The Wonga Coup

Couverture
PublicAffairs, 7 août 2006 - 303 pages
Equatorial Guinea is a tiny country roughly the size of the state of Maryland. Humid, jungle covered, and rife with unpleasant diseases, natives call it Devil Island. Its president in 2004, Obiang Nguema, had been accused of cannibalism, belief in witchcraft, mass murder, billiondollar corruption, and general rule by terror. With so little to recommend it, why in March 2004 was Equatorial Guinea the target of a group of salty British, South African and Zimbabwean mercenaries, travelling on an American-registered ex-National Guard plane specially adapted for military purposes, that was originally flown to Africa by American pilots? The real motive lay deep below the ocean floor: oil.

In The Dogs of War, Frederick Forsyth effectively described an attempt by mercenaries to overthrow the government of Equatorial Guinea — in 1972. And the chain of events surrounding the night of March 7, 2004, is a rare case of life imitating art—or, at least, life imitating a 1970s thriller—in almost uncanny detail. With a cast of characters worthy of a remake of Wild Geese and a plot as mazy as it was unlikely, The Wonga Coup is a tale of venality, overarching vanity and greed whose example speaks to the problems of the entire African continent.

 

Table des matières

Prologue
xiii
The Ocean of Oil
1
The Rise of Mann
3
Mad Uncle Macias
17
The Albatross of War
25
Obiang in Charge
37
The Gushing Prize
47
The Three Hundred Days
55
The Big Push
155
Strike One
157
The Wonga Coup Mark One
172
The Wonga Coup Mark Two
183
Playa Negra Pedicure
192
Send Me a Splodge
201
Smiling and Dying
212
Riggs and the Oil Firms
221

Smelly and the Priest
57
Assembling the Wongamen
66
Plans and Documents
75
Future Moto
88
Filthy Lucre
98
Enter Scratcher
111
Money and Recruits
124
Spain
134
Get Your Guns
143
The Price of Failure
232
Thatcher Falls
242
Back from the Dead
255
Epilogue
262
Writing The Wonga Coup
277
Selected Bibliography
285
Index
291
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À propos de l'auteur (2006)

Adam Roberts is a staff correspondent of The Economist. For four years he was the publication's Johannesburg bureau chief, reporting from Madagascar, Congo, South Africa, Ethiopia, Sierra Leone and—illegally—from Zimbabwe, as well as from many corners in between. He has also reported from South- East Asia, the Balkans, Europe and the United States. A former student of international politics at Oxford University and the London School of Economics, he is now based in London.

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