British mercenary Simon Mann, currently on trial in Equatorial Guinea, has testified that the governments of Spain and South America attempted to overthrow that oil-rich country's dictator, Teodoro Obiang, in 2004. To be sure, Mr. Obiang probably had it coming. He has ruled Equatorial Guinea ruthlessly for near 30 years, and his reign has seen such atrocities as the near-genocidal murder of many members of the country's Bubi minority.
Still, I have to ask why South Africa would be willing to unseat Obiang at the same time it has remained wholly unwilling to confront Zimbabwean tyrant Robert Mugabe. In considering the fate of Simon Mann, we should consider whether regime change in Zimbabwe might be more urgent and more justified.
Wednesday, June 18, 2008
Right Idea, Wrong Country
Labels:
africa,
coup,
regime change,
robert mugabe,
south africa,
zimbabwe
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