|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Britain
Mark Thatcher arrested over alleged African coup plot
By Chris Marsden
27 August 2004
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
The name of Thatcher has assumed political prominence once
again, carrying with it a familiar bad smell. This time the Thatcher
in question is Margaret Thatchers son, Mark, who has been
arrested in South Africa after being accused of involvement in
an alleged coup.
Sir Mark, who inherited a baronetcy after the death of his
father Dennis one year ago, was taken into custody after a dawn
raid on his home in Cape Town, South Africa, by the police anti-fraud
unit known as the Scorpions. He faces a possible 15 years in prison
for allegedly helping bankroll a failed coup in Equatorial Guinea,
sub-Saharan Africa's third-largest oil producer with proven oil
reserves of 12 million barrels.
Thatcher, 51, was later freed on two million rands (£167,000)
bail, but could face extradition to Equatorial Guinea, or prosecution
under South Africas Regulation of Foreign Military Assistance
Act that prohibits South African residents from assisting in a
coup or military activities outside South Africa. He must return
to court in mid-November.
The coup plot also allegedly involves another corrupt Tory
bigwig, Lord Jeffrey Archer, who was only recently released from
prison after serving a sentence for perjury.
Thatchers alleged involvement in the plot to overthrow
Equatorial Guineas tyrannical President Teodoro Obiang Nguema
Mbasogowho has declared himself god and has
ruled the country since 1979came to light as a result of
the arrest in Zimbabwe on March 6 of his neighbour Simon Mann.
Mann is an Old Etonian family member of the Watney brewing
empire and a former soldier in the elite Special Air Service.
He was one of 64 suspected mercenaries imprisoned after their
jet landed in the Zimbabwean capital Harare, apparently to pick
up a cache of arms. A total of 89 foreigners, most of them South
Africans, are currently imprisoned in Zimbabwe and Equatorial
Guinea.
Mann and Thatcher were close friends who regularly dined together.
Greg Wales, who has alleged links to the coup plot and is a long-standing
friend and former business partner of Manns, told the Guardian,
Simon and Mark did a number of business deals togetherin
mining, and aircraft and fuel brokerage.
Thatcher is said to have invested over £1100,000 in Manns
company, Guernsey-based Logo Ltd.
A similar amount is said to have been paid into an offshore
account belonging to Mann by Lord Archer. An aide to President
Obiang said that Thatchers name would be added to Archers
and those of four businessmen in a legal action being brought
by Obiang at the High Court in London for compensation.
President Obiang has also claimed that other leading Tories
were involved in the coup plot. He told Jeune Afrique/LIntelligent
that certain elements also indicate that Thatcher and a
former Thatcher cabinet minister whom I cannot name handled the
financial planning of the coup.
According to Manns handwritten confession, which his
lawyers claim was extracted under duress by the authorities in
Zimbabwe, he held a series of meetings in January with potential
investors on how they would benefit from replacing Obiang with
Spanish-based exiled opposition leader, Severo Moto.
The coup plotters counted on international support for their
efforts at a time when global corporations were seeking to tap
into Equatorial Guineas oil and when the ailing tyrant Obiang
was planning to hand over power to his equally unstable playboy
son, Teodorin.
Mann was allegedly approached by Motos backers to plan
a military coup, including the Lebanese oil tycoon, Eli Calil,
who is a British citizen and lives in a £12 million home
off the Kings Road in Chelsea, West London. Equatorial Guineas
Information Minister Agustin Nze Nfumu has alleged Calil arranged
to pay Mann $5 million to hire a group of mercenaries to oust
Obiang.
Mann was a natural choice. In the 1980s he founded the mercenary
outfit Executive Outcomes, which was involved in operations in
both Sierra Leone and Angola.
If the coup had been successful, its backers would have allegedly
been given oil concessions in a state that produces 350,000 barrels
a day.
A former South African Special Forces commander who worked
with Mann and is accused of participating in the plot, Nick du
Toit, has turned state witness and named both Calil and Moto as
co-conspirators.
On November 15, 2003, Manns Logo Logistics signed an
agreement with a group of Lebanese investors in the Asian Trading
and Investment Group SAL, which is allegedly linked to Calil and
was used to channel funds for the coup attempt. According to the
Observer, the Lebanese investors were to provide Manns
company with $5 million for mining, fishing, aviation and
commercial security projects in West Africa. Mann also signed
an agreement with Du Toit on December 1, which guaranteed financing
from Logo Logistics of up to $2 million for unspecified
projects.
Du Toit also apparently set up a company in December 2003,
Triple Option Trading, that was half-owned by three senior members
of Equatorial Guineas ruling elite and he was possibly used
to infiltrate the plot from the outset.
According to Manns own written testimony, he met with
Moto in Spain in early 2003. Mann says his role was to escort
Moto to Equatorial Guinea at the time when simultaneously
there would be an uprising of both military and civilians against
Obiang.
Mann himself is said to have put in $400,000 to cover the cost
of a Boeing 727 bought a week before the coup attempt from a firm
in Kansas, specially converted for US military use so that it
could take off and land on shorter runways.
It is alleged that in February, Mann had flown to Harare to
discuss a consignment of arms with officers of the state-owned
Zimbabwe Defence Industries, to be delivered on February 20 to
the airstrip at Kolwezi in Congo that was under the control of
a local rebel leader. A plane would then send the weapons to Equatorial
Guinea via Harare, but apparently failed to appear.
Nevertheless, on Sunday, March 7, Logo Logistics Boeing
747 left South Africa with 65 soldiers on board, and two packages
of cash amounting to $130,000, and landed in Zimbabwe where they
were supposed to meet up with Mann, and pick up weapons including
150 hand grenades, 80 60mm mortar bombs, 100 RPG-7 anti-tank projectiles
with 10 launchers, 20 light machine guns, 61 AK-47 assault rifles
and 75,000 rounds of ammunition. Instead they were arrested. The
Obiang regime also announced the arrest of more mercenaries led
by Du Toit.
In his televised confession Du Toit claims that he recruited
more than 60 veterans of bush wars in Angola and Mozambique, whom
he promised $6,000 each if they fought their way into Equatorial
Guineas capital, Malabo, and removed Obiang from power or
killed him.
Manns confession states that he met with at least a dozen
British millionaires, including some household names. One of these
told the press anonymously, Simon said he wanted around
10 people to each invest about £100,000. He claimed this
consortium would share an immediate payout of £15 million
once the coup had taken place, followed by profits from oil deals.
Lord Archer was allegedly one of those approached, and is said
to have paid money into an offshore bank account belonging to
Mann just four days before the coup attempt fell apart. Legal
documents and bank account details are said to show a payment
by J.H. Archer, Lord Archers initials, made to one of Manns
companies for $134,980 to an account at the Royal Bank of Scotland
in St Peter Port, Guernsey.
Though Manns friends insist that his confession was beaten
out of him, evidence of his connection with Mark Thatcher and
his possible involvement comes from a different source.
Mann attempted to smuggle a letter to his wife, which was intercepted
by Zimbabwean and South African intelligence. In the letter Mann
pleads for help from some of his influential friends, who he calls
Scratcher and Smelly. Smelly was Eli Calil.
Scratcher was Mark Thatcher. The Times quotes the letter
stating, I must say once again: what will get us out is
MAJOR CLOUT. We need heavy influence of the sort that ... Smelly,
Scratcher.
According to the Guardian, Mann wrote his wife, 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! This is not going well.
Mann went on to write in a way that suggests that Scratchers/Thatchers
involvement in the coup was direct. He writes, It may be
that getting us out comes down to a large splodge of wonga! Of
course investors did not think this would happen. Did I? Do they
think they can be part of something like this with only upside
potentialno hardship or risk of this going wrong. Anyone
and everyone in this is in itgood times or bad. Now its
bad times and everyone has to F-ing well pull their full weight.
He then concludes, Anyway [another contact] was expecting
project funds inwards to Logo [Manns firm] from Scratcher
(200).... If there is not enough, then present investors must
come up with more.
Mann was clearly expecting Sir Mark to make a $200,000 (£111,000)
investment, but he does not specify whether it was for the coup.
The Guardian states that the letter also refers to David
Hart, the former Old Etonian millionaire and union-busting adviser
to Margaret Thatcher when she was prime minister during the 1984-85
miners strike. It quotes the letter more fully stating, We
need heavy influence of the sort that ... Smelly, Scratcher ...
David Hart and it needs to be used heavily and now.
Thatchers lawyer, Peter Hodes, said Sir Mark was arrested
on suspicion of providing financing for a helicopter linked to
the coup plot and that he would plead not guilty.
Du Toit testified in court on the day of Thatchers arrest
that Sir Mark had met Mann in July 2003 and shown interest in
buying military helicopters for a mining enterprise in Sudan,
but he said that the meeting was a normal business deal
unrelated to any coup plot.
There have been rumours that Thatcher made an investment in
Manns Logo Ltd company through a South African company called
Triple A Aviation, which signed a contract to provide aircraft
and aviation services in January. The company, which trades as
Air Ambulance Africa, paid $100,000 (£55,000) into Logos
account on March 2, less than a week before the coup attempt.
Niel Steyl, the brother of the head of Air Ambulance, Crause Steyl,
is a former pilot for Manns Executive Outcomes and was piloting
the Boeing that was seized in Harare.
The Guardian states that its sources claim that Triple
A also provided the twin-engined King Air turboprop that flew
the exiled Equatorian Guinea opposition leader, Severo Moto, from
Spain to Bamako, Mali on the eve of the alleged coup attempt.
Mark Thatcher is a chancer, who has accrued a substantial personal
fortune largely by trading off his mothers name and connections.
At the top school of Harrow, where he was known as Thickie
Mork, he passed only three O levels and made poor A level
grades. He failed his accountancy examinations three times, one
of a string of failed careers including selling jewellery, racing
driving, and entrepreneur.
Nevertheless he has succeeded in amassing a personal fortune
in excess of £60 million as a result of various shady deals.
In 1982 he famously got lost in the Sahara desert for six days
during the Paris to Dakar rally. But it was his business deals
that showed his true mettle. In 1981, Margaret Thatcher secured
a £300 million construction deal in Oman for Cementation,
a Trafalgar House subsidiary. Her son was accused of receiving
payments as an intermediary in the contract. In 1985, he was said
to have pocketed £12 million in commissions after his mother
signed the al-Yamamah arms deal with Saudi Arabia.
He has also been accused of using a handwritten note from his
mother, addressed to the ruler of Abu Dhabi, to secure a profitable
deal and of connections with the Pergau dam affair, when British
aid was allegedly linked to a £1.3 billion contract placed
by Malaysia in Britain.
In the mid-1980s, he moved to the United States where he worked
as a representative of Lotus cars and where he married the millionairess
Diane Burgdorf. It was as a result of tax investigations following
the failure of some of his business ventures that the couple moved
to South Africa in 1995.
It appears that Thatcher had returned to South Africa only
in order to prepare a secret move to live in Texas. Makhosini
Nkosi, a spokesman for South Africas National Prosecuting
Authority, said, It does appear that he was planning to
leave the country. The house was on the market, he had disposed
of some of the cars, and there were suitcases around the house
which indicated they were planning to leave. He did confirm he
was planning to relocate to Texas.
See Also:
Spain accused of planning
coup in Equatorial Guinea
[1 July 2004]
Zimbabwe government arrests
coup plotters
[18 March 2004]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |