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Thatcher-linked Equatorial Guinea coup plotter dies

Publish date: 19 May 2025
Issue Number: 1126
Diary: IBA Legalbrief Africa
Category: Obituary

Simon Mann, an Eton and Sandhurst-educated ex-SAS officer, who led a botched coup involving Margaret Thatcher’s son to overthrow the Government of Equatorial Guinea, has died aged 72, reports The Guardian. Mann led a group of 70 fellow mercenaries who were arrested in Zimbabwe in 2004 for attempting to topple Equatorial Guinea’s despotic President, Teodoro Obiang. Mann and his friend Mark Thatcher admitted involvement in the attempted plot, which became known as the ‘wonga coup’. When the plot was revealed, Obiang threatened to eat Mann’s testicles and drag his naked body through the streets. Mann served more than five years in two of the world’s most notorious jails before being pardoned by Obiang himself. In March 2004, Mann, Nick du Toit and three other South African mercenaries plotted Obiang’s overthrow with international financial backers and the tacit approval of at least three governments, most notably Spain. The coup involved flying into the former Spanish colony in a plane loaded with arms and more than 50 black ‘Buffalo soldiers’ – former members of the now disbanded South African defence forces’ elite 32 battalion – to replace Obiang with an exiled opposition activist called Severo Moto.

In return, the plotters and their backers were hoping to tap into Equatorial Guinea’s reserves of oil and natural gas. But their plane was intercepted by the Zimbabweans at Harare airport. A jubilant President Robert Mugabe threw Mann and his fellow conspirators into jail before handing them over to Equatorial Guinea where a court sentenced the mercenary to 34 years in jail. In a note sent out to his legal team while he was being held, Mann implicated Thatcher, whom he referred to by the name Scratcher, in the coup. The note also pleaded for Thatcher use his influence to secure his release, according to The Guardian. In his trial, Mann admitted he had been approach by Ely Calil, a Lebanese oil tycoon who was a friend of Moto, who regarded himself as head of Equatorial Guinea’s Government in exile. Thatcher was alleged to have paid for a helicopter to fly Moto from Equatorial Guinea during the planned coup. He was fined and given a four-year suspended sentence for his part in the coup after admitting breaking anti-mercenary legislation. But he claimed he was only unwittingly involved in the plot.

Full report in The Guardian

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