#Headlines

Barrow to receive final TRRC report in September

Jul 29, 2021, 1:53 PM | Article By: Momodou Jawo

President Adama Barrow will now receive the final report of the Truth Reconciliation and Reparations Commission (TRRC) on 30 July 2021, according to the TRRC.

 

The government has also extended the mandate of the Commission to another eight weeks.

Lamin J. Sise, chairman of the TRRC who was speaking at a press conference yesterday said: “Following the end of the Public Hearings of the TRRC on 28thMay 2021, the Commission embarked intensely on the preparation of its Final Report for submission to the President of the Republic of The Gambia pursuant to Section 29(1) of the TRRC Act, 2017.”

“The Commission, the Attorney General and Minister of Justice and the Office of the President, after consultations, agreed on 12 July 2021 as the date for the submission of the Final Report to the President.  However, The Office of the President informed that due to the previously arranged engagement, the President was not available to receive the Commission on the 12th of July and therefore proposed the new date of 30 July 2021.”

“Notwithstanding the heavy schedule of work devoted to completing the draft report, the Commission informed the Attorney General on 27 July that it needed more time (about eight weeks) to complete all 16 volumes of the report and other important documents.”

“Accordingly, and following a meeting between the Chairman of the Commission and the Attorney General and Minister of Justice, the Commission suggested a new date of Thursday, 30 September 2021 as the date of submission of the Final Report of the TRRC to the President.”

“The Attorney General, in his capacity as the line-Minister for the TRRC, confirmed the new date on behalf of the Office of the President. He assured the Chairman of the TRRC that Government will fully fund the extension requested to complete the report.”

“Considering that the commission received Two thousand six hundred statements and heard testimonies from 393 witnesses covering sixteen themes, the report writing process was a daunting task for the commission. The team involved in the process is working round the clock to make sure it is given the attention it deserved.”

The work to be continued during the eight week extension period, he said, involves the finalisation of the following:

  1. Sixteen volumes, each containing overview, findings, and recommendations on

          (a) Soldiers with a difference

          (b) November 11th 1994 - Extra Judicial Killings of Security officers

(C) Unlawful killing of Finance Minister Ousman Koro Ceesay

(D) The convoy of the President - Accidents and Deaths

(E) April 10th and 11th, 2000: Student Demonstrations

(F) Attacks on Freedom of Expression and the Media

(G) Attacks on Religious Freedoms

(H) The Junglars – Unlawful killings, Tortures and Human Rights Violations

(I) The Presidential Alternative Treatment (HIV/AIDS) Programme

(J) Sexual and Gender based Violence

(K) President Witch Hunt Exercise

(L) Enforced Disappearances

(M) Killing of West African Migrants

(N) Institutional hearings – National Intelligence Agency (NIA)

(O) Institutional Hearings – Prisons

(P) Institutional Hearings – Justice Sector Institutions

  1. Sixteen volumes of transcripts of the Commission’s Public Hearings.
  2. TRRC’s Outreach Engagements: Activity Report.
  3. Public Hearings: Witness Portrait Album.

The Commission, the TRRC chairman further added, is currently intensely working on final stages of these documents in an effort to present the report in full to the President on the new scheduled date. “The TRRC expects to complete the preparation of its Final Report and does not expect any further extension.”