The Gambia’s longtime former ruler Yahya Jammeh stole at least
$50-million from the state, the country’s justice minister said Monday,
in the first major anti-corruption move by the country’s new president.
It
is the first time the new government of the small west African nations
has put a figure to the amount it believes Jammeh plundered from state
coffers before leaving for exile in Equatorial Guinea in January after
22 years in power.
“President Yahya Jammeh personally or under his
instructions directed the unlawful withdrawal of at least $50 million,”
said Justice Minister Abubacarr Tambadou, describing withdrawals from
The Gambia’s central bank and linked with state-owned Gamtel between
2013 and 2017.
“We have today obtained a court order freezing or
placing a temporary hold on the known assets in the country of former
President Yahya Jammeh and companies directly associated with him,”
Tambadou added.
The court order concerns 88 bank accounts in
Jammeh’s name or those of his associates, Tambadou told journalists,
along with 14 companies linked with the former strongman.
Jammeh
ran everything from bakeries to farms during his tenure and was
regularly accused of taking over successful businesses for his own gain.
Monday’s
order was designed to prevent Jammeh “liquidating or dissipating
assets,” the minister added, confirming the order applied only to the
former leader’s assets in The Gambia.
Last
Tuesday Gambian police said three cousins of the former president would
face theft charges after selling off his cattle, raising suspicions
that his contacts still in the country were under scrutiny.
“These discoveries are just a tip of the iceberg,” Tambadou told a press conference.
Interior
Minister Mai Fatty accused Jammeh of taking $11 million after leaving
in January, adding he also took luxury cars piled onto a Chadian cargo
plane, but the claim was not backed up by the rest of the cabinet.
The
Gambia’s longtime opposition United Democratic Party (UDP) won an
absolute majority in parliamentary elections in April, easily defeating
Jammeh’s party which has been cast into the electoral wilderness by his
departure.
That came after the stunning ouster of Jammeh by
President Adama Barrow in a December presidential election, a result
which the defeated leader fought for weeks until the threat of a
regional military intervention.
Meanwhile, police continue to
investigate dozens of forced disappearances under Jammeh’s rule, with
victims clamouring for justice.
The Gambia’s National Assembly was
long derided for acting as a rubber stamp for Jammeh’s decisions, but
hopes are high for a revitalised chamber with a raft of fresh faces
elected
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