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Today, the families of Frik Potgieter and Peter Huxham, two South African engineers unlawfully detained in Equatorial Guinea for 634 days, held a peaceful protest outside Africa Energy Week in Cape Town.

Families of two illegally detained SA engineers plead for clemency at peaceful protest at Africa Energy Week

• Families appeal to attending Equatorial Guinean government representatives to consider clemency
for Frik Potgieter and Peter Huxham, who have been unlawfully imprisoned in that country for 634
days.

Cape Town, 5 November 2024 – The families of two detained South African engineers staged a peaceful protest outside Africa Energy Week (AEW) at the Cape Town International Convention Centre today. With government officials from Equatorial Guinea in attendance at the conference, the families are appealing for clemency and the release of the two men, who have been held for almost 21 months.

Peter Huxham, a dual UK-South African citizen, and Frik Potgieter, a South African, were arrested on trumped up drug trafficking charges in Equatorial Guinea just two days after South African courts seized the luxury super yacht belonging to Equatorial Guinea’s Vice President, Teodore Nguema Obiang Mangue, the President’s son. Earlier, the SA courts had also seized the Vice
President’s two luxury Cape Town villas (Clifton and Bishopscourt). These assets were impounded following a court ruling in SA on a separate matter, completely unrelated to Peter and Frik.

In July 2024, the United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention intervened, issuing an opinion declaring the men’s detention illegal and arbitrary, and calling for their immediate release. However, despite the UN’s formal opinion, Frik and Peter remain in jail.

Close to 21 months of imprisonment has taken its toll on the health and mental wellbeing of Frik and Peter. Both men, who suffer from chronic conditions, have lost significant weight, and the mental anguish of their unlawful detention has led to the prison authorities calling for urgent medical intervention.

“We are becoming increasingly concerned for Frik and Peter’s health and mental wellbeing. They’ve already endured so much suffering during these long months of imprisonment under extremely difficult conditions. Each day they remain in prison adds to their hardship and to the distress of our families, who have been separated from them without any meaningful
contact. We plead with the Government of Equatorial Guinea to show compassion and grant them clemency so they can come home to their families and rebuild their lives. Their release would mean everything to us; it would be a step toward healing the deep wound this has created in our lives,” says Kathy McConnachie, Peter’s life partner.

“As the families of Frik and Peter, we humbly appeal to the Government leaders of Equatorial Guinea to end our suffering. For over 634 days, our beloved husbands, partners, fathers, and grandfathers have been separated from us, unlawfully imprisoned in a foreign country far from home. Every day without them is a day filled with worry, sadness, and an overwhelming sense of helplessness. Please grant them their freedom,” says Sonja Potgieter, Frik’s wife.

Both men, highly respected engineers with over a decade of experience each, have worked in the oil and gas sector in Equatorial Guinea for many years. They have long been appreciated by their peers, both for their technical expertise and for their commitment to training and mentoring younger Equatorial Guinean professionals.

The families are also pleading to South African Minister of International Relations, Minister Ronald Lamola, and his UK counterpart, Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs, the Rt Hon David Lammy to find an urgent solution to Frik and Peter’s ongoing detention in Equatorial Guinea. Both Ministers are in Cape Town today. Shaun Murphy and Francois Nigrini, spokespersons for the Potgieter and Huxham families, say: “We understand that there are complex diplomatic issues at play, but we implore these Ministers, as well as the President of Equatorial Guinea, to see beyond politics and consider the
human cost of this situation. Frik and Peter are not just names on a diplomatic file; they deserve their freedom. “We appeal to the compassion and humanity of the South African, UK and Equatorial Guinean governments. We believe in their capacity for empathy and their commitment to human rights and justice. We are not asking for anything more than what is right – the release of two innocent men who have been caught in diplomatic circumstances beyond their control. We are also not interested in pointing fingers or assigning blame. Our only desire is to see Frik and Peter return home safely. We ask these governments to work on finding a solution that can end this nightmare for our families,” they conclude.

 

Background to illegal detention of Peter Huxham and Frik Potgieter in Equatorial Guinea

  • On 9 February 2023, two innocent engineers, Peter Huxham (56) and Frederik (Frik) Potgieter (54) were arrested in Equatorial Guinea (EG) on trumped up drug trafficking charges. Peter was born in the UK and holds dual UK/ SA citizenship. Frik is a South African citizen. Peter and Frik, who both work on vessels for Dutch oil and gas company SBM Offshore in Equatorial Guinea, had just completed a 5 week rotation in the country, and were due to fly home to South Africa the following
    day. Until the time of their arrest, Peter and Frik had never met each other.
  • What Peter and Frik didn’t know was that just two days before their arrests, South African (SA) courts had seized a luxury super yacht belonging to Equatorial Guinea’s Vice President, Teodore Nguema Obiang Mangue. Earlier, the SA courts had also seized the Vice-President’s two luxury Cape Town villas (Clifton and Bishopscourt). These assets were impounded following a court ruling in SA on a separate matter, completely unrelated to Peter and Frik. The Vice President of Equatorial Guinea was furious with SA, as was noted on his social media posts during the time of Frik and Peter’s arrests.
  • On 1 July 2024, the United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention issued a formal opinion and concluded that Peter and Frik’s arrests and ongoing detention are arbitrary and illegal, and called for their immediate release. The arbitrary detention of individuals is a direct violation of fundamental human rights, including the right to liberty and security of person, as enshrined in international law. The United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights explicitly safeguard individuals from arbitrary arrest and detention.
    • Peter and Frik’s ‘court case’ in June 2023 in Equatorial Guinea was a farce. No credible evidence, witnesses, or expert testimonies were presented to the court by the State, nor was any proof presented that the alleged drugs were found on Peter or Frik, or that indeed they were drugs. It was alleged that the drugs were found in their luggage, but this could not have been true. Their luggage, combination-locked and unopened, was still in their rooms five days later when their employercollected them in the presence of hotel management and the local police.
  • The men each received a 12-year prison sentence, and are being held in a prison reserved for political prisoners in Mongomo, Equatorial Guinea. They were also ordered to pay USD $5 millioneach in damages, and additional fines to be shared between them. The sentences were based on outdated penalties for the alleged crimes, indicating an unsettling departure from the country’s new
    Criminal Code. Needless to say, an appeal has been lodged against the manner in which the court case was handled, as well as against these enormously high sentences.
  • Even though the super yacht has been released, the villas remain impounded in South Africa, and the men remain in prison in Equatorial Guinea for close to 21 months now. It is evident that these innocent men are caught in the diplomatic and political crossfire between South Africa and Equatorial Guinea. They were simply the wrong nationality, at the wrong place, at the wrong time.
  • Peter and Frik are beloved husbands, fathers and grandfathers. They are both highly experienced and professional engineers who have maintained an impeccable professional record in the oil and gas industry, both in Equatorial Guinea and abroad in other countries. Although working for the same company for 11 and 15 years respectively, the men had not met prior to their arrest, and they were working on two separate vessels. They have received numerous accolades over the years for their achievements and commitment to mentoring young people at work, mainly local Equatorial Guinean employees. Both men are deeply respected and valued within their families, church groups and communities.
  • The families of Peter and Frik are devastated and growing more distraught and concerned for their physical and mental wellbeing as the months pass since they last saw them.
  • The South African Department of International Relations (DIRCO’s) consular desk has managed to arrange just five visits by their officials to the men in the past 20 months. Another visit was arranged by the UK High Commissioner, as Peter holds dual UK/SA citizenship. Frik and Peter have not seen their families since before their arrests and have no means to speak to their families outside of these consular visits.
  • Article 36 of the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations, 1963 expressly states that countries be granted access to detainees in other countries. Again, both Equatorial Guinea and South Africa are signatories for the Convention, however, South African and UK consular authorities have, despite numerous requests, found it challenging to secure visits.
  •  On 5 May 2024, Naledi Pandor, former Minister of International Relations and Cooperation for South Africa, visited Equatorial Guinea to seek the release of Frik and Peter. She met with her counterpart, Simeon Oyono Esono Angue, the Minister of Foreign Affairs, International Cooperation and Diaspora, as well as Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo, the President of Equatorial Guinea. As per the Minister’s media statement on her return to South Africa: “Minister Pandor took advantage of her presence in Equatorial Guinea to raise with the authorities South Africa’s concerns regarding the
    incarceration of two South African citizens in the country. The Minister reiterated South Africa’s plea to the government of Equatorial Guinea for the release of the incarcerated South African citizens. Engagements on this matter are continuing.”
  •  On 22 July 2024, journalist Peter Fabricius wrote in Daily Maverick that the President of Equatorial Guinea had made it very clear to former Minister Pandor that Peter and Frik would not be released until the Vice President’s seized luxury homes in Cape Town were returned to him. This information has never been directly communicated to the families by DIRCO or the former Minister’s office.
  • On 21 August 2024, the families of Peter and Frik attended a sitting of the South African Parliamentary Portfolio on International Relations and Cooperation to request that the Committee summon the Minister of International Relations and Cooperation and representatives of DIRCO to come and explain to the Committee what it was doing to secure the release of Peter and Frik, as well as to get regular access to them. The Committee confirmed it would do so, and DIRCO confirmed that Government was committed to helping to secure the men’s release. No further details were provided to the committee.
  • On 26 August 2024, DIRCO held a media briefing on a range of international relations issues. It confirmed that its Ambassador to EG, Ambassador Nolufefe Dwabayo, had met with EG’s Minister of Foreign Affairs to raise SA’s concerns about Peter and Frik’s unlawful detention, to establish Equatorial Guinea’s response to the UN decision, and to ensure that consular visits are being permitted, as per the Vienna Convention.
  • DIRCO also met with representatives of the Equatorial Guinean Government at the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) in New York. Minister Lamola explained to Daily Maverick’s Peter Fabricius in an article published on 15 October there had been no breakthrough in his recent meeting with his Equatorial Guinean counterpart Simeon Oyono Esono Angue. Lamola said “they are open to further dialogue on the matter. We did raise this as an issue of national interest for our country and as an issue of serious concern. And we think that they should definitely consider releasing them. We elevated this as a matter of national interest, and we were very clear. And we said we will be open to continuous engagement and dialogue on the matter with the hope that it will lead to a solution of them being released. We will continue to knock on the door. We will never get tired. But we don’t want to raise the hopes of the families by saying that they have agreed or there is a positive outcome from the government. At this stage, it is not yet positive, but we will not get tired to raise the issue of them being released.” The families are disappointed that they had to receive this information through the media, and not directly from DIRCO.
  • On 23 October 2024, the South African Parliament unanimously adopted a motion calling for the immediate release of Frik and Peter. Tabled by DA MP Emma Powell, the motion condemns their ongoing imprisonment, acknowledges the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention’s 1 July opinion confirming the illegality of their detention, and reaffirms South Africa’s commitment to human rights and international law. Parliament expressed support for Frik and Peter’s families, calling on South African authorities to take urgent action to secure the men’s release.


In order to raise the profile of this matter, and seek support, the families of Frik and Peter launched an
online petition, website and social media profiles on Facebook, X and LinkedIn in June this year.
• Website: https://www.freefrikandpeter.co.za/
• Petition with over 12 500 signatures
• Social media:
• On X/Twitter – https://x.com/frikandpeter
• On Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/frikandpeter
• On LinkedIn – https://www.linkedin.com/company/frikandpeter

Media contact / interviews:
Sandra Sowray – 079 167 6863 / sandra@prologconsulting.co.za

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