Tag: Gambia

  • The Gambia and imminent anarchy

    SIR: Plato must have had tyrants like Yahya Jammeh, the outgoing President of The Gambia in mind when he succinctly asserted that “Democracy passes into despotism”.

    The renege and annulment of the recently concluded election in Gambia, which Adama Barrow won with a popular vote is an invitation to anarchy. The outgoing President must consider the grave implication for staying in power beyond January 18 which is utterly unconstitutional, undemocratic and a threat to democracy.

    The wish of the people of Gambia must be respected. Based on Carothers’ observation, should we say that democracy promoters are also ‘democracy spoilers’? If not how can you concede defeat only for you to annul an election that you commended as a free, fair and a credible election?

    The question begging for an urgent answer now is: What could be the drivers of internal promotion of democracy since the ‘externally promoted democracy’ is resisted and seen as neo-colonisation or an instrument of regime-change in most of African states?

    It is particularly worrisome that history is about to repeat itself.

    That the process of democratization increases the risk of society breakdown (war, moral degradation due to media globalisation…)—elections in Africa-Kenya (2009), Zimbabwe (2011), Ivory Coast-all these have ended up into civil wars and ‘power-sharing deals’.

    It is important at this point in time to appeal to ECOWAS to consider forceful eviction of despotic, tyrannical and draconian Jammeh as the last option and it must be done with professionalism to avoid civilian causalities, especially women and children who are victims of war.

    The adamant nature of the outgoing President to remain in power is not only provocative, it is also a threat to Global Security but caution must be taken to get Jammeh out to avoid a Libya scenario where things have never been the same since the forceful removal of Ghadaffi.

    • Sheyi Babaeko,

    Leeds, United Kingdom.

  • Jammeh appoints mediator despite hurdles

    Jammeh appoints mediator despite hurdles

    Gambia’s outgoing President Yayah Jammeh on Wednesday appointed a mediator to facilitate meetings between himself and president-elect Adama Barrow.

    Jammeh, who ruled the small West African nation with an iron fist for more than two decades, refuses to accept the result of the Dec. 1 presidential polls, which saw him, lose power.

    Barrow, a former real estate agent, who was little known before he announced his candidacy, is scheduled to take office on Jan. 19.

    The ruling party’s secretary general will mediate between Jammeh’s supporters and the opposition to “resolve any mistrust and issues,’’ Jammeh said in a televised address to the nation early Wednesday.

    He refuses to accept the election result because it was “full of arithmetic errors and anomalies, it also could not be credibly explained,’’ the outgoing president added.

    Jammeh ordered the justice minister and national assembly to draft a general amnesty bill, while issuing an executive order not to arrest or prosecute citizens for “acts or omissions’’ committed during the pre and post electoral period, between Nov. 1 and Jan. 31.

    The announcement comes a day after the Supreme Court postponed hearing a court petition filed by Jammeh to challenge the election results.

    The case was adjourned to Monday, since only one of a required minimum of five judges was present, the court’s registrar said.

    Several West African heads of state meanwhile postponed a meeting with Jammeh aimed at helping to resolve the political crisis from Wednesday to Friday.

  • Good tidings from Gambia

    Sir: I have just received the news I was expecting from the Gambia: some wise and right-thinking military Generals, who don’t want to waste human and material resources, are said to be telling General Yahya Jammeh to step down for the President-elect, Adama Barrow, when due, or, many battalions would not put up any defense if an invasion should arise due to his recalcitrance. Two leading Generals have been mentioned, specifically: Generals Saul Badjie and Musa Savage.

    The Gambian Generals should beware of Jammeh, and not take any chances or risk deceptions. I know Jammeh’s sun is set. Any nasty action on his part can only worsen his case, but beware.

    My final appeal goes to the entire Gambian Army, to unite behind change of power; after all, no human power can stop the international community from removing Jammeh. It is important that no Gambian blood be shed for Jammeh. I pity Yahya that after 22 years of dictatorship, he remains unsatisfied and ungrateful to God. Apparently, he is of the same stock with Nigeria’s “born to rule” that must not dialogue with insurgents nor allow restructure for peace, unity, and progress. The Yoruba note that when a snail puts its mouth on salt, it does not remove it until death. That is a warning to Yahya, not really an incantation.

    • Prof Oyeniran Abioje, PhD,

    University of Ilorin.

  • Gambia: ECOWAS intervention declaration of war, insult – Jammeh

    Gambia: ECOWAS intervention declaration of war, insult – Jammeh

    Gambian leader, Yahya Jammeh, has accused West African regional body, ECOWAS, of declaring war against his country for refusal to step down at the end of his mandate this month.

    Jammeh, who accused ECOWAS of putting forces on alert in case he refused to step down, has vowed to stay in power despite losing a Dec. 1 election to rival Adama Barrow.

    He also promised to defend Gambia against any outside aggression, in a New Year speech broadcast on state TV.

    The veteran leader initially conceded defeat in the vote, then changed his mind days later – raising fears that regional powers might have to intervene to oust him. His mandate runs out on Jan. 19.

    Marcel de Souza, commission president for the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), said last week that the body had put standby forces on alert.

    In his speech, Jammeh decried “the resolution of ECOWAS on the current situation to implement the results of Dec 1, 2016 presidential election by whatever means possible”.

    He apparently acknowledged again that the poll did not go in his favour.

    “It is in effect a declaration of war and an insult to our constitution.

    “Let me make it very clear that we are ready to defend this country against any aggression.

    “My government will never opt for such confrontation but defending our sovereignty is a sacred duty for all patriotic Gambians,” he said.

    Barrow’s surprise victory and Jammeh’s initial decision to concede after 22 years in power was initially seen as a moment of hope on a continent where autocratic leaders are becoming more entrenched.

    Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari has stepped in as an ECOWAS mediator to offer Jammeh an “honorable exit”, but Jammeh said the bloc could no longer fulfill that role.

  • Buhari sets up Gambia mediation team

    Buhari sets up Gambia mediation team

    President Muhammadu Buhari has set up a Mediation Support Team to assist him in resolving the political impasse in Gambia.
    The MST, headed by Foreign Affairs Minister, Geoffrey Onyeama, will work with the team of the co-mediator, President John Dramani Mahama of Ghana.
    Buhari and Mahama were mandated by the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) to resolve the Gambian logjam.
    Their mediation was one of the outcomes of the just-concluded ECOWAS Summit held on December 17, 2016 in Abuja.
    The summit also listed the terms of reference to include ensuring the safety of the President-elect, Adama Barrow, the political leaders and the entire population; upholding the result of the Presidential election held on December 1, 2016 and ensuring that the President-elect is sworn into office on January 19, 2017, in conformity with the constitution of the country.
    The Onyeama MST has begun immediate consultations with leaders in the sub-region as well as with international partners, Garba Shehu, Senior Special Assistant to the President on Media said today.
    The main task of the Mediation Support Team is to undertake the first phase of the preparatory and support work that would lead to a high level meeting of the mediator, President Buhari, and the stakeholders.
    “Buhari remains optimistic that a peaceful resolution of the problem, in line with the laws and the constitution of The Gambia, is possible before the January 19, 2017 inauguration date of the new president”, Shehu said.

  • Gambia: The people vs. Jammeh

    SIR: Anxiety prevails in the Gambia as the people await what becomes of their country come January 19, 2017. Will this country tow the path of peace or anarchy? Will Gambians have a new president? Will the incumbent remain in power? On this day of destiny, current president, Yahya Jammeh is expected to relinquish power and the President-elect, Adama Barrow resume as the country’s president. This day is expected to be special because it will be the first time that this West Africa nation is peacefully transferring power since Independence.

    For now, it is uncertain if this historic occasion will come to pass as expected because the incumbent president had backtracked after conceding defeat in a recent presidential election. Calls and appeals from ECOWAS, the AU, the UN and other local and international bodies to Jammeh to respect the outcome of December 1 presidential contest had fallen on deaf ears. In fact there are reports that troops from the sub-region are on a standby to intervene and use military force to oust Jammeh if he refused to relinquish power.

    Interestingly, Jammeh once told journalists that he would rule Gambia for a billion years if Allah so willed. Apparently, he was determined to cling to power as long as he would. However with the outcome of the presidential election and with what appears to be a political impasse in the country, Jammeh’s will seems to be on a collision course with that of Allah.

    But think about it, Allah has really been so magnanimous to Jammeh by allowing him to rule the country for 22 years despite his dismal human rights records and bad governance. During this period, this erratic leader acquired numerous titles that made his official introduction, ‘His Excellency Sheikh Professor Alhaji Dr. Yahya AJJ Jammeh Babili Mansa’ a laborious exercise. He claimed to have the cure for HIV/AIDS. Jammeh withdrew Gambia from the Commonwealth, which he described as a neo-colonial institution. He stated that Gambia would never be a party to any institution that represented an extension of colonialism. Jammeh declared the country an Islamic republic in an attempt to distance Gambia from its colonial past. In addition he threatened to kill anyone who indulged in homosexual act.

    He ruled with iron fists, conducted sham elections and clamped down on the opposition and freedom of expression in the country. It seemed that at the presidential election in December, this bond was broken.

    So as the world counts down to January 19, 2017, Gambia finds itself in a political deadlock with two opposing wills – the will of President Jammeh and the will of the Gambian people as invested in the president elect, Adama Barrow. Which will triumphs at the end of the day?

    • Leo Igwe,

    nskepticleo@yahoo.com

  • From Burundi to Gambia through DR Congo!

    Here we go again! Africans just have a way of muddying the waters. When you are thinking that Africa may finally be nearing getting used to democratic governance, even in its most elementary and rickety form, it springs new surprises that promptly and rudely snap you out of such day-dreaming. Two diametrically opposed occurrences in two English-speaking West African countries (Ghana and Gambia) just a few days apart brought about this thought. Presidential elections were held in both countries just a few days apart and the results were exactly the same, i.e., unambiguous electoral shellacking for both incumbent presidents by the people. While Ghana’s President John Dramani Mahama, who has just served only one term of four years out of two terms allowed by the constitution, willingly accepted the popular verdict, President Yahya Jammeh, his counterpart in Gambia who has ruled for 22 years, initially accepted the electoral verdict and congratulated the winner, Adama Barrow of the opposition party, only to make a complete and inexplicable about turn a few days later and to reject the result of the election, implying he intends to hang on to power illegitimately and against the wish of the people. Yahya Jammeh has thus carelessly tossed a spanner into the wheel of progress, and democracy is coming under a serious threat in that tiny nation.

    Yes, there is no denying the obvious fact that democracy is in recession across the globe. A number of recent studies by established scholars of democracy have indicated that democracy and its appurtenances, such as freedom and human rights, are being eroded, bending democracy into a crooked form almost beyond recognition. Many leaders who though had gained power through democratic means had been known to systematically and incrementally stifle democratic rule. While major powers like Russia and China have never been democracies even by the remotest of definitions, recent developments in countries like Turkey, Philippines, and now the United States of America with the election of that narcissistic demagogue Donald Trump as president, are confirming or lending credence to the conclusion by renowned scholars like Larry Diamond on the inexorable decline of democracy across the globe.

    Africa is evidently the poster boy of authoritarian rule. Since Africa came on the global scene with a plethora of newly independent states in the 1960s, most of the countries have since been ruled by an array of pretentious democrats, ruthless autocrats, psychopathic tyrants, sanguinary despots, sadistic presidents-for-life, and an assortment of cold-blooded military dictators, such that democracy is actually more of an exception on the continent than the rule. The proverbial ‘third wave’ of democratization has made little, mostly cosmetic, impact in Africa, as these Stone Age despots cynically manipulate democratic processes and symbols to consolidate autocratic rule. Robert Mugabe has ruled hapless Zimbabwe since 1980 and has just only a few days back manipulated his ruling party to endorse him at 92 years of age as its presidential candidate in the 2018 general elections. Jose Eduardo dos Santos, Paul Biya, Yoweri Museveni, Paul Kagame, to name a few, have kept their respective countries under tight-fisted rule for more than two decades each and have continued to manipulate democratic processes to entrench extreme personalist rule. The predictable end result of long personalist rule in the African experience is to bring the hapless country to ruin. The carcass of the so-called Democratic Republic Congo after Mobutu’s ruinous 32-year dictatorship is there for all to see!

    Today, intra-state violence rages on in Burundi where the president, Pierre Nkurunziza, has repudiated the constitutional term limit and rigged himself into office against the wishes of the people; DR Congo, perpetually embroiled in political turmoil since its independence in 1960, is about to combust all over again by President Joseph Kabila’s blunt refusal to conduct elections and leave power at the expiration of his tenure. The opposition coalition is gearing up for a fight, and no one can predict exactly how it will all pan out. As if that is not enough to unnerve Africans, Gambia’s pocket-size tyrant who initially accepted the results of the presidential election has made a dangerous about-face, repudiating the elections. He has also snubbed an ECOWAS attempt to persuade him to respect the will of the people by handing over power. Gambia is about to have its own baptism of fire, as Jammeh sticks to his guns and as the winning party is insisting on taking power in January. Jammeh has deliberately created what is known as a ‘Mexican stand-off’, a situation an online dictionary defines as “a stalemate or impasse; a confrontation that neither side can win.”

    Jammeh is now the bull in Gambia’s china shop, and unless a suitable deal is worked out quickly to ease out of power, the tiny country of less than two million people risks going the way of DR Congo. Africa has regrettably walked this destructive path too many times before, with extremely devastating consequences, a path that Professor Adebayo Williams famously calls “the road to Kigali”. Unfortunately again, it does not yet seem that African rulers have learnt any useful lessons from these destructive experiences. It was not long ago that the once peaceful West African country of Cote d’Ivoire also exploded in an orgy of massive post-election violence and bloodletting on a scale that beggared belief, simply because the incumbent President Laurent Gbagbo, like Yahya Jammeh now, refused to give up power after a credible election that he lost. Jammeh should be told of the two fates that await him should he continue with his obduracy: leave in a casket, like Muammar Gaddafi, or be hauled before the International Criminal Court in The Hague to face trial like Laurent Gbagbo!

    ECOWAS and African Union leaders definitely have their work cut out for them. Both organizations of which Gambia is a member-state must insist forcefully and unequivocally on the non-negotiability of the sanctity of the peoples’ choice of their own leaders, and it is time Africans threw down the gauntlet that if democracy would take root and deepen, it must begin with the respect for the sanctity of elections. They must do the level best to guide this Jammeh bull out of Gambia’s china shop, and save the long-suffering people of Gambia avoidable conflagration and bloodbath. The rest of the world can make all the righteous noises but they cannot help Africa until Africa first helps itself.

    Besides, unless Jammeh and Kabila are made to respect their countries’ constitutions and quit power, they risk setting dangerous and ignoble examples for other sit-tight despots to emulate. Even though what Jammeh and Kabila are doing is not entirely new in Africa, but the time has come for such to be stiffly resisted in order to send powerful signals across the continent that we have had enough of destructive sit-tight rule. If this is to be done, West Africa, erstwhile the most coup-prone of all the five sub-regions of Africa, must take the bull by the horns and set the positive example. This is a great test for President Muhammadu Buhari and his fellow ECOWAS plenipotentiaries, and they must know the rest of the world is eagerly waiting for them to act, and act decisively, first in defence of democracy, and second, to save Gambia from avoidable violence.

     

    • Prof. Fawole is of Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, Osun State.
  • Resolving Gambia’s political impasse

    SIR: The current political impasse in The Gambia is a by product of a democracy-driven political contestation that has gone sour. It was a struggle for power and authority to control the highest office in the land, the presidency. The election in question actually produced a winner in the person of opposition leader, Adama Borrow, who defeated the incumbent, Yahya Jammeh, who is a legend of a sort now in the comity of long-serving African leaders or heads of state.

    The good news, until recently, was that the outgoing president, the defeated “father” of the nation, congratulated the in-coming president immediately after the election. However, when the opposition shouted on their rooftops that, the outgoing elder statesman and president will be comprehensively probed, the papa of the nation smelt a rat, revisited the done election, saw some holes, and shouted back – I will no longer accept the election as a free and fair one. The election must be nullified and a new one must be conducted. So The Gambia landed itself in a deep, still brewing political impasse that may explode the nation.

    All known and well-respected individuals including presidents of all the nations and multinational and multilateral organizations have denounced the volte-face of the out-going president. Some have threatened fire and brimstone. Surely, a war is in our hands. And what do we do as peace lovers and advocates?

    Number one fact is that the in-coming crop of leaders made a mortal mistake. The mistake is this; they began to eat their cakes ever before the cakes are given to them. Why announce to the whole world that the outgoing president will rot in jail? This is an error, The Gambia like most countries in Africa is a near failed state in transition, therefore, an incumbent should be settled/pampered/paid like brutal warlords with comparative advantage, to leave the stage.

    As a solution, the outgoing president, Yahya Jammeh, should be allowed immunity against all probes and prosecution as long as he lives. Former president of Ghana, J. J. Rawlings still enjoys a similar legal cover.

    War, cannot be an option in The Gambia. Let us avoid it. We cannot afford to take actions that would result in loss of innocent lives of ordinary poor Gambians. International terrorists with weapons of mass destruction, drug gangs and other war entrepreneurs such as the “developed” countries’ defence industries, will cash-in on the situation in The Gambia if we let it degenerate into a war.  The result will be a long war that may consume all of us. Therefore, let us together ease the big masquerade with all fanfare out of the village square.

    • Charles, Alfred (PhD)

    Federal University Wukari, Taraba State.

  • Gambia: Take decisive action now, Sirleaf tells ECOWAS

    Gambia: Take decisive action now, Sirleaf tells ECOWAS

    •Expresses worry over recurrence of Boko-Haram attacks
    •Says trade among member states not encouraging

    The political crisis in the Gambia dominated discussion yesterday when the Authority of Heads of State and Government of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), met in Abuja.

    It was the 50th Ordinary Session of the meeting of the highest organ of the regional body.

    Worried over turn of events in the Gambia, the Chair of the Authority of Heads of State and Government, Mrs Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, demanded action from the body so as to prevent serious crisis.

    The Liberian president urged ECOWAS leaders to come up with a peaceful resolution before January 19, 2017, the constituted date when the mandate of president Jammeh comes to an end.

    Johnson-Sirleaf also reminded her colleagues of the unpleasant political situation in Guinea Bissau, which according to her has undermined the regional peace and security in the region.

    She said, “Since our last Summit in Dakar, regional peace and security has been undermined by unfolding situations in The Gambia and Guinea Bissau. With respect to Gambia, on December 1, the people of the Republic of The Gambia voted decisively for a change in the political leadership of the country by electing the candidate of a seven-party opposition coalition.

    “On the same date, the incumbent president conceded to the result of the election and congratulated the elected president. On December 10, the incumbent president rescinded his concession and called for a fresh vote.”

    While disclosing that efforts by a delegate from ECOWAS to prevail on President Yaya Jammeh to drop the call and accept the result as the wish of the people did not yield desired result, she said it is time for ECOWAS to live up to expectation and salvage democracy in the region.

    “In response, on December 13, an ECOWAS Mission which I headed and comprising Presidents John Mahama, Muhammadu Buhari and Ernest Bai Koroma, accompanied by Dr. Mohamed Chambers, Special Representatives of the UN Secretary General to West Africa and the Sahel, proceeded to Banjul to mediate with the concerned parties toward a resolution that would respect the will of the people.

    “The mission was successful in its consultative effort by holding meetings with the president, the president-elect and all the relevant stakeholders. It is now important that the authority, at this summit, considers recommended measures to bring this matter to successful conclusion before January 19, the constituted date when the mandate of the incumbent president expires,” she said.

    On security matters, the chairperson said ECOWAS is very concerned about the Boko Haram recurring attacks in Nigeria and other countries of the Lake Chad Basin. She added that the commission is equally worried about terrorist attacks on civilians and military targets in Mali and the recent attack in Burkina Faso where several persons were said to have been killed.

    She called for a minute silence in regards of the victims and charged the summit to find lasting solution particularly to the new transhumance security challenge which he noted has not only claimed the loss of many lives but is impacting negatively on regional food security.

    She advised other countries facing similar problems to adopt the Nigerian approach to managing transhumance challenges noting that it is a model that can be shared at bilateral levels.

    On the economic front, Johnson-Sirleaf who expressed worries over recent growth performance of the community said, “Trade within the community is very low which currently stands at around 12 percent. We need to do more. The success of regional integration rests largely on our collective resolve to fully implement the protocol on free movement of people and goods, particularly the Common External Tariff (CET) and the ECOWAS Trade Liberalization Scheme (ETLS)”.

    She also urged states to endeavour to meet their financial obligations to ECOWAS to ensure the smooth and effective implementation of the community development programmes.

  • Gambia’s Jammeh must leave power when term ends – UN

    Gambia’s Jammeh must leave power when term ends – UN

    UN official in West Africa on Wednesday said Gambian President Yahya Jammeh will not be allowed to remain president if he refuses to go at the end of his term in January.

    Mohammed Ibn Chambas, the UN Special Representative for West Africa and the Sahel, told newsmen in Dakar that Jammeh would face strong sanctions if he tried to cling to power.

    Jammeh, who took power in a coup in 1994, initially conceded defeat in the Dec. 1 election to little-known challenger Adama Barrow, raising the prospect of an end to his
    22 years rule.

    Jammeh’s rule was tainted by allegations of widespread human rights abuses.

    However, in a dramatic about-face that drew international condemnation, Jammeh
    then rejected the voting results last Friday, and his party was challenging the outcome at Gambia’s Supreme Court.

    Chambas, however, said “for Mr Jammeh, the end is here and under no circumstances can he continue to be president.

    “By Jan. 18, his mandate is up and he will be required to hand over to Mr. Barrow.”

    He added that Jammeh would be “strongly sanctioned” if he did not step down and hand over power to Barrow, without giving details.

    Chambas accompanied a delegation of presidents representing the regional bloc ECOWAS who travelled to Gambia on Tuesday but failed to reach a deal that would see Jammeh step down.

    Instead, Gambian soldiers seized the headquarters of the national elections commission and sealed it just hours before the presidents touched down in the riverside nation.

    UN Secretary-General, Ban Ki-moon, on Wednesday, said that the takeover was an “outrageous act of disrespect of the will of the Gambian people”.

    The building in Banjul remained deserted on Wednesday aside from two armed security guards, while its front gate and ground floor entrances were closed.

    “No one has gone to work. I didn’t even try. No one has informed me that I can go back,” elections commission chairman Alieu Momarr Njai said on Wednesday.

    The ruling Alliance for Patriotic Reorientation and Construction filed a challenge to the election result, even as the delegation held mediation meetings on Tuesday.

    The court has not held a session for a year and a half, and legal experts believe that at least four new judges would need to be hired to hear Jammeh’s petition.

    “We do not believe it will be heard by a credible court dedicated to ensuring the integrity of The Gambia’s democratic process,’’ a U.S. Embassy statement said.

    Analysts have suggested that the challenge in the Supreme Court, the legal channel for resolving election disputes, could put diplomats in a difficult position.

    While such disputes are relatively common in Africa, the international community generally defers to established domestic legal mechanisms for resolving them.

    However, in a notable exception, UN troops intervened militarily alongside France to oust Ivory Coast’s then-president Laurent Gbagbo after he used the constitutional court to overturn the 2010 election victory of Alassane Ouattara.

    Meanwhile, report says ECOWAS leaders will discuss Gambia at a summit in Nigeria on Saturday.  (Reuters/NAN)