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Africa: Subsaharan
Zimbabwe seizes ’US plane’ with military gear, 64 ’mercenaries’: minister
2004-03-09
Update... The plot thickens
Zimbabwe has impounded a US-registered aircraft which landed at Harare airport with military equipment and 64 suspected mercenaries, Home Affairs Minister Kembo Mohadi announced Monday. In Washington, a US State Department official denied that the plane was registered in the United States, though said it might once have been. "It is not a US registered aircraft right now," the official said.

Mohadi said that a "United States of America-registered Boeing 727-100 cargo plane was detained last (Sunday) night at about 1930 hours (1730 GMT) at Harare International Airport after its owners had made a false declaration of its cargo and crew. The plane was actually carrying 64 suspected mercenaries of various nationalities. Further investigations also revealed that on board the plane was military material." State television showed footage of the plane late Monday. Some of the equipment shown included satellite telephones, compasses, radios, military knives and boots, bolt-cutters and sleeping bags. The television said that most of the suspects were white, "heavily built males". The equipment found aboard the plane was usually used by "commandos on a special mission" it added.
Big fat guys? On a commando mission?
In Pretoria, meanwhile, South African Deputy Foreign Minister Aziz Pahad said that "the South African government is concerned at unconfirmed reports that some of the people on board may be South African nationals". Pahad did not say where those reports came from, but added, in a statement: "Should the allegations that those South Africans on board are involved in mercenary activities prove true, this would amount to a serious breach of the Foreign Military Assistance Act which expressly prohibits the involvement of South Africans in military activities outside South Africa without the due authorisation of the National Conventional Arms Control Committee." Mohadi said full details would be issued in due course but that in the meantime investigations were under way to establish the "true identities of the men and their ultimate mission".

The plane was moved to a military airbase, AFP was told. What had been done with the men aboard was not immediately clear. A US embassy official in Harare claimed "We know nothing about it" and the mystery deepened when the official in Washington confirmed: "It is not a US government or a US commercial aircraft as far as we know. I understand that at one point back in the 1970’s someone may have owned it in the US but it hasn’t been a US aircraft since the early 80s. I have no idea who owns it. There is no US citizen on board."

President Robert Mugabe has repeatedly accused the US government and the former colonial power, Britain, of trying to oust him since he was re-elected in controversial polls two years ago. Relations between the United States and Zimbabwe worsened last week when US President George W. Bush renewed sanctions imposed on Mugabe and other government officials a year ago for allegedly undermining democracy in the southern African country. Washington said it was widening the existing sanctions regime against Zimbabwe to include seven government-related businesses. Bush said the Zimbabwe government was causing a breakdown of the rule of law, economic instability, and fomenting politically motivated violence, but Information Minister Jonathan Moyo responded angrily, referring to the Americans as "hamburger-eating imperialists".

Last month the EU extended sanctions it had imposed against Zimbabwe, to include an arms embargo as well as travel restrictions and a freeze on any overseas assets of 95 government officials, including Mugabe. The economy of the former British colony has been in a nose-dive in recent years with international support drying up, and rates of inflation and interest skyrocketing to record highs of more than 600 percent. Mugabe’s reputation as an African statesman started fading in recent years after the country -- once the region’s breadbasket -- slid into economic decline as land reforms which had been left unresolved for years, were jump-started with the violent occupation of white-owned farms.
Posted by:tipper

#19  Any chance these guys can make a side trip to the Central African Republic and shut up a certain loudmothed ex-priest?
Maybe JB could become Bob's priest... They DO think alike and all.
Posted by: Old Patriot   2004-3-9 10:09:49 PM  

#18  Any chance these guys can make a side trip to the Central African Republic and shut up a certain loudmothed ex-priest?
Posted by: tu3031   2004-3-9 9:32:57 PM  

#17  aging Afrikaaner ex-SA army types, headed to Katanga, an old stomping ground for Mercs, but I could see they'd make Mugabe nervous.
Posted by: liberalhawk   2004-3-9 2:39:42 PM  

#16  GOD the Golden Corral Loves Marines Heavily built males, because they Kill eat everything they see...

Quoted from Full Metal Jacket Golden Corral Diners creed
Posted by: Bodyguard   2004-3-9 2:30:10 PM  

#15   The only time you'll see 64 white, "heavily built males" in the same room is at the Olympics.
Or a Marine Recon platoon. The rest of the 90 might be black, Hispanic, and/or Asian, but the rest of the numbers are about right. Recon seems to attract the BIG guys...
Posted by: Old Patriot   2004-3-9 1:06:34 PM  

#14  LOL,SH. The Golden Corral does tend to attract 'em doesn't it?
Posted by: GK   2004-3-9 12:56:33 PM  

#13  The only time you'll see 64 white, "heavily built males" in the same room is at the Olympics.

Charles, I see at least 64 heavily built white men, women and children every time I take the kids to the Golden Corral. The beach is worse.
Posted by: Super Hose   2004-3-9 11:57:53 AM  

#12  Here's the quote from BBC story:
However, a senior executive of Logo Logistics Ltd which is believed to have chartered the plane, said that the group were heading to eastern DR Congo to guard mining operations there.
"They stopped in Zimbabwe to pick up mining equipment, Zimbabwe being a vastly cheaper place for such," Charles Burrow told Reuters by telephone from London. A spokesman for the Civil Aviation Authorities in South Africa, Moses Seate, has said the plane took off from the domestic Wonderboom airport, north of the capital Pretoria. If confirmed, the plane looks likely to have been attempting an illicit journey by making an international flight from a domestic airport.
If the men on board are confirmed as mercenaries, it appears they failed to receive required authorisation from South Africa's National Conventional Arms Control Committee. Speaking earlier to the BBC's Network Africa, Zimbabwe's Home Affairs Minister Kembo Mohadi said the crew and passengers aboard the plane had been detained pending further investigation. He said ministers would be trying to ascertain the intended destination of the plane, and would give further details about the plane after the meeting. Mr Mohadi insisted the detentions were legitimate, because "the fact they did not display their cargo means they have become suspects".
Posted by: Steve   2004-3-9 10:20:21 AM  

#11  It looks as if the plan came from http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/3545507.stmSouth Africa. The company that bought the plane says the men were hired to guard mining operations in DR Congo & stopped in Zimbabwe to purchase mining equipment that would be cheaper there. FWIW [smile]
Posted by: rkb   2004-3-9 10:06:55 AM  

#10  referring to the Americans as "hamburger-eating imperialists"

Yeah, everyone knows we're hamburger-eating, beer-drinking, war-mongering, zionist-supporting capitalists! Get it right, dammit!
Posted by: Steve   2004-3-9 9:58:19 AM  

#9  referring to the Americans as "hamburger-eating imperialists".
i resent that!
Posted by: muck4doo   2004-3-9 9:25:15 AM  

#8  Equatorial Guinea arrests 15 they say in connection with the plane seized in Zimbabwe
Posted by: Sharon in NYC   2004-3-9 9:00:54 AM  

#7  Also covered yesterday, including info on the plane's registration and owner.
Posted by: Chuck Simmins   2004-3-9 8:30:57 AM  

#6  The television said that most of the suspects were white, "heavily built males".

The only time you'll see 64 white, "heavily built males" in the same room is at the Olympics.
Posted by: Charles   2004-3-9 8:29:16 AM  

#5  "Wild Geese"
Posted by: Raptor   2004-3-9 7:10:01 AM  

#4  This sounds suspicious like a coup attempt a few years back. I think in the Comoros where the men flew and succesfully took over the country. I couldn't find an online source but I recall the weapons had been smuggled in earlier.
Posted by: Phil B   2004-3-9 6:24:40 AM  

#3  How the hell do Sopwith Camels intercept a 727????
Posted by: Cheddarhead   2004-3-9 6:10:16 AM  

#2  Garrison, Bob can't really have fighters that work and pilots that can fly them without causing a mid-air collision, can he?
Posted by: Super Hose   2004-3-9 4:53:56 AM  

#1  Another account claims the airliner strayed into Zim airspace, was intercepted and forced to land by Zim fighters.Whatever actually happened, if the the Queen of England and her EUropeon allies are looking for a cause for war, they have one: 64 hostages.
Posted by: Garrison   2004-3-9 2:29:28 AM  

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