Search This Blog

Friday 29 February 2008

Mr. President, Remember April 10&11 Victims

by PK Jarju

Mr. President, last night while surfing the internet, I came across proceedings of the inquest into the death of 12 persons during the April 10 and 11 student demonstration. And as a parent, I couldn't help but wept profusely while reading it.


It was just sad and while it may have happened eight years ago, I can still imagine the pain and sufferings the parents and relatives of these children must be going through in their everyday lives.


Mr. President, on December 31 2007, you showed the Gambian people how much it meant to father a son by organizing a grand naming ceremony in your village, Kanilai. You even went to the extend of declaring that day a public holiday in order to enable all civil servants to grace the occasion, while ignoring the huge financial and economic losses it would cause to the public and private sectors.


And now while playing with your son and daughter in your mighty place ready to defend them to your last breath against any danger, you should remember that there are over a dozen parents in the country, who have lost their children on April 10 and 11 2000.


Their children have been brutally butchered in broad day light by military and police officers acting on God knows whose orders.


Mr. President, these parents never had the opportunity to say goodbye to their kids. All parents were expecting to have lunch with their children after school. But instead, they found their lifeless bodies in a mortuary at the Royal Victoria Teaching Hospital with their little faces covered, their school socks and shoes on.


These parents are less privileged. They are ordinary Gambians who work hard to look after their families while expecting your government to guarantee their security. But instead, you and your government failed them.

While your loved ones were all safely at home, you and your men on the ground didn't care. They acted like the Apartheid South African police, spraying bullets at the very people they swore to protect.


As I type this letter, Mr. President, I could hear their endless cries for justice. I could hear their voices and could feel their pain and anger. This anger will continue to boil in their chests until the Day of Judgment when every soul shall assemble before Almighty Allah and be accounted for his deeds.


Mr. President, please don't misunderstood my intentions here. I know that you and your cronies will try to accuse me of digging old wounds by writing this piece. Sorry if that is what you are thinking but the April 10 and 11 incident is not forgotten and will never be forgotten. It is still fresh in the minds and souls of every sane Gambian who believes in justice, peace and prosperity.


Mr. President, the decision by your government to shelve the recommendations of the Commission of Inquiry that your humble self appointed to look into the disturbances of April 10 and 11, has made Gambians believed that you gave the shoot to kill order to the security officers on the ground. And this suspicion will continue to remain in our minds as long as you and your government continue to sit on the truth.


It is still not too late for for the culprits to be brought to book. The 2001 Indemnity Act passed by your APRC dominated National Assembly can still be repeal. If the National Media Commission Act and Decree 89 can be repealled, why can't the Indemnity Act.


You have to start acting and behaving as leader of a nation. National interest should override our political and personal interests.


Like Halifa Sallah stated in his letter in April 2001, a government which is fit to lead a sovereign people is one which is committed to principles, standards and values aimed at safeguarding and enlarging the dignity and worth of our people. A personality whose only vision is to acquire and retain power and whose only mission is how to acquire and retain power by any means can only sow the seed of political decadence in a nation. The ramification of this is the display of utter disregard for the dignity and worth of the sovereign Gambian people.


Mr. President, your statement during the country's 43rd independence anniversary at the Independence Stadium in Bakau that you are in the process of "creating a new Gambia; a country where each and everyone of us will be held accountable and responsible for our actions, and a country where services, justice and all the hallmarks and principles of justice, equality and honest governance will permeate every section of society" can only be taken seriously if you stand aside and let justice prevail. Not only for the families of April 10 and 11, but for all those who were brutalised by your security officers.


In so doing, our beloved country will no doubt move forward. That is what good leaders do. They put the interest of the citizenry first.


Remember what you said in your independence speech: "greatness cannot be borrowed or imported. People do great things that make them great, and nations do things that lead them to greatness. Greatness is, therefore, an offshoot of factors that devoted citizens influence, alter or transform. Hence, no nation can become great if its citizens are indolent, indifferent, divided and destructive."


Mr. President, as it is a month to the commemoration of the eight anniversary of the bloody student demonstration, I will be reproducing proceedings of the Coroner's Inquest beginning with the testimonies of the victim's parents and a Cuban pathologist in bid to draw your sympathy towards the victims and their families. You may have already read it in the Coroner's and Commission of Inquiry reports, which I believe are now covered in dust somewhere in you office, but I still hope that as Muslim, you will have the heart and courage to allow justice to prevail.


PROCEEDING OF 24 APRIL 2000
Courtesy of Foroyaa Newspaper

In his opening statement, the Coroner said that his role was to inquire into the causes of the deaths of the 12 victims. Eleven witnesses who identified the bodies of the victims at the mortuary testified on 24 April.

TESTIMONY OF KEBBA SANYANG
Kebba Sanyang, father of Abdoulie Sanyang, told the Coroner that he lives in Old Jeshwang; that Abdoulie Sanyang (deceased) was his son; that he was three years old and was living with him at his home; that Abdoulie met his death outside his compound at Old Jeshwang between 9 a.m. and 12 noon.

He said his compound has two gates; that he was standing at one of them with the late Abdoulie; that upon observation of the students/paramilitary movement he told him to get into the compound; that although he got in he got out through the other gate where other members of the compound, men, women and children were standing; that as the movement of the paramilitary and the students drew near, the crowd rushed and the deceased, Abdoulie, fell, got up and fell, got up and fell again.

He said he died instantly; that he was picked up and taken to the RVH by a neighbour, Abdoulie Kujabi; that he received the body on 12 April and buried him the same day.


TESTIMONY OF BABA NJIE
Baba Njie, uncle of Lamin Njie, lives in Brikama; that he is a farmer; that he was the uncle and the guardian of the late Lamin Njie; that Lamin was attending GTTI and residing at Ebo Town; that he died on 10 April during events of 10 April; that on Thursday, 13 April he identified the body at the mortuary at RVH; that the body was laid to rest at Bulock on Friday, 14 April 2000.


TESTIMONY OF SANG PIERRE MENDY
Sang Pierre Mendy, in his testimony, said that he is a security officer and lives at New Jeshwang; that he knew Calisco Priera; that they are not related but that the mother lives in his compound; that he together with the sister of Calisco's mother identified Calisco's body at the mortuary at RVH; that he does not know the age and nationality of the deceased; that Calisco's mother is called Marie Therese Sonko.


TESTIMONY OF MARIE THERESE SONKO
Marie Therese Sonko, Calisco's mother, later confirmed that the deceased was her son who was born in 1982; that because he suffered from polio for the first three years he started school late; that he was a student at St. Charles Luwanga but could not go to school this year because he had not paid his fees. She said that the body had been laid to rest.


TESTIMONY OF MAFUGY BADJIE
Mafugy Badjie, uncle of Burama Badgie, told the Coroner that he was the uncle of the deceased; that the father, Bubacarr Badjie was very sick; that Burama was 10 years and was attending Tallinding Primary School; that he died on Monday, 10 April; that they learnt of the death on Wednesday, 12 April; that he identified the body in Banjul and when they got the body they buried him on the same day.


TESTIMONY OF MUSA COKER, VICE PRESIDENT OF THE GAMBIA RED CROSS SOCIETY ON OMAR BARROW


Mr. Coker said that he lives at Kanifing Housing Estate and was a nurse by profession. He said further that he knew the late Omar Barrow as a volunteer of the Red Cross Movement; that he does not know his age but he knew that he was married with a family.


He told the Coroner that he saw Omar at the Red Cross helping the wounded and that while in his office he heard gun shots in the street and people running from the Mobile Police Station end to the Red Cross; that he suddenly heard a loud cry in Wollof "they have shot Omar"; that on coming out he found Omar lying on his back outside the office block surrounded by volunteers inside the camp; that he was later moved to the corridor of the office then to the RVH in Banjul. He said he had identified the body on 12 April and was buried on the sameday.


TESTIMONY OF BASSIROU BARROW
Bassirou Barrow, father of Karamo Barrow, said he is a fitter and lives in Ebo Town; that the late Karamo was going to ICE High School and was born in 1976. He said Karamo was his first son; that he last saw Karamo in the morning of 10 April 2000; that he learnt of the death later in the day; that at about 2 p.m on 11 April they identified the body; that on 12 April, the body was handed over to them and was buried on the same day.


TESTIMONY OF JOSEPH B. CARROL
Mr. Joseph B. Carrol, father of Reginald Carrol, told the Coroner that he was living at Latrikunda Yiriyanga; that Reginald was doing computer studies at FBI at Old Jeshwang; that he was his son; that he left for Banjul on 10 April in the morning to cash a cheque; that he was later called by his wife who told him that Reginald had not returned home and his whereabouts was not known; that he said he had asked her to come and meet him in Banjul so that they can check at the RVH, where they later got the information of his death; that they were informed that he died during the students riot; that on Tuesday he was informed by the surgeon that his child died of gunshot wounds; that after receiving the body he discovered wounds and that he was finally buried on 17 April 2000.


TESTIMONY OF SAINEY GINGALLY
The seventh person to give evidence was the grandfather of Wuyeh Mansally, Sainey Gingally, who claimed that he received the body on Wednesday, 12 April 2000 and took to Casamance where he was buried.Sainey Gingally claimed that Wuyeh was born in Senegal and had only come here to study Arabic at the Tallinding Islamic Institute; that Wuyeh was born in 1980.



TESTIMONY OF MBYE CHUNE
The eight witness was one Mbye Chune, the father of the late Momodou Lamin Chune; he said that M.L. Chune was his first born and was 15 years old; that he was attending Latrikunda Junior Secondary School; that he got information of the death of his son from his fellow students that he had been shot at their school gate; that after two days search for the body they discovered him at the mortuary of the RVH and received the body on 12 April 2000 and buried the same day at 5 p.m.


TESTIMONY OF ABDOULIE BOJANG
Mr. Abdoulie Bojang of Tallinding gave testimony that he is the father of Lamin Abdoulie Bojang of Nusrat Senior Secondary School who is now deceased; that he is his first son and child; that he was found to be killed on Monday 10 April, 2000.

He said that he went on a trek to Basse on the preceding Saturday; that he learnt about the students incident and returned on that Monday; that he arrived in the evening and having learnt about his son not being seen home since after he went to school in the morning, he rushed to one Lamin Jarjue, his son's classmate to enquire; that he was told that they were together in school for their exams but were later dispersed when some other students stormed their school and they then headed towards Serrekunda through the Brikama Highway and during which commotion they lost each other in the crowd.

Mr. Bojang continued that upon hearing this he decided to proceed with his wife to the RVH in Banjul but first passed through the police station to check whether he was detained, but he was not there; that at the RVH he was shown a list of patients but the name of his son was not there; that it was there that he was informed about the death of his son; that he requested to see the body but was denied access; that he managed to see the body of his son who was shot at the back of his head on 11 April 2000; that there were also bruises on the face which might have been sustained when he fell down; that they were there up to 4.30 p.m. but were not allowed to collect the body; that it was on Wednesday, 12 April at around 12.30 p.m; that they were given the body which was later taken and buried in Jamburr the same day. He indicated that he saw the body after an autopsy was already performed on it.

PROCEEDING OF 25 APRIL 2000

TESTIMONY OF MR ALPHA BAH
The next witness to testify on Tuesday, 25 April 2000 was Mr. Alpha Bah, guardian of the late Ousman Sabally of Kerewan Samba Sireh in the CRD.
Mr. Bah stated that Ousman Sabally was his ward and nephew; that he died at Bansang Hospital as a result of the students incident in Brikamaba where he was attending school; that he was shot and rushed to Bansang Hospital by him and other relatives; that this incident occurred on Tuesday, 11 April 2000; that he was 15 years old; that they received the body on the following day Wednesday for burial; that he was since buried; that he was in grade 8; that he saw the body as he was bleeding profusely on both the chest and the back; that he was in school uniform.



TESTIMONY OF MUSTAPHA KUJABIE
He told the Coroner that he lives in Old Jeshwang and his occupation is masonry; that Kebba Sanyang is his neighbour and that Abdoulie Sanyang is Kebba Sanyang's son; that he is an infant; that on 10 April 2000, he heard some gun shots and came out of his compound and saw people running; that he saw the police dispersing the students and went back into his compound; that forty five minutes later, a woman came to him to seek assistance; that when he went he saw the deceased; that he took him to the Royal Victoria Hospital; that the hospital staff confirmed that the child was dead.



TESTIMONY OF INSPECTOR JOBE
Inspector Biran Jobe told the Coroner that he is part of the Serious Crime Squad; that on 10 April 2000 he was at GTTI where there was a students' demonstration; that he returned to the police headquarters at about 11.00 and was assigned to the RVH to look after victims involved in the students' demonstration; that on the morning of 11 April, 2000, he went to the mortuary where he found some corpses and he had cause to prepare some forms to enable autopsy to be done on the bodies before burial; that at that time not all bodies had been identified; that after the authorisation the said forms were handed over to the pathologist; that they had 11 bodies that day; that all the bodies were later identified except one which is yet to be identified; that the number given to that deceased was PM 44/2000; that he is a male; that it was difficult to identify where he was found; that no information is available as to who escorted him to the hospital; that the Criminal Records Office of the Police Headquarters took photographs of all the bodies in the mortuary.At this point, he applied to tender six photographs together with their negatives of the unidentified body.

They were admitted and marked A,B,C,D,E,F, He went on to say that they issued notices at the public notices at police stations but up to now no one has come forward; that he had to go back to the Coroner to obtain authority to dispose of the unidentified body; that it has now been laid to rest at the Old Jeshwang cemetery.

At this stage, at the request of the Coroner, he tendered the photographs of the other eleven bodies. He said that apart the autopsies were carried out by Dr Omar Sam and Dr Sorhegui Rafael.

CROSS EXAMINATION

After examination by counsel, Abdoulie Bojang, father of Lamin Bojang, cross examined Inspector Jobe. He asked Inspector Jobe why he failed to ask him to witness the autopsy of his son.
In response, Mr. Jobe said that this was the first time he was assigned such a task; that it was the relatives who requested to witness the autopsy.


TESTIMONY OF DR SORHEGUI RAFAEL
He told the Coroner that he is from Cuba; that he is a pathologist at the RVH and has been there for 10 months; that he has been a pathologist since 1976; that he received a request from the police for an autopsy on 11 April 2000; that the request forms bore the names of the deceased persons.

He was asked to read out the names and he read out the following names: Abdoulie Sanyang; Burama Badgie and Wuyeh Mansally. Upon request he tendered the forms in evidence.He said further that he performed autopsies on the bodies of these deceased persons on 11 April 2000 and that he was assisted by Dr Sam, the pathologist in charge.
He then proceeded to inform the Coroner about his findings:1.


ABDOULIE SANYANG: In the external examination there was no damage or wound and no evidence of chronic disease.
Internal examination: He indicated injuries and swellings in the left lungs. As to the cause of death, Dr Rafael indicated that the left pulmonary vein crushed; that it could have been pressed physically.

2. BURAMA BADJIE:

Examination revealed that the deceased sustained gun shot wounds from the back causing loss of blood and damage to the lungs.
The doctor proceeded to say that the cause of death was massive haemorrhage;that two wounds were visible: entry point at the right upper chest and at the back.The counsel asked the doctor to tell the court whether the entry point of 20mm and exit of 30mm is due to a live bullet or a blank bullet. In response, he said it was due to a live bullet; that it cannot be sutured; that in the cause of examination he did not come across any bullet in the body because of the speed. Asked whether he had any experience to have an idea as to the type of bullet used, he answered in the negative.


3. WUYEH MANSALLY:
Dr Rafael told the inquest that Wuyeh Mansally was aged 19 years; that he had sustained a wound on the right side of his neck of length 25mm; that the wound penetrated the left jaw causing the jaw to fracture around the exit; that as a result of the force of the bullet moving at high speed the tongue was cut at the main joint around the gullet.

Dr Rafael went on to indicate that as a result of this there was serious bleeding which led to Mansally's immediate death. When asked if the wound was caused by a live bullet, he answered in the positive. Asked further whether the bullet was fired at close range, he said that it can be estimated to have been fired from a range of about 13 metres. He was also asked why the exit of the wound was larger than the penetration, he said that it was due to the high velocity at which the bullet was travelling; that this forced small particles of bones around the fractured area of the jaw to go out with the bullet.
He was also asked if the other parts of the body were affected and he answered in the negative. He was asked if a rubber bullet can cause a penetrating wound, he answered in the positive but noted that it cannot have the same impact as a live bullet.

Read my column next week for another Pathologist, Dr Sam's report on Momodou Lamin Njie; Calisco Priera; Karamo Barrow; Reginald Carrol; Omar Barrow; Momodou Lamin Chune; Lamin A. Bojang and Ousman Sabally.Until then, Assalamalaikum For comments write to Papak196@yahoo.co.uk.

Tuesday 26 February 2008

Yet another gimmick

by PK Jarju

Last Tuesday, after taking my ten month-old son to bed, I tiptoed quietly downstairs to read the speech delivered by President Jammeh at our great nation's 43rd Independence Anniversary. But by the time I got to the tenth or eleventh paragraph, I started to yawn. Not that I was tired. I was not hungry either as I had eaten a full four inches pizza and drank two glasses of cranberry juice. I was bored.


While President Jammeh may have succeeded in impressing the large crowd at the Independence Stadium in Bakau with his speech, I found nothing new or exciting to warrant those people standing or sitting in that scorching hot sun to nearly dislocate their hands clapping for him. The speech was just mere rhetoric and political gimmick.


Years after years, we have seen him deliver similar ear-pleasing speeches only to see him act differently. President Jammeh seems to have forgotten that the deepening political differences among Gambians are of his own making. He has divided and continued to rule Gambians base on their political affiliations. And in order for Gambians to put aside their political differences and work together for the betterment of our country, Jammeh himself has to take the lead.


He has to take the lead by being sincere to his words and by governing The Gambia as a country and not his kingdom. Jammeh has to convince the Gambian people that he is a man they can trust. He has to stop being a chameleon that keeps changing its colours every now and then. There should be no room for hypocrisy. We have seen enough of that. All we want is action.


Since 1996, President Jammeh and his APRC militants have put politics before national interest. And while Jammeh can stand in front of those school children- the cream of our society and try to portray himself and his government as having the interest of the country at heart, many brilliant and hard working Gambians are being fired from their posts.


They are fired not because of corruption practices or wrong doing, but simply because someone elsewhere reported them for being opposition sympathisers. Many of those kids he was addressing will in a few months or years be denied jobs, government scholarships, arrested and tortured because their parents are opposition sympathisers or because they choose to be critics of his regime.


We have seen many Gambians killed, arrested and tortured by State Guard soldiers, the Gestapo (NIA) and other state security officers not because they are a threat to national security but because of their political affiliations or beliefs. And as i write this article, such crimes are continuing to be committed against innocent Gambians by men in uniform with the blessings of Jammeh.


Today in The Gambia, we use politics in everything. People suspected of having links with the opposition parties finds it very difficult - if not impossible to even register their businesses with the relevant government departments.


To suite the interest of President and his corrupt APRC government, Gambians are being restricted from setting up prosperous business entities like newspapers and other media outlets. Other media houses that have provided jobs for hundreds of Gambians like The Independent, Sud FM Banjul and Citizen FM are shut down for non other than political reasons. Communities that support the opposition are still being neglected by the government. Interestingly even though they pay their taxes to the government, yet they are being punished for voting for the opposition. These and many other things are happening in the country day in day out and they cannot just be ignored.


People cannot put their political differences aside while they are being bullied. Jammeh does not have any respect for his political opponents and critics. He have repeatedly called them and their sympathisers derogatory names on national television and even swears in the name of Almighty Allah to bury them six-feet deep just because they disagree with his policies and programmes.


And judging by the eyes which Jammeh looks at his opponents and critics, it would be very impossible for him to work with them. Jammeh has a lot of pride and does not listen to anyone. He is paranoid and reacts brutishly like a cobra to any advice he deems wrong. There is no job security when working with Jammeh and you can be lock up in Mile Two Prisons as long as he wants without even being charged for a crime. Working with Jammeh is like putting your hand in fire.


If there is to be real progress in our country's democratisation, the APRC regime has to try and win the confidence of Gambians. It cannot do so by continuing to manipulate the constitution left, right and centre to suite its interest. People cannot trust a regime that disregards all the democratic principles of the country. And unless Jammeh buries his pride and govern the country according to the dictates of the 1997 constitution, the political situation in the country will continue to get worst and worst.


With regard to women and youths, it is true that they have contributed so much to the development of the country, but they are still being failed by the APRC regime. The Gambian women continues to suffer from early marriage, female genital mutilation, poverty, you name it. Having a few women in cabinet, parliament and judiciary does not mean the government has the interest of women at heart.


Home is still the place of the Gambian women where she continues to suffer in silence. She wakes up at the first cock crow and goes to bed at midnight. She continues to be born in the cycle of poverty, grow up in poverty, live in poverty, and die in abject poverty.


The importance of the Gambian woman is only realised during elections and political rallies. She is transported around the country in trucks to campaign for politicians who are even too civilised to be covered in dust. Women are being transformed to political slaves. Take for instance, instead of looking after the kids, they are taken to Kanilai to work in Jammeh's farms and entertain his guests. They dance all days and night while Jammeh sits and giggle on his soffa and if he is too excited, he pumps money on them.


President Jammeh should stop playing political football with our women. His government should rather devise modalities of how to remove them from the firm clutches of poverty, abuse and sufferings.


The youth sector is another area which the government has neglected. The Jammeh regime has totally failed Gambian youths. It has failed woefully to provide a fruitful environment where the cream of our society will explore their talents to the fullest.


Over six thousand school children graduate annually from our schools while the public sector employs less than a thousand of then. In fact, I would be fair to say that more retrenchment than recruitment is taking place in the public sector. Giving out scholarships to members of the National Patriotic Student Association (Napsa) or children of Yai compins and senior APRC figures does mean that the government is helping to advance the cause of youth empowerment.


Our youths are being disempowered. They are not allowed to protest or criticise any government policy which is not in their interest. After 12 years of education, a large majority of youths ends up in the ghettos, or in the tourism industry as bumsters.


The government has created a ghetto culture in our youths and it is very unfair to see Jammeh accusing them of laziness. Gambian youths are not lazy. Provide them jobs and other opportunities and you will be surprise to see how hard working they are.


The National Youth Service Scheme (NYSS) only recieves an annual subvention of D4.1 million. Only D800, 000 serve as a Youth Enterprise Revolving Fund. The rest is meant for salaries, allowances, utilities and other costs of sustaining the programme. The National Youth Council receives a subvention of D738, 000.


Only D50,000 is designated for Youth Assistance Training. All these subventions are part of the budget of the Department of Youth, Sports and Culture, which stands at D14.5 million. D2 million of this is supposed to be a contribution to finance a National Enterprise Development Initiative.


If government really had the interest of youths at heart, it would have surely invested more money in to the productive base of the economy. More jobs would have been created for the youths. If over 10 million Dalasis could be spent in glorifying the tenth anniversary of the July 22 military coup, why can't such a huge amount be spent in creating jobs for the youths? The answer is simple. The men in power don't care about them.


The new Gambia President Jammeh is envisaging cannot be developed without the regime respecting the political freedoms and rights of the citizenry. The current policies of President Jammeh and his regime are killing our country. There are many intelligent Gambians in Europe, US and other parts of the globe, who wants to contribute to the development of the country. But they can only do if the right environment is created by the regime.


The Gambia can only move forward if Jammeh starts looking at what Gambians can do for The Gambia and not what they can do for him and his APRC party. We can also move forward if most of the unresolved murder issues and other crimes committed against innocent Gambians are address. No justice, no progress.

Friday 15 February 2008

The naked truth

by PK Jarju

How do you feel when you lie?
Straight faced while people cry
How do you feel when you promise something
That you know you'll never do
Giving false hope to the people
Giving false hope to the underpriviledged
Do you really sleep at night?
When you know you're living a lie
To you it is just a job
To the people it hurts to the bone ----Lucky Dube
Here we go again, the fact that an institution owned by President Yahya Jammeh is calling Gambian journalists and online newspapers abroad liars, idiots, trouble makers, cyber terrorists, enemies of The Gambia and other names is not surprising to any Gambian.
This reminds me of one of the seven commandments in George Orwell's book, Animal Farm, which reads: whatever goes upon two legs is an enemy.
In other words, the Daily Observer is implying that people who bow down and sing praises of Yayha Jammeh even when he declares a public holiday in honour of his son are the friends who have the interest of the country at heart. And those who criticise the Jammeh regime for its lack of respect to our rights are the enemies of The Gambia, the very country of their birth. How interesting is that?
The Daily Observer like its owner, hates to see any one who is demanding for the full restoration of democracy and the respect of the rule of law in The Gambia. As the only daily paper in the country, the Observer is doing a great disservice to The Gambia and Gambians by trying to build a false image of the country and its leadership.
How sad it is to see a newspaper with the motto, Forward with The Gambia, glorifying a man who for the past 12 years has transformed our great country into his kingdom, which he rules any how he wants with no regards to the laws of the land.
The management of the Observer wants Gambians to treat Jammeh as God and believe in whatever he says. They are taking advantage on the fact Gambians are believing and trusting lot and they want us to believe in Jammeh when he tells us bed time stories of pigs flying, curing Aids, curing barrenness or having the ability to know things that are about to happen in 40 years time. How wonderful is that?
The leadership's gross disregard to the constitution and other laws of the country has indeed turned our blessed country into kingdom of the fittest. Criticisms are not tolerated and the men in power comes down heavily on anyone who try to speak out against them.
The Daily Observer has to differentiate between Jammeh and The Gambia. Yahya Jammeh is an individual and The Gambia is a country. While Jammeh will be history, whether today, tomorrow or day after, The Gambia which is home to 1.5 million people will remain forever until the end of time.
The Daily Observer got to understand that no matter what mechanism it employs, it cannot change the truth, the reality on the country. The more it tries, the more laughable its efforts will be to the Gambian public. Its effort to suppress the truth, can be compared to that of a person trying to hide from the sun with his hands.
While we maybe far away from home physically, the Daily Observer, got to know that our minds and spirit are still in The Gambia. We are proud to be Gambians and as a concern people, we follow the events back home minute by minute. The Observer has to remember that the world is now a global village. With the help of technology, we are aware of any development in Banjul within minutes. In most occasions, we are privy of events in Banjul even before the news reaches Serekunda.
While we may be hated by President Jammeh and his regime, which has since 1994 employed all sorts of brutality ranging from intimidation, arrest and detention without trial, torture and murder, we are loved and respected by the Gambian people.
Our newspapers have a much wider Gambian readership, which shows solidarity and support in our service of writing nothing but the truth without fear or favour. Day after day, we receive letters of solidarity from people around the globe thanking us for being sane Gambians, who are not seeking for any political office but trying to keep a tyrant accountable.
The Daily Observer got to realise that the Gambian people are fed up with Jammeh. They are tired of waking up everyday and seeing their president getting more and more obessed at their expense while they suffer with starvation. They are sick of being unable to meet the rising costs of living while the president and his associates diverts their taxes to fund their flamboyant life styles. They are tired of being held to ransome by a president who is being paid from their taxes. They are sick of seeing a President who does not have their interest at heart. They hate a president who waste millions of dalasis to feed exotic animals in his Kanilai zoo while the population cannot afford to a decent three square meal. They hate to see a president who treats them like kids and swears Billahi Wallahi Tallahi at them.
Gambians are not fools. And thanks to the gallantry of the independent media, they have now fully understood that President Jammeh is not representing their interest at State House. He is there for his own selfish interest.
What the Gambian people need at the moment is a stronger opposition leadership. When that is fixed, hopefullly soon, then President Jammeh and his cronies will realise how frustrated Gambians are to his rule.
I and a thousands of other Gambians wants a leadership that will rule the people according to dictates of the 1997 constitution. We want a government that will not enslave Gambians. We want a government that will not seize the rights of the citizenry. We want a governemnt that will respects the opinions of the electorate. Jammeh and his cronies may not be hearing from these people, certainly not in the Daily Observer, but they are out there in our streets, work places, ghettos, everywhere- and their anger is brewing just beneath the surface.
As a democratic minded journalists, all I will keep doing is to continue telling the Gambian people what they need to hear as well as provide them with the space- the space they are shamelessly denied by the Daily Observer to freely express themselves. This will no doubt enable them to exercise their democractic rights by voting Jammeh out of power.
President Jammeh and his cronies and indeed the Daily Observer, got to realise that the so-called return of the country to civilian rule in 1996 does not in anyway make us a democratic country. The mere periodic voting in general elections does not make us a democratic country. The mere existence of the three arms of government does not make us a democratic country. What we have is The Gambia is Jammehcracy, a system of government that can best be define as government of Yahya Jammeh, by Yahya Jammeh and for Yahya Jammeh.
In Jammehcracy, while there exist the three arms of government, yet the president gets total control of their activities. He hires and fires ministers, legislators and judges. A minister who disagrees with him during cabinet meetings gets a good kicking on the backside. A member of parliament who fails to vote for any bill drafted by the executive is whack from the National Assembly and a judge who delivers a verdict against the state gets his contract terminated or remains at the bottom of the judiciary ladder with no prospects of promotion.
In Jammehcracy, the president becomes so intoxicated with power and will do everything in his powers to remain president for life. Like all dictators and tyrants, he becomes so paranoid thus trusts no one. He surrounds himself with his tribal men from the same village or division, who are pampered with goody goodies as long as they remain loyal to him. These tribal men in uniform spend sleepless nights arresting, torturing and in most occassions killing anyone who refuses to bend his knees for the president.
This of course reminded me of an article, The Portrait of a Tyrant authored by one of my mentors, Baba Galleh Jallow. In the article, Mr Jallow said: "Democracy, it is often said, is the tyranny of the majority. It is a political arrangement in which the majority elect representatives who then make and impose laws on the minority, whether the minority likes such laws or not. But it is universally acknowledged that a well-ordered democracy with the necessary checks and balances to prevent abuse of power is the best-known form of government. The situation becomes tricky when there is but a semblance of democracy, when there are no checks and balances, and where the elected representatives lack the personal wisdom and integrity to do the right thing and abstain from abusing their powers.
"The elected minority, knowing that those who elected them are really not in any position to control or punish them, begin abusing their power. Under the leadership of the would-be tyrant, they throw all care to the winds and employ every sort of conceivable device to deceive the people. They steal and get rich, lie and lavish goodies to blind the minds of the people, and become veritable sycophants to their leader, the would-be tyrant. When they are adequately corrupted and stripped of all honor and integrity, the would-be tyrant would start eliminating them one by one. So that in a short while, he would be the only surviving member of his former companions, thus beginning the rapid transition into a fully fledged tyrant. He would have been transformed, by his greed and insatiable lust for power, into a monster in human skin. For he would have lost all sense of proportion and would see himself as the very paragon of virtue and righteousness, thanks to the creeping and cringing sycophants groveling at his feet at every moment of his waking life."
The Daily Observer needs to know that while it is willing to blindly glorify President Jammeh and his bandwagon, sane Gambians will not. Gambians know that the APRC leadership is a complete sham. It is a bunch of currupt and selfish individuals who are using their positions to enrich themselves.
Take for example, we all know how much the president and his ministers are earning. Their earnings are not even upto £12,000 a year, yet they boast of fleet of cars, uncountable houses, zoo, foreign accounts and other properties far beyond their wages. How can they acquire all these riches if is not true bribery and corruption? Well you tell me that?
To conclude, let me make this clear once and for all. The Gambian media is here to stay. While the management of the Daily Observer is willing to bend its knees and bow its head to President Jammeh and his band wagon as they embark on their quest to milk the country to dry, we will not. We will always remain steadfast and committed to our principles. We will never abdicate our responsibilities no matter what bullying tactics you use. We can never be silent. NEVER.
Peace

Saturday 9 February 2008

Self defense

by PK Jarju
So far so good we still living today
But we don't know what tomorrow brings
In this crazy world
People dying like flies every day
You read about it in the news
But you don't believe it
You'll only know about it
When the man in the long black coat
Knocks on your door'
Cause you're his next victim
As you are living in this crazy world
.. Lucky Dube

This Tuesday, while reading the online papers, I came across an article on the February 5th edition of President Yahya Jammeh's newspaper, the Daily Observer, captioned Flagrant Injustice. While lashing out at the British High Commission for denying an entry visa to ill Gambian, Momodou, the paper stated: "Imagine how much money the British embassy in Banjul makes out of the pockets of the many poor Gambian students genuinely seeking scholarship in UK universities. This again contrasts sharply with the readily available visas for so-called dissident asylum-seeking journalists who end up becoming liabilities to the British citizens, as much as they remain forces of evil for their own countries. Is this how Britain intends to help The Gambia develop?....Also people that turn their backs to their countries, suddenly making themselves enemies of their home, are not only given asylum in the UK, but the country serves as sanctuary for them in their anti - development propaganda works."

I had to laugh aloud when I read this vile statement because Dida Halake, the paper's managing editor is doing the dirty work he is hired for by President Jammeh from his council flat in Leeds. It is very idiotic and stupid of him to try to compare Momodou's case with others. Dida has to know that his Master at State House is nothing but a corrupt and bloody dictator, who do not have the interest of the Gambian people at heart. Jammeh is not a blessing for the Gambian people.

How insane it is for an Ethiopian refugee to come to our very own country and insult us simply because we call for a democratic government that will govern the electorates in accordance to the laws of the land? Mr. Old man, if you are reading this piece, you got to know that we Gambians are not fools. We can be the most hospitable people on earth but never take our hospitability for weakness. We will not sit idly and watch a green snake like you come to our backyard and tell us that rubbish.

While he boost to anyone willing to listening that he holds a British passport, Dida was nothing in the UK but a mere primary school teacher in Leeds, West Yorkshire. He had to thank his lucky stars for being made Observer's managing director. He got the job not because of his intelligence. He got it not because he has any journalism experience. He got it simply through selfishness. For many years, we have seen him praise singing President Jammeh even when does things that are not in the interest of Gambians. And after all Jammeh does not care about one's qualifications when putting them in positions of public trust. As an incompetent leader himself, all Jammeh cares for is how much support you give to him and his APRC party.

As a man who have spent many years in Kenya and the UK, it is very ignorant and naive for Dida Halake to call Gambian journalists as anti-development. How stupid of him to think that we are enemies of the Gambia? How can a bloody foreigner come to our country and make such vile statement? Mr. Halake, we are not enemies of our motherland. We will never be. While you are nothing but a locust, who is only looking for green grass to chew, we are not. We will forever be proud to be Gambians and will do anything within our means to ensure that our country is not transformed into a kingdom rule by one mad man.

We have seen how corruption, nepotism and dictatorship led to the savagery resulting in the death of thousands of Ethiopians. And before you waste your time preaching us to love our country, why not preach love to your adopted home, Kenya, where thousands of people were killed.

Mar Halake, it is only a mad man who will try to put his own house on fire while his parents and kids are sleeping inside. Our criticism of the Jammeh is not in anyway geared towards bringing instability to our very own country. We have a gaddem right to criticize a tyrant like Yahya Jammeh, who thinks that he can rule us anyhow he wants. It is our God given right to express ourselves which Jammeh can never take away no matter how much he tries.

Like Andrei Dmitrievich Sakharov, exile Russian top nuclear physicists once stated in an interview with John Simpson of the BBC: "The desire, the instinct to oppose brutality and repress freedom of though is unquenchable. Of course it can be be force to keept quite at times, when repression gerts worse. Not everyone wants to be a matrtyr but the instincts remains and will always remain. And when circumstances becomes a little favourable, it will raise its head again. You cannot crush the instinct, because its part of us - part of human condition. The desire to be free is one of the fundamental human desire." So Mr. Old man, there you go.

Mr. Halake needs to realise that Jammeh is doing no one a favour by constructing roads or schools. He is doing what he is vote in for. That is why we pay our taxes. Dida has lived in Leeds for many years and never did he write a letter thanking the Leeds Metropolitcan Council for clearing his rubbish bin. Why, this is because they are doing what they are expected to do. If that is the case, does he think we a bunch of dummies who will heap praises on Jammeh for building a hospital in Fatoto, that only have paracetamol?

Dida Halake needs to know that the political situation in the Gambia is getting worse and worse by the day. It can be compared as being in a boat which is being driven by a mad captain in a stormy sea. People are being oppressed left right and centre everyday.

Where was Dida Halake when journalists like Alhagie Mbye of The Independent was arrested and tortured for over a week at the NIA headquarters not for setting Banjul International Airport on fire, but for writing an article seen critical of the regime. Where was Halake when my friend Malick Mboob was detained and tortured for over three months for just writing to the Freedom Newspaper? Where was Dida Halake when over a dozen innocent subcribers of the Freedom Newspapers were rounded up in the country and tortured by the NIA? Where was Dida Halake when armed soldiers set The Independent on fire? Is the closure of The Independent, Citizen FM and Sud FM justifiable? Where was Dida Halake when Deyda Hydara was brutality killed by NIA officers for just being a journalists? Where was Dida Halake when Ebrima Sillah's house was set on fire? Where was Dida when Chief Manneh, a bloke he knew very well at the Observer disappeared from earth after been arrested by the NIA? Why is the government wasting tax payers money in prosecuting Fatou Jaw Manneh? Is Dida not aware of Decree 70/71 and the new criminal procedure code which makes it a crime liable for six months in prison for just caricaturing someone? Well, I will excuse him if he is not aware of it as he might have been busy teaching kids in his Alhassan Madarasa how to support Yahya Jammeh.

Mr. Halake, Gambian journalists are today living in an atrocious political climate and you must have hammered 20 pints of larger if you think that all is well and fine. President Jammeh regards himself as God and wants every living soul in the country to bow down to him. And Dida Halake must be have gone completely crazy to see us as a forces of evil. We will never be cowed.

If there is any force of evil, it is Dida Halake. He is deliberately turning a blind eye while Jammeh is milking us to dry. He is careless about the oppression taking place in the Gambian. He does not care about the sufferings of our people. All he wants is too is to see Gambians been transformed into destitutes while Jammeh gets fatter and brutal.


Mr. Halake, we have seen many of your types and we know that you are only glorifying President Jammeh and his brutal regime for your own selfish desires. You will be on the next plane back to Leeds the very day you get the sack from the Observer.

Dida needs to know that Jammeh has brought nothing but untold sufferrings to the Gambian people. Poverty is increasing everyday with many families living under less than one Pound Sterling a day? While Dida is being paid D10, 000 a month, he needs to know that a large majority of civil servants are earning less than D1,000 a month. They are finding it difficult to survive the hardship which is epitomise by sky rocketing prices of commodity goods, high electric and water bills.
Our farmers are finding it difficult to put food on the table simply because their nuts are still unsold.

Mr. Halake you have been in the Gambia for many years and how many times have you had people losing their jobs just because they oppose Jammeh? How many times have you seen people being abtrararilly arrested and lock up at the stinking Mile Two Prisons for months without standing before any court of law just because they fell out with Jammeh? How many times have you heard of people disappearing from their families just for being opponents of the regime? Would you sit in your cozzy office and rant about forces of evil if your father, brother or uncle was one of these people buried in an unknown grave?

You are just being an ignorant wanker but you knew how unpleasant persecution is. You have witnessed it first hand in your native Ethopia and you have to be so grateful to Kenya for providing a safe heaven for you. While you are glad that those days are over, we in the Gambia are facing it. Yes big time.

Mr. Halake, have you forgotten that I am a signatory to your will and I know all about you. For the time being I let those things to be.
Peace
For comments, write to papak196@yahoo.co.uk