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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Gambia’s President to challenge election loss at Supreme Court

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BANJUL: Gambia’s President Yahya Jammeh will challenge the results of a December 1 election at the Supreme Court, the ruling party said, raising the prospect that a shock opposition victory that was poised to end 22 years of autocratic rule will be overturned.


Celebrations erupted across the tiny West African nation last week when Jammeh unexpectedly conceded defeat after the elections commission announced the victory of opposition candidate Adama Barrow.


However, in a dramatic about-face that drew international condemnation, the mercurial former coup leader on Friday decried “serious and unacceptable abnormalities” and called for fresh polls.


In a statement broadcast on state television late on Saturday, the Alliance for Patriotic Reorientation and Construction (APRC) said it was preparing a petition “against the flawed decision of the Independent Elections Commission”.


The deadline for submitting a challenge to the court is Tuesday.


There is no sitting Supreme Court in Gambia, though there is currently a chief justice, who is Nigerian. In order to hear Jammeh’s complaint, legal experts believe at least four other judges must be hired.


Rights groups say Jammeh exerts strong influence over the court.


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President Yahya Jammeh[/caption]

Three chief justices served between 2013 and 2015. The first, a Nigerian, was fired five weeks after his appointment then arrested and jailed. His Ghanaian successor lasted six months before his dismissal.


Ali Nawaz Chowhan from Pakistan served for three months before abruptly leaving Gambia after acquitting the former navy chief in a treason case. He later told a Pakistani newspaper that he left because the decision displeased the government.


The last two Gambian judges left the court a year and a half ago.


“Either you do what Jammeh wants you to, or you lose your job or even go to jail,” said Bubacarr Drammeh, a former state prosecutor who fled into exile in the United States earlier this year.


“The election results were correct, nothing will change that,” elections commission head Alieu Momarr Njai said on Sunday. “If it goes to court, we can prove every vote cast. The results are there for everyone to see.”


Barrow, who has pledged to serve as a transitional leader and step down after three years, said on Saturday that Jammeh had no constitutional authority to reject the poll results. The residence in the capital Banjul where Barrow was staying on Sunday was surrounded by around 30 unarmed supporters who said they were providing security after the police and military declined to protect him. — Reuters


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