Gambian
President Yahya Jammeh has hit out at regional mediators urging him to step
down, saying he will not be intimidated.
The West
African regional bloc Ecowas had called on him to honour his initial pledge to
accept electoral defeat.
Mr Jammeh,
who subsequently said the 1 December poll was flawed, added that he would
defend his country if need be.
Ecowas had
said military intervention might be a possibility if diplomatic efforts failed.
Mr Jammeh
has launched a court action to annul the vote after the electoral commission
changed some results.
The
commission insists the outcome was not affected by an initial error and property
developer Adama Barrow defeated Mr Jammeh.
Mr Jammeh
seized power in the tiny country in 1994 and has been accused of human rights
abuses, although he has held regular elections.
In a
45-minute speech at the African Bar Association on Tuesday night, Mr Jammeh
defended his position, saying West African leaders had violated the Ecowas
principle of non-interference.
"Who
are they to tell me to leave my country?" he said during his televised
speech.
"I
will not be intimidated by any power in this world. I want to make sure justice
is done.
"I'm a
man of peace, but I cannot also be a coward. I am a man of peace but that does
not also mean that I will not defend myself and defend my country and defend my
country courageously, patriotically and win."
The BBC's Umaru
Fofana in the capital, Banjul ,
says it was his first public reaction to last week's intervention by Ecowas
leaders, and he reiterated his call for fresh elections as the only way to
resolve the impasse.
According
to the electoral commission's final count:
Mr Barrow
won 222,708 votes (43.3%)
President
Jammeh took 208,487 (39.6%)
A
third-party candidate, Mama Kandeh, won 89,768 (17.1%)
Results
were revised by the electoral commission on 5 December, when it emerged that
the ballots for one area had been added incorrectly.
Meanwhile,
a spokesman for the opposition coalition that backed Mr Barrow has said Mr
Jammeh will not face prosecution after leaving office.
"President-elect
Barrow says he is going to treat outgoing President Yahya Jammeh like a former
head of state and would consult him for advice," Halifa Sallah told the
AFP news agency.
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