Equatorial Guinea Grants Pardon for Mann

Former British soldier Simon Mann, sentenced to 34 years for a coup plot in Equatorial Guinea, has been pardoned, the government has said. An adviser to the president, Miguel Mifuno, told BBC News Mann had to leave the country within 24 hours. The Foreign Office said it was aware of reports of Mann's proposed release and was seeking to clarify the situation. Mann, who was sentenced in July 2008, admitted conspiring to oust President Teodoro Obiang Nguema during his trial. Mr Mifuno said Mann had been released on humanitarian grounds related to his health. The adviser also told BBC News Nick du Toit, a South African convicted for taking part in the attempted coup, had also been pardoned. Equatorial Guinea's Supreme Court Judge told the BBC that Mann would be leaving jail on Tuesday and his family were due out on Tuesday morning. Justice Obono Olo also said he had met Mann in the past few days and said he was, "in good health." The Ministry of Information statement said Mann was being pardoned on compassionate grounds, due to his need to have regular medical treatment. A UK Foreign Office spokesman said: "This is something for the Equatorial Guinea authorities at this stage." In March 2004, Mann and 63 others were arrested in Zimbabwe on board a plane which flew in from South Africa. Its destination was Equatorial Guinea. His extradition came after he had served four years in prison in Zimbabwe for trying to purchase weapons without a licence. Equatorial Guinea, an oil-rich former Spanish colony, has been ruled by President Obiang since he seized power from his uncle in 1979. Mann's lawyer had asked for leniency, saying his client was a pawn of powerful international businessmen and he had been "not a co-author" of the coup plot but "an accomplice". The former special forces officer apologised, saying he was not the most senior coup plotter. Mann had implicated Sir Mark Thatcher, son of UK former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, and London-based millionaire Eli Calil as organisers of the plot. Sir Mark, who now lives in southern Spain, was fined and received a suspended sentence in South Africa in 2005 for unknowingly helping to finance the plot. After Mann's verdict, Sir Mark reiterated to the BBC that he had had no direct involvement. He said he had known nothing about any plan to overthrow the government and added that he had already faced justice in South Africa.