News

To build a democratic future, Gambia teaches its autocratic past

A landmark report by Gambia’s Truth, Reconciliation, and Reparations Commission lays bare the murders and rights abuses carried out by Yahya Jammeh, who ruled from 1994 until 2016.

Activists see the 17-volume report as a springboard for teaching future generations.

Why We Wrote This

A “child-friendly” report in newly post-dictatorship Gambia gets to the heart of a universal truth: To avoid future atrocities, past ones must be remembered.

“Children cannot be sidelined – they have to know what is going on from the get-go,” says Mariama Jobarteh, whose civil society organization Fantanka co-authored a child-friendly version of the report. Fantanka’s ultimate goal is to integrate it into curriculums and libraries.

Being informed is more important now than ever, as Gambia’s transition toward democracy faces serious setbacks. A new constitution was scuttled in 2020, meaning current president Adama Barrow, who came to power promising change, is still ruling under the same constitution amended to account for a dictator’s whims.

But there’s cautious optimism. Compensation has been paid to some victims. A bill criminalizing torture is on the way. Officials have promised a special court to try those deemed fit for prosecution by the Commission – including Mr. Jammeh himself.

“It is not a substitute for justice,” says Sirra Ndow of the Gambia chapter at the African Network Against Extrajudicial Killings and Enforced Disappearances. But “it is the foundation for justice.”

At first, the students sat in shocked silence, struggling to process what they’d just heard. Then, one by one, they began to fire questions at their teacher.

Did the former president’s soldiers really kill people, even children? Why did some people support him? And how did this all happen for so long? 

“Is it true that this is what the security did to people? Is it true that they beat people? Is it true?” Sheriffo Ceesay, a teacher at Bakoteh Proper Lower Primary School, recalls his sixth graders asking him. “You [could] tell from the children’s faces that this is something that is unimaginable.”

Why We Wrote This

A “child-friendly” report in newly post-dictatorship Gambia gets to the heart of a universal truth: To avoid future atrocities, past ones must be remembered.

It’s been just over a year since Gambia’s Truth, Reconciliation, and Reparations Commission (TRRC) delivered its landmark final report, after two years of publicly broadcast hearings and testimony. The report laid bare the murders, tortures, and rights abuses that had been carried out under the regime of Yahya Jammeh, who seized power in a bloodless coup in 1994. 

The commission’s 17-volume report, which includes details of the murders of at least 240 people by state agents, is an invaluable collection of testimonies from victims and perpetrators alike. But it’s also full of complex legal terms and moments too explicit to teach to children. 

Previous ArticleNext Article