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How ex-Jammeh ally tortured and killed political opponents

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A former key ally of former Gambian President, Yahya Jammeh has admitted to supervising the arrest, torture and killing of opposition politicians and critics of the previous regime.

The former army captain Edward Singhateh has narrated harrowing stories of how he arrested, tortured and executed suspected political opponents.

According to Singhateh, many critics of Jammeh were arrested and never meant to be kept prisoners but executed.

Although in some instances he claimed he didn’t pull his trigger to shoot dead people, he admitted responsibility for those crimes.

He has been giving these testimonies before the country’s Truth, Reconciliation and Reparations Commission (TRRC) in Banjul.

Singhateh had earlier admitted his responsibility in the killings of 11 soldiers in the November 1994 coup.

He was one of four junior officers who carried out the coup in 1994 that brought Mr Jammeh to power.

In the previous testimonies he said months after the coup that brought Jammeh to power, 11 soldiers were accused of launching a counter-coup and were executed.

Mr Singateh told the truth commission that he and Mr Jammeh agreed to execute the soldiers although he claimed he did not fire the shots.

More than 20 soldiers were killed at the time and their bodies were never discovered until recently.

Remains of seven of the soldiers were found in a single grave outside the capital Banjul this year after a two-week search of a military barracks.

Relatives of the missing soldiers had to witness the discovery of the skulls in a grave.

Human rights abuses

Human rights activists have in the past accused Jammeh’s regime of torturing opponents, undertaking summary executions, forced disappearances and rape.

Since his exit from power, there have been reports of many atrocities that took place under Jammeh.

The ongoing hearings into alleged rights abuses during Mr Jammeh’s 22-year rule also revealed that the former leader ordered the 2005 execution of the 56 West African migrants, including 44 Ghanaians.

There have been other witnesses who have also testified that Jammeh ordered other killings of journalists and activists he deemed an obstacle to his rule.

The commission’s work will primarily offer some compensation to individuals who suffered torture, molestation and other crimes including killings under Mr. Jammeh’s regime.

There are eleven commissioners who are hearing the stories of witnesses and hope to document the scale of the abuses by October 2020.

Yahya Jammeh ruled Gambia for 22 years until he was forced out of power into exile in Equatorial Guinea in 2017.

But his country has been left in a state of bitterness due to the several reports of extrajudicial killings, torture and forced disappearances under that regime.

 

 

Source: Africafeeds.com

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