Yaya Jammeh |
Gambia’s President Yahya Jammeh has appointed six foreign
judges into the Supreme Court to join the remaining member, so that his
election petition could be heard, reports The Nation.
Sources in the country however could not give the names of
the judges.
The President also yesterday ordered the electoral
commission building taken over by police on December 13 to reopen, saying it
had been shut for safety reasons.
The Independent Electoral Commission (IEC) office was sealed
off without warning by security forces on the same day President Yahya Jammeh’s
political party lodged a court case against the commission to have the December
1 election result annulled.
A decree issued yesterday claimed the authorities had
received reports the IEC would be burnt down, stating: “Now that the threat has
abated, the IEC head office will reopen.”
IEC staff could return to work “with
immediate effect”, the statement added, but a visible security presence would
be maintained around the compound close to the capital, Banjul.
The president’s legal complaint
against the IEC was triggered in part by a vote recount in the days following
the December 1 election, which ultimately confirmed opponent Adama Barrow’s
victory, 22 years after Jammeh took power.
The Gambia is facing prolonged
political deadlock as Jammeh has said he will await a Supreme Court ruling,
delayed until January 10, before ceding power.
The reopening of its headquarters
will allow IEC officials time to prepare their case.
The president’s stance has stoked
international concerns about the future of the tiny west African country, with
the UN joining African leaders in calling for him to step down.
The Thursday decree also hit out at
the tide of false news circulating on the internet and social media that
claimed Jammeh had been deposed by his army chief.
“The Gambia under the leadership of
His Excellency the President Sheikh Professor Alhaji Dr Yahya A.J.J. Jammeh
Babili Mansa will continue to jealously guard the stability of the nation and
ensure the maintenance of peace and security,” the decree said.
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