Equatorial Guinean President Teodoro Obiang Nguema on
Wednesday announced a “total amnesty” for all political prisoners and
opposition figures banned from political activity, according to a decree read
on national television.
“I grant
total amnesty to all citizens condemned by the courts… for political offenses
in the exercise of their activity, serving or not serving their sentence,” the
presidential decree said.
The move
comes after President Obiang, who has ruled the oil-rich former Spanish colony
since 1979, called last month for “dialogue and political interaction” with
opposition groups.
Five
political parties had signalled their willingness to take part in a national
dialogue in July if their security was ensured.
The amnesty “must allow wide participation of all
political actors”, according to the president, and guarantee “security” for
those taking part in talks with international observers present.
The
amnesty will also be granted to people “deprived of their liberty or prevented
from exercising their political rights,” the decree said.
Obiang’s
decades in power have been strongly criticised for corruption and human-rights
abuses.
His
proposal for national talks came after a failed coup last December — one of
more than half a dozen attempts to unseat him over the years — that was
followed by a crackdown on the opposition.
The
now-banned Citizens for Innovation party (CI) said Tuesday that opposition
figure Juan Obama Edu, who was jailed for “sedition”, had been tortured to
death in prison earlier this week.
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