OPINION: Jammeh’s ouster, a wake-up call to African sit-tight leaders

OPINION: Jammeh’s ouster, a wake-up call to African sit-tight leaders

Editor's note: Olalekan Waheed Adigun, the Legit.ng partner blogger, in this piece, explains why the removal of the ex-president of Gambia, Yahya Jammeh would bring peace to the people of the country.

Mr. Adigun could be reached via http://olalekanadigun.com/

More details in Legit.ng’s step-by-step guide for guest bloggers.

Many Nigerians, including me, were expecting a bloodbath in The Gambia as the deadline set by the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) expired for ex-President Yahya Jammeh to vacate office for the duly elected President Adama Barrow.

OPINION: Will Jammeh’s ouster bring anticipated peace to Gambia?
Gambian new president, Adama Barrow, after his inauguration

READ ALSO: OPINION: Jammeh as a threat to democracy and democratization in Africa?

I kept a late night on the 19th of January waiting for the news of Jammeh stepping down peacefully. I was disappointed the man called the bluff of ECOWAS and the international community as if telling them to “go to hell”. This movie was going to be longer than I thought.

That night, with no sign of President Jammeh planning to leave, even though I knew he was like a drowning man struggling against the wind, I had to managed to sleep for barely two hours. This was a man who stood no chance against the Nigerian-led ECOMOG soldiers.

Why should he be fighting a lost battle? Why shouldn’t he just accept the asylum offers from Nigeria and Morocco? Why does this man just want to shed innocent blood in a battle he would still lose? All these were the questions I asked myself as Jammeh continued to stay in power at Banjul.

As someone told me, Jammeh has some South African-trained mercenary soldiers ready to defend him in the event of an ECOMOG invasion. He said for him to have stayed in power for about 22 years, giving up power easily will be very difficult. He argued that Nigeria shouldn’t have intervened. Should Jammeh win the war against ECOMOG, he argued, the myth of Nigerian military will be broken and that will further ignite the Biafran agitations in Nigeria.

Even though I knew the position this man is coming from, especially as it concerns the Nigerian Army, I got some sense from what the man was saying. At some point during the negotiation, some events popped up here in Nigeria. Nigeria’s Deputy Senate President Ike Ekweremadu opposed the military option to The Gambian crisis. He argued that it would be counter-productive.

At the same time, some pseudo blogs came up with the news that Jammeh has allegedly “told” President Buhari that he should “go and free Nnamdi Kanu and Biafra before coming to tell me to go.”

As if things were all planned for the same time, the Nigerian Senate woke up from its slumber and opposed the deployment of troops to The Gambia. They soon realize it was “unconstitutional” for the President to deploy troops after the soldiers had almost reached Senegal. Clearly, Jammeh’s agents are really hard at work here in Nigeria!

OPINION: Will Jammeh’s ouster bring anticipated peace to Gambia?

READ ALSO: Why pro-Biafrans should stop seeking self-determination

While this is not the platform to respond to Jammeh’s Nigerian agents, as Africans, we should congratulate ourselves that we were able to demonstrate to the world that we are capable of handling our affairs without European or US intervention. That there was no gunshot or lives lost in the whole crisis shows things are really changing. The most important thing is that Jammeh’s 22-year reign came to an end in The Gambia without bloodbath.

Olalekan Waheed Adigun is a political analyst and independent political strategist for wide range of individuals, organisations and campaigns. He is based in Lagos, Nigeria. His write-ups can be viewed on his website http://olalekanadigun.com/ Tel: +2348136502040, +2347081901080

Email: olalekan@olalekanadigun.com, adgorwell@gmail.com

Follow me on Twitter @adgorwell.

The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily represent the editorial policy of Legit.ng.

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