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Subject:
From:
Beran jeng <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
The Gambia and related-issues mailing list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Fri, 21 Dec 2001 12:57:32 -0500
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From BBC Online


Low Graphics  Friday, 21 December, 2001, 12:27 GMT
Gambia election boycott


President Jammeh won presidential elections

The main opposition party in Gambia is to boycott national assembly
elections due on 17 January.
The announcement casts a shadow over the swearing-in of President Yahya
Jammeh later on Friday for a second five-year term.



Darboe is worried about electoral fraud

The leader of the United Democratic Party-led coalition, Ousainou Darboe,
said they doubted the electoral commission's ability to conduct a free and
fair election after its handling of the presidential election in October.

He alleged massive electoral fraud had been perpetrated by the ruling party
with the active collaboration of the Gambian electoral commission.

"There have been massive transfers of votes from constituencies where the
ruling party feels confortable to constituencies where they do not."

Political scores

Mr Darboe told the BBC the aim of the boycott was to expose the fraud in
order for the country's democratic institutions to become more responsive to
the people's aspirations.



President Jammeh will be sworn in later on Friday


The 18 October presidential elections were judged by election observers like
the Commonwealth to have been fair on the day of the voting.

But the UDP said that some 60 of its people were picked up without charge
after the polling, in what appeared to have been an exercise in settling
political scores.

These arrests awakened fears that President Jammeh's government, which first
came to power in a military coup, was reverting to repressive ways after
foreign observers left the country.


Ousainou Darboe
"We are not taking part in the national assembly elections"








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