Gambia's land theft thrives on civic illiteracy

Performance keeps the Gambian land machine grinding, even when presidents rotate out, because ritual obedience feeds it without anyone needing to believe a word.

Architecture outlives leaders
  • The Gambia gets framed as a predatory setup.
  • Presidential power gets wrapped in Mansayaa mystique.
  • The State Lands Act 1991 masks land grabs.
  • Leadership swaps happen, yet the setup stays put.
How ritual compliance reproduces control
  • Fieldwork across Kombo shows ritual obedience keeps it humming.
  • Over forty percent cannot read English gazettes.
  • Officials lean on that literacy gap to push notices.
  • Elders press thumbprints, trusting explanations they cannot verify.
Ceremony over consent
  • Communities attend handovers without free prior informed consent.
  • Brufut residents assume the State House protects clan land.
  • Kartong elders sign payouts without grasping permanent loss.
  • Delegations to the State House get recast as loyalty visits.
Coastal Belt leases and legal gaps
  • The Coastal Belt leases of 1970 expose the trick.
  • District Authorities granted Lease P.18 1970 in Kombo North.
  • Authorities also issued Lease P.14 1970 in Kombo South.
  • The Provinces Lands Act, Cap 103, gave no power to alienate.
Tourism Development Area repackaging
  • Original leases labeled land only as the Coastal Belt.
  • Tourism Development Area appears without a documented legal instrument.
  • Officials run the TDA like a separate entity.
  • Opacity blocks citizens from tracing that bureaucratic flip.
Sacred aura and reflexive deference
  • Presidential authority carries a sacred glow.
  • In Niamina, Mansa Kunda triggers bowed heads.
  • Reverence blocks questions before they form.
  • Citizens slide from rights holders into subjects.
Hidden sphere and parallel grounds
  • Communities keep boundary knowledge outside official records.
  • Malagen report flagged illegal reservation of Karenti.
  • Brufut documented continuous occupation despite vacancy claims.
  • Participatory mapping preserves indigenous place names.
Demystification and policy tension
  • Demystification targets the sacred wrap around the secular office.
  • Proposal swaps Mansa titles for the Jamaa Kunda language.
  • National Land Policy 2026 2035 backs customary ownership.
  • The policy keeps amending the State Lands Act 1991.
 

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