President Barack Obama's National Security Council (NSC) has voiced concern over Gambia's moves to block access to top United Nations human rights investigators and enact tough new legislation against homosexuality.
Gambia's foreign minister last week vowed to
sever dialogue with the European Union after the bloc, an important donor to the West African nation, raised similar criticisms.
"We remain concerned about ongoing reports of forced disappearances and arbitrary arrests, including of journalists, human rights advocates, and civil servants," NSC Spokesperson Bernadette Meehan said.
In the statement, released on Thursday and read on Gambian state-owned radio and television, the NSC said it was also disappointed in the Gambian government's failure to investigate the disappearance of two U.S. citizens missing since June 2013.
Though the statement did not name the missing Americans, it was apparently referring to Alhaji Ceesay and Ebrima Jobe, two Gambian-born U.S. citizens, who had traveled to the capital Banjul to look into opening a computer business.
During a visit to Gambia last month, the U.N.'s investigators for illegal killings and for torture heard allegations of extrajudicial executions of government opponents, journalists and activists and the widespread use of torture.
However, they said they were prevented from visiting parts of the main prison in Banjul despite earlier receiving approval.
President Yahya Jammeh - a former military officer who seized power in a 1994 coup - signed into law legislation in October that introduced the crime of 'aggravated homosexuality', making it punishable in some cases with life in prison.
The definition covers cases such as homosexual relations with someone under the age of 18, or a person with HIV having homosexual sex.
The U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights, has said Gambia's new law violates fundamental human rights and has called for its repeal. Rights watchdog Amnesty International says more than a dozen people have already been arrested under the legislation.
The NSC criticized the law and said it was concerned by calls by senior officials for the persecution of members of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender community.
"Protecting human rights and fundamental freedoms is a cornerstone of U.S. foreign policy, and we will be guided by these values as we respond to these negative developments in The Gambia," it said.
Gambia's government did not immediately respond to the NSC statement.
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