Al Hadji Yahya Jammeh |
Gambian President Yahya Jammeh apologized to former colonial master Britain on Sunday for saying its nationals were involved in a failed coup attempt last month.
In the
immediate aftermath of the coup, Jammeh accused foreign-backed dissidents in
Britain, the United States and Germany of
mounting the attack.
However, on
Sunday he withdrew the reference to Britons.
"So far
there is not a single Gambian or dissidents from Britain who came to join to
them (the coup plotters); so I am very sorry," Jammeh said on Monday in a
speech before the armed forces near his palace.
Prosecutors
in the United States have charged a Texas businessman with bankrolling and
trying to lead the coup with the support of a former U.S. Army sergeant. No
details of any German involvement in the coup have emerged so far.
Gambia,
whose borders are fabled to have been fixed by cannonballs fired from a British
warship on the eponymous river, is a popular destination for European tourists.
But despite
the economic ties, 49-year-old Jammeh, who seized power in a 1994 coup, faces
growing Western pressure over alleged human rights abuses.
In an
apparent jab at the former colonizer, Jammeh said in the same speech: "If
God says so, I will be very happy to rule Britain. After all they ruled us, so
if I can rule them; if Gambia can rule them, that will be the biggest
gift."
Jammeh, who
typically wears a large white African tunic called a boubou and carries prayer
beads, has earned a reputation in the West for colorful speeches.
He once
claimed publicly to have personally found a cure for AIDS and told the BBC that
he would rule for "a billion years".
No comments:
Post a Comment