Five things to know about The Gambia

644

BANJUL, Gambia, Oct 13, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – The Gambia on Monday launches a
truth and reconciliation commission into the era of former president Yahya
Jammeh, who ruled with an iron fist for 22 years.

Here are five things to know about the small West African nation.

– Colonialism and a coup –

The Gambia is the smallest country on mainland Africa, narrowly straddling
the river that gives it its name. It has a tiny coastline on the Atlantic but
is otherwise surrounded by Senegal.

The Gambia was a British colony from 1888 until independence in 1965,
becoming a republic in 1970, when then prime minister Dawda Jawara was
appointed president.

Jawara was overthrown in a bloodless coup in 1994 by Jammeh, who ruled
until he lost elections in December 2016 to opposition leader Adama Barrow.

Jammeh fled to Equatorial Guinea the following month after other countries
in the region intervened, politically and then militarily.

– Abuse and graft –

Jammeh’s reign was associated with massive abuse of human rights, ranging
from torture to disappearances, entrenched corruption and grinding poverty.

In 2013, Jammeh said The Gambia would withdraw from the “neo-colonial”
Commonwealth and in 2014 announced plans to drop English as The Gambia’s
official language.

In December 2015 he declared that the predominantly Muslim country, which
had a history of religious tolerance, was an Islamic republic that had broken
free from its “colonial legacy”.

– Poverty and migration –

Some 60 percent of Gambians live in poverty, UN data shows, with a third of
those living on less than $1.25 (1.2 euros) a day.

The Gambia’s agricultural base is weak, and the main crop is peanuts. The
economy is also supported by tourism and remittance payments by the large
Gambian diaspora in Europe.

Per capita gross national income (GNI) fell to $430 in 2016, from $750 in
1993.

Repression and poverty have driven many Gambians to seek a better life in
Europe.

With a population of less than two million, Gambians are among the largest
groups, per capita, seeking to crossing the Mediterranean to Italy, according
to the International Organization for Migration (IOM).