The Gambian President Adama
Barrow’s administration faced a backlash Tuesday after admitting its new
vice-president may be constitutionally barred from serving and confirming
ex-leader Yahya Jammeh will be permitted to keep a fleet of luxury cars.
AFP
report continues:
One
day after naming Fatoumata Jallow-Tambajang as deputy leader, an outcry broke
out after local media alleged she was 67 years old, two years over the legal
maximum to serve in the post.
Barrow
spokesman Halifa Sallah told journalists he was aware of the reports and
advisors were recommending a parliamentary vetting process be put in place to
avoid a similar situation, without confirming Jallow-Tambajang’s true age.
Several
phone calls to Jallow-Tambajang by AFP went unanswered on Tuesday.
“I
have spoken to President Barrow that many concerns are being raised,” Sallah
said.
“The
president has been carefully advised that he constitute a vetting committee,”
Sallah added, while asserting that “the appointment was done in good faith
based on the facts that were available”.
Barrow
was in “final discussions with west African leaders “in order to announce the
hour of coming,” Sallah said, adding that he would arrive “very soon”.
Barrow
is currently living in Senegal until his safety can be guaranteed by thousands
of soldiers from five African nations currently deployed in The Gambia, but
unease is growing over his prolonged absence.
Equatorial
Guinea Tuesday for the first time confirmed the presence of Jammeh in the small
West African country, where he had been offered refuge as “a political exile”.
President
Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo, another long-serving African leader, had
convinced Jammeh “to avoid any situation of armed confrontation”, government
spokesman Eugenio Nze Obiang said.
– Bentley and Benz –
The
news came on the same day it was confirmed that ex-leader Jammeh had struck a
deal with Barrow to keep a fleet of luxury cars in exchange for leaving the
country on Saturday for exile in Equatorial Guinea.
An
airport source who saw the cargo being prepared on Saturday night when Jammeh
flew out of the country said “two Rolls Royces and one (Mercedes) Benz” were
loaded onto a Chadian cargo plane, while 10 others await shipment.
“The
government was fully prepared and supportive of ex-president Jammeh to leave
and as a result they found it is better to leave with all his properties,” his
spokesman said.
The
airport source even reported a tussle over whether to take Bentleys or Rolls
Royces onto the cargo flight, before settling for the latter.
The
news is likely to anger Gambians who have also learnt Jammeh took off with US$11
million of state funds, according to one of his Dakar-based advisors, leaving
the coffers nearly empty.
“I
am so sickened by the deal; but I guess saving just one life on either side is
worth more than all of his wealth,” Twitter user @YesWeCan_Gambia wrote.
An
“entry-level” Rolls Royce costs US$250,000, and most Gambians live on less than
US$2 a day.
Meanwhile
a top judicial official told AFP the country’s sole remaining Supreme Court
judge has resigned following attempts by Jammeh to overturn the result of a
December 1 election won by Barrow.
“It
is true that the chief justice has resigned from his position. His resignation
letter is dated 20th January. He is out of the country. He has gone back to
Nigeria,” judicial secretary Landing Sanneh told AFP.
Emmanuel
Fagbanle had deferred a decision on hearing Jammeh’s legal complaint over a
lack of other judges to hear the case, but was known to be uneasy with the
mercurial strongman’s use of the court system to pursue his personal
grievances.
Jammeh’s
defiance over the election result prompted more than 76,000 people to seek
shelter in Senegal, the UN refugee agency said Tuesday, citing Senegalese
authorities.
The agency said “more than an estimated 8,000 people, as of Monday, have returned to their native Gambia since the political crisis there ended” when Jammeh left the country on Saturday night.
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