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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Buoyant oppn a threat for Gambian leader

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Banjul: Gambian President Yahya Jammeh (pictured) faces the biggest threat to his 22-year rule on Thursday as the country heads to the polls following two weeks of unprecedented rallies by an energised opposition.


Some 880,000 Gambians will be eligible to vote when more than 1,400 polling stations open at 0800 GMT in an election overshadowed by an internet blackout in a nation long accused by rights groups of suppressing freedom of expression.


The winner will serve a five-year term in The Gambia, a tiny former British colony in west Africa which occupies a narrow sliver of land surrounded by French-speaking Senegal.


Jammeh is running for a fifth term in office with his ruling Alliance for Patriotic Reorientation and Construction (APRC).


He faces previously unknown businessman Adama Barrow, chosen as a flagbearer by seven Gambian political parties and an independent candidate who have joined forces for the first time to form a coalition with unprecedented support.


A third candidate, former ruling party MP Mama Kandeh, is also standing for the Gambian Democratic Congress (GDC).


At his final rally on Tuesday night, Jammeh said he was looking forward to ramping up development in a country that “will move faster than it has in 22 years,” but he also warned that protests over Thursday’s result would not be tolerated.


The Gambia’s unique voting system, which sees citizens vote by dropping a marble into a coloured drum for their candidate, could not be rigged, he added, meaning “there is no reason for anybody to protest.”


Rights group Amnesty International urged the authorities to ensure that the election and post-electoral period “are held in a climate that is free from violence and which fully respects the right of all people to freely express their views.” — AFP


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