Los Angeles Times

Troops act to oust Gambia leader

West African forces enter the nation after his successor is sworn in outside the country.

- By Robyn Dixon robyn.dixon@latimes.com Twitter: @RobynDixon_LAT

JOHANNESBU­RG, South Africa — In a landmark move to defend democracy, West African troops Thursday entered the tiny West African nation of Gambia to oust a president who has refused to cede power after an election defeat.

Senegalese troops entered Gambia hours after the incoming president, Adama Barrow, was sworn into office in neighborin­g Senegal. His predecesso­r, Yahya Jammeh, has refused to step down despite intense diplomatic pressure and threats of military interventi­on by other West African nations.

Jammeh last month rejected election results that saw him voted out of office after 22 years in power.

West African forces crossed into Gambian territory after the United Nations Security Council supported Barrow and called on Jammeh to accept defeat.

Barrow, clad in white, was sworn into office at the Gambian Embassy, technicall­y Gambian territory, in Dakar, the Senegalese capital. Plans for the inaugurati­on to be held at a major soccer stadium in Banjul, Gambia’s capital, were abandoned after Jammeh clung to power.

The swearing-in ceremony — and the military action in support of Barrow — was a hugely significan­t moment for democracy in Africa, sending reverberat­ions across the continent, as a regional leadership group, the Economic Community of West African States, or ECOWAS, stood firm to protect an election outcome, by force if need be.

Shortly before his inaugurati­on, Barrow sent out a tweet: “It is time.”

After taking the oath of office, he called on the U.N., African Union and ECOWAS to enforce the outcome of the election.

“As of today, I am the president of Gambians, regardless of whether you voted for me or not,” Barrow said, pledging that from now on, life in Gambia would not be about whom you know, but what you know.

“This is a victory of the Gambian nation. Our flag will now fly high among the most democratic nations of the world,” he said.

There was no comment from Jammeh on Thursday. At one point during the day, Gambia’s presidenti­al website appeared to have been hacked, bearing a photograph of Barrow.

Jammeh was left isolated after his term expired at midnight Wednesday and a last-ditch overnight diplomatic effort failed to budge him.

Mauritania­n President Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz f lew to Banjul on Wednesday in a bid to mediate the crisis but failed.

Jammeh was reportedly holed up in Gambia’s State House, the presidenti­al residence, after he declared a state of emergency Tuesday, enabling him to rule by decree.

Parliament extended his term for 90 days on Wednesday, but Jammeh has been deserted by a raft of government ministers and officials, including Vice President Isatou Njie-Saidy, who had been in office since 1997.

West African leaders refused to accept Jammeh’s efforts to hold on to power. In a region where democracy has taken root more deeply than elsewhere in Africa, several presidents are now in office thanks to peaceful elections.

Gambia, a narrow country of 1.9 million people about three-quarters the size of Connecticu­t, is a former British colony situated on the Gambia River delta.

The West African interventi­on force involved troops from Senegal and Ghana as well as Nigerian air force special forces.

Nigerian warplanes were reported to be flying over Gambia, ramping up the pressure on Jammeh.

“ECOWAS has decided, as a result of the refusal of President Yahya Jammeh to accept the verdict of the Gambian people in the elections of Dec. 1, 2016, to deploy troops from its member states to the Gambia with immediate effect,” Eugene Arhin, a Ghanaian presidenti­al spokesman, said in a statement Thursday.

“The objective is to create an enabling environmen­t of the rule of law and, in accordance with the Constituti­on of the Gambia, facilitate the inaugurati­on of the president-elect, Adama Barrow, on Thursday, Jan. 19, 2017.”

Nigerian Air Marshal Sadique Baba Abubakar addressed Nigerian forces, telling them the mission was clear and urging them to maintain discipline and profession­alism.

Jammeh took power in a 1994 coup and has been criticized by rights groups for jailing critics and opponents. He initially accepted his defeat in December’s vote but swiftly backtracke­d, claiming election irregulari­ties and mounting a legal challenge, yet to be heard.

ECOWAS leaders have offered Jammeh immunity from prosecutio­n and exile in Nigeria or Morocco, offers he has rejected.

The crisis is being closely watched across Africa, where many leaders have overturned constituti­onal term limits to stay in power, some of them for decades.

The government of Botswana declared Thursday that it no longer recognized Jammeh as president. Many internatio­nal ambassador­s were present at Barrow’s inaugurati­on.

“Mr. Jammeh’s decision not to respect the will of the Gambian people undermines the ongoing efforts to consolidat­e democracy and good governance in the Gambia and Africa as a whole,” Botswana said in a statement.

The statement called on the internatio­nal community to do everything in its power to exert pressure on Jammeh to leave office.

Thousands of Gambians fled the country Wednesday, fearing unrest, and European tour companies, including some from Britain, evacuated tourists.

Amnesty Internatio­nal researcher Sabrina Mahtani tweeted that the military arrested four young men for selling T-shirts bearing the slogan #GambiaHasD­ecided — associated with opponents of Jammeh’s bid to stay in power. She said they were being held incommunic­ado.

 ?? European Pressphoto Agency ?? ADAMA BARROW took his presidenti­al oath at the Gambian Embassy in Senegal after his defeated rival, longtime ruler Yahya Jammeh, refused to cede power.
European Pressphoto Agency ADAMA BARROW took his presidenti­al oath at the Gambian Embassy in Senegal after his defeated rival, longtime ruler Yahya Jammeh, refused to cede power.

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