Countdown till ECOWAS Intervenes in Gambia

The Odum of Ala Igbo

Hail Biafra!
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The Republic of Biafra
800 Nigerian troops, or so, have been taken from the frontlines around Lake Chad to prepare for this invasion.

Nigerian MPs are speaking of offering aslyum to Jammeh. They probably dislike the possibility of a Buhari military victory.

:jbhmm:
 

Jparker

Innocence lost in the EAST
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My coworker is from there and she always playing talking about ill pay to send you there if you kill our president. :whew:
 

BigMan

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To Nigerian elites, 2 million starving out of 193 million is nothing. Nigeria "must" remain the military power along the Gulf of Guinea/West Africa.

Check out Nigeria's actions in Sierra Leone/Liberia

:francis:
 

Yehuda

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The Gambia’s top judge on Monday pulled out of hearing a bid by President Yahya Jammeh to halt the inauguration of president-elect Adama Barrow later this week, in a blow to the incumbent head of state.

[...]Jammeh has lodged a challenge to the election result with The Gambia’s Supreme Court and last week filed a fresh injunction to prevent the chief justice from swearing Barrow into office.

But on Monday Chief Justice Emmanuel Fagbenle said he could not hear the new case, dealing a blow to Jammeh’s efforts to halt Thursday’s inauguration.

“Given that the injunction affects me in my capacity as the chief justice, I will recuse myself from hearing it,” he said.

“The motion therefore waits for the Constitution of the Supreme Court or allow the judges to arrive in The Gambia.”

[...]The Gambia relies on foreign judges, notably from Nigeria, to staff its courts due to a lack of its own trained professionals.

Last week the Supreme Court said Jammeh’s challenge to the election result could not be heard for several months as it did not have a full bench, and the extra judges needed to hear the case were not available.

[...]With tensions running high, Jammeh said on Sunday that he had spoken to Liberian leader Ellen Johnson Sirleaf and was adamant he would not budge until the Supreme Court had heard his challenge to the poll result.

“The so-called deadline of January 19 2017 is not cast in stone and all parties shall await the outcome of the Supreme Court,” he said on state television.

Leaders of neighbouring countries and the Economic Community Of West African States (ECOWAS) have repeatedly called on the long-serving strongman to leave office peacefully, so far to no avail.

As well as Sirleaf, Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari and Ghana’s ex-president John Mahama have appealed to Jammeh to step down twice in person, without success, most recently on Friday.

[...] The prospect of military intervention in The Gambia has even been floated in recent days, following declarations by the United Nations and African Union that boots on the ground could get the green light without a rapid resolution of the crisis.

The head of the UN Office for West Africa and the Sahel said on Friday that ECOWAS would ask the Security Council to approve the deployment of troops to The Gambia if Jammeh continues to refuse to leave office. – AFP

Blow to Jammeh's court bid as top judge pulls out
 
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