You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
Africa: Subsaharan
Strategypage's Crystal Ball seems to be working
2005-01-19
January 19, 2005: On January 13 Mark Thatcher, son of former British prime minister Margaret Thatcher, pled guilty to helping plot and finance a coup in Equatorial Guinea. Thatcher was fined $500,000, in lieu of a jail term. Thatcher was arrested in South Africa August 2004. Prosecutors said the Thatcher and his group intended to topple Equatorial Guinea's long-time dictator, Teodoro Obiang Nguema. In March 2004 Equatorial Guinea arrested 15 allegeded mercenaries inside the country and claimed the 15 were "an advance group." 60 more men allegedly connected to the conspiracy (a follow-on force?) were arrested in the Zimbabwe. Equatorial Guinea is one of the bleakest spots in sub-Saharan Africa. The government is corrupt and cruel. The dictator has been accused of cannibalism (no kidding). The country now has large oil reserves --which means more money for the elites. This is a round about way of saying Equatorial Guinea needs a change in government. However, it is unclear who was behind the coup that Thatcher helped finance. No doubt this is a huge embarrassment for his family and particular his mother. There is also this sidelight: Equatorial Guinea has fascinated mercenaries and adventurers for years. The miserable, fictional West African country of Zamboanga in Frederick Forsythe's novel THE DOGS OF WAR --where a small band of mercs topples a corrupt dictator-- is based on Equatorial Guinea. In Forsythe's book, however, the mercs pull it off. (Austin Bay)

Equatorial Guinea was a poor, and thinly populated (600,000 people), tropical dictatorship, when oil was discovered in the 1990s. By 1997, $100 million a year in oil revenue was coming in, which doubled the nations GDP. Oil revenue has since expanded five time, and most people are as poor as ever. Only a few percent of the population benefits from the oil income. President (for life, and since 1979 when he deposed his uncle) Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo rules by offering potential opponents the carrot (money) or the stick (jail or death.) There are only about 1,200 people in the armed forces, and another thousand police and security agents. All well taken care of. Generous payments are made for information about any threats to the government, and several attempted coups have been short circuited by these arrangements.

Did somebody say "Coup"?
CONAKRY (Reuters) - Soldiers in Guinea ramped up security in the capital Conakry on Wednesday after unconfirmed reports of an attempt to oust ailing President Lansana Conte, witnesses and diplomats said. "We have been told that around 11 o'clock (1100 GMT) this morning men in military uniform tried to attack Conte," said a senior Western diplomat in the capital, Conakry. Conte, a diabetic chain-smoker who is rarely seen in public, has ruled the former French colony since seizing power in a 1984 coup but there have been growing concerns about his health. A second diplomatic source said gunshots had been heard in a Conakry neighborhood as Conte's convoy passed through earlier in the day. "President Conte was not hit," he said.

Guinea, which holds a third of the world's known bauxite reserves, the raw material used to make aluminum, has long been seen as a bulwark against instability in neighboring Sierra Leone and Liberia, and more recently Ivory Coast. However analysts say there is no obvious successor to Conte and they fear his death may spark a violent scramble for power in the West African country. Guinea has been shaken by riots in several towns in recent months over price rises for items such as rice and electricity.

Witnesses said members of the presidential guard, known as the Red Berets, were stopping cars around Conte's palace and had told residents and workers in a nearby hospital to leave the immediate area. "The presidential guard are searching cars and given that they are Conte loyalists, it would seem that they have put down any attempt," the Western diplomat said. The second source said soldiers were also rounding up people in other parts of the coastal capital. A change in the constitution in 2001 allowed Conte to run for a third term in 2003. He won a landslide victory after the opposition boycotted the poll saying it would not be fair. Conte, who says he was born around 1934 and has been treated abroad for illness in the past two years, voted in the December poll by handing his ballot from his Toyota Land Cruiser.
Posted by:Steve

#1  Prosecutors said the Thatcher and his group intended to topple Equatorial Guinea's long-time dictator, Teodoro Obiang Nguema.

Seems like I got an e-mail from his wife (the queen) recently wanting to give me millions! Who knew Thatcher was behind it all? (/sarcasm off/)
Posted by: BA   2005-01-19 2:31:24 PM  

00:00