Gambia’s Jammeh eyes fifth term

Gambia's President Yahya Jammeh.

Gambia's President Yahya Jammeh.

Published Jul 22, 2015

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Dakar - A month after 29-year-old Lieutenant Yahya Jammeh seized power in Gambia in a bloodless coup in 1994, the US Ambassador cabled Washington to warn that the “anti-western” and “anti-democratic” new president was seeking an “open mandate”.

As Gambia marks the 21st anniversary of Jammeh's rule, Andrew Winter's warning still resonates as rights groups accuse the president of cracking down on opponents before an expected bid for a fifth term next year.

Unlike long-ruling African leaders in Burundi and Burkina Faso, whose efforts to extend their presidencies have provoked violent demonstrations, Jammeh appears unlikely to encounter resistance in his tiny West African country.

Gambia has not seen a public protest since 2000 when security forces killed 14 people, a government inquest showed. A shambolic coup attempt in December last year led by US-based Gambians was quickly snuffed out.

Jammeh, who once told a reporter he could rule for “a billion years”, has scrapped term limits from the constitution and blocked an attempt by regional bloc ECOWAS to reinstate them in May. The bloc refused to send observers to the last polls in 2011, citing intimidation of the opposition and the electorate.

“The chances of political change are very, very slim, mostly because the regime ensures the opposition remains weak,” said Sidi Sanneh, a former foreign minister who has become a US-based dissident.

The government denies that civil liberties have worsened and says that Gambia has been transformed during Jammeh's rule from a near Stone Age economy to a modern nation.

Jammeh, 50, is perhaps best known outside Gambia for a claim to have found a herbal cure for AIDS. His country, a beach-fringed strip of land surrounded by Senegal which Jammeh calls “the smiling coast”, attracts thousands of sun-seeking tourists from Britain and the Netherlands each winter.

But thousands of young Gambians from a population of less than 2 million are fleeing each year in the other direction, seeking a better life in Europe, according to European Union migration data.

Sanneh says next year's election offers scant opportunity for change.

The government passed a law this month raising the running costs for presidential candidates to 28 times the average annual income of $450, in what it said was a move to ensure parties are well-led. Police halted an opposition party tour in April because they lacked a permit, local paper Foroyaa said.

By contrast, hundreds of young Jammeh supporters sang and cheered in a parade to mark “Revolution Day” - the anniversary of the president's arrival in power - an event more celebrated than independence from Britain in 1965.

“Since the December attacks he is increasingly insecure,” said Abdoulaye Saine, a US-based author and professor. “He was nervous before but now he is really lashing out against any perceived threat.”

Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch report growing repression since the failed coup. Three alleged plotters face execution and dozens of people are missing, campaigners say.

But Jammeh said on Wednesday that he would pardon prisoners charged with treason from 1994-2013. “I turn a new page but the first person to stain the page will pay the ultimate price,” he told a large crowd in Banjul.

In a country with army checkpoints every few kilometres, security is increasing, residents said. Jammeh, known as “oga” or “boss” by soldiers, has boosted the numbers of his Jola ethnic group in the army, they said. Residents and diplomats say he has not left Gambia since December.

The Committee to Protect Journalists has also complained of attacks on press freedom. It said journalist Alagie Ceesay was bundled into a car and detained by suspected government agents for nearly two weeks and freed on July 13, only to be abducted again four days later.

Information Minister Sheriff Bojang said he was not available for comment. He told local media in June: “The Gambia has achieved significant progress in legal due process, press freedom and trafficking in persons.”

However, local sources told the U.N. Special Rapporteur in a May report of a place called Bambadinka in the National Intelligence Agency headquarters used for interrogation and torture. Gambia says the allegations in the report are unsubstantiated.

Jammeh proposed a bill last month that would increase the crimes punishable by death, according to a copy seen by Reuters.

The last reported executions were in 2012 by firing squad.

Allegations of rights abuses come as one Western diplomat in the region said relations with Gambia are at an all-time low. Jammeh pulled Gambia out of the Commonwealth in 2013, calling it neo-colonial, and in June, the EU's top diplomat was expelled after a meeting with the government.

EU data shows the number of Gambians seeking asylum in Europe more than a tripled last year. This was linked to a recession caused by drought and the Ebola outbreak elsewhere in West Africa which hit tourism in Gambia.

Most of the 11,515 asylum seekers were young adults and 200 were unaccompanied minors. An unknown number have drowned in the Mediterranean. In May, Jammeh suggested families could do more to prevent migration.

Moses Abukari, Gambia country manager for the International Fund for Agricultural Development, said youth migration from rural areas was creating labour shortages.

The government wants to make Gambia self-sufficient in food. But the International Monetary Fund warned that a 15 percent drop in production last year has “serious implications” for food security as the so-called hungry months between harvests approach.

“Instead of voting with marbles, they (youth) are voting with their feet,” said Sanneh, referring to a method of voting by dropping marbles into urns.

Reuters

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