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Friday, June 2, 2006 - Page updated at 12:00 AM Two held captive in Congo say politics was reasonThe Associated Press
ORLANDO, Fla. — They said they slept on inch-thick, bug-infested mats and flushed toilets with recycled bath water, eating a piece of bread or a small can of corned-beef hash once a day. But two Americans captured in Congo while working for a presidential candidate are back home and in seemingly good spirits, though they are awaiting blood tests to see if they contracted malaria. Retired Orlando police Capt. Joseph Robinson, 47, and retired U.S. Secret Service agent Kevin Billings, 49, spoke Thursday about their detention. They and Seth Taylor of San Diego were among 32 foreigners Congolese officials accused of planning a coup ahead of national elections. Robinson and Billings deny they were plotting a coup. They said they and Taylor were working for Orlando-based AQMI Strategy to provide security and strategy consulting for a presidential candidate. Captured May 19 and released Saturday, they returned to the United States on Monday. Taylor remained in Orlando but did not want to talk with reporters, an AQMI spokesman said. Billings and Robinson said they initially feared for their lives in Congo but came to believe the government was simply trying to intimidate their candidate, Dr. Oscar Kashala, ahead of scheduled July 30 elections. "I don't think either one of us are the types to think that we're going to lay down and die," Robinson said. To pass the time, the men sang theme songs from "Gilligan's Island" and "The Beverly Hillbillies" and a boisterous rendition of "If You're Happy And You Know It." "By the time we got to 'stomp your feet,' we had a whole bunch of security guards with AK-47s peeking around the corner," Robinson said. Robinson and Billings said they were headed home for a visit May 18 when government officials removed them from an airplane, took their passports and told them a minor mix-up would keep them in Congo until the next morning.
The Congolese government said they were arrested with military items, but the men said they weren't armed. Instead, they said they were told the Global Positioning System units, laptop computers and hiking boots they carried were tools of insurgency. The two said they were not harmed, but a South American arrested at the same time was nearly bludgeoned to death, and Nigerians in their holding cell were beaten in interrogation. Congolese officials continued to insist Thursday that the men were planning to overthrow the government. "All the mercenaries — the Nigerians, the Americans and the South Africans — admitted that they had been recruited to carry out a coup d'état," Congolese Information Minister Henri Mova Sakanyi said. Nearly 18,000 U.N. troops are on the ground trying to ensure the Congo elections are peaceful. Associated Press writer Anjan Sundaram in Kinshasa, Congo, contributed to this report. Copyright © 2006 The Seattle Times Company Most read articles
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