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Justice without borders: Gambians fight dictator’s impunity from afar

It was easy to guess who ordered the 2004 drive-by murder of Deyda Hydara, a journalist and outspoken critic of Gambia’s dictator, Yahya Jammeh. But the president and his hit squad, the Junglers, seemed untouchable, even long after the dictator was ousted from power in 2017.

That is, until last November, when a German court sentenced Bai Lowe, the man driving the yellow taxi that night, to life in prison for crimes against humanity.

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For decades, Gambia’s dictator and his henchmen were untouchable. Now international courts are offering their victims a new path to justice.

The ruling was made possible by an increasingly popular legal principle called universal jurisdiction, which allows severe crimes to be tried regardless of where they were committed or the nationality of the perpetrator or victim. In recent years, universal jurisdiction has become an essential avenue to prosecute atrocities committed in countries like Syria, where prospects for accountability are otherwise limited. 

Now, Gambian activists hope the German ruling will create momentum to help them find justice for many more of Mr. Jammeh’s victims, whether within Gambia’s own legal system or far beyond the tiny west African nation’s borders.

Deyda Hydara had just turned his blue Mercedes onto a dark dirt road lined with factories when a beat-up yellow taxi with no license plates suddenly appeared behind him, flashing its lights.

It was 10 p.m. on Dec. 16, 2004, and the renowned journalist was driving home from a party at work in Banjul, Gambia’s capital city. He waved out his window for the taxi to pass. But as it pulled around Mr. Hydara’s car, the taxi suddenly slowed. A passenger leaned out the window and fired three shots directly into the Mercedes.

It was easy to guess who ordered the murder of Mr. Hydara, an outspoken critic of Gambia’s dictator, Yahya Jammeh. But the president and his hit squad, the Junglers, seemed all but untouchable, even long after the dictator was ousted from power in 2017.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

For decades, Gambia’s dictator and his henchmen were untouchable. Now international courts are offering their victims a new path to justice.

Until last November, when a German court sentenced Bai Lowe, the man driving the yellow taxi that night, to life in prison for crimes against humanity for his role in several political murders between 2003 and 2006.

The ruling marked the first time that any member of the Junglers had been convicted for their crimes, anywhere in the world. It was made possible by an increasingly popular legal principle called universal jurisdiction, which allows severe crimes to be tried regardless of where they were committed or the nationality of the perpetrator or victim. In recent years, universal jurisdiction has become an essential avenue to the prosecution of atrocities committed in countries like Syria, where prospects for accountability are otherwise limited. 

Now, Gambian activists hope the German ruling will create momentum to help them find justice for many more of Mr. Jammeh’s victims, whether within Gambia’s own legal system or far beyond the tiny west African nation’s borders.

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