The West African state's autocratic president has elevated his coup d'etat over his country's independence.
 
 
  
Ousainou
 Darboe, leader of the opposition United Democratic Party, said Jammeh's
 July 22 celebration is a misplaced priority. Jammeh's government no 
longer thinks about positively changing the lives of the people, instead
 amassing wealth for himself and spending money lavishly on 
commemorating his coup.
Lamin Jahateh is a Gambian journalist
and the editor and publisher of
Gambia News Online.
|  | 
| Yahya Jammeh overthrew The Gambia's democratically elected president in a coup d'etat in 1994 [AFP] | 
By Lamin Jahateh |  Aljazeera – Aug 1, 2012
Banjul, Gambia
 - Last week, on July 22, Gambian leader Yahya Jammeh celebrated the day
 he overthrew the country's democratically elected president in a coup 
d'etat in 1994. Then a lieutenant, Jammeh led a group of young soldiers 
to overthrow the government of President Sir Dawda Jawara. Jawara was 
among the key people who fought for the independence of The Gambia from 
British colonial rule, and subsequently became the first prime minister 
and later president of the country after independence.
President
 Jammeh has now for 18 years commemorated the day he broke one of 
Africa's longest traditions of electoral democracy. In the celebration, 
he justifies his unconstitutional action by claiming the former 
government had not been developing the country, and that his bloodless 
coup was a move to salvage the country and bring development to the 
people.
By
 now, the coup celebration has eclipsed the country's Independence Day. 
Jammeh's administration has relegated the Independence Day celebration 
on February 18 to be officiated by regional governors and mayors.
In
 contrast, every year on July 22, Jammeh lavishly spends millions of 
dollars on partying not only with party militants, but with government 
ministers, regional governors, and military officers - all of whom 
should be independent of party politics. These officials are now 
Jammeh's political toys. Halifa Sallah, one of the main figures in the 
opposition coalition National Alliance for Democracy and Development 
(NADD), has said the funds going into these celebrations are public funds.
| "[Jammeh]
 vowed that he and his fellow plotters had not staged the coup to 
perpetuate themselves, and that they would return to the barracks as 
soon as they set things right." | 
In one of the celebrations, a record 80 million dalasis, about US$2.5m, was spent.
Thanks
 to the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, this year's celebration was 
low-key. Notwithstanding, there was a televised address on national TV 
that Jammeh monopolised. And as usual, he declared the day after, July 
23, as a national public holiday. 
The coup
Soon
 after toppling the previous Jawara regime, Jammeh promised his coup was
 different. He vowed that he and his fellow plotters had not staged the 
coup to perpetuate themselves, and that they would return to the 
barracks as soon as they set things right.
This
 is said to be what the coup plotters agreed upon. They were supposed to
 be in the statehouse for only three months to set up an interim 
government that would steer the country towards civilian democratic rule
 again. But after having tasted power, Jammeh reneged on the 
plan. This angered some of his fellow coup plotters who wanted to take 
him out of the statehouse by force. They planned a coup against him, but
 Jammeh put down the coup on September 11, 1994. It is believed that 
some of these coup plotters were brutally killed and some sent to Mile 
II, the State's central prison. "It was in this coup that they killed my
 brother," said Mamudou Sillah, the brother of Amadou Sillah, one of the
 soldiers in the coup.
Instead of setting up an interim government, Jammeh entrenched himself in power. He suspended the 1970 republican constitution and banned all political activities,
 ruling by decree. Thanks to international pressure, the military 
leadership retired from the army and formed the Alliance for Patriotic 
Reorientation and Construction. The country held controversial elections
 in 1996, which were swept by Jammeh's party.
Aside from the 1996 elections, Jammeh has won three widely criticised elections in 2001, 2006 and 2011.
Instead
 of celebrating September 30, 1996, the day he was declared winner of 
the elections with 55 per cent of the total vote, Jammeh continuously 
celebrates the coup d'etat - sending the wrong signal that there is a virtue in taking up arms to overthrow a constitutionally elected president.
'Numerous achievements'?
| "The
 payment of the government's domestic debt burden, which continues to 
rise by the day, consumes almost 25 per cent of the annual national 
budget." | 
Jammeh
 often brags that the July 22 coup brought "numerous achievements" to 
The Gambia worthy of celebrating. True, many schools, hospitals, and 
roads were constructed in the country. But some of the hospitals lacked 
qualified medical practitioners and adequate medicine.
Most
 of these projects were constructed with foreign aid and loans. Although
 that is not unique to The Gambia, the country has become classified as a
 Heavily Indebted Poor Country, having taken out so many loans it cannot
 repay them. Thanks to the generosity of the IMF, in 2007, most of these
 loans were cancelled under the Multilateral Debt Relief Initiative. 
Five years later, though, the IMF cautions that the debts of the country
 are again becoming unsustainable. 
The payment of the government's domestic debt burden, which continues to rise by the day, consumes almost 25 per cent of the annual national budget.
 This is crowding out other public expenditures as there is no space to 
increase funding for job creation, purchase drugs for hospitals, and 
other pressing national needs.
Meanwhile,
 more than 50 per cent of the population still lives in poverty, and 
many people continue to die of curable diseases. Many struggle to have 
three basic meals a day.
Former
 national assembly member Sidia Jatta said as of 2011, Gambia's debt is 
so high that if it were divided among Gambia's 1.7 million people, each 
one would owe about 20,000 dalasi ($635) - in a country where GDP per 
capita is about $600.
From grass to grease 
When
 Jammeh took over power in 1994, the watchwords of his government were 
probity, accountability and transparency. Immediately after taking over,
 his government started a trial involving all the ministers and other 
high-profile officials in the former government for corruption and other
 related charges. This was done with a view to demonstrate to the 
outside world that the junta was doing its best to recover The Gambia's 
stolen funds.
As years went by, the watchwords of the junta began to fade away as Jammeh, who came to power with almost nothing in his bank account, is now arguably among the richest African leaders and a top businessman in The Gambia. He continues to amass more wealth, land, and fleets of very expensive cars.
After
 some years in power, Jammeh - who originally came from one of the 
poorest parts of the country - started living the life of a messiah. His
 native village, Kanilai, one of the most remote settlements of The 
Gambia, is now one of the most beautiful places in the country with 
modern, state-of-the-art buildings.
Lamin Jahateh is a Gambian journalist
and the editor and publisher of
Gambia News Online.

 
 
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