West African leaders have given
Yahya Jammeh a final opportunity to relinquish power after Senegalese
troops entered The Gambia.
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Mr Jammeh has been given until noon on Friday to leave office or be forced out by UN-backed regional forces.
Troops have been told to halt their advance until the deadline passes.
The
Economic Community of West African States (Ecowas) is acting in support
of Adama Barrow, who was sworn in as the new Gambian president on
Thursday.
His legitimacy as president, after winning last month's election, has been recognised internationally.
Last-ditch mediation talks, led by Guinea's President Alpha Conde, are due on Friday morning.
Chairman
of the Ecowas commission, Marcel Alain de Souza, said that if the
meeting with Mr Conde proved unsuccessful, militarily action would
follow.
"If by midday, he [Mr Jammeh] doesn't agree to leave The
Gambia under the banner of President Conde, we really will intervene
militarily," he said.
Troops from Senegal and other West African countries crossed into The
Gambia after an initial deadline for Mr Jammeh to stand down passed
with his resignation.
Mr Barrow, who remains in Senegal, has said
that he will not return to Gambia's capital, Banjul, until the military
operation had ended.
The threat by the West African regional bloc
Ecowas to remove Mr Jammeh by force is supported by the 15-member UN
Security Council, although the council has stressed that a political
solution should be the priority.
A Senegalese army spokesman, Col
Abdou Ndiaye, told the BBC that troops who were now in The Gambia were
prepared to fight if necessary.
"It is already war, if we find any
resistance, we will fight it," he said, adding: "If there are people
who are fighting for the former president, we will fight them."
But Col Ndiaye said the main goal of Ecowas was to restore democracy and to allow the newly-elected president to take power.
In his inaugural speech at the Gambian embassy in Senegal's capital,
Dakar, President Barrow ordered all members of The Gambia's armed forces
to remain in their barracks.
Any found illegally bearing arms would be considered "rebels", he said.
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After first accepting defeat he reversed his position and said he
would not step down. He declared a 90-day state of emergency, blaming
irregularities in the electoral process.
The electoral commission
accepted that some of its early results had contained errors but said
they would not have affected Mr Barrow's win.
Mr Jammeh has said he will stay in office until new elections are held.
Remaining in power would also give him protection against prosecution for alleged abuses committed during his rule.
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