BANJUL (Reuters) - Gambia’s President Adama Barrow vowed on Saturday to revive the country’s faltering economy with sweeping reforms as he sought to draw a line under the erratic 22-year rule of his predecessor.

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Barrow was sworn into office a month ago during a brief exile in Senegal as Yahya Jammeh refused to accept his defeat in a December election. Jammeh fled into exile days later as troops from West African countries prepared to enter the capital and force him to go.

Saturday’s inauguration event at the national stadium was ceremonial, timed to coincide with the date that Gambia won independence from colonial master Britain in 1965.

Tens of thousands of Gambians gathered at the stadium to watch military marches and brass bands performing before a giant banner reading #GambiaHasDecided, the slogan of a campaign to persuade Jammeh to accept defeat.

“Few people would have thought that I’d be standing here today,” Barrow said, wearing a traditional flowing white robe with gold trim.

“For 22 years, the Gambian people yearned to live in a country where our diverse tribes will be bridged by tolerance and our determination to work together for the common good,” he said. “One Gambia, one nation, one people.”

Barrow, 51, now faces the task of lifting the tiny nation -- which straddles the banks of a West African river -- out of grinding poverty, in part a consequence of Jammeh’s volatile rule during which thousands of dissenters were jailed and scores of businesses expropriated.

“We have inherited an economy in decline,” Barrow said.

He pledged to introduce free primary education, which is guaranteed by the constitution but was not implemented during Jammeh’s rule.

Gambia’s economy depends on exports of groundnuts from small-scale farming and on the hard currency brought in by thousands of tourists drawn to its sun, white sandy beaches and lively resorts.

Barrow said his government would start work immediately to encourage investment in other sectors such as technology.

He also pledged to re-build institutions that had been hollowed out under Jammeh. During his rule, Gambia’s supreme court judges fled the country and the press was muzzled.

Jammeh’s cruel and eccentric antics often made headlines, such as when he vowed to rule for “a billion years” and threatened to slit the throats of homosexuals.

Barrow, in contrast, is nicknamed “no drama Adama” because of his calm quietness.

A self-made real estate developer who once worked at an Argos department store in London, he is softly spoken and plans to reverse Jammeh’s more capricious acts, such as a letter withdrawing from the International Criminal Court.