Gambia: Bodies Of Killed Coupists Exhumed

Coup Plotters
Erstveröffentlicht: 
02.04.2017

Coup(JollofNews)- Authorities  in the Gambia have exhumed the bodies of four foreign based Gambian dissidents who were killed in December 2014 while trying to topple the former regime of Yahya Jammeh.

 

The decomposing bodies of Lamin Sanneh, Jaja Nyass, Njaga Jagne and Dawda Bojang were dug out of a secret burial place in Tintiba Forest, a swampy area near the Dumbuto Firing Range, north-west of Bwiam.

The men who belonged to the Gambia Freedom League, were part of a group  that entered the small West African nation on 30th December 2014 with the expectation that others in the country would join and assist them to overthrow Mr Jammeh’s regime. But as they attempted to storm the presidential palace, they were met with heavy gunfire from security forces, squashing the coup, and killing  Lamin Sanneh, Jaja Nyass, Njaga Jagne and Dawda Bojang.

Their bodies were kept in the mortuary of Edward Francis Small Teaching Hospital, Banjul, for over three years before being hastily buried a few months ago in an unmarked grave.

The dissidents spent over US$200,000 on multiple firearms, including M4 semi-automatic rifles, night-vision goggles, body armor, ammunition, black military style uniform pants, boots, and other personal equipment which they shipped to the Gambia for use in the coup attempt.

They said their aim was to toppled Mr Jammeh’s regime, restore democracy and the rule of law in the country.

But the Jammeh regime had accused them of being criminals who wanted to destabilise the country.

The regime said documents retrieved from the dissidents after the attack have revealed their plan to arrest and kill service chiefs and other high-ranking and prominent individuals in the country.

It added that the attack was also well-planned and the dissidents had intended to destroy key infrastructures including the Central Bank of the Gambia building, Denton Bridge, Gamtel House, Kotu Power Station among other national assets.

Following Mr Jammeh’s shocked defeat in last December’s election, the new Gambian regime has lauded the dissidents and the country’s Foreign Minister, Ousainou Darboe, has described them as heroes.

The government has also freed all those who were jailed for their role in the coup. All serving security officers who were also jailed for colluding with the coup plotters have also been reinstated to their positions.