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Gambia, Ghana Sued At ECOWAS Court By Families Of Migrants killed Under Jammeh

The families of some West African migrants killed in The Gambia under the regime of Yahya Jammeh have on Wednesday sued the states of The Gambia and Ghana before the ECOWAS Community Court of Justice. Assisted by the African network against extrajudicial killings and enforced disappearances (ANEKED), the families filed complaints against the two governments for infringing several international human rights, including the right to judicial remedies.

In seeking for justice before the regional court, the complainants benefitted from inputs provided by the “Freedom from Violence Project” of the Centre for Human Rights, University of Pretoria. The complaint is on the basis that all migrants have human rights, no matter how or where they move. Furthermore, relatives of the disappeared have the right to know the full and unadulterated truth about the fate of their loved ones and obtain reparations regardless of their migratory status, gender or nationality.

In July 2005, 44 Ghanaian migrants as well as some 12 other West Africans (from Nigeria, Senegal, Togo, and Côte d’Ivoire) including two women (one reportedly pregnant) forcibly disappeared in The Gambia while on their way to Europe by sea. A Gambian national, Lamin Tunkara, purported to have been their smuggler also suffered the same fate.

“Nobody should have to wait 15 years to get justice for such serious human rights violation. The silence and inaction from both governments only serves to fuel impunity and lack of transparency surrounding the enforced disappearance of the West Africans. The families left behind continue their search for truth and justice,” said Nana-Jo N’dow, Founder and Executive Director of ANEKED.

The migrants were never heard from again except for the lone survivor Martin Kyere who managed to escape and alert authorities across the border in Senegal.

Following the enforced disappearances and for years afterwards, Ghanaian and Gambian civil society organizations have joined forces with the sole survivor and families of those disappeared to campaign for those responsible to be held accountable in fair trials, however their demands have fell on deaf years.

Despite pledges by both governments in 2009 to “pursue through all available means, the arrests and prosecutions of all those involved” no significant steps have been taken to back the rhetoric, even as evidence has emerged that the migrants were murdered, by the “Junglers”, a death squad reporting directly to former President of The Gambia Yahya Jammeh.

Additionally, five different United Nations human rights monitors have expressed concerns to both governments at the lack of credible investigation carried out thus far.

Nana-Jo N’dow added that “It is time a thorough, independent and credible investigation into this incident is conducted by a competent legal authority and that governments take up their responsibility to fulfil the rights of the deceased migrants and their families who deserve nothing short of truth, justice and accountability.”

With africafeeds

 

 

 

 

 

 

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