State of emergency declared in The Gambia
Outgoing Gambian President
Yahya Jammeh has declared a 90-day state of emergency a day before his official
mandate ends, state TV reports.
Regional leaders have been
unsuccessfully trying to persuade him to hand over power to Adama Barrow, who
won December's elections.
The move comes after Nigeria
deployed a warship to further pressure Mr Jammeh.
Regional bloc Ecowas has
prepared a force but maintains that military intervention would be a last
resort.
The exact terms of the state
of emergency remain unknown, as no details were provided with the announcement.
Mr Barrow is meant to be
inaugurated as the new president on Thursday.
Mr Jammeh initially accepted
the election results but then decided he wanted them annulled after the
electoral commission admitted some errors, although it insists this did not
affect the final outcome.
The Supreme Court is unable to
hear the challenge until May because of a shortage of judges, and Mr Jammeh has
said he will not step down until then.
Show of strength
At least three Gambian
ministers, including the foreign minister, have resigned in recent days.
Thousands of Gambians have also fled to neighbouring Senegal amid fears of
violence.
BBC Africa Security
Correspondent Tomi Oladipo says the Nigerian warship is being deployed to put
on a show of strength rather than to launch an attack.
A military source says that
the vessel - the NNS Unity - is currently sailing off the coast of Ghana.
Mr Barrow won 43.3% of the
vote compared with Mr Jammeh's 39.6%. A third candidate, Mama Kandeh, got
17.1%.
Yahya Jammeh seized power in
the tiny West African country in 1994 and has been accused of human rights
abuses, although he has held regular elections.
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