The Incarceration of Fanta Jawara and Other Excesses of Gambia’s Delusional President

Earlier this year, Gambian-born American citizen Fanta Jawara visited the Gambia after an 11-year absence to be part of a community event in her village. During her stay, a wave of anti-government protests rocked Banjul, Gambia’s capital, for days. On April 16, while she waited for a taxi in the midst of those protests, 45-year-old Jawara was arrested by a Gambian Police Intervention Unit (PIU) officer whose team had been assigned to stop a demonstration organised by members of the United Democratic Party (UDP), an opposition party and vocal critic of Yahya Jammeh’s government.

In Jawara’s words:

“I was stopped by a gentleman in plainclothes who asked me to give him my phone. I asked him why I should give him my phone.” She continued further, “The police officer started dragging me and slapping me. They were beating me from the time I was arrested up to the time we arrived at the camp.”

Fanta Jawara is married to Ebrima Jawara, the grandson of Dawda Jawara who was kicked out of power by Yahya Jammeh in the bloodless coup of 1994. She maintains that she was just a bystander when protests erupted and had nothing to do with it.

While many other innocent onlookers who were arrested that day have been released, Jawara remains locked up in the Gambia’s notorious Mile Two Prison, which has been investigated by the United Nations for reported torture and abuse. Government prosecutors accuse her of, among other things, a conspiracy to commit felony, rioting, unlawful assembly, and inciting violence.

Fanta Jawara’s husband and two daughters outside the White House during a mass appeal for her release. Washington Post

Since the 1994 coup, President Yahya Jammeh has maintained an iron grip over the political fortunes of the country. In 1996, he transitioned from military coup leader to elected president in a round of elections that were anything but free and fair. When he was re-elected for a fourth presidential term in 2011, he reportedly told the BBC, “If I have to rule this country for one billion years, I will, if Allah says so.”

Jammeh and his government have been accused repeatedly of major human rights violations. Following his orders in April 2000, Jammeh’s dreaded PIU officers opened fire on student demonstrators, killing 12 students and a journalist. Countless reports of disappearances and unlawful detention of opposition members abound. Jammeh was even linked to the massacre of 44 Ghanaian migrants in 2004.

Under his rule, Gambia has experienced a serious restriction of press freedom, with the enactment of draconian new laws that limit freedom of speech and control access to information within the country. Members of the press suffer widespread incarcerations, and in 2004, one of Jammeh’s closest military aides fatally shot the editor of the point, a Gambian popular tabloid.

Jammeh has targeted members of the Gambia’s gay community with particularly intense vitriol. He famously told a crowd in May 2015, “If you do it, I will slit your throat — if you are a man and you want to marry another man in this country and we catch you, no one would ever set eyes on you again and no white person can do anything about it.”

He has even begun to pick a fight with Senegal, the nation that almost completely surrounds his own. Meanwhile, back in the Gambia, Jammeh continues to spread the controversial and much-disputed claim that he has the power to cure HIV/AIDS, asthma, high blood pressure, and even treat infertility in women, to the utter chagrin of the international community. Part of his HIV/AIDS treatment programme reportedly requires patients to cease taking anti-retroviral drugs.

The Gambia has already been knocked of the list of countries eligible for the United States’ African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA), which supports the growth of African economies by allowing imports from Africa easy access into the American market. Despite this and other international sanctions, Jammeh has apparently continued to thrive as president — reportedly, he even owns a luxury mansion in the United States. This proves that such sanctions mainly hurt the already impoverished Gambians.

Rather, the international community and especially the US has to save them from Jammeh’s delusions of invincibility by hitting him exactly where it hurts — by imposing travel bans on him and seizing his assets and those of his closest aides.

The continued incarceration of an American citizen for more than eight weeks is more than enough reason to act.

Mark Babatunde

Mark Babatunde is a believer in the wonders of rice and beans. Quite thin and very nervous, he likes to laugh out loud in his high pitched voice just to enrage his nice neighbors. He has a bucket list that includes jet skiing from Lagos to London. He is also a wannabe nudist, a civil engineer and the biggest fan of the Simpsons.

Recent Posts

16-year-old Ethiopian Hana Taylor Schlitz breaks sister’s record to become the youngest graduate from TWU

The famous Taylor Schlitz family is making headlines once more as the youngest of the…

4 hours ago

Tahra Grant is reportedly the first Black woman to be Chief Comms Officer at a major Hollywood studio

Sony Pictures Entertainment has appointed Tahra Grant as its Chief Communications Officer. She replaces Robert…

4 hours ago

How Ashley Fox quit her Wall Street job and built a startup to financially empower those Wall Street would never talk to

Meet Ashley M. Fox, the founder of Empify and the first in her family to…

5 hours ago

‘It wasn’t worth it’ – Tyra Banks says the first time she drank alcohol was when she was 50

Tyra Banks, the iconic former host of Dancing With the Stars, has made a delightful…

7 hours ago

Brazilian woman who wheeled dead uncle to bank to withdraw his money is being investigated for manslaughter

A Brazilian woman named Érika de Souza, 42, is under investigation for manslaughter after authorities…

9 hours ago

For the first time, Ghana’s Asante King displays long-lost treasure looted by British forces in 1800s

Ghana’s Asante king Otumfuo Osei Tutu II has unveiled the long-lost treasure of the kingdom…

9 hours ago

Colorado generated $113 million in Deion Sanders’ first season, here’s how

Deion Sanders is a retired American professional football and baseball player who currently coaches at…

10 hours ago

Tiger Woods to receive $100M loyalty reward from PGA Tour: report

Tiger Woods is set to receive $100 million from PGA Tour Enterprises for his loyalty,…

12 hours ago

Jalen Hurts’ $200,000 donation for ACs improves comfort for students in Philadelphia schools

Jalen Hurts, the Philadelphia Eagles' quarterback, has shown his affection for the community by contributing…

12 hours ago

Shaq says he spends $1K on pedicures after his mom advised him to paint his toenails: ‘I know my feet stink’

It appears Shaquille O'Neal is willing to go all the way out to pamper his…

13 hours ago

U.S. Army Major found guilty of smuggling guns to Ghana in rice barrels

A U.S. Army Major faces up to 240 months in prison after he was found…

14 hours ago

Brittney Griner reveals she contemplated suicide while in Russian jail: ‘I felt like leaving here so badly’

In her first interview about her conviction in Russia on drug smuggling charges, WNBA star…

14 hours ago

Alison Hammond sells off glamorous old-size clothes after drastic weight loss, all proceeds go to British Liver Trust

The beloved host of This Morning, Alison Hammond, is making headlines by selling off her…

1 day ago

Two female students make history in Michigan earning Boy Scouts’ highest rank: Eagle

Two high school students in Grand Rapids, Michigan, have earned a place in history. The…

1 day ago

Family and friends mourn 36-year-old firefighter who died of heart attack after being laid off

Derek Floyd, a 36-year-old Fire Department of New York probationary fireman, died of a heart…

2 days ago