Daily Mail
'Takes readers into a world where slippery chancers and thuggish ex-special forces type...rub shoulders with spooks and dodgy financiers.'
Review
Daily Mail -'Impressively researched and briskly narrated...takes readers into a world where slippery chancers and thuggish ex-special forces type, mostly South African, rub shoulders with spooks and dodgy financiers.' Publishers Weekly - 'The most terrifying thing about this chronicle of a failed coup attempt in Equatorial Guinea is that it's not a Graham Greene novel but a true story. An irresistibly lurid tale...he lifts the curtain to the backrooms of power in postcolonial Africa.' Sunday Times - 'riveting and superbly researched...a brilliant, mordant, blackly comic read.' Observer - 'Adam Roberts shows, with merciless precision, how the dogs of war panicked where they should have been cool, and screwed up where they should have been clinically efficient.'
Sunday Times
riveting and superbly researched
a brilliant, mordant, blackly comic read.
Observer
...shows, with merciless precision, how the dogs of war panicked...and screwed up where they should have been clinically efficient.
Product Description
In March 2004 Nick Du Toit confessed to 'the Wonga Coup' - an attempt to overthrow the government of Equatorial Guinea. This is the story of how the coup was set up and why it failed. On 7 March 2004, Zimbabwean police impounded a plane which flew in from South Africa with 64 alleged mercenaries on board. The group, led by Nick Du Toit and former SAS member Simon Mann, were planning a coup in Equatorial Guinea. Within a few days of the failed takeover, Du Toit appeared on TV and admitted everything, almost certainly after torture. Investigators soon found that the plot was funded not by oil tycoons but by celebrity investors. Several names were put forward, including Sir Mark Thatcher and a "J. H. Archer". In November 2004 Britain's foreign secretary, Jack Straw, admitted that his government knew about the plot three months before it took place. The target of the coup was Obiang Nguema, the president of Equatorial Guinea and one of the last relics of old-fashioned tyranny in Africa. But the plotters were not campaigning for democracy. Equatorial Guinea is Africa's third largest producer of oil, and the coup plotters wanted a share of these oil billions. The story echoes Frederick Forsyth's The Dogs of War, uncannily... Adam Roberts tells the amazing tale of the coup, recounting the drama in detail - how it was set up and then called off at the last moment, and how the plotters were tortured. He also explains the wider significance of the events and their aftermath, providing a rich understanding of a continent that is still all too poorly known and the great scramble for control of the continent's bountiful resources. A video of a recent author event can be found on YouTube.
About the Author
A former Southern Africa correspondent of The Economist, Adam Roberts has contributed to the TLS and political journals in Africa and now works for The Economist in London.