Kuwait Times

Gambia launches a crackdown on protest movement

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BANJUL: The Gambian government has launched a crackdown on a weeks-old movement demanding the departure of President Adama Barrow, following violent demonstrat­ions in which medical officials say three protesters were killed. Tension has been building in The Gambia, a tiny West African country surrounded by Senegal, over Barrow’s decision to stay in office for five years after initially pledging to step down after three.

Police in the capital Banjul on Sunday fired tear gas at hundreds of protesters, who responded by throwing stones and setting tyres on fire, an AFP correspond­ent at the scene said. Police arrested 137 people at the demonstrat­ion, it added. The government later announced a ban on the “Three Years Jotna (is up) Movement”, the group that has spearheade­d weeks of protests calling for Barrow to step down. In a statement, spokesman Ebrima Sankareh said the group was a “subversive, violent and illegal movement” that was “determined to illegally overthrow the constituti­onally elected president”.

The group’s president Abdou Njie was also arrested on Sunday, according to an AFP journalist, although the government would not confirm it was holding Njie. Three people were killed in Sunday’s clashes according to Kebba Manneh, director of the Serrekunda hospital where victims were taken. Red Cross sources said 28 people were taken Sunday to Serrekunda hospital, close to where protesters had gathered in the districts of Old Jeshwang and Stink Corner on the outskirts of Banjul. The government denied that any protesters were killed on Sunday.

Radios silenced

Among those arrested were the director of the King FM radio station, and a radio presenter who had been charged with inciting violence, a station employee said. The head of another radio station, Digital FM, was also arrested and it was not known where he was being held, Saikou Jammeh, secretary general of Gambia Press Union said. Authoritie­s later moved to shut the two stations, accusing them of serving as platforms for inciting violence and broadcasti­ng for the anti-Barrow movement and threatenin­g “the security of The Gambia”.

Sunday’s clashes broke out after demonstrat­ors tried to change their itinerary to get closer to the city centre. “Let’s go and burn everything that belongs to Adama Barrow and his family,” one protestor called out to those alongside him, the AFP reporter heard. “We will protest until Barrow resigns,” said another who identified himself as Amadou Sanyang. “He is a traitor who betrayed the population’s trust, we are going to teach him a lesson.”

On Saturday, hundreds of Gambians had marched on the outskirts of Banjul, responding to the call of victims associatio­ns demanding justice for sweeping rights abuses and murder suffered under former dictator Yahya Jammeh’s 22-year rule. — AFP

 ??  ?? BANJUL: A demonstrat­or holds up a placard while demonstrat­ing, asking for Yahya Jammeh, the former President of the Gambia, to be brought to justice, in Banjul. — AFP
BANJUL: A demonstrat­or holds up a placard while demonstrat­ing, asking for Yahya Jammeh, the former President of the Gambia, to be brought to justice, in Banjul. — AFP

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