USA TODAY International Edition

Gambia’s defeated leader leaves country, ends standoff

- Carley Petesch and Krista Larson Associated Press

Gambia’s defeated leader Yahya Jammeh and his family headed into political exile Saturday night, ending a 22year reign of fear and a post- election political standoff that threatened to provoke a regional military interventi­on when he clung to power.

As he mounted the stairs to the plane, he turned to the crowd, kissed his Quran and waved one last time to supporters, including soldiers who cried at his departure.

The flight came almost 24 hours after he announced on state television he was ceding power in response to mounting internatio­nal pressure calling for his ouster. The incoming president, Adama Barrow, told The Associated Press earlier Saturday that Jammeh would fly to Guinea, though that might not be his final destinatio­n.

Though tens of thousands of Gambians had fled the country during his rule, Jammeh supporters flocked to the airport to see him walk the red carpet to his plane.

Barrow defeated Jammeh in the December elections, but Jammeh contested the results as calls grew for him to be prosecuted for alleged abuses during his time in power. A regional force had been poised to force out Jammeh if last- ditch diplomatic efforts failed.

The situation became so tense that Barrow had to be inaugurate­d in neighborin­g Senegal at the Gambian Embassy. He said Saturday he would return to Gambia once it is “clear” and a security sweep is completed.

Jammeh’s announceme­nt ended hours of last- minute negotiatio­ns with the leaders of Guinea and Mauritania.

“We believe he’ll go to Guinea, but we are yet to confirm 100 percent, but that’s what we believe,” Barrow told the AP.

In the Guinean capital, Conakry, the security minister was at the airport with jeeps full of wellarmed military personnel, witnesses said. However, a special plane also landed from Malabo, the capital of Equatorial Guinea, with only a crew and no passengers, suggesting that could be Jammeh’s final destinatio­n. Equatorial Guinea, unlike Guinea, is not a state party to the Internatio­nal Criminal Court.

The new Gambian president told the AP he had not yet been given the communique that should spell out the terms of Jammeh’s departure. “What is fundamenta­l here is he will live in a foreign country as of now,” he said.

As Jammeh prepared to leave the country after more than two decades in power, human rights activists demanded that he be held accountabl­e for alleged abuses, including torture and detention of opponents.

It was those concerns about prosecutio­n that led the famously mercurial Jammeh to challenge the December election results, just days after shocking Gambians by conceding his loss to Barrow.

Jammeh’s agreement to step down has brought an end to the political crisis in this nation of 1.9 million, which has promoted it- self to European tourists as “the Smiling Coast of Africa.”

Critics of Jammeh insisted he should not be given any kind of amnesty.

“Jammeh came as a pauper bearing guns. He should leave as a disrobed despot. The properties he seeks to protect belong to Gambians and Gambia, and he must not be allowed to take them with him. He must leave our country without conditiona­lities,” said Jeggan Bahoum of the Movement for the Restoratio­n of Democracy in Gambia.

An online petition urged that Jammeh not be granted asylum and should instead be arrested. Barrow, though, cautioned that was premature.

“We aren’t talking about prosecutio­n here, we are talking about getting a truth and reconcilia­tion commission,” Barrow told the AP. “Before you can act, you have to get the truth, to get the facts together.”

Jammeh, who first seized power in a 1994 coup, had been holed up in recent days in his official residence in Banjul, increasing­ly isolated as he was abandoned by his security forces and several Cabinet members.

 ?? AP ?? Gambia's leader Yahya Jammeh appears on state television Saturday to give a statement agreeing to step down from office.
AP Gambia's leader Yahya Jammeh appears on state television Saturday to give a statement agreeing to step down from office.

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