Teneng Mba Jaiteh | |
Office: | Ambassador of the Gambia to the European Union |
Term Start: | January 2015 |
Office2: | Minister of Energy |
Term End2: | 17 February 2014 |
Office3: | Secretary General of the Civil Service |
Term Start3: | 2008 |
Term End3: | 2009 |
Predecessor3: | Ousman Jammeh |
Nationality: | Gambian |
Alma Mater: | University of Sierra Leone's Fourabay College, London School of Economics |
Teneng Mba Jaiteh is a Gambian politician who serves as Gambia's ambassador to the European Union as well as 7 of its member states.
Jaiteh was educated at the University of Sierra Leone's Fourabay College and the London School of Economics. She has a BA in History and an MSc in Development Studies.[1]
Jaiteh served as Deputy State Secretary in The Gambia's Department of Finance and Economic Affairs in 2003, and as Secretary General of the Civil Service from 2008 to 2009, replacing Ousman Jammeh in the post.[2]
On 29 May 2009, Jaiteh was appointed Deputy Minister of Petroleum and Mineral Resources by President Yahya Jammeh. She was later appointed Minister of Energy,[1] but was relieved of that appointment on 17 February 2014 when Jammeh said the portfolio would come under his office.[3] She became one of nearly 200 cabinet ministers and government officials to be hired and fired by Jammeh since he came to power in a 1994 coup.[4] She was reinstated three days later.[5]
In January 2015, Jaiteh was appointed as Gambia's ambassador to the European Union,[6] [7] also covering (Germany), Poland, Netherlands, Luxembourg, Slovakia and the Czech Republic as well as the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons,[8] African, Caribbean and Pacific Group of States, the International Criminal Court and the World Trade Organization. Her post is located in Brussels.[1]
After the December 2016 election, Jaiteh was one of a dozen Gambian diplomats who backed President-elect Adama Barrow as the legitimate president and called on Jammeh to step down,[9] [10] [11] sending a joint congratulatory letter to Barrow.[12] In response, Jammeh's new Information Minister, Seedy Njie said in January 2017 that the twelve ambassadors had been fired.[13]