Gambia: UN Security Council demands Jammeh hand over power
The
UN Security Council on Saturday demanded that Gambia’s leader Yahya
Jammeh hand over power to the president-elect after he rejected the
election results in a dramatic political U-turn.
In power for the past 22 years in the West African country, Jammeh surprised his critics when he accepted defeat a day after the December 1 vote.
But he reversed course on Friday, announcing he no longer accepted the results.
Council members “strongly condemned” Jammeh’s decision to reject the results and call for a new election.
A consensus candidate backed by a coalition of opposition groups, Barrow on Saturday urged Jammeh to accept defeat, arguing he had no legal standing for the turnaround.
Senegal, a non-permanent member of the Security Council, has requested a meeting to discuss the crisis, which could be held on Monday, diplomats said.
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said he was “dismayed” by Jammeh’s rejection of the election results and called on him to “fully respect the outcome of the election”.
Ban called for a “peaceful, timely and orderly transfer of power, in full respect of the will of the Gambian people as expressed in the election”, said a statement from his spokesman.
The appeal to Jammeh was issued after Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf was dispatched to Banjul by the West African ECOWAS group to defuse the crisis, but was prevented from entering the country.
Senegalese Foreign Minister Mankeur Ndiaye accused Jammeh of refusing to allow Sirleaf’s plane to land in the capital.
Ban and the Security Council urged restraint from any statements or actions that could lead to violence.
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