LUTON, England (AFP) - – British mercenary Simon Mann arrived home Wednesday after being freed from jail in Equatorial Guinea expressing relief to be back in Britain.
"This is the most wonderful homecoming I could ever have imagined," he said in the statement read out by a spokesman, adding that he was "hugely grateful" to President Teodora Obiang Nguema for pardoning him.
"It's the best, best early Christmas present my family and I could ever possibly have imagined," the statement added.
"I am especially looking forward to meeting my son Arthur, who was born a few months after I left the country and who consequently I have never seen," it continued.
Mann said he had spent much of the last "tough" five and half years in solitary confinement.
"I do now need time to adjust and I would ask that you respect my privacy and that of my family during this period."
Mann, a 57-year-old former member of the British elite forces, was jailed for 34 years for his role in the failed 2004 coup plot in the oil-rich west African state.
