Saturday, April 25, 2026

First Lady Leads National Charge Against Food Waste with Türkiye and TIKA in Gunjur




By JarranewsTV Staff Reporter

In a strong demonstration of leadership and commitment to sustainable development, Her Excellency the First Lady, Fatoumatta Bah-Barrow, today stood at the forefront of The Gambia’s fight against food waste, joining forces with the Embassy of Türkiye and the Turkish Cooperation and Coordination Agency (TIKA) in Gunjur, West Coast Region, to commemorate the International Day of Zero Waste 2026.


The event, marked with purpose and urgency, reinforced The Gambia’s growing alignment with global efforts to confront one of the most pressing environmental challenges of our time. The International Day of Zero Waste, observed annually under the joint stewardship of UNEP and UN-Habitat, serves as a powerful reminder of the need for responsible consumption, efficient production systems, and sustainable waste management practices.


This year’s focus on food waste brings into sharp perspective a staggering global reality: nearly one billion tonnes of food are lost or wasted every year. Against this backdrop, the First Lady’s presence in Gunjur sent a clear and decisive message—The Gambia is not standing idle but is actively engaging international partners to drive meaningful change at the grassroots level

Central to the campaign is the promotion of the “5 R’s” principle—Refuse, Reduce, Reuse, Recycle, and Rot (compost)—a practical framework aimed at transforming everyday habits and fostering a culture of sustainability among citizens.


Today’s engagement in Gunjur was more than a symbolic observance; it was a call to action. Communities, institutions, and individuals alike are being urged to take ownership of the zero-waste agenda by adopting environmentally responsible behaviors, organizing awareness initiatives, and embracing innovative solutions to minimize waste.


With strong partnerships and visionary leadership, The Gambia continues to position itself as a proactive player in the global movement toward a circular economy—one that prioritizes resource efficiency, environmental protection, and long-term national resilience.

Thursday, April 23, 2026

IEC Raises Red Flag Over Activities of Unregistered Political Groups


By JarranewsTV Staff Reporter

The Independent Electoral Commission (IEC) has issued a strong warning over what it describes as the increasing and unlawful involvement of unregistered political movements in the country’s electoral space, cautioning that such actions threaten the legal order governing democratic participation.

Speaking at the Commission’s second monthly Stakeholders Forum, IEC Chairman Joseph Colley expressed concern that a number of groups operating outside the bounds of the Elections Act 2025 are engaging in activities reserved exclusively for duly registered political parties.

“The emergence and conduct of some of these movements, which have not met the legal requirements to be recognised as political parties, is a matter of serious concern,” Colley stated. “The law is clear—only registered political parties are permitted to sponsor candidates, access state media under regulated conditions, and fully participate in the electoral process.”

The Commission warned that any entity found flouting these provisions risks facing legal consequences, including public sanctions, referral to the Attorney General’s Chambers, or court action.

While the IEC reaffirmed its commitment to ensuring an open and transparent voter registration process, it stressed that such integrity must be matched by strict adherence to the legal framework by all political actors.

Amid these concerns, the Commission continues to oversee the ongoing 2026 Supplementary Voter Registration exercise, which has drawn significant public participation since its launch on April 8. The exercise, set to conclude on May 21, caters to citizens who missed the 2021 registration, as well as those seeking transfers or replacement voter cards.

Chief Electoral Officer Sambujang Njie reported that over 41,000 applicants were registered in the first week alone, with women accounting for the majority of registrants. He also acknowledged minor operational challenges, including technical faults and isolated printing errors, noting that corrective measures have largely been implemented.

Although cases of attempted double registration have been recorded, the IEC emphasized that its primary concern remains the need to safeguard the electoral process from unlawful political activities that risk undermining public trust.

Colley concluded with a firm reminder that democracy must operate within the confines of the law, urging all political actors—both established and aspiring—to respect the rules that govern participation in The Gambia’s electoral system.

“From Condemnation to Complicity: The UDP’s Contradictions on Incendiary Speech”

By Alagi Yorro Jallow 
The paradoxes and contradictions of compromised media, self-proclaimed activists, human rights defenders, and the UDP.
The contradiction becomes even clearer when we recall that the United Democratic Party itself once condemned inflammatory rhetoric with admirable force. On June 25, 2025, as reported by The Alkamba Times, the UDP issued a blistering statement against Agriculture Minister Demba Sabally after he suggested that “shedding blood” might be necessary to secure President Barrow’s reelection. The party described Sabally’s remarks as reckless, irresponsible, and a direct assault on the nation’s democratic principles. They warned that such language risked inciting violence, undermining the integrity of the electoral process, and betraying the ministerial oath to serve all Gambians. Yet today, when similar if not more explicit rhetoric comes from their own senior official, Chairman Yankuba Darboe, the same moral urgency is nowhere to be found. This silence is not merely inconsistent; it exposes a troubling double standard in how political actors choose when to defend peace and when to look away.
Fatoumatta:The Gambia deserves a politics grounded in maturity, starting with the courage to say enough to bloodshed, insults, and tribal smears. Our democracy cannot survive if hypocrisy is normalized; it will only endure if every leader — whether NPP, UDP, minister, or lawyer — is held to the same standard of peace, dignity, and responsibility. So why the silence from the Gambia Bar Association, the National Human Rights Commission, and Baba Jalinding?

Reckless Posturing and a Misguided Narrative on The Gambia’s Electoral Integrity

By Yaya Dampha, NPP Diaspora Coordinator

Dr. Lamin Manneh’s latest public pronouncements regarding a so-called “software” to monitor and track election results are as troubling as they are intellectually shallow. They expose not innovation, but a dangerous blend of ignorance, political opportunism, and a willingness to mislead supporters on matters of national importance.
Let us address the facts—clearly, firmly, and without apology.
The Gambia’s Electoral System Is Manual, Transparent, and Tamper-Resistant
The Gambian voting system is neither electronic nor digitized. It is a simple, physical, and highly transparent marble voting process conducted in full public view. Votes are cast manually, counted manually, and verified manually—right at the polling stations.
There is no digital backend. No electronic transmission. No software-dependent infrastructure.
Therefore, Dr. Manneh must answer a very basic question:
What exactly is this “software” intended to monitor in a system that is entirely non-digital?
Anything presented beyond internal party record-keeping is, at best, redundant—and at worst, a deliberate attempt to manufacture doubt where none exists.
Counting Is Immediate, Open, and Verified by All Stakeholders
At the close of polls, counting begins instantly in the presence of:
Party agents from all contesting parties
Domestic and international observers
Security personnel
Ordinary citizens within the community
Each result is:
Publicly announced at the polling station
Officially recorded
Counter-signed by all party agents present
This is not a hidden process. It is one of the most transparent electoral mechanisms anywhere in the world.
Parallel Tabulation Is Not a License for Public Deception
Political parties are fully entitled to collect their own results through their agents. That is standard democratic practice.
However, let it be unequivocally stated:
No political party, no official, and certainly no self-styled technocrat has the legal authority to declare election results.
That authority rests solely with the Independent Electoral Commission (IEC).
Any attempt—direct or implied—to pre-empt, contradict, or publicly substitute the IEC’s mandate is reckless, unlawful, and a direct threat to public order.
Irresponsible Claims and Dangerous Implications
Dr. Manneh’s repeated assertions of “fraud,” unsupported by judicial validation, coupled with his party’s failure to substantiate such claims in court, raise serious concerns about credibility.
Even more alarming is the subtle conditioning of supporters to distrust official results in advance. This is not vigilance—it is calculated destabilization.
Political actors must understand that:
Democracy is governed by law, not by loud assertions
Electoral disputes are resolved in courts, not on radio talk shows
Public confidence must not be sacrificed for partisan theatrics
Security Institutions Must Remain Vigilant
Any narrative that encourages premature declaration of results or undermines legally established processes falls squarely within the domain of national security.
The security services have both the authority and the obligation to:
Prevent the spread of misinformation capable of inciting unrest
Ensure compliance with electoral laws
Safeguard peace and stability before, during, and after elections
This responsibility must be exercised firmly and without hesitation.
Conclusion: Leadership Demands Responsibility, Not Noise
The Gambian people deserve seriousness, honesty, and respect for institutions—not technological grandstanding or political narcissism disguised as innovation.
Dr. Manneh’s statements do not strengthen democracy; they weaken it. They do not inform the public; they risk inflaming it.
The path to State House is not paved through confusion, intimidation, or self-declared victories. It is earned through lawful participation, credible evidence, and respect for the sovereign will of the people as declared by the IEC.
Anything short of that is not politics—it is recklessness.


Editorial: When Silence Becomes Complicity: Selective Outrage and Dangerous Rhetoric in The Gambia




By JarranewsTV Editorial Board

There is a troubling inconsistency creeping into The Gambia’s public discourse—one that threatens not only fairness, but the very principles of accountability and peace that our democracy depends on.

When Demba Sabally  stated that NPP  supporters were “ready to shed their blood” to ensure the re-election of President AdamaBarrow, the backlash was immediate and intense. Opposition parties, civil society actors, and self-styled activists rushed to condemn the remark. In many instances, the statement was stretched beyond its ordinary meaning—mischaracterized as a call to violence against others, rather than what it more commonly signifies: a willingness to sacrifice oneself for a political cause.

Yet, in stark contrast, when the Chairman of Brikama area council  publicly asserted that “for a peaceful change of government to happen, somebody has to die,” the response has been muted, if not entirely absent. This was not metaphorical. It was not symbolic. It was a deeply troubling assertion that introduces the idea of death as a condition for political transition—an idea that strikes at the very core of democratic order.

The silence from key institutions has been deafening.

Where is the principled response from the National Human Rights Commission? Where are the strong, unequivocal statements from civil society organizations that claim to defend human rights and democratic norms? Why has there been no decisive repudiation from the United Democratic Party, a party that prides itself on legal expertise and intellectual leadership?

This selective outrage erodes public trust. It sends a dangerous message that accountability is guided not by principle, but by political convenience. When one statement is amplified and condemned—arguably beyond its intended meaning—while another, far more explicit in its dangerous implication, is ignored, it exposes a double standard that weakens the credibility of those who claim moral authority.

The Gambia’s democratic journey has been shaped by hard-earned lessons about the cost of instability and the value of peace. That progress must not be undermined by reckless rhetoric or by the failure to confront it when it arises. Words carry weight—especially in politically sensitive moments—and leaders must be held to the highest standard of responsibility.

We therefore call not only on national institutions, civil society, and political actors to break their silence, but also urge the international community and global human rights organizations to take note. Statements that suggest violence as a pathway to political change are not mere domestic concerns—they are warning signs that demand vigilance, scrutiny, and principled response.

The Gambia cannot afford a culture where dangerous words are either distorted for expediency or ignored for convenience. Consistency is the foundation of justice, and without it, advocacy becomes hollow.

Silence, in moments like this, is not neutrality—it is complicity.

https://www.amnesty.org/en/

https://www.hrw.org/

https://www.ecowas.int/

https://www.gov.uk/world/organisations/british-high-commission-banjul

https://gm.usembassy.gov/





Wednesday, April 22, 2026

HON. DAWDA A. JALLOW, ADDRESSES PBC MEETING ON THE GAMBIA AT UN HEADQUARTERS, NEW YORK CITY


At a defining moment in its democratic rebirth, The Gambia steps confidently onto the global stage—not as a nation burdened by its past, but as a beacon of resilience, reform, and unwavering political will. Under the visionary leadership of President Adama Barrow, the country’s transition from the shadows of former ruler to a thriving democratic order stands today as a compelling testament to what determined governance and international partnership can achieve.

This address to the is not merely a diplomatic engagement—it is a powerful declaration of progress, accountability, and national resolve. It boldly affirms The Gambia’s commitment to justice, reconciliation, and sustainable peace, while calling on the world to recognize and reinforce a success story that continues to inspire beyond its borders.


On behalf of His Excellency President Adama Barrow, the Government of The Gambia extends its sincere gratitude to all members of the Peacebuilding Commission for your continued political attention and solidarity with The Gambia's peacebuilding journey. 

The Peacebuilding Commission has been, and remains, an indispensable partner, providing political accompaniment, mobilizing resources, and promoting coherence across the UN system in support of our nationally owned process. 
Your sustained engagement with us in The Gambia sends an important signal of international solidarity with not only member states, but equally, victims and survivors of gross human rights violations, and civil society, all over the world.

Nine years have passed since the end of Former President Yahya Jammeh's 22-year authoritarian rule in The Gambia. In that time, we have been on a remarkable democratic transition. We have witnessed two cycles of peaceful presidential, legislative and local government elections, built new institutions, enacted landmark legislation, and demonstrated that transitional justice can serve as a strong, and genuine foundation for sustainable peace. 

A close and natural partnership has emerged between the Government of The Gambia, our UN Country Team and the Peacebuilding and Peace Support Office (PBPSO) since the onset of our transition in 2017. 
In 2025, this culminated in the selection of The Gambia as the first member state to undergo the Peacebuilding Impact Spotlight exercise through the Peacebuilding Impact Hub. 
For almost 12 months, we have undertaken a thorough and participatory research initiative into what transitional justice has achieved and where it still needs to deliver for the people of The Gambia.  
It has been an intense exercise, but equally an exhilarating and motivating year full of reflections, discussions and consultations.

As Minister of Justice and policy leader on transitional justice in The Gambia, today is an important opportunity to reflect honestly on what has been achieved, what remains, and where international support is most urgently needed for The Gambia. 

Following the conclusion of the research component of the Spotlight exercise, I am grateful for this opportunity to present to you too, Your Excellencies, an outline of a national strategy for transitional justice.

HIGHLIGHTING KEY ACHIEVEMENTS: WHAT WE HAVE DELIVERED

Your Excellencies, 

The Truth, Reconciliation and Reparations Commission, established in December 2017 by the Government of The Gambia, created an unprecedented national space for victims, survivors, and perpetrators to speak publicly for the first time about gross human rights violations committed on our country between July 1994 and January 2017. The testimonies and stories broadcasted over live television for almost 3 years gripped our nation. These were difficult times, but necessary. By making truth-seeking a national conversation, this Commission, the TRRC, dismantled denialism and placed The Gambia in a unique historical position to mend our social fabric and contract between people and Government, whilst reaffirming human dignity as the foundation for sustainable peace. 

Following the submission of its Report and recommendations, The Government of The Gambia has consistently demonstrated the highest level of will to drive the implementation of the TRRC’s recommendations to their logical conclusion. 

We have accepted to implement 263 of the 265 recommendations made by the Commission, even publishing an Implementation Plan on how this will be achieved: over a 5-year period (January 2023 to December 2027), involving 304 activities, 59 national institutions and a cost estimate of 150 million USD.

Your Excellencies, 

One needs not look much further than The Gambia for powerful demonstration of sustained political will almost a decade into our democratic transition. Our processes have always been driven by our people, victims and survivors foremost, and responded to by the Government and our National Assembly. Since 2017, The Gambia has introduced robust legislative and institutional frameworks across all pillars of transitional justice:

On the reparations track: The Victims Reparations Act, enacted in 2023, establishes both the Victims Reparations Commission and the Victims Reparations Fund, and essentially takes over from the TRRC’s interim mandate to administer reparations. In 2025 and 2026, the Government of The Gambia allocated 20 million GMD in each year for the Fund, which we are proud to see being administered by the Commission in accordance with its compensation policy. The administration of reparations for victims, survivors and communities of gross human rights violation in The Gambia, is a critical component and milestone of our transitional justice process, one His Excellency, President Adama Barrow often describes as a “super priority.”

On the accountability track: The National Assembly passed the Ban from Public Office (TRRC) Act (November 2023), the Special Accountability Mechanism Act (April 2024), the Special Prosecutor's Office Act (April 2024), and in partnership with ECOWAS, a hybrid tribunal, the Special Tribunal for The Gambia was also created (December 2024). We are proud to present to the world under this framework, a unique post-conflict, justice and criminal accountability mechanism that activates pathways for both domestic and international prosecutions, with a strong focus on judicial expediency, victim’s participation, and witness protection, whilst strengthening national justice and security sector institutions.

On guarantees of non-recurrence: The National Human Rights Commission is fully operational as an “A status,” independent national human rights institution. In more recent times, a National Strategy on Memorialization, and a National Programme on Archiving have also been developed through a consultative approach, and soon to be reviewed by Cabinet.  

All of these formal mechanisms have also been complemented by consistent community dialogues amongst traditional, religious, women and youth-led networks. The Spotlight exercise, and its final Report confirms that this “people centered,” complementarity approach to legislative and institutional building is essential to sustaining peace. 

REMAINING CHALLENGES: AN HONEST ASSESSMENT

The Government of The Gambia is committed to transparency. The Spotlight research confirms what we acknowledge: public confidence declines when implementation slows or is not clearly communicated. 

According to the National Human Rights Commission, mandated to monitor and report on the implementation of the TRRC recommendations, the Government of The Gambia has 3 years into the implementation phase, fully implemented 48 out of 263 recommendations, commenced implementation of another 133 recommendations, and yet to commence implementing 92 recommendations.  

We are committed to accelerating this pace and improving communication with victims, their communities, and indeed, all Gambians. This is not a process we are prepared to allow to stall.

However, a daunting reality must be confronted by the Government, and all supporters of our process. 

The cost estimates to implement the recommendations of the TRRC is approximately 150 million USD, of which significant portions remain unfunded. 

To give this Peacebuilding Commission a concrete sense of what is at stake: the operationalization of the hybrid Special Tribunal alone is estimated to require approximately 60 million USD over five years, or roughly 12 million USD per year. Investigations, and domestic prosecutions through the Special Prosecutor’s Office and the Special Criminal Division of our High Court are estimated to require approximately 2.5 million USD per year. The Victims Reparations Commission requires sustained deposits into the Reparations Fund; the Government has to date, allocated 40 million GMD towards the Fund, and another 20 million GMD for the operations of the Reparations Commission, but the scale of need across victim categories is considerably larger, and indicative figures for full delivery are still being costed as the Commission builds its national victims database. 

Community reconciliation programming and civil society engagement represent a further set of needs that, while individually more modest, are essential to the process’s credibility at the local level. The significant reduction of donor funded governance project, and development financing in general, has created real pressure across all of these tracks. 

In response, the Government of The Gambia is actively looking inwards, and seeking to diversify our partnerships to build on the essential, and promising foundations for sustainable peace thanks to the UN Peacebuilding Funds. 

THE NATIONAL STRATEGY: EMERGING PRIORITIES FOR THE NEXT PHASE

Your Excellencies, 

The Government of The Gambia, with technical assistance from the UN Resident Coordinator’s Office is in the process of developing a comprehensive national strategic document on transitional justice, one that consolidates lessons from the Spotlight Report, and 3 years of implementation of the TRRC recommendations. 

We are committed to getting this document right rather than getting it done quickly, but I would like to present an outline of the strategy's emerging framework and key priorities.

The draft National Strategy for Transitional Justice and Peacebuilding in The Gambia responds to a decisive moment in our process. It does not introduce new commitments; it consolidates those already adopted through the Government White Paper and Implementation Plan on the TRRC recommendations, and provides a shared reference to guide delivery during the period 2026–2027. 

Its central purpose is to move The Gambia from a phase defined by frameworks and commitments to one defined by consistent, credible, and visible results. 

The strategy is structured around four interrelated orientations: consolidating existing gains; advancing accountability toward visible delivery; reinforcing guarantees of non-recurrence; and supporting reconciliation in a sequenced manner. 

It clarifies roles across institutions, prioritizes coordination and public communication, and identifies targeted areas for financing and partnership. The strategy acknowledges candidly that the principal challenge today is not the definition of commitments, but their translation into outcomes that victims and communities, and all Gambians can see and feel.

The emerging strategic priorities for the next phase are: (1) operationalizing the Special Prosecutor's Office and the hybrid Special Tribunal; (2) accelerating the reparations programme, including through the Reparations Fund; (3) deepening reconciliation at the community level; (4) advancing security sector reform; and (5) finalizing outstanding legislative reforms. These priorities build on existing national frameworks and reflect the evidence generated by the Spotlight research.

OUR ASK OF THE COMMISSION

Sustained Political Attention and Advocacy

Your Excellencies, 

The Gambia asks the Peacebuilding Commission to continue its political accompaniment. This includes advocating with bilateral partners and international financial institutions for sustained, flexible, and predictable support for The Gambia's transitional justice process. Political attention from this body sends an important signal of solidarity to our victims, our civil society, and our people, and we do not take it for granted.

Financial Support for the Special Tribunal and Reparations

We appeal to member states and partners to consider concrete financial and technical contributions — particularly for the operationalization of the hybrid Special Tribunal and the reparations programme. ECOWAS has provided its political and institutional endorsement for prosecutions. What is now required is funding. The architecture exists; what must follow are resources to operationalize this ambitious- but carefully designed, post-conflict criminal accountability mechanism.

The Gambia as a Model for South-South and Triangular Learning

The Gambia stands ready to share its experience — the lessons of truth-seeking, the importance of institutional anchors, the vital leadership role of victim, women and youth led civil society organizations, and around community-level reconciliation — with countries navigating similar transitions. The Peacebuilding Commission can play a critical bridging role in facilitating that exchange, and we welcome that partnership.

CLOSING: RESOLVE, NATIONAL OWNERSHIP, AND PARTNERSHIP

To conclude, Your Excellencies,

The Gambia's transitional justice process is nationally owned, evidence-based, and irreversible. The Jammeh era is part of our history — but it will not define our future. We have held consultations with our people, built institutions, passed laws, and conducted research into what has worked well, and what can be improved. We are in the process of learning from our own doings, both lessons and best practices, whilst responding to shifts in global political and financial and economic dynamics, with sharper focus of what has always been our objective: the reconstruction of our nation rooted in respect for human rights, the rule of law, human dignity and sustainable peace.

What we now ask is that the international community match our commitment with sustained, reliable support. Since 2017, and despite a long list of multifaceted challenges, The Gambia has demonstrated that where there is political will, there is a way. We remain resolute. We remain committed. And we remain grateful for the solidarity of this Commission.

Continue to stand with The Gambia.

I thank you for your kind attention.