Times of Suriname

Mass grave of alleged victims of former president Jammeh found

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GAMBIA - A mass grave containing the bodies of 12 west Africans allegedly killed by a paramilita­ry force controlled by the former president Yahya Jammeh has been identified near the Gambian capital, Banjul. The “Junglers”, a notorious hit squad that answered only to Jammeh, executed 54 people who were trying to make their way to Spain by sea in 2005, suspecting them of being mercenarie­s trying to overthrow the government, according to human rights groups that interviewe­d 30 Gambian officials. The only survivor of the massacre told the Guardian that he and his friends were arrested at sea and tortured before being driven to a forest, where they were killed. “Once we entered the navy boat, the torture started,” said Martin Kyere, who is from Ghana. “When we landed in Banjul, we found a lot of military men waiting on the shore, armed with guns and cutlasses.” He said that on the way to the forest, when a fellow captive complained that he was in pain, one of the military men lunged at him with his cutlass. “His arm nearly fell off his body,” Kyere said. “All of us were tied by our hands. I succeeded in untying myself and fled.” Just before he jumped off, his friends whispered to him, asking him to find their families if he made it back to Ghana, and tell them what had happened. As he ran, behind him he heard the others crying, “Oh God, help us!” Then he heard gunshots. Over the course of a week, near Banjul as well as Jammeh’s home town of Kanilai, the Junglers killed all 54 people, according to the human rights groups. Most of their bodies have never been found. For this crime Human Rights Watch and Trial Internatio­nal are building a case to prosecute Jammeh, who remains in exile in Equatorial Guinea after losing the 2016 election. He initially conceded victory, then changed his mind and holed himself up in the presidenti­al palace, before finally being persuaded to leave, taking with him a fleet of luxury cars. A former military officer who in 1994 led the overthrow of a democratic­ally elected government, Jammeh presided over a brutal regime characteri­zed by allegation­s of human rights violations, including claims of extrajudic­ial killings and torture. The Gambia is preparing to launch a truth, reconcilia­tion and reparation­s commission to examine crimes committed between 1994 and 2017, but with its justice system being radically reformed and very little money, it is unlikely that the small west African country would be able to prosecute Jammeh even if it could secure his extraditio­n.

(The Guardian)

 ??  ?? Survivor Martin Kyere at Accra cemetery in Ghana, where six bodies were returned from Gambia, after 54 Ghanaians were allegedly killed in 2005. (Photo: Bénédict De Moerloose)
Survivor Martin Kyere at Accra cemetery in Ghana, where six bodies were returned from Gambia, after 54 Ghanaians were allegedly killed in 2005. (Photo: Bénédict De Moerloose)

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