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11.03.2014 Gambia

No English please, we're Gambians: president

By AFP
Gambian President Yahya Jammeh walks on November 24, 2011 in the capital Banjul.  By Seyllou AFPFileGambian President Yahya Jammeh walks on November 24, 2011 in the capital Banjul. By Seyllou (AFP/File)
11.03.2014 LISTEN

Dakar (AFP) - Gambia will drop English as its official language, President Yahya Jammeh said in his latest diatribe against former colonial power Britain.

"We're going to speak our own language," he said, without specifying which of the poor west African country's indigenous tongues would replace English.

The 48-year-old Gambian strongman is often pilloried for rights abuses and the muzzling of the press, and members of the diaspora have set up critical news outlets against Banjul.

A video of his latest broadside against Britain, delivered in English during the swearing-in of a new chief justice on Thursday, was uploaded on YouTube.

The country has several languages to choose from as a replacement for English.

Two in five Gambians speak Mandinka, while Fula or Wolof are used by another 34 percent. Jammeh himself is from the minority Jula tribe, which speaks a Manding language most closely related to Bambara, spoken in nearby Mali.

Gambia, a country of about 1.8 million, is a finger of territory flanking the Gambia River, with Senegal on either side and a narrow Atlantic coastline.

In 2008, Jammeh gave an ultimatum to gays and lesbians to leave his country, saying he would "cut off the head" of any homosexual found in Gambia.

Two years later the European Union cancelled 22 million euros ($30 million) of aid because of concerns over human rights and governance issues.

Gambia stunned the Commonwealth mainly grouping former British colonies by withdrawing from the 54-nation bloc in October, branding it "an extension of colonialism".

Jammeh said Britain had "no moral platform" to talk about human rights anywhere in the world.

"What brought the British in the first place to Gambia... was trade in ivory because Gambia had a lot of elephants," he said.

"They ended up wiping out the elephants and then turned around and started selling Africans. The British instituted slavery."

"The only thing they left us with is unfortunately the English language," he said.

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