BANJUL, The Gambia — The smallest nation on the African continent has a lot on its plate. Newly elected President of The Gambia Adama Barrow faces an insolvent economy, two decades of documented human rights abuses, reserves of only two months’ worth of imports, more than 40 percent youth unemployment, and a capital city that, according to environmental impact assessments, will slip into the Atlantic in less than 45 years.
Barrow’s inauguration tomorrow is billed as an end to 22 years of oppression and isolationism under the ousted Yahya Jammeh and a rebirth of “The New Gambia.”
As the world waits to discover how and when Barrow will carry out his promise to “completely reform” the fragile West African nation, aid donors are already crowding in, eager to get a read on Barrow’s agenda.