Known for walking around with his trademark prayer beads
and a stick, Yahya Jammeh is reputed to be one of the world's most
eccentric and ruthless leaders.
Born in May 1965, he came to power in 1994 as a
29-year-old army lieutenant. Now, he is a portly president who portrays
himself as a devout Muslim with miraculous powers, such as the power to
cure people of Aids and infertility. He also believes that homosexuality
threatens human existence.
Mr Jammeh divorced his first wife Tuti Faal and
subsequently married two other women, though his official website refers
only to Zineb Yahya Jammeh, who holds the title of First Lady.
According to The Gambia's privately owned Point
newspaper, he married his second wife, Alima Sallah, in 2010, but Mr
Jammeh's office issued an instruction that she should not be referred to
as First Lady - in contrast to South Africa where all four wives of
President Jacob Zuma hold the title.
"She is not to be addressed as the First Lady
because, according to protocol, there can only be one First Lady and, in
this case, that is Madam Zineb Yahya Jammeh," the newspaper quoted the
presidency as saying.
Mr Jammeh, claiming that he has the support of
most Gambians, nearly all of whom are Muslims, has won four multi-party
elections - his latest victory was in 2011 when he obtained 72 per cent
of the vote.
But in a sign that his credibility among African
leaders had plummeted, the regional body, the Economic Community of West
African States (Ecowas), refused to endorse his victory, saying voters
and the opposition had been "cowed by repression and intimidation".
His decision to withdraw from the Commonwealth,
which had been pushing for reforms in the tiny West African state, is a
further sign of Mr Jammeh's growing isolation, analysts say.
The Gambia, portrayed in tourist brochures as an
idyllic holiday destination, is the second African country to pull out
of the Commonwealth in the past decade - Zimbabwe took a similar
decision in 2003 after the body extended sanctions against President
Robert Mugabe's government because of its human rights record.
Many African leaders, including South Africa's
then-President Thabo Mbeki, rallied around Mr Mugabe, believing he was
the victim of a Western plot to oust him.
'Aids cure'
Although Mr Jammeh will probably seek to whip up
anti-Western feelings, he is unlikely to gain much support in Africa as
he lacks the political stature of Mr Mugabe, who led his country's
struggle for independence from colonial rule in the 1970s.
In an interview in 2011 with the BBC's Focus on
Africa radio programme, Mr Jammeh said he did not fear a fate similar to
Libya's killed leader Muammar Gaddafi or Egypt's ousted President Hosni
Mubarak.
"My fate is in the hands of almighty Allah," he told the BBC.
"I will deliver to the Gambian people and if I have to rule this country for one billion years, I will, if Allah says so."
Mr Jammeh said he was not bothered by the criticism of human rights groups.
"I will not bow down before anybody, except the almighty Allah and if they don't like that they can go to hell," he said.
Mr Jammeh is known for expressing bizarre views.
In 2007, he claimed that he could cure Aids with a herbal concoction - a
view condemned by health experts.
Later, he also claimed that he could cure infertility among women.
Mr Jammeh is also known for his virulent opposition to gay rights, having once threatened to behead gay people.
During an address to the UN General Assembly last
month, Mr Jammeh lamented that Western governments were pushing for
homosexuality to be legalised.
"Homosexuality in all its forms and manifestations
which, though very evil, anti-human as well as anti-Allah, is being
promoted as a human right by some powers," he said.
The Gambian Government's treatment of journalists and opposition parties has also caused huge concern among human rights groups.
Mr Jammeh's government has been under intense pressure to solve the murder of the editor of The Point newspaper, Deyda Hydara.
Gunned down in 2004, he has become a symbol of the campaign for press freedom in The Gambia.
The international media group Reporters Without
Borders (RSF) says there is "absolute intolerance of any form of
criticism" in The Gambia, with death threats, surveillance and arbitrary
night-time arrests the daily lot of journalists "who do not sing the
government's praises".
Death sentences
In the BBC interview, Mr Jammeh denied his security agents had killed Mr Hydara.
"Other people have also died in this country. So why is Deyda Hydara so special?" he said.
In August last year, Mr Jammeh used a speech to
celebrate the Muslim festival of Eid to announce that all prisoners on
death row would be executed, effectively ending a moratorium that had
been in place for 27 years.
"By the middle of next month, all the death
sentences would have been carried out to the letter; there is no way my
government will allow 99 per cent of the population to be held to ransom
by criminals," Mr Jammeh said at the time.
Nine people were executed, including Alieu Bah, a
former lieutenant in the army who was arrested and jailed in 1997 for
plotting to oust Mr Jammeh.
He agreed to halt further executions, following unprecedented pressure from the African Union (AU) and the European Union (EU).
Despite Mr Jammeh's isolation on the world stage,
there is little sign that his hold on power within The Gambia is under
threat at this point.
He runs one of the most feared intelligence
agencies in Africa, with its tentacles spread across the country - so
much so that people in cities and villages fear speaking ill of the man
who is officially referred to as his "His Excellency Sheikh, Professor,
Alhaji, Doctor Yahya AJJ Jammeh".
SOURCE: AFRICAN REVIEW
SOURCE: AFRICAN REVIEW