Gambian army 'hostile elements' working against government

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Sat, 08 Jul 2017 - 03:02 GMT

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Sat, 08 Jul 2017 - 03:02 GMT

Supporters of former strongman Yahya Jammeh are still active in The Gambia

Supporters of former strongman Yahya Jammeh are still active in The Gambia

Banjul, Gambia - 8 July 2017 : The head of a West African force maintaining security in The Gambia told AFP Friday that army officials loyal to veteran former leader Yahya Jammeh were plotting against the new government.

West African troops were first sent to The Gambia in January to compel Jammeh to relinquish power to his elected successor Adama Barrow, but were retained at the new president's request over fears for his safety.

Colonel Magatte Ndiaye, the head of a Senegalese contingent deployed by the the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), told AFP that rebel elements were intent on destabilising the country and working with exiled Jammeh-era top brass.

"High-ranking officials of the Gambia Armed Forces that have fled with the former president have maintained contact with hostile elements within The Gambia security forces still on active duty," Ndiaye told AFP.

Members of Jammeh's ultra-loyal death squad, known as the "Jungulars", had succeeded in fleeing to neighbouring countries, he added, despite calls to bring them to justice.

"When you put the influence from outside and the operation from inside together, it shows that there are so many negative forces working to make this country ungovernable," Ndiaye said.

Jammeh is currently living in exile in Equatorial Guinea as part of a deal to get him to leave the country peacefully following 22 years in power, and is believed to have taken several of his most important aides with him.

Senegal's foreign minister described The Gambia as threatened by external forces in June, sparking speculation over the level of danger posed by groups such as the Jungulars intent on sowing discord in The Gambia.

Colonel Ndiaye said that while his troops were "succeeding in building that confidence between the Gambian people and their own security forces," demonstrations were being planned that warranted their attention.

One protester was killed in a violent demonstration against the presence of the West African force near Jammeh's home village of Kanilai in June, which Ndiaye described at the time as "self-defence" against a crowd of 600 people with hunting rifles, machetes, knives and stones.

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