Media bias helped Gambia’s Jammeh win election – AU

“Although provision was made for equal access of all  political parties and candidates to the public media, the actual  coverage was strongly weighted in favour of the candidate of the  ruling party,” the AU observer mission concluded.

“The gross imbalance in the financial and material  capability of the candidates may have resulted in the lack of  adequate visibility of the United Democratic Party (UDP) and the  Independent candidates,” it said of his main challengers.

The bloc found that there were no acts of intimidation  during voting on Friday and concluded that despite the failings,  “the results are a true reflection of the will of the sovereign  people of The Gambia”.

Results showed Jammeh won 470,550 votes, while his closest  rival Ousainou Darboe got 114,177 votes, or 17 percent.  Independent candidate Amath Bah scored 11 percent. Many analysts  saw the incumbent’s victory as a foregone conclusion.

Addressing thousands of cheering supporters in the capital  Banjul, Jammeh said Gambia would one day have the best standard  of living not only in Africa but in the world too, and called on  rivals to work with him.
“Those who have lost should come together, so we can work as  one … I will turn this country into a superpower of peace and  economic better in four years time,” he said.

Gambians have an average income per head of around $1 a day.
Earlier, Darboe urged Gambians to reject the election as  rigged, while Bah complained of insufficient access to media and  funds to campaign properly.
One of Africa’s most controversial rulers, Jammeh announced  in 2007 that he had a herbal concoction that cured AIDS, but  only on Thursdays, a claim derided by health experts. He has  been criticised for reported threats to human rights groups and  a 2008 order for all homosexuals to leave Gambia.

Jammeh’s standing abroad has been further strained by spats  with Senegal and Guinea, while the West African body ECOWAS said  this week it would not send an observer mission to the polls  because it doubted they would be free and fair.
Gambia is one of only handful of African states not to have  diplomatic ties with China because of its recognition of Taiwan.