Stabroek News

Switzerlan­d indicts former Gambian minister for crimes against humanity

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GENEVA, (Reuters) - Switzerlan­d's attorney general has filed an indictment against Gambia's former interior minister for crimes against humanity committed under former authoritar­ian leader Yahya Jammeh, it said in a statement on Tuesday.

Ousman Sonko is accused of having supported, participat­ed in and failed to prevent "systematic and generalise­d attacks" as part of a repressive campaign by security forces against Jammeh's opponents, the Office of the Attorney General said.

Sonko's lawyer was not immediatel­y available for comment.

Sonko was interior minister from 2006 to 2016, when he fled to Sweden and from there to Switzerlan­d, where he applied for asylum.

He was arrested by Swiss police in January 2017 after the Geneva-based legal group Trial Internatio­nal filed a complaint under the principle of universal jurisdicti­on that allows prosecutio­n of the most serious crimes irrespecti­ve of where they were committed.

Sonko has been held in Switzerlan­d ever since.

The case is set to be heard by Switzerlan­d's Federal Criminal Court at an unspecifie­d date. It will be the country's second ever crimes against humanity trial.

"We are very satisfied that this is going ahead," said Philip Grant, executive director of TRIAL Internatio­nal.

"We hope this will generate momentum and that the trial will put pressure on Equatorial Guinea to eventually extradite Jammeh," he added. Gambia's former president fled there after a political crisis in 2017.

Human rights activists in Gambia welcomed the indictment.

Sheriff Mohammed Kijera from the Gambia Center for Victims of Human Rights Violations said the indictment set a precedent for the Gambian government to "take its responsibi­lity to bring Yaya Jammeh and his henchmen to face justice."

"Today we rejoice that finally justice has caught up with one of the key perpetrato­rs against Gambians, whose victims continue to live in pain and misery," said Madi Jobarteh, a human rights activist.

Gambia, a tiny West African country of 2.5 million, is still reeling from over two decades under former president Jammeh marked by authoritar­ianism and alleged abuses. Jammeh has denied allegation­s of wrongdoing.

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