The demise of the Senegambian Confederation
The end came suddenly for the Senegambian Confederation last
August. According to sources in Banjul, a Gambian suggestion that the presidency
of the Confederation should rotate between the Heads of State of Senegal and The
Gambia rather than held permanently by the President of Senegal, as it had been
since 1982, annoyed the Senegalese. Within 24 hours the Senegalese army and
police units in The Gambia-the most visible symbols of the union between the two
countries-had been withdrawn and President Dawda Jawara had accepted, not the
proposal for a freeze, but the complete pulling down of the
Confederation. He asked his foreign minister, Mr Omar Sey, to begin negotiations
immediately for the dismantling with his Senegalese counterpart. So came to an
end the latest (if not the final) chapter in the saga of voluntary union between
the two countries which goes as far back as the 19th century.
The Gambia is surrounded by Senegal on three sides, dividing the
latter almost into two. In terms of area, Senegal is 20 times the size of The
Gambia. Culturally, both countries share the same ethnic groups and languages
(Mandinka, Fula, Wolof, Jola and Serahuli). Islam and Christianity are the
dominant religions in both countries.
It has always been believed that it was a matter of time before
Senegal swallowed up The Gambia since both countries were carved up in the
Versailles Treaty of 1783. But for one reason or another, The Gambia has
remained separate. In the 1870s the French proposed to exchange The Gambia with
territories elsewhere. This proposal seemed at one time to be finding favour in
London, but it was successfully scuttled by lobbyists of Bathurst-based English
merchants. The British were again prepared, before independence, to see The
Gambia absorbed by Senegal, a position strengthened by a UN report which
favoured federation. This idea was vigorously opposed not only by the emerging
political party in the territory, the PPP (the Protectorate Peoples Party
which was to become the Peoples Progressive Party) but also by some
Senegalese politicians, particularly Doudou Thiam who, it is believed, had an
eye on the vice presidency of Senegal-a position which was being proposed for
The Gambia.
A physical inconvenience for Senegal, the independence of The
Gambia was received in Dakar not without a feeling of disappointment. But in the
Senghor years that followed, both countries learned to accommodate each other,
moving closer step by step after initial difficulties.
In 1964, the FAO proposed a customs union between the two
countries but nothing came of it. Three years later, however, they signed a
loose Treaty of Association and joined other West African countries in 1975 in
signing the ECOWAS (Economic Community of West African States) treaty-a treaty
which has among its medium-term objectives a customs union throughout the
region.
In 1978, both countries set up The Gambia River Development
Organisation which has among its development targets the building of a
bridge/barrage across the River Gambia. The bridge/barrage, it is hoped, will
provide energy and irrigation possibilities for The Gambia and the fastest and
easiest link between the northern and southern parts of Senegal, vital for
Senegal not only economically but also from the point of view of security. The
project has still not got off the ground for a variety of reasons, the most
important being the considerable reluctance on the part of The Gambia, which,
informed sources believe, is not really convinced that the economic benefits
that will flow from such a bridge will overshadow the implications as far as The
Gambias sovereignty is concerned.
The Gambia, however, contrary to most forecasts, has proved
economically viable despite its geography. Although The Gambia shares the common
principle of plural democracy with Senegal, this small country has an entirely
different economic system, which seems to work. Gambians continue to guard
jealously the independence and sovereignty of the country. They have never made
a secret of the fact that The Gambias sovereignty is non-negotiable in its
relationship with Senegal.
An abortive coup
The abortive coup detat in The Gambia in 1981, put down
with the help of Senegalese army, forced the authorities to reappraise The
Gambias relationship with Senegal. It strengthened the ties between the
two countries. This culminated in an Agreement which set up the Senegambia
Confederation-a union that came into force in February 1982. As well as
consolidating the cooperation already existing between the two countries, the
Agreement provided among other things, for joint independent institutions: a
parliament, an executive and an army with the President of Senegal as President
of the Confederation and the President of The Gambia as the Vice-President (Both
countries retained their full sovereignty and official languages); harmonisation
of foreign policy; strengthening of cultural and technical cooperation and
eventual economic integration.
The Confederations budget was being financed two-thirds by
Senegal and one-third by The Gambia. For the Senegalese, the Confederation
represented a step along the road to political union between the two countries.
For The Gambia it was a forum for cooperation and eventual economic union, no
more, no less. It was this difference in conception of what the Confederation
actually meant that was beneath the unspoken disagreement between the two
countries and the slow progress towards economic integration.
When the eighth anniversary of The Senegambian Confederation was
celebrated in Dakar in February 1989, it was all pomp (military march past) and
nothing to show for it. At least 80 % of the Confederations budget went on
defence and security.
In the eyes of The Gambians, however, progress was being made.
Trade between the two countries was on the increase and the re-export trade was
booming. Agreement had been reached on the Protocols to establish a Free Trade
Area and negotiations were continuing on monetary and customs union between the
two countries before the sudden collapse of the Confederation.
The Senegalese reaction, according to Gambian sources, was to
tighten border control on goods coming into, or in transit through, Senegal from
The Gambia as the text of a telex widely circulated in Banjul, from the
Senegalese authorities to all customs posts along the border with The Gambia,
made clear. The Gambians have, meanwhile, reacted calmly to the situation with
some feeling that, despite the collapse of the Confederation, Senegal would
respect other agreements on international trade to which both countries are
signatories like the UN Convention on transit and ECOWAS treaty. At the time of
writing there has been no major development in the relations between the two
countries. It is only left to be seen the extent to which The Gambias
re-export trade and economy as a whole will be affected.
A.O.
Basic facts about the Gambia
Area: 11 295 sq km along the River Gambia.
Brief history: The Gambias first contact with Europe goes
as far back as 1456 when Portuguese navigators, Luis de Cadamosto and Antoniotto
Usidimare sailed up The Gambia and landed at an island they named St Andrew,
after one of their sailors called Andrew, who died of fever and was buried
there. For 200 years the Portuguese enjoyed a quiet monopoly of trade with the
hinterland until the mid-17th century when they were challenged by other
European powers. First by the Baltic Germans of the Duke of Courland, who
occupied and built a fort on St Andrews Island in 1651. Ten years later,
the British captured it and named it James Island after the heir to their throne
who was to become King James II.
Then there ensued a long period of rivalry between the British
and French as the American and Caribbean colonies expanded, demanding more
slaves. The British held on to territories along the bank of the River Gambia
and up north to St Louis on the Bank of Senegal River. In 1766 they established
the Province of Senegambia with headquarters in St Louis which was placed under
the responsibility of the Royal Charter Companies. James Island on the other
hand, was placed under a Lieutenant Governor.
Taking advantage of British engagement in the American war of
independence, the French in 1779 attacked and captured James Island destroying
the fort. The island was, however, returned to the British a couple of years
later, under the Versailles Treaty in 1783, when the present-day boundary lines
of The Gambia were drawn.
The British acquired the capital, Banjul (formerly Bathurst) in
1816 and administered both The Gambia and Sierra Leone from there until 1888
when they were separated. Apart from trade, the British had little interest in
the tiny colony and were willing to part with it in exchange for French colonies
elsewhere. Despite French initiatives in this direction, this somehow never
happened. As mentioned in the Senegambia article, even at independence, the
British were in favour of The Gambia being absorbed by Senegal. a position
strengthened by a United Nations report which recommended union. The
Peoples Progressive Party (PPP) won the elections of 1962 which paved the
way to self-government with Dawda Jawara as prime minister. In February 1965,
The Gambia became independent and in April 1970 a Republic, with Al-Haji Sir
Dawda Jawara as its first president. The latter has held the post ever since
having successively been re-elected in a country which embraced plural democracy
from the moment of self-government.
Population: 695 886 (1983 official estimate) annual rate of
growth 3.4%; density 61.5 per sq km. Ethnic groups: Mandinka, Wolof, Fula, Jola
and Serahuli. Eighty percent are Moslem and the rest are mostly Christians.
Political parties: The PPP (Peoples Progressive Party in
power since 1962); NCP (the National Convention Party), and the United Party.
Capital: Banjul (pop. approx. 45000: 1985 estimate).
Curreney: Dalasi. D13 = £ I (Sept. 1989): D8.6 = ECU I
(Nov. 1989).
Gross Domestic Product ( 1988/89 estimate): D 513.4 million:
Agriculture 29.9%; Industry 8.9 %; Services 49.9 % .
GDP per capita: US$250.
International trade (1988/89): exports D 311.4 m; imports D 940
m, deficit D 628 m. Goods exported: groundnuts and derivatives, cotton, fish and
fish products, fruits and vegetables.
Principal imports: food, drink and tobacco, machinery and
equipment, manufactured goods, minerals and fuel. Goods re-exported; mostly
rice, flour, sugar, China green tea and textiles.
Principal trading partners: United Kingdom, France, U.S.A.,
Belgium and Luxembourg, Thailand, Ghana, Nigeria, Senegal and Switzerland.
Destination of re-exports: Mauritania, Senegal, Guinea Bissau,
Guinea. Mali and Burkina Faso.
Reserves (1988/89): D 184.9 m (SDR 20 m).
Foreign debt (1989):
US$355m.