The Peterborough Examiner

Ex-Gambian leader accused in killings

Yahya Jammeh ordered deaths of more than 50 migrants, human rights organizati­ons charge

- ABDOULIE JOHN AND CARLEY PETESCH The Associated Press

BANJUL, GAMBIA — A survivor, families of the disappeare­d and human rights organizati­ons are seeking the extraditio­n and prosecutio­n in Ghana of Gambia’s former leader Yahya Jammeh for alleged direct involvemen­t in the killing of more than 50 West African migrants in 2005.

Human Rights Watch and TRIAL Internatio­nal on Wednesday called on Ghana’s government to investigat­e new evidence they say ties Jammeh to the killings of Ghanaians and others.

The groups conducted interviews with 30 former Gambian officials, including 11 officers linked to the deaths. Witnesses identified the Junglers, a notorious unit that took orders directly from Jammeh, as those who carried out the killings as the migrants tried to make their way toward Europe.

Several officials told the rights groups that the migrants may have been mistaken for mercenarie­s, who reportedly were planning a coup.

“The West African migrants weren’t murdered by rogue elements but by a paramilita­ry death squad taking orders from President Jammeh,” said Reed Brody, counsel at Human Rights Watch. “Jammeh’s subordinat­es then destroyed key evidence to prevent internatio­nal investigat­ors from learning the truth.”

Some 44 Ghanaians and several Nigerians, including two women, left from neighbouri­ng Senegal in a motorized canoe in hopes of catching a boat that eventually would take them to Europe, the rights groups said. They couldn’t make contact with the boat and landed in Barra, Gambia, on July 22, which was the country’s Revolution Day marking Jammeh’s 1994 coup.

“They lined us up, pointing guns at us, and marched us to the Barra police,” the sole known survivor of the killings, Martin Kyere, said in the report.

The rights groups confirmed that the migrants were detained in the presence of the inspector general of police, National Intelligen­ce Agency director and chief of the defence staff, among others, and at least two of those present were in telephone contact with Jammeh.

The group of migrants was divided and handed over to the Junglers.

“We were in the back of a pickup truck,” Kyere said. “As the truck went deeper into the forest I was able to get my hands free. I jumped out from the pickup and started to run into the forest.”

The other migrants were executed near the capital, Banjul, and along the Senegal-Gambia border near Kanilai, the rights groups said.

Ghanaian authoritie­s worked with Kyere to identify many of the dead, in an investigat­ion that ultimately led to reparation­s by Gambia for victims’ families and the return to Ghana of six bodies.

No arrests have been made in the killings, the rights groups said. Instead, “rogue elements” in Gambia’s security services were blamed and Gambia’s government was not “directly or indirectly complicit,” according to a report by the United Nations and the ECOWAS regional bloc, the groups said.

Human Rights Watch and TRIAL Internatio­nal are part of an internatio­nal campaign launched in Gambia to prosecute Jammeh for the abuses alleged under his 22-year rule.

Jammeh fled into exile in Equatorial Guinea in January 2017 after losing elections.

The West African migrants weren’t murdered by rogue elements but by a paramilita­ry death squad taking orders from President Jammeh.

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