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'Executed' Gambian coup plotters exhumed
by Staff Writers
Banjul, Gambia (AFP) April 1, 2017


AFP photographer detained in east Libya
Tripoli (AFP) April 1, 2017 - AFP's photographer in the eastern Libyan city of Benghazi, Abdullah Doma, was detained late Saturday for the second time in several days by security services there, his family said.

Doma had been released on Wednesday night after being held for 24 hours over his coverage of a public concert to mark Earth Hour.

Security services had raided Doma's home on Tuesday night and told the family he was to be questioned over his photographic coverage for AFP of the concert at Benghazi university on March 25.

The Awqaf religious authorities, linked to the authorities in the east, had condemned the Earth Hour event in Benghazi as "offensive" to Islam as it went against the segregation of the sexes.

Late Saturday, Benghazi's counterterrorism unit called the photographer, asking him to go to their headquarters "to answer a few questions", his family said.

Relatives who accompanied him there were told by "policemen" to go back home as he was "now in detention".

The family was not given any explanation, but one relative believed Doma had been detained once again for covering the concert.

AFP management expressed its concern after Doma was detained again.

It called on the Benghazi authorities to free the photographer as soon as possible and urged that no charges be pressed against him.

Benghazi is controlled by the military authorities of Khalifa Haftar, which contest the legitimacy of Libya's UN-backed Government of National Accord which is based in the capital Tripoli.

Millions of people from a record 187 countries and territories took part this year in the annual bid to highlight global warming, according to the conservation group WWF.

The bodies of three Gambian coup plotters, including a former US war veteran, have been found using intelligence from members of former leader Yahya Jammeh's death squad, police told AFP on Saturday.

Colonel Lamin Sanneh, who served in Jammeh's presidential guard, Alagie Nyass and Njaga Jagne, who served in Iraq for the United States' army, were among those who mounted an attempt to overthrow the former president in December 2014.

All three men were known to have been killed in the immediate aftermath of the coup attempt, but the full circumstances of their deaths were unclear until now.

Members of Jammeh's ultra-loyal death squad, known as the "Junglers", have long been accused of carrying out extrajudicial killings and torture by the UN and rights groups.

"The remains of late Colonel Lamin Sanneh, Njaga Jagne and Alagie Nyass were exhumed on Friday by Gambian investigators," the police source told AFP.

"They were buried in a military firing range in Tintinto around President Yahya Jammeh's home village of Kanilai," the source added.

The source added that the Junglers themselves were cooperating with the authorities and had led them to the site, as the interior ministry investigates a litany of unsolved disappearances.

Families say those disappearances are linked to arrests by The Gambia's notorious security services, which were at one time under Jammeh's personal control.

"The investigators were led to this site by members of President Yahya Jammeh's killing squad... The remains were exhumed in the presence of police, military and family members of the victims," the source said, adding forensic tests would be carried out in the coming weeks.

Jammeh defied international calls for investigation into the circumstances leading to the men's deaths following the coup attempt and the authorities declined requests to hand over their remains to their families for burial.

Six other men were convicted and sentenced by a military court in April 2015 in connection with the attempted power grab, with three given death sentences.

President Adama Barrow, who defeated Jammeh in the polls in December to oust him from power after 22 years, pardoned the convicted coup plotters last month and reintegrated them into the army.

Jammeh fended off several attempted coups after coming to power in 1994 via the same method, and is now living in exile in Equatorial Guinea.

AFRICA NEWS
Mali opposition close to joining key peace summit
Bamako (AFP) April 1, 2017
Mali's opposition on Saturday took tentative steps towards ending its boycott of a political summit enshrined in the country's 2015 peace deal after the government extended a deadline to facilitate extra talks. Opposition parties were the last holdout after former rebels who had led several uprisings against the state in Mali's north ended their own boycott on Tuesday to attend a conference ... read more

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