President Jammeh Wins with Comfortable Majority


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Special Correspondent
Washington, DC

Preliminary results in Gambia's presidential elections indicate that incumbent President Yahya Jammeh has won with a comfortable majority.

With only two or three constituency results remaining, President Jammeh had polled 52.3% of the vote while his nearest rival, Lawyer Ousainou Darboe of the three-party opposition coalition polled 33%,

Hamat Bah of the National Reconciliation Party had polled 8%, former vice president Sheriff Dibba of the National Convention Party polled 4% and Sidia Jatta of the Peoples Democratic Organisation for Independence and Socialism polled 3%.

Speaking to allAfrica.com from the capital Banjul, coalition leader Darboe said he would respect the people's decision.

"Apart from the inducement factor [the plying of voters with cash by competing parties] I cannot complain much. The Gambian people are ready to suffer for another five years and there's nothing we can do about that," he said.

Mr Darboe said the Independent Electoral Commission (IEC), which some had claimed would connive in rigging the elections in President Jammeh's favour, had "done an excellent job." He said his coalition was satisfied with the IEC's management of the vote and did not think that the results from the few remaining constituencies would affect the final outcome.

"I would respect the people's decision and would readily concede defeat," he said, allaying fears of post-election violence arising out of his coalition's contesting the results.

House majority leader Tamsir Jallow told allAfrica.com that "the Gambian people have spoken and I have nothing else to add to that. The results speak for themselves."

Independent sources on the ground in Banjul spoke of some interesting trends in this year's polls. Former opposition strongholds such as Jarra East, Jarra West, Jarra Central, Kiang East, Kiang West, Kiang Central and even Lawyer Darboe's home constituency of Upper Fulladu West were won by the president.

Even more surprising was the fact that Wuli, home constituency of PDOIS candidate Sidia Jatta, was won by Jammeh. Following his election as MP for the area in 1997, Mr. Jatta had set up the Wuli Fund into which he posted about 70% of his monthly pay to help develop the area.

President Jammeh also won the home constituency of NCP candidate Sheriff Dibba.

Conversely, the opposition clinched victory in at least two ruling party strongholds of Tumana and Kantora constituencies.

Sources in Banjul say that even if opposition parties had managed to form an all-party coalition, the count shows that the president would still have emerged victorious.

Some observers say, however, that even if the vote itself was properly conducted, they cannot describe the entire process as free and fair. "Apart from the fact that Jammeh does have some support, his victory is largely a result of some sort of carrot and stick policy," a prominent journalist told allAfrica.com. He estimated that the president had spent up to two million dalasi (over US$122, 000) on his campaign. "The widespread dishing out of money to voters across the country, combined with threats of exclusion from development programmes for opposition areas must have given him the votes," he said.

Whatever the case, an election that was widely projected to be fraught with violence has ended peacefully. Now Gambians are waiting to assess the post-election scenario, after the election monitors have gone.




Copyright © 2001 allAfrica.com. Distributed by AllAfrica Global Media (allAfrica.com).

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>From: Jabou Joh <[log in to unmask]>
>Reply-To: The Gambia and related-issues mailing list <[log in to unmask]>
>To: [log in to unmask]
>Subject: Re: THE 2001 PRESIDENTIAL POLL
>Date: Fri, 19 Oct 2001 09:43:23 EDT
>
>Karamba,
>
>Yes, it appears indeed, that the people have spoken, and despite our varied
>opinions as to who can best serve the people, and who has their best interest
>at heart, we have to respect their wishes because that is what democracy is
>all about.
>We wish Gambia well, and call upon the APRC government to serve all the
>people equally and within the laws of our land and our constitution because
>this is what the people expect when they charge them with the mandate to
>govern.
>
>Jabou Joh
>
>In a message dated 10/19/2001 8:02:53 AM Central Daylight Time,
>[log in to unmask] writes:
>
>
> > It appears the polls are over and the forces of change have not succeeded.
> > Our fellow citizens who actually voted have elected to remain with the
> > incumbent. The opposition fought a gallant battle. They laid out all the
> > important issues facing our people and mustered all the energy they could to
> > take it to the electorate. I am not happy with the verdict but I do respect
> > the will of the majority of our people. I wish our nation well.
> > Karamba
> >
> >
>
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