Dozen soldiers to face charges in Gambia
By afp
November 19, 2017
BANJUL, GAMBIA: A dozen Gambian soldiers will face charges for nine different offences, an army spokesman told AFP on Saturday, amid fears that a faction of the military remains loyal to ex-president Yahya Jammeh.
The charges were laid out at a court martial hearing held on Friday, where 12 officers were presented to a military panel and a civilian judge in a case shrouded in secrecy. “Twelve army officers were arraigned before a court martial at Yundum barracks yesterday,” army spokesman Lamin Sanyang told AFP.
“They are charged with nine criminal counts, but for now I cannot go into the details,” he added. Pleas will be entered on November 27, when the men are expected to be formally charged. Separately, military sources told AFP the charges relate to sedition accusations and suspicions of loyalty to former President Jammeh, who ruled the small west African nation with an iron fist for 22 years. A coalition of opposition parties fielded standard-bearer Adama Barrow as their candidate in December 2016 elections, who ultimately defeated Jammeh and took over the presidency in late January.
There have been concerns about lingering Jammeh supporters in the ranks of the army, evoked back in July by Colonel Magatte Ndiaye, the head of a Senegalese army contingent still deployed to The Gambia by the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS). He told AFP
The charges were laid out at a court martial hearing held on Friday, where 12 officers were presented to a military panel and a civilian judge in a case shrouded in secrecy. “Twelve army officers were arraigned before a court martial at Yundum barracks yesterday,” army spokesman Lamin Sanyang told AFP.
“They are charged with nine criminal counts, but for now I cannot go into the details,” he added. Pleas will be entered on November 27, when the men are expected to be formally charged. Separately, military sources told AFP the charges relate to sedition accusations and suspicions of loyalty to former President Jammeh, who ruled the small west African nation with an iron fist for 22 years. A coalition of opposition parties fielded standard-bearer Adama Barrow as their candidate in December 2016 elections, who ultimately defeated Jammeh and took over the presidency in late January.
There have been concerns about lingering Jammeh supporters in the ranks of the army, evoked back in July by Colonel Magatte Ndiaye, the head of a Senegalese army contingent still deployed to The Gambia by the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS). He told AFP
-
Trump Revokes Legal Basis For US Climate Regulation, Curb Vehicle Emission Standards -
DOJ Blocks Trump Administration From Cutting $600M In Public Health Funds -
2026 Winter Olympics Men Figure Skating: Malinin Eyes Quadruple Axel, After Banned Backflip -
Scientists Find Strange Solar System That Breaks Planet Formation Rules -
Meghan Markle Rallies Behind Brooklyn Beckham Amid Explosive Family Drama -
Backstreet Boys Voice Desire To Headline 2027's Super Bowl Halftime Show -
OpenAI Accuses China’s DeepSeek Of Replicating US Models To Train Its AI -
Woman Calls Press ‘vultures’ Outside Nancy Guthrie’s Home After Tense Standoff -
Allison Holker Gets Engaged To Adam Edmunds After Two Years Of Dating -
Prince William Prioritises Monarchy’s Future Over Family Ties In Andrew Crisis -
Timothée Chalamet Turns Head On The 'show With Good Lighting' -
Bucks Vs Thunder: Nikola Topic Makes NBA Debut As Milwaukee Wins Big -
King Charles Breaks 'never Complain, Never Explain' Rule Over Andrew's £12 Million Problem -
Casey Wasserman To Remain LA Olympics Chair Despite Ghislaine Maxwell Ties -
Shaun White Is Back At The Olympics But Not Competing: Here’s Why -
Breezy Johnson Engaged At Olympics After Emotional Finish Line Proposal