Bangkok Post

Gambia’s Jammeh to step down

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>> BANJUL: Gambia’s defeated leader Yahya Jammeh announced early yesterday he will cede power, after hours of last-ditch talks with regional leaders and the threat that a regional military force would forcibly remove him.

“I believe it is not necessary that a single drop of blood be shed,” Mr Jammeh said in a brief statement on state television. He vowed that “all the issues we currently face will be resolved peacefully” but did not give details. No date has been set for the return of Gambian President Adama Barrow, who beat Mr Jammeh in last month’s election and who was sworn into office on Thursday in neighbouri­ng Senegal, where he was for his safety. “The rule of fear” in Gambia had ended with Mr Jammeh’s rule, said Mr Barrow late on Friday.

Mr Jammeh’s agreement to step down brought an end to the political crisis in this tiny West African nation of 1.9 million.

Gambian human rights activists are insisting that Jammeh be held accountabl­e for alleged human rights abuses during his 22-year rule and that he not be able to keep funds illegally amassed.

“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 Mr Jammeh not be granted asylum and should instead be arrested for alleged human rights abuses. Mr Jammeh could leave Gambia on Saturday, according to those close to the negotiatio­ns mediated by Mauritania­n President Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz and Guinean President Alpha Conde. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not permitted to speak about the situation to the media.

Famously mercurial Mr Jammeh initially shocked Gambians by conceding his election loss to Mr Barrow in December. But after human rights activists demanded his arrest for alleged abuses, he refused to accept his defeat and refused to leave power. Mr Jammeh, who first seized power in a 1994 coup, has been holed up this week in his official residence in Banjul, increasing­ly isolated as he was abandoned by his security forces and several Cabinet members.

The West African regional bloc, ECOWAS, pledged to remove Mr Jammeh by force if he did not step down. The group assembled a multinatio­nal military force including tanks that rolled into Gambia on Thursday. The force included troops from Senegal, Ghana, Nigeria, Togo and Mali and they moved in after Mr Barrow’s inaugurati­on and a unanimous vote by the UN Security Council supporting the regional efforts.

Fearing violence, about 45,000 people have fled Gambia for Senegal, according to the UN refugee agency. Banjul remained peaceful as the political crisis played out.

 ??  ?? CRISIS AVERTED: Pupils on bikes drive next to a military convoi leaving the border with Gambia, near the village of Toubacouta, Senegal, yesterday.
CRISIS AVERTED: Pupils on bikes drive next to a military convoi leaving the border with Gambia, near the village of Toubacouta, Senegal, yesterday.

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