Gambia, Senegal hold border blockade talks

Truckers stop along the Senegalese-Gambia border town of Keur Ayip on May 9, 2016.   Senegal and the Gambia have agreed to hold talks on May 15 aimed at ending a three-month border blockade, but the truckers behind the closure are adamant the frontier will stay shut until their demands are met. Senegalese territory entirely surrounds the Gambia, leaving it dependent on cross-border deliveries of fuel and food, but the tiny state raised entry fees from 4,000 CFA ($7) to 400,000 CFA ($700) per truck without warning in early February, infuriating drivers.  / AFP PHOTO / SEYLLOU

 

Karang/ AFP

Senegal and The Gambia will hold talks on Sunday aimed at ending a three-month border blockade that has created shortages of essential daily items on both sides of the frontier.
Gambian authorities slapped a hundred-fold hike on fees for trucks entering its territory—which is completely surrounded by Senegal—without warning in February, infuriating Senegalese drivers who are now blockading the border.
Since then, Senegalese and Gambians alike have suffered shortages and the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) has waded in to mediate the dispute, so far without success. Exacerbating tensions, a long-promised bridge across the river that takes up most of The Gambia’s territory has been delayed for decades, though is now due to be completed in 2017. “This is the sixth blockade since 2000… we are demanding the border be opened at all hours, not closed every day between 7 pm and 7 am, and a bridge,” Pape Seydou Dianko, a well-known figure among Senegal’s militant transport unions, said last week in the sleepy Senegalese border town of Karang where a long line of trucks sat idle. Dianko and his allies pose a headache for the two countries’ foreign ministers whose meeting in Dakar will be the first official talks on the topic since the border was effectively sealed off to commercial traffic.
Although the Gambian authorities have since reverted to their original tariff, years of bad-tempered exchanges at the border have taken their toll, and Senegal’s deliverymen are still refusing to allow the free passage of goods. The result is a 500-kilometre (310-mile) detour around Gambian territory from Senegal’s northern cities in order to access the rural southern region of Casamance.
“The detour is tough but it’s the price to pay for the endless hassle from the Gambian police and customs officers,” said Senegalese transporter and trade unionist Baby Toure at the Keur Ayib border post. Senegalese media reported last month that power outages have become ever more frequent in the Gambian capital due to a lack of fuel.
“In The Gambia, people are tired of the blockade. We are short of many items, including salt. This situation has to be resolved,” said one resident of the Gambian border village Keur Ali, who asked not to be named.

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