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Photo: Micheal Sang Correa (Photo credit Facebook). |
By Samba Jawo reporting from the USA
In a pivotal legal showdown, a federal judge in the United States of America, USA, is scheduled to hear a high-profile case involving Michael Sang Correa, an alleged member of a former Gambia dictator, notorious dead squad today, potentially shaping the political landscape and legal precedents in the United States (USA).
This case, which has drawn international attention, could influence ongoing discussions about political asylum, corruption, and accountability on a global scale.
Correa, 41, an alleged 'Jungler' whose members have confessed to committing torture and other serious human rights abuses following a failed coup d’état in 2006, tortured suspected coup members and extracted forced confessions.
Survivors of this torture testified at Gambia’s Truth, Reconciliation, and Reparations Commission (TRRC) that Correa personally tortured them or was present while other 'Junglers' engaged in torture.
Justice Christine M. Arguello is a Federal Judge on the United States District Court for the District of Colorado.
Judge Arguello has decided that on Monday, 7 April 2025, she will conduct jury selection in the ceremonial courtroom (2d floor).
There will be space for the public inside the courtroom for those who want to attend.
Michael Correa, 41, is an alleged member of the notorious death squad whose members have confessed to committing torture and other serious human rights abuses. Following a failed coup d’état in 2006, the 'Junglers' tortured suspected coup members and extracted forced confessions. Survivors of this torture testified at Gambia’s Truth, Reconciliation, and Reparations Commission (TRRC) that Correa personally tortured them or was present while other 'Junglers' engaged in the torture.
The proceedings will be held in Judge Arguello's courtroom on the 6th floor, (Courtroom A602), and there will be opening statements. The first Gambian government witness is expected to give testimony.
In 2006, The Gambia’s National Intelligence Agency’s report on interrogations following the attempted coup also implicated Correa in torture. Former 'Junglers' told the Truth-Seeking Commission that Correa not only tortured individuals suspected of planning the coup but also participated in numerous other extrajudicial killings, including the killing of journalists Dayda Hydara and Chief Ebrima Manneh in 2012 and the murder of Gambian-Americans Alhagie Mamut Ceesay and Ebou Jobe in 2013.
On September 17, 2019, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security arrested Correa in Denver, Colorado, for overstaying his visa.
Following news of his detention, a coalition of human rights organizations and Correa’s victims, including CJA, the African Network Against Extrajudicial Killings and Enforced Disappearances, the Gambia Center for Victims of Human Rights Violations, the Guernica Centre for International Justice, Human Rights Watch, the Solo Sandeng Foundation, and TRIAL International called on the United States to investigate the credible allegations of grave international crimes committed by Correa in Gambia. On February 18, 2020, U.S. Senators Patrick Leahy and Richard Durbin also urged the government to investigate Correa and, if warranted, to prosecute him in the United States.
This story was reported by Samba Jawo from the USA and was edited by Ousman A. Marong.
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