and saves the village/country/town/caravan and ride/walk/swim into the sunset Wink
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Jens
Jr. Member
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Posts: 1,526
Angola


« Reply #1 on: August 26, 2004, 02:19:42 PM »

Dogs of War is a very cool novel. Smiley
I agree ( and I still think that Mr. Thatcher read it and got a bit too inspired) - what is the name of the Swedish translation? The Danish is called "Dødens Drabanter"
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Jens
Jr. Member
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Posts: 1,526
Angola


« Reply #2 on: August 26, 2004, 06:08:42 PM »

A little bit about that lovely fellow, Mark and his marry men Wink It's from IRIN

EQUATORIAL GUINEA: Alleged mercenary leader tells court he met Mark
Thatcher

LIBREVILLE, 25 August (IRIN) - South African authorities arrested the son
of former British prime minister Margaret Thatcher on Wednesday in
connection with a failed plot to overthrow Equatorial Guinea's president,
while the top suspect in the bungled coup was probed about his links to
the British businessman in a Malabo court.

Nick du Toit, an alleged South African mercenary on trial for plotting to
overthrow President Teodoro Obiang Nguema, told the court in Equatorial
Guinea's capital that he was introduced to  Mark Thatcher in South Africa
in July 2003 by Simon Mann, another key figure in the alleged mercenary
plot to invade the Central African country.

Shortly before Du Toit spoke, Thatcher was arrested in Capetown by South
African police and charged with involvement in the foiled plot to
overthrow Obiang. He was later released on bail of US$300,000.

Du Toit was the alleged leader of a group of 15 mercenaries that was
preparing the ground in Equatorial Guinea last March for the arrival of a
planeload of 70 other mercenaries from South Africa. The government says
they were planning to oust Obiang and replace him with Severo Moto, an
opposition leader who runs a government-in-exile from Madrid.

But du Toit and his colleagues were arrested on 6 March and the following
day the Zimbabwean government intercepted a chartered jet on a stopover in
Harare, which was carrying 70 former South African soldiers, led by Mann.
All those on board were arrested.

A court source in Malabo told IRIN that in response to prosecution
questioning on Wednesday, du Toit admitted having been introduced to
Thatcher by Mann.

Reuters and AFP, who had correspondents attending the trial, quoted du
Toit as telling the court that he met Thatcher to discuss the sale of some
helicopters which du Toit owned in Zambia and which Thatcher wanted to use
for mining operations in Sudan.

Du Toit was a former member of South Africa's special forces during the
Apartheid era. He subsequently set up a series of transport, fishing and
security businesses in Equatorial Guinea, which are grouped in his holding
company Triple Option.

He is on trial with 13 other foreigners and four Equatorial Guineans,
accused of plotting to overthrow Obiang.

The accused include seven other South Africans, some of whom worked for du
Toit's businesses in Equatorial Guinea, four Guinean employees of Triple
Option and six Armenians. The latter formed the crew of an Antonov 12
cargo plane that ran charter flights in Central Africa.

<b>Death penalty?</b>

All have been charged with conspiracy to overthrow the Equatorial Guinea
government and the illegal possession of arms and ammunition. The court
sources said all the defendants faced long jail terms amounting to life
imprisonment if found guilty.

The state prosecutor has demanded the death penalty for du Toit who is
also accused of treason. But President Obiang, who has ruled Equatorial
Guinea for the past 25 years, has said publicly that none of those
presently on trial would be executed.

The trial before a panel of three judges opened at a conference hall in
Malabo on Monday. Du Toit has so far done most of the talking under
cross-examination by the prosecutor. He has claimed that he was the only
defendant who knew about the mercenary invasion plot and was part of it.

The court source told IRIN that the trial was expected to conclude on
Thursday or Friday and this was confirmed by Amnesty International which
sent an observer to attend the proceedings.

Amnesty spokesman George Ngwa told IRIN from London that the human rights
group was by and large satisfied with the way the trial was being
conducted. However, he expressed concern that the South African and
Armenian defendants had not been provided with adequate translations. The
court proceedings are being conducted in Spanish.

Obiang, who came to power by executing his uncle in a 1979 coup, has been
widely accused of spending Equatorial Guinea's oil wealth on his own
family and friends while leaving the country's 500,000 inhabitants in a
state of dire poverty. Last week he took delivery of a new  US$50 million
Boeing 737 airliner fitted out as an executive jet.

Obiang's government has also been widely accused of human rights abuses,
including extra-judicial killings, torture and the detention without trial
of suspected opponents of the regime.

A German man who was one of the 15 alleged mercenaries arrested in
Equatorial Guinea last March died in detention 11 days later. The
government said he died of cerebral malaria. Amnesty quoted eye witnesses
who had seen the man's corpse as saying he was tortured to death.
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