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Gambia on the Road to Political Limbo![]() President Jammeh Sunday, September 04, 2011 As Gambians gear up for the presidential elections in November, and the
National Assembly elections, less than two months later, we have seen President
Jammeh intensify his socalled philanthropic gestures, including dishing out
tractors to various individuals and farming communities as well as flooding the
country with sugar and other food items for the Ramadan, virtually putting
traders in those commodities out of business.
It is obvious to anyone who cares for the truth that President Jammeh
has neither the money nor the wherewithal to provide all those tractors, for
instance, on his own. Therefore, the only logical conclusion is that they were
either bought from state resources or a grant from Taiwan for the Gambian
people. Yet, Gambians were deliberately given the impression that they were
being provided by President Jammeh out of his magnanimity, no doubt as part of
his election campaign.
President Jammeh and his APRC can therefore be accused of using state
resources to campaign for re-election, including a complete monopoly of the
public media, which belongs to all Gambians, regardless of political
affiliation. We also recently saw him campaigning in the guise of ‘Dialogue with
the People’ tour, which is sponsored and paid for by the Gambian tax payers.
However, this is despite him telling Gambians that he was not going to
campaign, even though his every action, including making numerous promises
during the tour as well as dishing out those tractors, bags of sugar, cash and other
material gifts, as well as virtually all his utterances and other actions, tantamount
to campaigning.
However, while President Jammeh is busy campaigning in various guises, there
is hardly much happening in the opposition camp. While we have recently seen
some sabre rattling between the leadership of the UDP and PDOIS about the
possibility of forming a strategic alliance for the elections, but there has not
yet been any serious attempt so far to make such alliance between the only two
active opposition parties left in the ring to challenge the APRC; with all the
others either hibernating or, like NDAM and NCP, having completely been
submerged into the APRC, a reality.
Therefore, with the present division within the opposition, President
Jammeh can confidently say that he does not need to campaign in order to win
the next elections with a ‘landslide’. This is because his opponents are yet to
indicate that they are ready to put up any formidable challenge to the APRC
hegemony during the elections or at any time.
Of course it is a well-known fact that the APRC is not as popular and
homogeneous as its apologists would want us to believe, and there is no way
that the party can win a free and fair election in this country, but the facts
are quite glaring that free and fair elections cannot obtain under the present
political dispensation. We have all witnessed the persistent repression of the
media and the opposition, including the ridiculous imprisonment of the UDP
campaign manager Femi Peters for one year for merely organizing a UDP rally
without a police permit, which the APRC does on a daily basis, and yet no
policeman would dare to confront them.
We have also seen how President Jammeh has been going around during his recent
country-wide tour threatening not to bring government projects to those areas
that vote against him, as if the money for those projects comes from his pocket
and not the Gambian tax payers’ money, which of course includes the opposition.
This is in addition to the unfair use of the public media by President
Jammeh and the APRC at the expense of all other Gambians, including the
opposition, who all have an equal stake in them. It is indeed a shame to see
the Gambia Radio and Television Services (GRTS), for instance, being
transformed into the propaganda organ of the APRC. It is therefore a big joke
for anyone to call such a situation ideal in a democracy when only one
political party has access to the media and everyone else is denied such
access.
Despite the large turn-out during the recent general voter registration
exercise, which produced an unprecedented figure of over 800, 000 registered
voters out of a population of less than 1.5 million, what is likely to happen
during the elections is that the voter turn-out would again be much lower than
in the last elections in 2006 when just about 50 per cent actually turned out
to vote. Therefore, unless the opposition get their act together and convince
Gambians of the need to come out and vote, only those very few Gambians who
support President Jammeh, together with those numerous non-Gambians who have
been registered to vote in the country, as well as those induced by money and
other material gifts and promises, would come out to vote, while the vast
majority of the people would stay at home, for lack of a credible alternative,
no doubt as a result of the failure of the opposition to come out with a
credible strategy to confront the APRC.
Indeed, we are all aware that virtually all those who do not come out to
vote are actually opposed to the regime, but because of the failure of the
opposition to form a strategic alliance, most of those people see no point in
coming out to vote unless there is a formidable opposition strategy to dislodge
President Jammeh.
Of course President Jammeh and his praise singers are always quite happy
with such a scenario and in fact that is no doubt why he goes about saying that
neither elections nor a coup d’etat would remove him from power. It is all part
of his psychological onslaught on the psychic of Gambians, with the intention
of being seen as an invincible super-human who is several rungs above ordinary
mortals.
What is therefore likely to happen is that at the end of the day,
President Jammeh will again be re-elected with a ‘landslide’ victory, which he
and his praise singers will attribute to his popularity and magnanimity,
completely disregarding the unlevelled political playing field that his
opponents have been operating in. He will be sworn in for a fourth term as
president of this country with pomp and gaiety and the present system will not
only continue, but The Gambia’s reputation will continue to slide downwards and
the ship of state will get stuck deeper and deeper into the mud.
With this trend, The Gambia will continue to become more and more an
international pariah state as well as attract scum and laughter within the
sub-region.
ENDS Author: with D.A Jawo | Related Topics |