Freed British mercenary returns from E. Guinea

British mercenary Simon Mann, seen here in 2008, arrived home after being freed from jail in Equatorial Guinea expressing relief to be back in Britain.

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.

Related Articles