Houston Chronicle Sunday

‘A new Gambia is born’ after election upset

New president vows to release political prisoners, promises reforms

- By Carley Petesch

YUNDUM, Gambia — Gambia’s newly elected president on Saturday vowed to free all political prisoners and urged exiles who fled the 22-year reign of Yahya Jammeh to return from abroad and help him reform the tiny West African country.

“Anew Gambia is born,” Adama Barrow said the day after his upset election win. “We want everybody on board now. This is Gambia; politics is over.”

A former businessma­n and now real estate mogul who became the unlikely head of a formidable opposition coalition, Barrow, 51, said he plans to preside during a three-year transition before another presidenti­al election is held.

He also said he planned to reverse Jammeh’s decisions to pull out of both the Commonweal­th, a group made up mostly of former British colonies, and the Internatio­nal Criminal Court, which prosecutes atrocities and other human rights abuses.

South Africa, Burundi and Gambia all have announced plans to withdraw, saying the court unfairly singles out African nations.

“The ICC is advocating for good governance. If you want to be part of that, I think there is no need for you to withdraw from the ICC,” Barrow said.

Raucous celebratio­ns erupted Friday after Gambia’s election commission announced Barrow had won the Thursday vote, earning 45 percent of the total compared to Jammeh’s 36 percent.

The streets were calmer Saturday, but Gambians still were clearly excited about the pending transfer of power, marveling at the fact that Jammeh had conceded defeat in a phone call aired on state television Friday night.

Barrow, too, was optimistic about the future.

“I’m very happy because everybody thought that it was impossible, and the impossible became possible,” he said in the interview at his modest home east of the capital, Banjul.

On Saturday, relatives, friends and coalition leaders gathered under trees out on the lawn, and Barrow was greeted with cheers, hugs and a local prayer singer. He said his two wives, five children and mother would join him in Gambia’s State House when he assumes office in January.

While officially elected to a five-year term, Barrow noted that he had agreed to serve only three years with a goal of repairing Gambia’s democracy before making the way for new leadership.

“When we get that done, then the foundation is there, and myself, I will not be in the political scene,” he said.

On Saturday, Secretary of State John Kerry congratula­ted Barrow on his win and noted that his inaugurati­on as president would mark Gambia’s first democratic transfer of power.

“We call for unity and calm during this transition period,” Kerry said.

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