From the BBC:
"UK regrets The Gambia's withdrawal from Commonwealth"
The Gambia's decision to withdraw
from the Commonwealth 48 years after joining is something to "very much regret",
the UK Foreign Office has said. The west African nation branded the 54-member grouping, which includes the UK
and most of its former colonies, a "neo-colonial institution". The withdrawal was announced on state TV but no other reasons were given.
Two years ago President Yahya Jammeh accused the UK of backing his political
opposition ahead of elections. Commonwealth officials said they only heard about the move through the media
and had not yet been contacted by The Gambia. A spokesman said Secretary-General Kamalesh Sharma had seen the reports with
"dismay and disappointment" and had asked for "clarification" from the country.
There is a history of tension between President Jammeh,
who came to power in a 1994 coup, and the UK. Earlier this year, a Foreign
Office report singled out The Gambia for its human rights record, citing
cases of unlawful detentions, illegal closures of newspapers and discrimination
against minority groups. On Thursday a Foreign Office spokesman said: "Decisions on Commonwealth
membership are a matter for each member government. We would very much regret
Gambia, or any other country, deciding to leave the Commonwealth." In August last year The Gambia was criticised by Amnesty International and
others for executing nine prisoners by firing squad. The Commonwealth was founded in 1931 but acquired its modern shape after 1949
as former British colonies and protectorates, including The Gambia, started to
achieve self-government and varying degrees of independence. According to the Commonwealth's charter, member states should communicate and
co-operate "in the common interests of our peoples and in the promotion of
international understanding and world peace". In its statement, The Gambian government said it had "withdrawn its
membership of the British Commonwealth". It said it had "decided that The Gambia will never be a member of any
neo-colonial institution and will never be a party to any institution that
represents an extension of colonialism". But Bakary Dabo, former vice president of The Gambia and chairman of the
country's campaign for democratic change, said people there are generally "very
happy" to be part of the Commonwealth. He said the government had recently begun "picking up war against poorly
specified enemies called 'western powers'". Speaking on BBC Radio 4's Today programme, Mr Dabo said this rhetoric had
"accelerated" in recent years and been used when President Jammeh gave a
"rambling" speech at the United Nations General Assembly last month
Aids claim
Also at the UN, President Jammeh said homosexuality was one of the three
"biggest threats to human existence". He has also drawn international criticism for claiming he can cure Aids with
a herbal body rub and bananas. BBC Africa analyst Farouk Chothia said despite its image as an idyllic
holiday destination, The Gambia, and its population of less than two million,
were kept under tight control by its eccentric leader. The latest decision was bound to come from him, our analyst added. The Royal Commonwealth Society, an education charity which works in
Commonwealth countries, said The Gambia's announcement was unexpected and
appeared to be undemocratic.
Society director Michael Lake said President Jammeh had made the decision
"without consulting The Gambia's people" and the country's withdrawal would be
"a loss felt by both its people and the wider Commonwealth network". He added: "Far from being a 'neo-colonial institution', the modern
Commonwealth operates on a consensus model and its voluntary membership is
predicated primarily on a country's commitment to upholding shared values and
principles." The last time a nation left the Commonwealth was in 2003, when Zimbabwe
withdrew. The Queen, who is 87, is the head of the Commonwealth, which holds its next
heads of government meeting in Colombo, Sri Lanka, next month. However, the gathering will be the first that the Queen has not attended
since 1971. She will send her son, the Prince of Wales instead. Buckingham
Palace said she would make fewer overseas trips because of her age. Three African countries have joined the Commonwealth in recent years. Rwanda was admitted
in 2009 after applying for membership the previous year, while Cameroon and
Mozambique became members in 1995.
^ Gambia leaving the Commonwealth will only hurt the Gambia. The Commonwealth is bigger and stronger than just a handful of small member countries (it is not tightly controlled like the EU.) If the UK, Australia or Canada decided to leave then I could see there being an issue. ^
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-24376127
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