Gambia’s new leader to be sworn in at Dakar embassy as incumbent refuses to go despite threat of military intervention.
Gambia’s President-elect Adama Barrow says he will be sworn in at the country’s embassy in neighbouring Senegal, as regional forces massed at the border to force incumbent Yahya Jammeh to quit after his election defeat.
In messages posted on his social media accounts, Barrow said the inauguration was going to take place as scheduled on Thursday in the Senegalese capital, Dakar.
https://twitter.com/adama_barrow/status/822000166454620160?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw
Al Jazeera’s Nicolas Haque, reporting from Dakar, said representatives of West African heads of states were expected to attend the swearing-in ceremony, due to take place at 16:00 GMT.
“A very significant moment for the Gambian history,” Haque said.
There was a heavy security presence at Gambia’s Dakar-based embassy on Thursday afternoon. Embassy staff climbed onto the roof to replace the faded Gambian flag with a new one.
It was not clear how Barrow will travel to Gambia.
VP quits
Earlier on Thursday, sources told Al Jazeera that Isatou Njie Saidy, Gambia’s Vice President since 1997, had quit, becoming the highest level official to abandon Jammeh’s camp in his standoff with opposition Barrow, who won last month’s presidential election.
“Saidy’s resignation comes a series with defections among Jammeh’s entourage,” Haque said.
AL JAZEERA’S NICOLAS HAQUE, REPORTING FROM DAKAR IN NEIGHBOURING SENEGAL:
Troops from Senegal, Ghana, Nigeria, Mali and Togo are at the borders of Senegal, waiting for a green light to intervene and unseat Yahya Jammeh, who according to the constitution is no longer the country’s legitimate ruler.
Banjul has been turned into a “ghost town'”with tens of thousands of people fleeing the capital and at least 26,000 crossing the border into Senegal.
Meanwhile, Ousman Badjie, the chief of defence staff, has said that he will not put his men on the line and they will not fight or die for Yahya Jammeh.