New
Gambian President, Adama Barrow has said that his predecessor will not
be allowed to stay in the country as Yahya Jammeh, is given until midday
on Friday to hand over power.
Adama Barrow being sworn-in on Thursday in Senegal
In his first media interview with Al Jazeera, new Gambian
President, Adama Barrow who was sworn-in on Thursday in his country's
embassy in Dakar, Senegal, has urged his predecessor, Yahya Jammeh to
leave the country and hopes that ECOWAS countries can find him a safe
haven.
"We cannot allow Yahya Jammeh to remain in the Gambia, it will
make our job difficult. That's why all our negotiations is he leave
Gambia, he can later come back. But as of now the political climate
doesn't allow that. I advise him in good faith to give peace a chance.
It is about democracy."
It was gathered that Jammeh started negotiations with ECOWAS on
Thursday and agreed to step down but demanded an amnesty for any crimes
that he may have committed during his 22 years in power and that he be
permitted to stay in The Gambia, at his home village of Kanilai.
Those demands are not acceptable to ECOWAS, Marcel Alain de Souza,
head of the 15-nation Economic Community of West African States
(ECOWAS), said;
"If, at 12 o'clock, he does not make up his mind, we will bring
him by force or by will. Our troops will advance on Banjul. Until the
last minute, we still think there is a solution resulting from a
dialogue,"
"Diplomacy is a long road, it always has been and always will
be, so every opportunity to find a resolution is the best means possible
for the region. The last thing that West Africa needs is another
conflict," Robin Sanders, a former US ambassador to ECOWAS, told Al Jazeera.
While there has been talk that a deal may include an amnesty for
Jammeh, whose regime has been accused of various human rights abuses,
Sanders said that this would set a bad precedent.
"Also in this case, I am not in the camp of complete amnesty
because what you do is signal additional impunity going forward with
other leaders, not only just in the continent but across the world," she said.

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