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Mercenary Simon Mann's family 'delighted' over pardon

By Liam Creedon, Press Association

Simon Mann, an Eton-educated former army special forces officer, was sentenced to a prison term of 34 years

AFP/Getty Images

Simon Mann, an Eton-educated former army special forces officer, was sentenced to a prison term of 34 years

The family of former British soldier Simon Mann spoke today of their delight after he was granted a full pardon for his part in a failed coup plot in Equatorial Guinea.

Mann, 57, was sentenced to a 34-year jail term after admitting conspiring to oust President Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo, leader of the tiny West African country.

A statement released by the Mann family read: "The family is absolutely delighted that Simon has been pardoned and is to be released shortly."

The statement continued: "Everyone is profoundly grateful to the President and the Government of Equatorial Guinea.

"The whole family is overjoyed at the prospect of finally welcoming Simon home after five-and-a-half long years away."

Mann was granted the full pardon on humanitarian grounds, a statement on the website of Equatorial Guinea's Information Ministry said.

The mercenary has been held in the country's notorious Black Beach prison and is expected to be released later today. He will then be free to return to the UK.

A family spokesman said Mann was due to arrive home "in the next few days".

A Foreign Office spokeswoman said: "We have been informed of the imminent release of Simon Mann.

"We understand this was a personal decision by the President of Equatorial Guinea on humanitarian grounds."

Mann was sentenced in July last year following a high-profile trial.

The former SAS officer was accused of masterminding an operation to oust President Obiang.

The old Etonian was originally arrested with around 70 other people, mostly former soldiers, when their aircraft arrived at an airport in the Zimbabwean capital, Harare, in March 2004.

The plan was to put opposition leader Severo Moto, who is exiled in Madrid, in power and gain control over the country's oil wealth.

At first Mann denied that the group had come to collect weapons for a coup.

His lawyers claimed they were on their way to the Democratic Republic of Congo to help secure diamond mines.

He was jailed for seven years in Zimbabwe for conspiring to buy weapons of war.

Mann said he suffered a violent abduction in February from Chikrubi prison in Zimbabwe to Equatorial Guinea.

He has always insisted that he was not the main man behind the plot.

Equatorial Guinea held its first trial into the alleged plot in August 2004.

South African arms dealer Nick Du Toit was sentenced to 34 years in prison as a result of the case.

Sir Mark Thatcher, the son of former prime minister Baroness Thatcher, was given a suspended sentence in South Africa in relation to the funding of Mann's operation, though he has always denied any knowledge that a coup was being plotted.

During his trial Mann told the court the ex-prime minister's son was "part of the management team" behind the failed plot and "not just an investor".

Four other men - Mr du Toit, Sergio Cardoso, Jose Domingos and George Alerson were also granted pardons for their part in the plot.

Supreme Court Chief Justice Obono Olo, who was the attorney general who prosecuted the coup plotters, said Mann and his accomplices would be freed at some point today.

He denied rumours that Mann was unwell, telling the Associated Press that he was "fine, fit."

The country is Africa's third biggest oil producer but many of its people remain poor.

It is also considered to be among the continent's worst violators of human rights.

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Comments

This should be worth watching...
[info]ancientoneuk wrote:
Tuesday, 3 November 2009 at 11:51 am (UTC)
They hang him out to dry and cut and run, the people behind this faded into the shadows and Mann and the others from such notable groups as the infamous Buffalo Brigade are really, really gonna be pissed with certain people...

Right now I imagine Lord Archer, Mark Thatcher and others are probably having a real bad day...
How much?
[info]bleedingekk wrote:
Tuesday, 3 November 2009 at 12:03 pm (UTC)
How much and who paid? The tax-payer??
Re: How much?
[info]ancientoneuk wrote:
Tuesday, 3 November 2009 at 01:07 pm (UTC)
Probably was taxpayer money used there somewhere... Mann had a lot of clout and probably used this to leverage a deal to get him out, after all he wasn't incommunicado and no doubt there are people that really don't want to read about certain things on the front pages of the tabloids...
Good time for coup here
[info]lkdamo wrote:
Tuesday, 3 November 2009 at 04:11 pm (UTC)
With Britians 3rd world economic situation at the moment, is it wise to let people like Mann back into the country?

Blair and Miliband might get ideas.
HE'S A TERRORIST, HANG HIM!
[info]therealbigearth wrote:
Tuesday, 3 November 2009 at 05:23 pm (UTC)
ok, ok, life imprisonment then..


makes me laugh when gordon bOOm and others try and peddle some sort of moral 'superiority' over other nations!

LEARN YA HISTORY!
Interesting?
[info]neil639 wrote:
Tuesday, 3 November 2009 at 05:37 pm (UTC)
It will be interesting to see what this unsavoury character has got to say about the involvement of that other unpleasant character, Mark Thatcher, and the even more unpleasant convicted criminal Lord Archer.
Who is ""the family"'?
[info]timspooner wrote:
Tuesday, 3 November 2009 at 06:21 pm (UTC)
As I recall, his wife hung him out to dry......................and really, who cares about this unsavoury guy?

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