Mercenaries 'won't be charged'
2009-11-05 12:05
Johannesburg - Four South Africans pardoned by Equatorial Guinea for a failed coup in 2004 will not face local criminal charges when they return home, the justice ministry said on Thursday.
"These people have been arrested, tried, convicted and served a term for their crimes. They have paid for their sins and they will not be charged again," said justice department spokesperson Tlali Tlali.
Nick Du Toit, Sergio Cardoso, Jose Sundays and George Alerson, along with British citizen Simon Mann, had been sentenced to 34 years in prison but were granted presidential pardons on humanitarian grounds on Tuesday.
They had been jailed for their role in a 2004 plot to oust President Teodoro Obiang Nguema as head of the former Spanish colony.
South Africa banned all mercenary activity in 1998, and tightened the law after the coup attempt in Equatorial Guinea.
Still in Equatorial Guinea
However Tlali said if new allegations against the four were to emerge, new charges will be investigated.
"If it appears that there are other allegations they were never tried for, these allegations will receive attention of the law agencies," he said.
Mann returned to Britain on Wednesday, but the four South Africans have yet to return home. The foreign ministry said it could not provide any details on their travels.
Sapa reported that they were still waiting in Malabo on Thursday morning to hear when they will return home.
"I must tell the truth, they are still with us at the embassy," the head of South Africa's mission in Malabo, Lungile Mkuyana, told Sapa.