Ms
Njie-Saidy held the post since 1997. AFP
|
The Gambia's
Vice-President Isatou Njie-Saidy resigned yesterday, hours before his mandate
expired, the AFP news agency has quoted family sources as saying.
BBC
Africa Live/ Media report continues:
The
environment and higher education ministers also quit, the latest of a string of
cabinet members to abandon Mr Jammeh following his refusal to step down after
more than two decades in office, AFP reports.
Meanwhile
Edu Gomez, the lawyer of outgoing leader of The Gambia, Yahya Jammeh, has fled
the country to neighbouring Senegal after penning the president a letter to
step down from office in the interest of peace.
Mr.
Gomez who represented Mr. Jammeh and his party, the Alliance for Patriotic
Reorientation and Construction, APRC, in their failed attempt to have the
country’s Supreme Court overturn the victory of the President-elect, Adama
Barrow, and stop his inauguration as President.
Mr Edu Gomez's Letter |
In
his letter, Mr. Gomez claimed he was made to work under “tremendous pressure
and coercion” as the lawyer of the now largely isolated leader and his party.
He added that he could not refuse to work for Mr. Jammeh and his party, like
other lawyers in the country, because he was on a retainer.
“On
Tuesday 17th January 2017, my son and I took a crucial decision to seek
sanctuary in the sister Republic of Senegal. This was found necessary due to
the mounting fear and rapidly increasing tension at every passing moment,” he
wrote.
“The
general perception is that after midnight on 18th January 2017, the mandate of
President Yahya Jammeh would expire and President-elect Mr. Adama Barrow would
be sworn-in as president, in line with the dictates of our constitution. Any
attempt to interrupt this ceremony, it is clearly understood, opens the Gambia
to attack from ECOWAS forces.
“As
a legal practitioner representing President Jammeh and the APRC the party in
the ongoing petition filed on his behalf at the Supreme Court of the Gambia, I
have to admit that I was working under tremendous pressure and coercion. All
the lawyers with established practices in the Gambia refused to be associated
with the said petition. As a retainer for the ruling APRC party, I could not
refuse the brief on professional grounds, despite my apprehension.”
He
said he and his family fled to Senegal having successfully eluded the 24 hour
military surveillance he was placed on.
He
advised Mr. Jammeh to step down so as to avoid a gruesome end to his presidency
and in the interest of peace and the safety of the Gambian people.
“Having
fortunately eluded the 24 hour military security around me and my family, I
managed to arrive in Senegal where I now gained safety, respite and mental
stability. In my present situation, I humbly and respectfully advise President
Jammeh as the champion of peace he has been known to be to peacefully step
aside in the interest of peace and safety of the Gambian people.
“Everything,
except God’s Kingdom, comes to an end. I advocate for a peaceful end rather
than a violent and gruesome end. Please in the name of Most Merciful God do not
allow your legacy to be described as one where “pen of the sword dipped in
innocent blood writes its history on the rough page of tyranny”, he said.
Meanwhile,
on Wednesday, Mr. Jammeh turned down a last ditch effort by the President of
Mauritania, Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz, to convince him to step and aside and
rescue him to exile.
Mr
Aziz arrived Gambia just as ECOWAS troops prepared for a military action in the
country.
Having failed to convince Mr Jammeh to relinquish power, Mr Aziz later left the country for a meeting with Senegalese president Macky Sall and Mr. Barrow, who had been in the Senegalese capital Dakar, after the failure or ECOWAS leaders to convince Mr Jammeh to allow the peace transition of power.
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