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View Full Version : Margaret Thatcher's son arrested for coup plot



Guerrilla22
27th August 2004, 06:05
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CBS/AP) Mark Thatcher, the son of former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, was arrested Wednesday and charged with helping to finance a foiled plot to overthrow the government of oil-rich Equatorial Guinea.

Thatcher, a 51-year-old businessman who has lived in South Africa since 2002, was arrested at his Cape Town home shortly after 7 a.m. and taken before the Wynberg Magistrate's Court, where he was charged with violating South Africa's Foreign Military Assistance Act.

"We have evidence, credible evidence, and information that he was involved in the attempted coup," police spokesman Sipho Ngwema said before the arraignment. "We refuse that South Africa be a springboard for coups in Africa and elsewhere."

Thatcher was placed under house arrest and given until Sept. 8 to post bail of 2 million rands, or nearly $300,000.

Defense lawyer Peter Hodes said Thatcher was arrested on suspicion of providing financing for a helicopter linked to the coup plot. "He will plead not guilty," Hodes said.

Thatcher's court appearance was delayed when he was robbed of his shoes, jacket and cell phone in a crowded holding cell, according to a court official who witnessed the attack. Thatcher did not appear to have been injured and police were seeking to recover the items, the witness said.

Thatcher, who has a twin sister and is the only son of Lady Thatcher and the late Denis Thatcher, was in his pajamas when police arrived at his home in the upscale suburb of Constantia and he was allowed to take a shower before they began examining his records and computers, Ngwema said.

Thatcher is accused of helping finance a plot to oust President Teodoro Obiang of Equatorial Guinea, which authorities say was foiled in March.

"We allege that Mr. Thatcher contravened [the Foreign Military Assistance] Act by financing the attempted coup in Equatorial Guinea," said Ngwema. "We believe Mr. Thatcher assisted in finance and logistics."

Equatorial Guinea, Africa's third-largest oil producer, put 19 people on trial this week for the alleged plot. One other defendant died in custody under suspicious circumstances. Seventy other accused mercenaries are on trial separately in Zimbabwe.

At the trial, a lawyer representing the government said the country would be interested in extraditing Thatcher. But no arrest warrant has been announced.

The 19 defendants on trial since Monday are charged with attempting to assassinate a head of state, illegal possession of arms and explosives, terrorism, treason and endangering the public.

A lead defendant, South African arms dealer Nick du Toit, testified Wednesday that he attended a July 2003 meeting in South Africa with Thatcher and Simon Mann of Britain, who is on trial in Zimbabwe as the alleged head of the plot.

But Thatcher only showed interest in buying military helicopters for a mining enterprise in Sudan, said du Toit, who faces the death penalty for his alleged role in the plot. "This was a normal business deal," du Toit testified.

Obiang's 25-year-old regime — accused by the U.S. State Department and others of torture and other abuses — is at the center of an oil boom in the Gulf of Guinea. The region is estimated to hold 10 percent of the world's oil reserves, and some of its most corrupt governments.

Since the development of Equatorial Guinea's oil industry began in the mid-1990s, the rain-soaked nation of just 500,000 people has enjoyed one of the fastest economic growth rates in the world, at up to 70 percent a year.

South Africa, which has sought to crack down on the involvement of its nationals in foreign mercenary activities, has been involved in the investigation of the alleged plot against Obiang since the start.

Its intelligence services tipped Zimbabwean authorities off to the arrival of a plane carrying 67 suspected coup participants in Harare on March 7 as they were allegedly en route to Equatorial Guinea. All were arrested with three other suspects, including Mann, and charged with seeking to procure weapons from the state arms manufacturer.

The 70 defendants maintain they were heading to Congo to provide security for a mining operation.

Thatcher studied accounting but then pursued an undistinguished career in motor racing. In January 1982, he was lost for six days during an auto rally across the Sahara Desert, causing his mother to weep in public for the first time.

He started his own company and moved to Texas in April 1984 after a lengthy controversy over reports that he represented a British construction firm that won a contract worth $600 million in Oman while Prime Minister Thatcher was there on a trade-boosting trip in 1981.

He moved to South Africa two years ago and has been involved in various ventures after business troubles in the United States, including a civil racketeering lawsuit in Dallas that he settled for an undisclosed sum and charges from the Internal Revenue Service for his role with a Dallas-based home security company that went bankrupt.

Thatcher also was under scrutiny in Parliament in Britain in 1994 over allegations he was involved in international arms deals while his mother was prime minister.

h&s
27th August 2004, 11:15
I don't care if he's guilty or not - just lock the bastard up. Teach the toff a lesson. Oh yeah, I also hope that his mother will be so heartbroken that she will die a slow, painful death because of it!

Louis Pio
27th August 2004, 11:54
I can see the son is just as criminal as his mother.

Commie Girl
27th August 2004, 14:06
:lol: The apple doesn't fall far from the tree!

Guerrilla22
29th August 2004, 22:16
This guy, apparently is involved in some sort of business that deals with exporting oil fronm Equatorial Guinea. Most likely, he wanted to put someone into power that would make policies favorable to his business. Anyways, kudos to South Africa for promptly arresting him and turning him over.

commiecrusader
29th August 2004, 22:31
yeah the scorpions did a pretty good job there. nice to see that 'who you know' isnt the most important thing everywhere.

1949
30th August 2004, 02:39
Obiang's 25-year-old regime — accused by the U.S. State Department and others of torture and other abuses
For some reason, I thought Equatorial Guinea, like Pakistan, Uzbekistan, etc., was ruled by some U.S/other-imperialist-backed reactionary regime. Can someone please give me more info on the political situation in Equatorial Guinea?

PRC-UTE
30th August 2004, 07:16
shoot 'im! :D

Commie Girl
30th August 2004, 14:50
Interesting Article about (http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/afp_world/view/103921/1/.html) the president of that country...

Also,

Equatorial Guinea gained independence in 1968 after 190 years of Spanish rule. This tiny country, composed of a mainland portion plus five inhabited islands, is one of the smallest on the African continent. President OBIANG NGUEM MBASOGO has ruled the country for over two decades since seizing power from his uncle, then President MACIAS, in a 1979 coup. Although nominally a constitutional democracy since 1991, the 1996 and 2002 presidential elections - as well as the 1999 legislative elections - were widely seen as being flawed. The president controls most opposition parties through the judicious use of patronage. Despite the country's economic windfall from oil production resulting in a massive increase in government revenue in recent years, there have been few improvements in the country's living standards.

cubist
30th August 2004, 15:24
very interesting keep us posted about the outcome!:)

Conghaileach
31st August 2004, 09:18
Some Mother’s Son
by Danny Morrison

Only once did I feel any sympathy for Margaret Thatcher. It was January 1982 and her son Mark was lost in the Sahara Desert whilst rallying. A camera caught her going into Number 10 and she was clearly distraught at the thought of her helpless son dying from hunger and thirst. It occurred to me: maybe now she realises how the mother of a hunger striker felt.

Anyway, 29-year-old Mark was found by a search party after three days. As we know to our cost, this personal experience never humanised Thatcher.

Before she left office she brought back the concept of hereditary honours which is why her son is now Sir Mark. Or, rather, Sir Mark, POW.

Yes, the brat was arrested in South Africa on Wednesday in connection with allegedly funding an attempted coup against President Obiang of Equatorial Guinea. The alleged plotters were said to be hoping to exploit Equatorial Guinea's massive oil reserves by installing their own leader, Severo Moto.

There was no time for loving when they came in the morning. Thatcher was seized in his silk pyjamas. The South African authorities moved against him when they discovered that his house had been put on the market, his bags had been packed, his two children had been booked into boarding schools in the USA and Sir Mark and his wife had one-way tickets to the States. However, he made bail and is now under house arrest in Cape Town.

Sir Mark’s neighbour and close friend in the exclusive Cape Town suburb of Constantia was Simon Mann, a former SAS officer who served in the six counties before becoming a soldier of fortune. The two were involved in business deals together. Last March Mann was arrested on the runway of the main airport in Harare, the capital of Zimbabwe. He was waiting to take possession of rifles, mortar bombs, rocket launchers and ammunition. They were to be loaded onto a Boeing 727 which had been specially converted so that it could land on a short strip. On board the plane were 64 former South African soldiers who had fought for the apartheid government but who had turned mercenary.

Last January Mann had been introduced by Nick du Toit to a Zimbabwean arms dealer and paid a deposit on the weapons worth £100,000. Du Toit, whose business partner is a minister in the government of Equatorial Guinea, was being monitored by South African intelligence. After Mann’s arrest in March the authorities in Malabo, the capital of Equatorial Guinea, swooped on Du Toit and fourteen others, who were, apparently, part of the advance party. They were charged with plotting, along with exiled opposition leader, Severo Moto, to overthrow the government in a coup. Moto, who was on stand-by in a neighbouring country, was to fly by helicopter to Malabo after the coup and be declared President. It is suggested that a week before the attempted coup Mark Thatcher deposited $100,000 dollars into Mann’s account to cover the costs of the helicopter.

Equatorial Guinea is a former Spanish colony with a population slightly larger than Belfast’s. Its inhabitants live in abject poverty. It became a coveted possession after oil and gas were discovered and produced in the 1990s. The people live under the dictatorship of President Obiang who killed his own uncle to take power in a coup in 1979.

It just shows you the damage that Thatcher caused when she ended the right to remain silent. Du Toit couldn’t wait to tell the court in Guinea that the mastermind of the coup attempt was Simon Mann. Mann couldn’t wait to make a signed statement after his arrest stating that Ely Calil (a Chelsea-based oil billionaire) introduced him to Severo Moto in Madrid. In jail in Zimbabwe Mann – who had clearly never heard of H-Block ‘comms’ - wrote his wife a very, very large smuggled letter which was intercepted by South African Intelligence. You would hardly have needed Enigma to break the clever codes used by the former Etonian who demanded that his friends on the outside use their money and influence to get him released.

“Our situation is not good and it is very URGENT. They [the lawyers] get no reply from Smelly and Scratcher [who] asked them to ring back after the Grand Prix race was over!

“We need heavy influence of the sort that [removed for possible legal reasons] Smelly, Scratcher… David Hart and it needs to be used heavily and now. Once we get into a trial scenario we are fucked… Anyone and everyone in this is in it – good times or bad. Now its bad times and everyone has to fucking pull their weight.”

After a glance the authorities worked out that Scratcher was slang for Thatcher and Smelly slang for Ely (Calil, whom Equatorial Guinea accuses of helping to organise the coup). David Hart, a millionaire property developer, was a journalist for ‘The Times’ and an adviser to Thatcher during the 1984 miners’ strike.

The investigation also shows that one JH Archer – otherwise known as Jeffrey – deposited $134,000 dollars in Mann’s account, four days before the attempted coup. Last Thursday Mann pleaded guilty to attempting to buy arms but denied planning a coup and said the arms were for guarding mines in the Democratic Republic of Congo. He will be sentenced in September. The mercenaries on the plane admitted breaching immigration and aviation laws.

Sympathy has been pouring in for the young, 51-year-old Mark. In an editorial the Scottish ‘Daily Record’ said: “Don’t even think of shedding a tear for Mark, sorry, Sir Mark. This waste of space would be even more of a nonentity than he is if he did not trade on the name of his discredited mother, Margaret. With no achievements of his own, he lives a sad life, only defined by being the offspring of a hate figure. Still, he manages to make an obscene amount of money on the back of his mother’s infamy for putting 3.5 million people out of work and consigning a generation to a life of misery and poverty.”

Mark did very well at school and left with three ‘O’ Levels. He failed his accountancy exams three times. Then he got lost in the desert. He married Texas millionaire Diane Burgdof and they moved to South Africa, where he was questioned. as part of an anti-corruption investigation of government officials. There have been hurtful allegations that he shamelessly traded on his mother’s name and through her connections in Saudi Arabia and Oman made a fortune on arms deals.

Mrs Thatcher is now in a terrible predicament. Frankly, it would be awful if Mark was extradited as a common criminal to Equatorial Guinea where there is state censorship, they ill-treat people, have non-jury courts and shoot-to-kill. How would she cope seeing her son in a prison uniform? How would she cope herself with strip searches? And after all she has done for the poor of Africa. Is there no justice in this world?


(Source (http://dannymorrison.ie/articles/somemothersson.php))

h&s
31st August 2004, 13:13
In 1979, Obiang Nguema, who has claimed to be in permanent communication with God, seized power from his uncle, whom he had executed
I think that sentence sums up pretty well how much of an idiot Obiang is.....


The investigation also shows that one JH Archer – otherwise known as Jeffrey – deposited $134,000 dollars in Mann’s account, four days before the attempted coup.
And why isn't this twat being arrested either? Any excuse to have him locked up (and not in an open prison) is good enough for me.

Hate Is Art
31st August 2004, 15:51
hes already in prison isnt he?

I hope Mrs Thatchers dies.