Mark Thatcher denies role in Guinea coup plot

British businessman Mr Mark Thatcher today denied being part of a web of financiers accused of plotting a coup in Equatorial …

British businessman Mr Mark Thatcher today denied being part of a web of financiers accused of plotting a coup in Equatorial Guinea.

Sir Mark Thatcher is surrounded by media and spectators outside Wynberg court, in Cape Town, South Africa
Sir Mark Thatcher is surrounded by media and spectators outside Wynberg court, in Cape Town, South Africa

Mr Thatcher (51), the son of former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, reached a plea deal with South Africa on the case last month but appeared in court under a prior agreement to answer questions submitted by prosecutors from Equatorial Guinea.

"As you have observed from the answers to the questions it is patently clear that I had nothing to do with the financing of any coup in Equatorial Guinea," Mr Thatcher told reporters after the hearing, which lasted about an hour.

Mr Thatcher last month agreed to plead guilty to violating South Africa's anti-mercenary laws in return for a suspended four-year sentence and a fine of three million rand ($500,000).

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The case is linked to a group of 70, most since jailed in Zimbabwe, which arrested them last March and charged them with arms and immigration offences relating to the Equatorial Guinea plot.

One of those jailed was the group's ringleader, Briton Simon Mann, a friend of Mr Thatcher's. South African prosecutors said they agreed to the plea deal with Mr Thatcher because they were unsure of winning a conviction.

Mr Thatcher had earlier agreed to answer questions from Equatorial Guinean prosecutors, who have alleged that he was part of an international conspiracy to topple the government of the oil-rich West African state.

In today's hearing Mr Thatcher conceded he knew many of the other people named by Equatorial Guinean officials - including Lebanese oil tycoon Eli Calil and London-based politician-turned-novelist Jeffrey Archer. He said his social contacts were not necessarily business partners.