The New Zealand Herald

Exiled ex-leader accused of emptying country’s coffers

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Exiled Gambian ruler Yahya Jammeh stole millions of dollars in his final weeks in power, plundering the state coffers and shipping out luxury vehicles by cargo plane, a special adviser for the new President said yesterday.

Meanwhile, a regional military force rolled in, greeted by cheers, to secure the tiny West African nation so that democratic­ally elected President Adama Barrow could return home. He remained in neighbouri­ng Senegal, where he took the oath of office on Friday because of concerns for his safety.

At a press conference in the Senegalese capital, Barrow’s special adviser Mai Ahmad Fatty told journalist­s that the President “will return home as soon as possible”. Underscori­ng the challenges facing the new Administra­tion, Fatty confirmed that Jammeh made off with more than US$11.4 million ($15.8m) during a two-week period alone. That is only what they have discovered so far since Jammeh and his family took an offer of exile after more than 22 years in power and departed on Sunday.

“The Gambia is in financial distress. The coffers are virtually empty. That is a state of fact,” Fatty said. “It has been confirmed by technician­s in the Ministry of Finance and the Central Bank of the Gambia.” Fatty also confirmed that a Chadian cargo plane had transporte­d luxury goods out of the country on Jammeh’s behalf in his final hours in power, including an unknown number of vehicles.

Fatty said officials at Gambia airport have been ordered not to allow any of Jammeh’s belongings to leave. Separately, it appeared that some of his goods remained in Guinea, where Jammeh and his closest allies stopped on their flight into exile.

The unpredicta­ble Jammeh, known for startling declaratio­ns like his claim that bananas and herbal rubs could cure Aids, went into exile under mounting internatio­nal pressure, with a wave to supporters as soldiers wept. He is now in Equatorial Guinea, home to Africa’s longest-serving ruler and not a state party to the Internatio­nal Criminal Court. His dramatic aboutface on his December election loss to Barrow, at first conceding and then challengin­g the vote, appeared to be the final straw for the internatio­nal community, which had been alarmed by his moves in recent years to declare an Islamic republic and leave the Commonweal­th and the ICC.

Barrow’s adviser disavowed a joint declaratio­n issued after Jammeh’s departure by the United Nations, African Union and West African regional bloc Ecowas that bestowed a number of protection­s upon Jammeh, his family and his associates — including the assurance that their lawful assets would not be seized.

“As far as we’re concerned, it doesn’t exist,” Fatty said.

The declaratio­n also said Jammeh’s exile was “temporary” and that he reserved the right to return to Gambia at the time of his choosing.

The declaratio­n doesn’t give him amnesty, according to internatio­nal human rights lawyer Reed Brody.

“Under internatio­nal law in fact you can’t amnesty certain crimes like torture and massive or systematic political killings,” he said in an email. “Depending where Jammeh ends up, though, the real obstacles to holding him accountabl­e will be political.”

Barrow will now begin forming a Cabinet and working with Gambia’s national assembly to reverse the state of emergency that Jammeh declared in his final days in power, said Halifa Sallah, spokesman for the coalition backing the new leader. — AP

 ??  ?? Yahya Jammeh went into exile under mounting internatio­nal pressure.
Yahya Jammeh went into exile under mounting internatio­nal pressure.
 ?? Pictures / AP ?? Adama Barrow.
Pictures / AP Adama Barrow.

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