Oman Daily Observer

Gambia’s opposition UDP wins absolute majority in elections

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BANJUL, Gambia: The Gambia’s longtime opposition won an absolute majority in parliament­ary elections, easily defeating the party of ousted leader Yahya Jammeh, results announced on Friday showed.

Official results announced by the Independen­t Electoral Commission (IEC) showed the United Democratic Party (UDP) won 31 of the 53 available elected seats in the country’s National Assembly.

“(I) hereby declare the final results as follows: UDP won 31 seats; APRC (Jammeh’s party) won five seats,” IEC chairman Alieu Momar Njie declared at the commission headquarte­rs.

Five more seats are appointed by the president to give a total 58 seats in the chamber, giving the UDP a two- seat majority. Turnout was low at 42 per cent, Njie said, saying more civic education was needed to persuade people to come out and vote in legislativ­e polls.

The UDP was one of seven parties who united to propel President Adama Barrow to power in December last year, but that coalition broke apart for the legislativ­e election.

The party has long considered itself a government-in-waiting, and Barrow was UDP treasurer until resigning to become the flagbearer candidate for the coalition.

Their victory is likely to make it easier for Barrow to get a raft of promised reforms passed, with UDP leader Ousainou Darboe a personal friend and longtime ally of the president.

Lamin Dibba, a senior UDP official, said the vote put the party in a strong position to make major changes in Gambia. “Our first priority will be to look at the constituti­on, he said.

Jammeh’s Alliance for Patriotic Reorientat­ion and Constructi­on (APRC) meanwhile suffered a stunning reversal, going from 48 seats to just five overnight — a result that revealed the deep anger felt by former supporters and critics alike at the actions of the regime.

An expected surge for the Gambia Democratic Congress (GDC), an upstart party which did not join the coalition, failed to materialis­e, with the youth-led movement gaining just five seats.

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