The living hell of Equatorial Guinea’s missing prisoners and their families

In Equatorial Guinea, hundreds of prisoners end up locked away for years on end, with no way of receiving visits from their lawyers and families.

These forgotten people, who were for many, invariably jailed following trials full of irregularities, are incarcerated in some of the world’s sadly known infamous prisons such as Black Beach, Bata, or Bioko.

Since they enter the prison walls, they have neither been seen nor heard from, and their relatives do not know whether they are alive or dead.

The Black Beach prison in the capital Malabo is a hideout; a hole in which the humidity due to the proximity of the sea and the land made prisoners live in infrahuman conditions.

A prisoner said

A few years ago, a prisoner that was finally released qualified the Black Beach prison in the capital Malabo where he was detained as a hideout; a hole in which the humidity due to the proximity of the sea and the land made prisoners live in infrahuman conditions.

In the country’s prisons, detainees are tortured on a widespread basis and their lives are in constant threat due to overcrowding.

Amnesty International has documented several cases of the missing prisoners, including that of Francisco Micha, a 68-year-old Equatorial Guinean national who was living in Spain since the end of the 90s, and his friend Fulgencio Obiang Esono, an engineer and Italian national of Equatorial Guinean origin.

Francisco Micha
Francisco Micha

The pair was travelling from Rome to Togo on business. Upon their arrival in Lomé on 18 September 2018, they suddenly became unreachable. Rumors started to circulate indicating they had been abducted by the Equatorial Guinea security forces and were detained at Black Beach prison. A few days later the rumors were confirmed by official sources.

Fulgencio and Francisco were tried with more than a hundred men accused of having taken part in the 2017 alleged coup plot to unseat President Teodoro Obiang in a trial that took place in the city of Bata from March to May 2019.

According to observers, the trial was marred by a host of violations of the right to a fair trial. The majority of defendants had been arbitrary detained for approximately a year, without being informed of the charges against them.

At the end, sentences ranging from three to 90 years in prison were handed to the 112 defendants, some of whom were tried in absentia, Fulgencio and Francisco receiving almost 60 years in prison each.

Since the verdict, their families have lived in a waking nightmare. They carry on without understanding how it could be possible that a business trip to Togo has ended up in a prison in Equatorial Guinea.

In Madrid, where Francisco’s family lives, they only know he travelled to Rome to meet Fulgencio with whom he travelled to Togo. Francisco’s wife, who needs pills to sleep, feels urgent to know if he is still alive as she can’t stand the suffering of her children.

Francisco’s wife last saw her husband in 2019 on television as his sentence was read out. Since then, it is like the earth has swallowed him up. In more than two years she has not received any news from Francisco and wants to believe he is still alive and doing fine.

For Francisco’s five children, the situation is so painful that they have not been able to share it with their closest friends. For them, their father is a good man with good values. They feel the house is empty as he is missing. They miss his arrival home from work each day, and the way he would ask them one by one how their days had been. They miss the secrets they would share with him, the help he would provide, and the Madrid football matches they would watch together on TV.

Not knowing if Fulgencio is dead or alive is an endless agony.

Fulgencio’s sister

Despite everything, Francisco’s children still have hope. They all dream about the day their father will return home. They are looking forward to telling him about how well they are doing at school and how much they have improved playing football. They want Francisco to feel proud of them.

In Italy, Fulgencio’s sister feels sometimes guilty just for thinking that her brother is dead. Her words illustrate the endless suffering she would like to stop:

“If I knew that Fulgencio is dead, with all the pain in the world I would accept the idea and reconcile myself, but not knowing if he is dead or alive is an endless agony. Authorities in Equatorial Guinea are not just finishing Fulgencio’s life, they are also ending the lives of his whole family. I just want the President to tell us if he is dead or alive”.

“I fear that authorities are doing all this, thinking that we are going to forget about my brother, however, we are not going to forget him,” she said.

Francisco and Fulgencio’s families are not the only ones that are living this nightmare. In November 2019, four members of the opposition group “Movement for the Liberation of Equatorial Guinea Third Republic’’ (MLGE3R in Spanish) were abducted in South Soudan by the Equatorial Guinea Security forces and transferred to prison in the country. A few days later the rumors were confirmed by official sources. These opposition members were tried in absentia in the same May 2019 trial.

In most of these cases, the detainees were the breadwinners of their families who are now struggling by selling their belongings to survive. Some of them haven’t had the courage to tell their children the truth.

How is my eight-year-old daughter, who adores her father and who thinks he is a very nice person, going to understand he was sent to prison for 80 years?

One of the mothers was asking

They have simply told them their parents are in Equatorial Guinea for work as knowing the truth will kill the children of sadness.

One of the mothers was asking:

“How is my eight-year-old daughter, who adores her father and who thinks he is a very nice person, going to understand he was sent to prison for 80 years? How is she going to understand that she is not going to see him anymore? She is only eight. I can’t do this to her. My heart just breaks thinking that my daughter is never going to see her father again”.

In Equatorial Guinea many prisoners will continue missing, living in a “deep and black hole” as described by a former detainee, lonely and abandoned, without their relatives knowing their fate.

However, their families are not losing faith. They continue to believe in the strength of their loved ones and that they may one day be released.

Under national and international human rights law, anyone accused of a crime has the right to a fair trial. But in many countries throughout the world, such as Equatorial Guinea, basic defence rights and due process are not respected: such as lawyers present during interrogations; independent doctors on-hand to examine detainees; contact with families and ensuring “confessions” obtained by torture can never be used as evidence.

Amnesty International is urging Equatorial Guinea President Teodoro Obiang, to urgently comply with international human rights law and to ensure that all detainees are protected against torture and ill-treatment, are held in humane conditions and have access to their families and lawyers.

The original of this piece was published on 23 June by the Daily Maverick.