Let the truth be told.
-Yus
Human rights country document released US report indicts Gambia Gov’t again
The US State Department has released its annual Country Report on human
rights practices in The Gambia renewing its criticism of what it called more
human rights violations by the Jammeh regime despite the return to democracy.
It also observes that a number of decrees still exist that run contrary to
the spirit of the constitution, giving sweeping powers to some state
functionaries to arrest and detain individuals for more than 72 hours without
the writ of habeas corpus. The State Department document lists a number of
human rights violations, which it asserts were left unchecked and unresolved
in 2000, leading to a hostile political environment that denied democratic
freedoms to individuals deemed as opponents of the regime. The report says
the country’s human rights situation, which was “generally poor and
serious”, remains a damning indictment of a government claiming a restoration
of democracy and the rule of law under President Yahya Jammeh. According to
the report members of the security forces committed serious human rights
abuses, which in most cases are not prosecuted or their perpetrators
punished. The report lists a number of unexplained deaths and the failures of
the government to pursue investigations into them. This included the shooting
at a checkpoint in Omorto of Faburama Manneh and Bakary Ceesay by soldiers,
suspecting drug trafficking. It also includes the killing of Hussein Wasni a
Lebanese visitor on 30th October along the Kombo coastal high way after he
allegedly failed to stop at an army checkpoint and Ousman Ceesay a United
Democratic Party supporter who died from a shot at Tallinding following
clashes between supporters of the ruling party and those of the main
opposition on the last day of the presidential campaign. The US report
further adds that, security forces continue to torture and carry out other
cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment on civilians and security
detainees especially at the Denton Bridge. It adds that several opposition
supporters claimed that they were tortured whiles they were detained by
security officers The report also indicates the beating of John Senesi a
Sierra Leonean teacher along Kairaba Avenue by soldiers on February 16th, the
beating of Brian Secka of Sukuta by a police officer named Bojang on April
14th, the beating of Pa Moo Sallah, Ousman Sowe, and Sang Gaswell (athletes
of KMC) in Basse by Paramilitary officers in Basse after a volley ball match
during the NAYCONF among others, The report further detailed that since the
return of the country to civilian rule, the government of The Gambia has not
formally revoked military decrees enacted prior to the enactment of the 1997
constitution that gives the NIA and the Secretary of State for the Interior
broad powers to detain individuals indefinitely without charge “in the
interest of national security”. These decrees the report says, seem to be
inconsistent with the constitution but have not been subjected to judicial
challenge. The report observes that although the government has stated that
it no longer enforce these decrees, in some instances it disregards
constitutional requirements that stipulate that detainees be brought before a
court within 72 hours. The report also claims that detainees were often
released after the 72 hours and instructed to report to the police stations
or NIA headquarters periodically until the case proceeds to the courts. On
prison conditions, the report states that the International Committee of the
Red Cross (ICRC) who visited the prisons found improving conditions, but also
noted that the psychological conditions at the Mile Two, Jeshwang and
Janjanbureh prisons were “hard” in that maximum security prisoners were
confined to small, individual cells for 21 hours a day and were allowed few
family visits. It also points out that there were credible reports of
beatings and malnourishment of detainees. Local jails it adds continued to
experience overcrowding, with inmates including detainees awaiting charges or
those charged awaiting trial, occasionally sleeping on the floor, provided
with mats or blankets. It catalogues that the police are reluctant to
terminate fistfights between prisoners until the dispute is settled
violently, and many of the prisoners are injured. Harassment of journalists
The report states that journalists were harassed by security forces and the
police some such incidents being the harassment of Salieu Mbowe a freelance
journalist by police officers at his home in Latrikunda on February 28, the
beating of Alieu Badara Mansaray by officers of the Bundung Police station on
May 27, the sacking of Peter Gomez a broadcaster at GRTS on January 5, the
arrest of Modou Thomas, Bakary Manneh and Namory Trawally who were covering
the NAYCONF in Basse on June 11, the arrest of George Christensen of Radio 1
FM and Baboucarr Gaye on October 23 and 29 on the pretext of financial
irregularities regarding the operation of their stations, and the closure of
Citizen FM.The report would be serialized in our subsequent editions.
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