Mercenary Mann says South Africa backed coup plot

Mann, who was released from prison earlier this month, told  the BBC he believed that the operation had the unwritten consent  of South African intelligence.

“South Africa wanted to be in,” he said, according to  extracts of an interview to be broadcast on Tuesday. “In fact, I  was told: ‘Get on with it.’“

“Because, if they are very good friends of the new  government, it would be of great benefit to South Africa because  they know perfectly well that billions of dollars are at stake,”  57-year-old Mann said.

Educated at Eton, Britain’s top private school, the  ex-special forces officer was arrested in Zimbabwe along with 70  other mercenaries en route to Equatorial Guinea aboard a plane.

Extradited to Equatorial Guinea, he was sentenced in July  2008 for conspiring to topple President Teodoro Obiang Nguema  Mbasogo. He was pardoned on health grounds, having served just  over one year of a 34-year sentence.

During his trial, Mann portrayed himself as a pawn of  international businessmen he said were trying to seize power and  named the son of former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher  as being involved — an allegation Mark Thatcher has denied.

In the BBC interview, Mann said he got on well with Mark  Thatcher, at one point his neighbour in South Africa, describing  how Margaret Thatcher would come and stay in a cottage in the  garden of her son’s house.

“I always sat next to her at dinner parties,” he said. “She  liked me. We even went on holiday together.”

Mann, who said that from his point of view the purpose of  the coup was to make money from the oil-rich country, said he  wanted Mark Thatcher as an investor in the plot, and that he had  told him precisely what the operation was.

Discussing some of his early plans for the coup, Mann said  he had also considered an assassination and a guerrilla war, but  these options had been discarded. He said had been unhappy with aspects of the final plan but  was under pressure from unnamed backers to get the coup over.

“I thought there was quite a good chance I was going to die,  because I knew that far too many people knew about the  operation,” he said, adding that he should have had the courage  to halt the plans but failed to.

Yesterday, Equatorial Guinea’s President Obiang looked set  to win an election landslide, extending his 30-year rule.