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Periodical article | Leiden University catalogue | WorldCat |
Title: | The Gambia's 2006 presidential election: change or continuity? |
Author: | Saine, Abdoulaye |
Year: | 2008 |
Periodical: | African Studies Review |
Volume: | 51 |
Issue: | 1 |
Pages: | 59-83 |
Language: | English |
Geographic term: | Gambia |
Subjects: | presidential elections 2006 |
External link: | http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/african_studies_review/v051/51.1.saine.pdf |
Abstract: | On Friday, September 22, 2006, Gambians voted in the third presidential election since soldier-turned-civilian-president Yahya Jammeh came to power in a bloodless 1994 coup d'état. President Jammeh's ruling party, the Alliance for Patriotic Re-orientation and Construction (APRC), defeated two separate, though ideologically and programmatically similar, political/party alliances. This article analyses the 2006 presidential election and assesses the extent to which it represents change toward political liberalization or continuity in the APRC's engineering of the election process and its outcome. It demonstrates that the 2006 presidential election has not appreciably moved The Gambia any closer to a more democratic political culture. The election resulted instead in the consolidation of authoritarian rule under Jammeh. Clearly, disunity within the opposition eroded both its popularity and credibility and irreversibly changed the dynamics of the election in Jammeh's favour. Jammeh is in a position to use his 'mandate' and 'victory' to widen political participation, undertake genuine reconciliation, root out corruption, investigate mounting deaths, protect press freedoms, and put the economy on a course to mend itself. But this seems unlikely, given his proclivity for press repression and a lack of commitment to bettering the lives of ordinary Gambians. Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract] |