This article is from the source 'nytimes' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.nytimes.com/2014/12/31/world/africa/banjul-gambia.html
The article has changed 6 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 0 | Version 1 |
---|---|
Gunfire Reported in Gambia’s Capital as President Is Abroad | |
(35 minutes later) | |
LONDON — Gunfire broke out overnight in Banjul, the seaside capital of the West African nation of Gambia, residents said, and there were reports on Tuesday that the presidential palace had been attacked. | |
The shooting came at a time when President Yahya Jammeh, the autocratic longtime ruler who came to power after a coup in 1994, was out of the country on a visit to France, according to news reports. | The shooting came at a time when President Yahya Jammeh, the autocratic longtime ruler who came to power after a coup in 1994, was out of the country on a visit to France, according to news reports. |
Gambia, a sliver of land along the Gambia River and among Africa’s smallest countries, is a former British colony surrounded to the north, south and east by Senegal. | Gambia, a sliver of land along the Gambia River and among Africa’s smallest countries, is a former British colony surrounded to the north, south and east by Senegal. |
News reports ascribed the gunfire to a coup attempt or a mutiny, but there was no immediate comment from the authorities to explain the confusion. | |
Banks and other offices remained closed on Tuesday, Reuters quoted residents as saying, and state radio played traditional music without mentioning the shooting. Troops were said to be blocking a bridge controlling access to the city center. | Banks and other offices remained closed on Tuesday, Reuters quoted residents as saying, and state radio played traditional music without mentioning the shooting. Troops were said to be blocking a bridge controlling access to the city center. |
Mr. Jammeh has faced increasing criticism from outside his country for running a repressive state. | Mr. Jammeh has faced increasing criticism from outside his country for running a repressive state. |
This year, Amnesty International criticized the authorities for changing the Constitution to extend maximum jail terms for some categories of homosexuality to life imprisonment from 14 years. | |
The changes came “at a time when the space for free speech in Gambia is rapidly shrinking,” Amnesty International said in a report in November. | |
“This is particularly evident in restrictions on the media, where the government controls what is printed and broadcast,” it continued. | |
“Human rights defenders, journalists and political activists face harassment, intimidation, arbitrary arrest and detention, torture and enforced disappearance,” the report said. “President Jammeh has repeatedly criticized human rights defenders for promoting and protecting the human rights of sexual minorities.” | |
The reports of shooting in Banjul came roughly two months after demonstrators in Burkina Faso took to the streets to protest President Blaise Compaoré's plans to extend his 27 years in office. The uprising forced the president to flee to Ivory Coast as his government collapsed. In the chaos, an army officer, Lt. Col. Isaac Zida, took power. | The reports of shooting in Banjul came roughly two months after demonstrators in Burkina Faso took to the streets to protest President Blaise Compaoré's plans to extend his 27 years in office. The uprising forced the president to flee to Ivory Coast as his government collapsed. In the chaos, an army officer, Lt. Col. Isaac Zida, took power. |
After weeks of political wrangling, Colonel Zida was named prime minister in a transitional government intended to steer the country to elections within a year. Michel Kafando, a civilian former foreign minister and ambassador to the United Nations, was appointed interim president. |