Gambian leader Yahya Jammeh has
ruthlessly pursued opponents real and imaginary, and implied more than
once that he would kill anyone who defied him.
His magnanimous concession speech and
promise of a swift handover to president-elect Adama Barrow after 22
years in power has therefore left many scratching their heads a week
after the election.
Opposition figures and analysts believe
he may have been caught out by his own fawning entourage, who reassured
him so frequently he would win that the counter possibility never
occurred to him.
After an unprecedented two-week
opposition campaign, Jammeh rumbled into Banjul’s cricket ground in a
4X4 and predicted his best score ever on December 1, election day.
“By the grace of the almighty Allah,
there will be the biggest landslide in the history of my elections,”
said Jammeh, wearing his usual white robes and sunglasses, a Koran in
one hand.
The collision of his arrogance, changes
to election rules and an opposition organised and united for the first
time ever meant that, by the time Jammeh worked out what had happened by
nightfall, it was too late.
Gambia observer Jim Wormington of Human
Rights Watch told AFP that Jammeh relied on the same tactics that had
delivered four previous electoral victories, without accounting for the
work done by the opposition to build support.
“Jammeh believed… his domination of
state media, mobilising of local officials in support of his candidacy,
muzzling of independent journalists and imprisonment of key opposition
figures, would once again guarantee victory,” Wormington told AFP.
– Blackout –
But several factors had changed since Jammeh’s 2011 re-election with more than 70 percent of the vote.
Analyst Mathias Hounkpe of the Open
Society Initiative for West Africa (OSIWA) said on-the-spot counting
used for the first time in a presidential election may have made it
difficult to fix the polls in his favour.
“The announcement of results at the
polling station level could have allowed the margin of fraud to be
reduced in comparison with the past,” Hounkpe said.
This did not prevent a central polling
error that was only corrected on Monday that showed Barrow had won by
just over 19,000 votes, a slimmer margin than first thought.
Essentially, Barrow’s opposition coalition may not have had a fair fight, but they had a free one, according to Wormington.
“Gambians — on election day itself — were able to vote freely for the candidate of their choice,” he said.
Allegations of electoral fraud in previous years may be moot anyway, according to some observers.
One western diplomat based in the region
said it was “unlikely the result would have been different if rigging
had happened” in previous elections, as the opposition vote was split
and the parties weak.
Alieu Momar Njie, chairman of the
Independent Electoral Commission, was watching the votes being counted
on election night when state broadcaster GRTS informed him that its
scheduled coverage would stop.
“When (Jammeh) found out he had lost the
election he informed the television managing director who put on hold
the announcement of the results because he was going to concede defeat
through the television,” Njie said.
The Gambia’s GRTS channel was switched
to Koranic recitals to await Jammeh’s announcement, but he decided not
to appear, leaving confusion over the result and a vacuum of information
that quickly filled with rumours.
An internet shutdown and the blocking of text messages only fed the sense of a conspiracy building.
Very few people know exactly what happened between then and Njie’s announcement late Friday morning that Jammeh would concede.
Media in neighbouring Senegal has said
Jammeh was persuaded by senior military figures to respect the result,
while others have said he was given an ultimatum to accept or lose their
support.
Regardless, the military did not stop
the result being delivered, if later than planned, and Jammeh conceded
defeat later Friday.
– Coalition test –
OSIWA’s Hounkpe noted that Jammeh’s
relaxed demeanour in his televised concession speech “didn’t give the
impression that something was about to happen to him”.
By then, according to one Gambian
diplomat working in another west African nation and with close links to
the president, Barrow had guaranteed Jammeh his safety.
The president was asked to tell his soldiers to “stay calm” in return, the diplomat told AFP.
Barrow told AFP on the morning after the vote he was “certain” of victory, and by afternoon he was the president-elect.
The coalition’s first big test will be
managing an outpouring of anger at Jammeh, a man who repressed so many
for so long, but who still enjoys significant support.
For the moment, calls for prosecution
have been delicately sidestepped by the most senior members of Barrow’s
team, as they oversee a delicate transition period.
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