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From: "IRIN" <[email protected]>
Date: 25 Jan 2017 09:04
Subject: Bye bye Jammeh: Hope and challenges in The Gambia ...
To: "ElisabethJanaina" <[email protected]>
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Today's humanitarian news and analysis

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Bye bye Jammeh: Hope and challenges in The Gambia
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Only disgraced ex-president Yahya Jammeh’s most hardcore supporters turned
up to watch as he boarded a private jet at the weekend for exile in
Equatorial Guinea. Some soldiers and members of his political party cried
and shouted: “Daddy, Daddy”. Others aggressively jeered at supporters of
The Gambia’s new coalition government.

But once he took to the skies, most of the nation breathed a collective
sigh of relief.

“This day is amazing. We didn’t see it coming. We didn’t believe that he
would leave, and the fact that this has happened democratically is the
greatest achievement,” said 24-year-old Aminata, part of a youth group
helping Gambian refugees as they arrived back at the ferry terminal in
Banjul.

“A year ago, we thought this would be impossible. But now we are hopeful
that things will change. Now, we feel that destiny is in our hands, because
leaders will have to be more accountable. Now, we know the power of our
vote.”

The moment was all the more remarkable because of what was at stake if the
situation had unravelled. “We are in disbelief that we have come out of
this in peace. We are glad that Jammeh has gone, but in a solemn way,
because we came so close to war,” added Aminata’s friend, Khadija.

Adama Barrow, The Gambia’s new president, was sworn in last week. For his
safety, the ceremony had to take place in Dakar, Senegal, and he was not
planning to return home until a West African military intervention force
had secured the country.

They were poised across the border the night Barrow was sworn in, and the
threat of force was crucial in buttressing mediation efforts by the West
African regional bloc ECOWAS that eventually succeeded in pressuring Jammeh
to accept his electoral defeat and step down.

ECOWAS troops and military vehicles now patrol the streets of Banjul,
cheered as they pass. Gambian soldiers are meanwhile being disarmed because
of a concern that rogue elements, still loyal to Jammeh, could cause
trouble.

[image: Adama Barrow - the man of the moment]
Jason Florio/IRIN
Adama Barrow - the man of the moment
>From total power to ignominy

Jammeh, along with a group of other young officers, came to power in a coup
in 1994. After 22 years of oppressive
<http://irinnews.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=31c0c755a8105c17c23d89842&id=e88e1168f2&e=399c7ee738>
rule, in which arbitrary detention, torture, and disappearances were
common, he suffered a shock electoral defeat in a 1 December ballot that
most analysts assumed he would rig.

At first, Jammeh magnanimously accepted the result
<http://irinnews.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=31c0c755a8105c17c23d89842&id=732756ff6b&e=399c7ee738>,
only to change tack a week later and declare the poll void. He petitioned
the Supreme Court for a fresh election, but as he had sacked most of the
judges 18 months previously the court could not hear the challenge before
May.

He then declared a state of emergency that technically would have allowed
him to stay in power for another three months. This desperate, last-ditch
attempt to cling to power was ignored by the West African leaders who were
working to resolve the crisis.

By then, Jammeh’s grip on power was already slipping. Most of his cabinet
had deserted him and his army chief, General Ousman Badjie, had conceded
that his soldiers would not resist the ECOWAS intervention force.

Barrow’s inauguration speech
<http://irinnews.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=31c0c755a8105c17c23d89842&id=4516936e5f&e=399c7ee738>
embraced the history-making moment. “This is a day no Gambian will ever
forget,” he said. “The capacity to effect change through the ballot box has
proven that power belongs to the people in The Gambia. Violent change is
banished forever from the political life of our country. All Gambians are
therefore winners.”

But the fact that Barrow’s much-anticipated swearing-in couldn’t take place
on Gambian soil is a bitter reminder of the regime’s far-reaching net of
oppression.

Jammeh had ordered there to be no inauguration celebrations. In the event,
nothing could stop at least several thousand young Gambians defiantly
taking to the streets.

At Westfield Junction – the symbolic location just outside Banjul where
opposition activist Solo Sandeng was arrested in April last year after
calling for electoral reform (he was subsequently tortured to death) – the
crowd grew and grew. Above the throng was one united cry: “Gambia has
decided”.

Throughout the political impasse, activists had been peacefully campaigning
to ensure Gambians’ democratic choice was upheld. #GambiaHasDecided became
a social media phenomenon, also appearing on billboards and T-shirts,
defying Jammeh’s attempts to silence dissent.

[image: Gambians that fled come home]
Jason Florio/IRIN
Gambians that fled come home
What now?

Having put themselves on the line, young Gambians who voted for change are
determined to see a new Gambia achieved.

“The day the coalition was formed – that was the day the whole country
smiled,” said Momodou Jallow, 28.

But Jallow also offered a sobering reminder to the coalition not to lose
sight of how they came to power. “I voted for Adama Barrow not because I
liked him but because I didn’t want to vote for Jammeh,” he told IRIN.

Jallow, who was recently arrested for posting views critical of Jammeh’s
government on social media, wants to see a change in the constitution, in
particular the introduction of a two-term presidential limit.

And there are plenty of other challenges facing the new administration.
After more than 22 years of Jammeh’s autocratic rule, it must start pretty
much from scratch: having to install a cabinet, institute a proper rule of
law, and launch much-needed military and political reforms amid a climate
of both uncertainty and expectation.

Barrow began announcing his cabinet on Monday. A notable pick was Vice
President Fatoumata Tambajang, a former minister and United Nations
Development Programme staffer credited as the main force in galvanising the
previously fractious opposition parties.

One of the new administration’s first tasks will be to support the return
of the 46,000 refugees estimated by the UN’s refugee agency, UNHCR, to have
fled to Senegal and Guinea over the past weeks, fearing impending conflict.

An estimated 25,000 have also been internally displaced, according to the
Gambian Red Cross Society. Almost everyone in the capital sent family
members – mainly women, children, and the elderly – away to the sanctuary
of relatives in other parts of the country.

Extra pressure is being placed on already stretched food supplies and
sanitation in the some of The Gambia’s poorest communities, according to a
rapid assessment survey by United Purpose, an NGO.

Jammeh’s stubbornness also hurt Gambia’s already ailing economy by dealing
a blow to its main revenue earner – tourism. As the crisis deepened,
Western governments sent charter planes to pick up holidaymakers, right in
the middle of peak season.

[image: Watching the inauguration]
Jason Florio/IRIN
The revolution is televised - watching the inauguration
Tackling impunity

But uppermost in many Gambians’ minds is how Jammeh and his accomplices
will be made to pay for the wide-ranging crimes and abuses perpetrated
under his regime.

Jammeh is free to return to The Gambia in the future under the exile terms
set out in a joint statement
<http://irinnews.us12.list-manage2.com/track/click?u=31c0c755a8105c17c23d89842&id=c9eee79dc5&e=399c7ee738>
by the UN, the Afrcian Union, and ECOWAS. These state that he, his family,
and his senior aides should have the same rights to dignity and safety as
any former president.

The unsigned communique implies that he will have impunity from prosecution
but it doesn’t impose any legal obligations on the new Gambian
administration. Barrow has since referred to it as a “resolution, not an
agreement”.

Barrow’s administration intends to establish a truth and reconciliation
committee, which will gather evidence. But some people do not think this
process will go far enough.

The new government’s spokesman, Halifa Sallah, has already hinted that it
may not be in the national interest to delve too deeply into the past.

But Fatou Jagne, West Africa director of human rights NGO, Article 19, has
welcomed a homegrown reconciliation process, saying: “We need to give
Gambians a chance to set up a mechanism that will work for them to get to
the justice and the truth.”

New Gambia has begun. It’s a place where people can now speak freely and
have hope for the future, but the new administration will need to carefully
manage the soaring expectations of its people, according to Abdul Aziz
Bensouda, secretary-general of the Gambian Bar Association.

“People have expectations for rapid development, but [this will be
difficult] with a budget that’s just enough to pay the bills,” he said. “It
is a case of trying to right the wrongs under Jammeh’s regime, and move us
[forward].”

lh/oa/ag

*TOP PHOTO: Gambians welcome West African ECOMIG troops to Banjul. CREDIT:
Jason Florio*
Bye bye Jammeh: Hope and challenges in The Gambia ecomig.jpg
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