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Spain accused of planning coup in Equatorial Guinea
By Vicky Short
1 July 2004
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Spain stands accused of involvement in an aborted coup in its
ex-colony, Equatorial Guinea, which was allegedly due to take
place on March 7.
Miguel Mifuno, special adviser to President Theodoro Obiang,
has alleged that the Popular Party (PP) government of Jose Maria
Aznar, which has since been replaced by a Spanish Socialist Party
(PSOE) government, had sent a warship to the country with 500
marines on board. Our intelligence forces, he declared,
say that the warship was going to arrive on March 8, the
same date that the coup attempt was going to take place.
It was already in our territorial waters with 500 soldiers
aboard. Meanwhile there was a team of foreign mercenaries already
in Equatorial Guinea who knew where we lived. They had plans to
kill 50 people and to arrest others. Spain was providing all the
facilities for the coup. (The boat) was there to provide resources
for the mercenaries.
Mifuno added that Spain was also providing funds to opposition
groups in exile and that it wanted to run its former colony.
It is also alleged that Spain had offered to send arms to the
country just before the coup attempt, ostensibly to help it with
a longstanding border dispute with Gabon. The president refused,
and when Spain sent another message saying that the marines were
coming the president again refused and sent a letter to the United
Nations to clarify the matter. The ship was nevertheless sent.
Equatorial Guinea is a tiny country on the western part of
sub-Saharan Africa. The country is comprised of a mainland area
and a series of small islands including Bioko, which houses the
countrys capital, Malabo. It is 10,831 square miles, with
a population of just over half a million. It was a Spanish colony
until 1968. For many years, agriculture (primarily cocoa, coffee
and timber) formed the basis of the economy. However, since 1995,
significant offshore oil discoveries in the Gulf of Guinea have
converted Equatorial Guinea into the third-largest oil producer
in sub-Saharan Africa, behind Nigeria and Angola. Oil accounted
for nearly 90 percent of the value of total exports in 2001. Equatorial
Guineas total proven reserves are estimated at 1.1 billion
barrels of oil.
Oil was first discovered off the island of Bioko in the mid-1990s.
Since then, Equatorial Guinea has become the fastest growing economy
in Africa if not the world, with GDP growth of nearly 70 percent.
It has the fourth highest US investment in sub-Saharan Africa,
with oil companies operating there including Exxon Mobil and Chevron
Texaco.
The location of Equatorial Guineas reserves in the hydrocarbon-rich
Gulf of Guinea (estimates of probable reserves are as high as
10 percent of the world total), has prompted large amounts of
foreign investment (primarily by US companies) in further exploration
and development of the countrys oil sector.
The expansion of offshore oil exploration by Equatorial Guinea
and its neighbours has increased the importance of maritime borders
used to delineate each countrys rights to offshore oil deposits.
In March 1999, President Obiang signed a decree unilaterally adopting
an equidistant median line to define territorial boundaries as
stipulated under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the
Sea. Cameroon, Sao Tome & Principe, and Nigeria subsequently
accepted the decision as an improvement over constantly disputed
traditional boundaries. Relations remained strained, however,
because of Nigerias ongoing border dispute with Cameroon.
Equatorial Guinea is currently involved in a similar dispute
with Gabon, over the ownership of the island of Mbagne in the
Gulf of Guinea. In February 2002, Equatorial Guineas nominal
control of Mbagne was threatened when the government of Gabon
seized control of the island. Since then, the governments of both
countries have met to discuss the issue, including the possibility
of joint exploration of the waters surrounding Mbagne, but have
not achieved any resolution to their dispute.
While the alleged attempted coup took place last March when
Spain was still under the rule of Aznars right-wing PP government,
which was ignominiously kicked out of office by a massive antiwar
movement on March 14, the present PSOE government has taken it
upon itself to deny the allegationssaying that it knows
nothing about a Spanish ship being there and rejecting any implication
by Spain in the coup.
The accusation that Spain was involved in a planned regime
change in Equatorial Guinea was first raised after 67 mercenaries
were arrested and tried in Zimbabwe. They were Angolans, South
Africans, Namibians, Congolese and one Zimbabwean with a South
African passport. According to Zimbabwes Home Affairs Minister
Kembo Mohadi, the mercenaries were aided by the British
secret service, that is MI6.... American Central Intelligence
Agency and the Spanish secret service.
The Zimbabwe arrests coincided with the arrest of 15 mercenaries
in Malabo, capital of Equatorial Guinea. Their leader, Nick du
Toit, appeared on state television confessing to the coup attempt.
He said, It wasnt a question of taking the life of
the head of state but of spiriting him away, taking him to Spain
and forcing him into exile, and then of immediately installing
the government-in-exile of Severo Moto. The group was supposed
to start by identifying strategic targets such as the presidency,
the military barracks, police posts and the residences of government
members.
Severo Moto is the main opponent of Equatorial Guineas
President Teodoro Obiang Nguema and is currently in exile in Spain.
There have already been a number of coup attempts in West Africa,
where the discovery of huge offshore oil deposits has attracted
growing interest. Last year alone, there were coup attempts in
Mauritania and São Tomé and Principe, as well as
a successful coup in Guinea Bissau.
The Spanish government was denounced in a report by Amnesty
International, Greenpeace and Oxfam, among other nongovernmental
organisations in January, for exporting weaponry to 10 African
countries. These weapons, including large-calibre Howitzer-type
arms, are exported under the guise of hunting and sports equipment.
Spanish arms exports amounted to 274 million euros in 2002, according
to the report.
See Also:
Spain: Zapatero willing to
send troops to Haiti
[16 June 2004]
Spain assumes leading role
in Middle East diplomacy
[17 May 2004]
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