Tuesday, August 12, 2025
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Matarr Njie: The young man ready to do any job that comes his way

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By Ousman Jatta

Matarr Njie used to be a taxi driver. That’s what he’s ever done for a long time to earn a living. But he is nowadays a straw seller. The covid-19 pandemic has rattled the transport sector, and Matarr decided to change ventures and now sells straws along the highway.

‘’As a man you should be ready to do any job that comes your way’’ Njie explains.

Njie says the driving job was not working for him due to the impact of the pandemic on the transport sector. further

“I have no other option but to find another job that will earn me money.

“I thank God with my current job, because I use it to help my parents, and my owe family as well.

“If one job does not work for you another will,” Matarr says.

Ahmad Gitteh to Darboe: You can’t compare yourself with Sidia Jatta in terms of integrity

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Ahmad Gitteh went after Ousainou Darboe on Thursday saying the UDP leader cannot compare himself with Sidia Jatta – putting his mouth into what is an entirely Sidia Jatta-and-Ousainou Darboe fight.

Sidia Jatta had claimed Darboe buried the coalition ‘when he came’ and that it was President Barrow who told him the UDP leader said he must make him foreign minister by crook or by hook.

The comments have since not sat well with UDP adherents and their leader Darboe blasted back at Sidia saying he now despises him for lying. Some UDP members have also along the way accused The Fatu Network of being anti-UDP.

Erstwhile UDP supporter Ahmad Gitteh put his mouth into the issue on Thursday going after Darboe in extraordinary fashion.

Gitteh said: “It’s Sidia Jatta who should despise you. When you were there, you accepted things. Sidia was there and he refused. He is still there but has never insulted Barrow. You were there and said Barrow is a prophet.

“It was you who said Adama Barrow is not corrupt, he’s content. Now you said Yahya Jammeh is better than Adama Barrow. Sidia is sitting and calm. He has been at the same disposition since at the outset when the coalition was being formed. It’s you who gets red, yellow and black and green.

“So how can such a person say he despises Sidia Jatta? People’s eyes are open and there are evidence. The spider thinks he has the best house when he has the worst house. I do not agree with Sidia Jatta regarding ideology but you cannot compare him with you in terms of integrity.”

 

The Gambia and Switzerland Agreement on Migration: Differences and Similarities

The Minister of Foreign Affairs Mamadou Tangara must inform Gambians in full about the contents of the agreement that was signed on 12 January 2021 between the Gambia and Switzerland. To merely issue a press release with high sounding promises and benefits that cannot be verified is not enough. In fact, that agreement cannot stand until it is approved by the National Assembly as required by the Constitution under Section 70(1)(c). Has this agreement been presented to the National Assembly yet?

Gambians must know that the Swiss Government has also issued a press release on the same agreement on the same day. But their press release did not say all that the Gambia press release mentioned. The Swiss press release noted that they have signed similar agreements with eight other African countries. So, it is not just about the Gambia.

In their press release, the Swiss said that the “State Secretariat for Migration (SEM) intends to continue to support Gambian authorities in handling migration, not least by helping to implement projects locally.” They went further to say that SEM is already supporting local projects to build national capacity as well as national response to COVID through IOM. Finally, part of the agreement deals with the issue of returnees, which the Swiss authorities said relates to “the practical organization of returnees, such as identification and the issuing of replacement documents.”

Apparently, the press release from our Foreign Minister Tangara is not fully in line with the press release from the Swiss. For example, our Foreign Ministry said the agreement deals with “unemployment and creation of more opportunities for women and youth in the Gambia”. What are these opportunities and how did the agreement handle that?

The Gambian press release also said they negotiated for “all undocumented Gambian migrants in Switzerland to be trained on livelihood skills and be integrated in Swiss community? The press release further said that both countries have agreed that “all legal remedies will be exhausted before any voluntary returnees will be repatriated.” Tangara’s press release also states that the agreement will “pave the way for the establishment of a multi-purpose skills training centre and create other opportunities for young people to achieve their goals in the Gambia.” Finally, the Gambian press release said both countries agreed on “spelt-out modalities… to ensure equitable and balanced life for Gambians in Switzerland…”.

These are lofty ideals in the Gambian press release but they are not mentioned in the Swiss press release. Therefore, are both press releases true or false, or is one or both of them overstating or understating the terms of this agreement? Citizens have a right to know.

Therefore, I hereby call on the National Assembly to scrutinise this agreement fully. We know that the issue of irregular migration and the presence of undocumented migrants, especially Africans is a major issue for Europe. They are very eager to stop irregular migration and are doing everything possible to stop it.

While European nations, and indeed any other country, have a right and duty to manage their immigration issues, in the same vein the Gambia Government also has a right and a duty not to accept agreements that undermine the rights and welfare of our citizens at home or abroad. After all migration is a fundamental human right guaranteed by international law, which also protects the rights of migrants, documented or undocumented, anywhere in the world. Hence no nation should put up unreasonable migration laws and agreements just to deny others from visiting their country.

If the Gambia Government is to allow Gambians to be deported from Europe and America then the Government must ensure that it has the necessary support to offer to these returnees in order to enable them have a meaningful and productive life at home. We must not forget that our people spend their life’s fortune and in addition to risking life just to get to Europe. Hence the Government must not accept to have these people deported anyhow simply because they are undocumented. The Government should protect the best interest of our people.

Therefore, the Government must take responsibility to ensure that returnees’ rights and needs are addressed. Otherwise, the Government would be undermining national security if it allows scores of Gambians to be deported anyhow only to come back to the same poverty from which they were running away. After all, the Government must bear in mind that it is these Gambians in Europe and other places who are sending those billions of dalasi in remittances every year thereby sustaining both our economy and families.

Therefore, I hereby call on the Minister of Foreign Affairs and Gambians Abroad Mamadou Tangara to release the full agreement publicly so that Gambian citizens will see and know what has been agreed in their name and on their behalf and for their welfare. It is our right to know.

For The Gambia Our Homeland

Fatoumatta Jallow Tambajang: Key facts about the woman as she prepares for AU vice chairperson election

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Gambians have been basking in the excellent news of the selection of former vice president Fatoumatta Jallow Tambajang as a candidate in the upcoming AU vice chairperson election. Mrs Jallow Tambajang will battle it out with five other women for the top AU job. But who is Fatoumatta Jallow Tambajang in terms of her resume? The Fatu Network provides you with some key facts about her.

– Mrs Fatoumata Jallow-Tambajang is a former vice president, humanitarian, leading development professional, and one of Africa’s most seasoned technocrats with a lifetime of service to the continent of Africa and her country, The Gambia.

– Mrs Tambajang has served as a Gambian vice president and minister, as well as a policy adviser on women to three successive Gambian presidents.

– In 2016, she played a pivotal role in establishing an unprecedented coalition of seven Gambian opposition political parties, two independents, and four civil society organisations that stabilised the country and ushered a peaceful democratic transition of power in The Gambia.

– Prior to her transition into government, Mrs Tambajang had a distinguished career with the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) in Africa, working as a Chief Technical Adviser in Gambia as well as the UNV/UNDP Adviser on Gender, Health and Population in Liberia.

The Obituary of a Rancid Presidency: A Great American Tragedy

Four years ago, an American demagogue, who openly embraced division and racial discord, assumed the power of the presidency of the United States.

He came railing against the “swamp” and “deep state” and until his last day in office he continued to rail against his own government whenever they refuse to commit crimes for him.

In power, he praised autocrats like Putin and Kim,  and attacked America’s democratic allies like Merkel. He politicized the administration of justice, used government powers to serve his own ends, and monetized the Presidency for himself and his children.

A liar by trade – and at a scale and magnitude never before seen in all history of politics. Today, Washington Post have documented over thirty thousands of his lies that are to be buried with the infamy of his presidency. Epic of Trump’s lies culminated in the big lie that he won the election that he so decisively lost to Biden by over 7 million votes in the 2020 elections.

What is most astonishing about this weaseling sociopath is his ability to turn one of America’s two main political parties into a cult of personality, where blind fealty and the pace of sycophants genuflecting under the feet of ‘dear leader’ is all that counts.

America, in essence, haven’t learned anything new about Donald Trump. The fact that he is a horrible human being has always been evident. He had voluminous and incontrovertible trails of evidence against his character and antics well before politics. His multiple bankruptcies and series of rape and sexual assault cases are common knowledge.

What he also exposed is letting the world know there are millions of Americans who were perfectly willing to overthrow a constitutional democracy in order to keep a belligerent fascist autocrat in power. That 74 million Americans are willing to follow Trump’s dark lies, look beyond his fascist inclinations and care less about his casual racism against their fellow citizens.  Or perhaps many are themselves racists and fascists.

His lies metastasized to a form of cancer, which became inseparable from the wild conspiracy theories Qanon pedals around. Many in his Republican base believed his lies and much worse. Heck some of them actually believe that even on this Inauguration Day, Biden and democratic leaders will in fact be arrested and taken to jail, and Trump will remain president. This is the extent of America’s epistemological crisis today.

But at long last America can take a break from the early-morning tweets  of firing cabinet Secretaries; the bizarre sight of an orange-haired septuagenarian President dancing at super spreader events; a president that lies with every breathe; and finally the shocking spectacle of inciting a mob into storming the US Capitol.

We no longer have to listen to a President telling rioters; “We love you”, or saying white supremacist are “fine people”. We don’t have to listen to a president with a strange conviction that windmills cause cancer; who lies constantly about a pandemic that killed 400 thousands of his fellow citizens; who separate and cage migrant babies at the border; who tells us that somehow we can nuke hurricanes into submission; who suggested ingesting disinfectant  as a cure for Covid or “hit the body with very powerful lights”.

This president once contemplated on buying Greenland in exchange for Puerto Rico, and million other trifles. A President who attempted covering his petty lies with sharpie re-drawing to alter the map of a hurricane trajectory that he wrongly claimed will hit Alabama. He lies about the most trivial and the most serious.

This is the liar-in-chief who have warned for months that caravans of illegal immigrants were coming to “invade” America from the southern border and actually send real U.S. troops to guard against it.

This presidency, this American tragedy, this American carnage, is an unprecedented journey of dysfunction, a tragicomedy, and the worst national shame in American politics.

Woodrow Wilson was a bigot and botched the handling of a pandemic in 1918; Lindon B. Johnson, Richard Nixon and Bush all lied to the American public about Wars and other major issues. Reagan lied about Iran contra, supported apartheid in South Africa and promulgated racist domestic policies. Bill Clinton and Andrew Johnson were impeached for other reasons.

There were plethora of American Presidents that were outright bigots, liars and philanderers. But only Trump was all of these things at once, plus much worse. And only him, has ever been impeached twice. That will be his lasting embarrassment if he is capable of being embarrassed, but a narcissist knows no shame.

His is a dark legacy of emboldened white supremacists, a raging pandemic and siege of the US Capital.

By Jamal Drammeh.

Facebook: jamal.drammeh
Twitter: @jamaldrammeh

President Biden repeals Trump travel ban on people from Muslim countries

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On his first day in office, U.S. President Joe Biden reversed many of the unpopular and controversial immigration policies of his predecessor, including the 2017 travel ban on people from several predominantly Muslim countries.

President Biden signed an executive order ending the travel ban on citizens from more than a dozen countries, including Eritrea, Yemen, Nigeria and Sudan. It was one of six executive orders he signed which dealt specifically with U.S. immigration. The travel ban was originally criticized as a “Muslim ban” when Donald Trump first signed it. The Trump administration cited national security concerns at the time. The ban later included a few non majority-Muslim nations.

The move to repeal the ban has been hailed by several civil rights organizations, including the American Civil Liberties Union, which called the policy a “cruel Muslim ban that targeted Africans.”

The Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) also welcomed the move, calling it “an important first step toward undoing the anti-Muslim and anti-immigrant policies of the previous administration.”

“It is an important fulfillment of a campaign pledge to the Muslim community and its allies,” said Nihad Awad, head of the nation’s largest Muslim civil rights organization.

The incoming president had referred to the policy as discriminatory. (CGTN Africa)

 

 

 

 

 

 

‘I don’t entertain foolish people’: Seedy Njie threatens to end interview after reporter linked NPP to drugs

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Seedy Njie threatened to end his interview with a Paradise TV reporter after she appeared to link National People’s Party to drugs.

Seedy Njie was left seething when Madinding Ceesay asked Njie to reacts to allegations NPP invested money into drugs only for those drugs to now be seized.

“If you go there we will end the interview. This is a serious allegation. I have never heard it anywhere what you’re telling us,” Seedy Njie told the reporter.

“We have nothing, we don’t know, we are not aware. Please don’t go there. I don’t want us to end the interview. I’m here because I respect you. I respect Harona and the institution. It’s a serious crime you’re labelling on the NPP. You see I don’t entertain foolish people,” the top NPP official said.

A back and forth then erupted as the reporter tried to explain to Njie that it was just an allegation. It then took a commercial break to separate the two.

The interview continued fives minutes later.

Senegal: MFDC rebel faction affiliated to dead rebel Diamakoune Senghor want to negogiate

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Members of the MFDC faction affiliated to Diamakoune Senghor have marked the 14th anniversary of the late rebel leader’s death.

Senghor remained a myth to many of people in Casamance until his death in February 13, 2007.

MFDC fighters on Wednesday celebrated the 14th anniversary of his death in Dialan Banta in Ziguinchor with a call for dialogue with President Macky Sall. The new president of the rebel faction is Edmond Bora who spoke to Sud Quotidien.

Bora became leader of the rebel faction following the assasination of Abdou Elinkine Diatta in 2019.

Madi Jobarteh and MC Cham Jnr demand foreign ministry makes its ‘so-called’ agreement public

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Madi Jobarteh has led calls for a ‘so-called’ cooperation agreement the Gambia government said it signed with Switzerland.

A government delegation led by Vice President Dr Isatou Touray earlier this month signed a deal on migration with Switzerland with Switzerland saying it involves deportation.

The foreign ministry had been tightlipped about it but it on Wednesday issued a press released confirming a deal has been signed.

Madi Jobarteh said shortly after the press release: “Where is the so-called Cooperation Agreement between The Gambia and Switzerland on migration? Citizens have a right to see a signed copy of the agreement. The Foreign Minister has a duty to make it public.”

GDC’s MC Cham Jnr reacted to the press release today writing: “The Gambia Government press release on the so-called protection of Gambian migrants in Switzerland, from the Foreign Affairs ministry is fake. The news we got since last week and it was published across many media outlets is that the government has signed a deportation agreement with the Swiss authorities.

“It was signed by the Vice President Dr Isatou Touray and Foreign Affairs minister Dr Momodou Tangara. The government should tell the Gambians the truth. We need to see the document they signed.”

Foreign ministry confirms signing of agreement which Swiss government says involves deportation

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The Ministry of Foreign Affairs said on Wednesday the government has on Tuesday 12 January 2021 signed a cooperation agreement on migration matters with the government of Switzerland in the city of Berne.

The signed Cooperation Agreement is meant to curb irregular migration and ensure effective protection of the rights of Gambian citizens who are migrants in Switzerland, according to a statement by the foreign ministry. The Swiss government however said it will involve deportation of Gambian migrants.

But according to the foreign ministry, the agreement “will create cordial working relations between the Government of The Gambia and the Government of Switzerland in identifying opportunities, coordinating and managing challenges of migration”.

“These, the two countries believe will further strengthen relations and deepen cooperation with regards to the effective management of migration, dealing with unemployment and creation of more opportunities for women and youth in The Gambia.

“The Government of The Gambia further negotiated for all undocumented Gambian migrants in Switzerland to be trained on livelihood skills and be integrated in Swiss community.

“As The Gambia progresses in enhancing her democracy, there is need to ensure that the country adheres to international Human Rights Instruments by respecting the laws of other countries whilst also ensuring that Gambian citizens within and outside enjoy the required protection of the Government. In this regard, the Government of The Gambia and the Government of Switzerland agreed that all legal remedies will be exhausted before any voluntary returnees will be repatriated,” the foreign ministry said in its statement.

 

 

President Barrow expresses ‘deep’ appreciation to ECOWAS who sent soldiers to sack Jammeh and install him

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President Adama Barrow has expressed ‘deep’ appreciation to ECOWAS, African Union and the Security Council of the United Nations for standing by the country over the years.

ECOWAS heads of state in January 2017 agreed unanimously to send troops to The Gambia to ensure Jammeh leaves power and President Barrow is installed amid a bitter political impass.

Tuesday marked four years since President Barrow was sworn into office at the Gambian embassy in Dakar and he has expressed ‘deep’ appreciation to ECOWAS, African Union, the Security Council of the United Nations, and all friendly nations who stood by the country over the years.

Jammeh’s refusal to cede power following the December 1, 2016 presidential election sparked a huge political impasse in the country. Ecowas then tapped a Senegalese general Francoise Ndiaye to ensure the will of the Gambian people is enforced. Jammeh then fled as the soldiers moved in on him paving the way for President Barrow’s takeover.

Meanwhile, President Barrow in commemorating the fourth anniversary of his ascension is touting ‘exceptional’ developments.

“Under the leadership of President Barrow, the country has witnessed exceptional developments, particularly in the area of road infrastructure; bearing in mind that infrastructure development is key to the advancement of the country’s socio-economic status,” State House said in a statement on Tuesday.

President Barrow’s four years in power

By Basidia M Drammeh

Today marks President Barrow’s four years in power after being sworn in Dakar amid an unprecedented political impasse due to former President Yahya Jammeh’s dramatic U-Turn on an initial decision concede defeat. Since then, a lot has happened; hence I have been struggling with capturing all that had occurred in 1,460 days in one single article.

Nonetheless, it will be fair to say that the Barrow Administration and its Coalition members have mainly failed to live up to the Gambian people’s high expectations who voted for change in 2016. President Barrow had deviated from the mandate on which they (coalition) campaigned and won the election. The Gambians wanted a break away from the dark past and yed sweeping reforms that would usher in a new system. Under Jammeh, The Gambia had been badly wounded and scarred by gross human rights violations, mismanagement of public funds, extra-judicial killings, repression of freedom of expression and the dismantlement of almost all democratic tenets.

Four years down the line, some of the hallmarks of the former regime remain alive and vivid. Corruption is rampant, patronage is the order of the day, hiring and firing without advancing reasons remains, pomp and praise-singing accompany presidential convoys. A fleet of luxurious vehicles accompanies the president. Governors and local chiefs are deeply engaged in partisan politics. Top Government officials and technocrats are dragged to partisan politics. Diplomatic and service passports are issued to connections rather than on merit. Hiring is mostly done based on who you know rather than what you know. And the list goes on and on.

Yes, we have freedom of speech, freedom of assembly and free press. Yes, we no longer have political prisoners languishing in jail just because they chose a party other than the President. Yes, we don’t have NIA operative snatch opponents of the regime, real or perceive, and drag to torture chambers. Yes, we no more see family members, relatives, loved ones disappear into the unknown or get murdered by the so-called junglers. Yes, the President has demonstrated his respect for the respect and the independence of the judiciary.

As positive as they may be, these developments are no privileges or handouts because the Gambians have four voted and fought for them. Gambians have voted for both regime and system change involving civil service reform, security sector reform, and public funds’ proper management. They wanted to see an end to self-perpetuation. They wanted to have a new Constitution that would reflect the hopes and aspirations of the Gambian people. Ordinary Gambians wished to see a reduction of commodity prices. Gambians wanted to see an end to patronage and impunity.

Down the line, many of these hopes have dashed. Key among the broken promises is the President’s pledge to serve for only three years after heading a transitional and transformation-oriented Government. Not only did the president decide to serve out his constitutionally mandated term, but he also formed his own party to contest the next presidential election.

A draft Constitution that cost 116 million dalasis was written to usher on a third republic only to be dumped by the President’s allies in Parliament at his behest. The president’s closest aides were publicly critical of the document describing it as discriminatory to Barrow. The Janneh Commission’s recommendations, set up to probe the former regime’s financial malpractices, were largely overlooked by the President. There are mounting concerns that the Truth, Reconciliation and Reparations Commission might meet a similar fate. The GRTS, which was once called JRTS for being the mouthpiece of the former Gambian president Yahya Jammeh regularly airs the president’s NPP rallies. The Meet the People’s Tour that is designed to avail the president of the opportunity to listen to the people about the impact of the Government’s policies on them, has been transformed to lambast rival political parties and heap praise the president. Electricity and Water remain scarce and beyond the means of the majority of Gambians. Internet service exorbitantly expensive. The President has promised to set up an anti-corruption watchdog to fight endemic corruption, yet the promise remains elusive.

The President’s supporters would refer to the bridges and the roads the President has either initiated or inherited from the President as clear signs of his development crusade. However, the question remains: Was Barrow elected to build roads or build institutions?

 

Sibusiso Moyo: Zimbabwe foreign minister dies from Covid-19

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Zimbabwe’s Foreign Minister Sibusiso Moyo has died after succumbing to Covid-19, the government says.

Born in 1960, the former army general gained international prominence in 2017, when he announced the military takeover that ousted long-serving President Robert Mugabe from power.

Zimbabwe has recorded a surge in Covid-19 cases since the festive season.

There have been 28,675 cases and 825 deaths since the virus was detected in the country last March.

More than half of the cases have been since New Year’s Day, Reuters news agency reports.

The rise in infections has been blamed on people travelling from South Africa during the festive season.

South Africa has seen a spike in cases after a new fast-spreading variant of the virus was detected in the country in November.

South Africa has recorded the highest number of cases in Africa – more than 1.3 million – and the most deaths – more than 38,000.

Mr Moyo is the second senior government figure to die from Covid-19 in Zimbabwe. Retired general and Agriculture Minister Perrance Shiri succumbed to the illness last July.

In neighbouring Malawi, President Lazarus Chakwera has taken personal blame for the recent rise in Covid-19 cases in the country.

There had been a “collective sense of relaxation in adherence to Covid prevention measures among many Malawians including myself”, he said last week.

Malawi’s Local Government Minister Lingson Belekenyama and Transport Minister Muhammad Sidik Mia died from the illness last week.

Mr Moyo died in a local hospital on Wednesday, President Emerson Mnangagwa’s spokesman George Charamba said in a statement.

Mr Mnangagwa described him as a friend and a “true hero”.

“He fought his entire life so that Zimbabwe could be free,” the president said. (BBC)

Army bereaved! Navy lieutenant Mbaye Faal dies

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A senior Navy officer Mbaye Faal died early Tuesday, the Gambia Armed Forces said in a statement on Wednesday. He was aged 51.

The army described the navy lieutenant’s passing ‘untimely’ while announcing the said event.

“The sad news is extended to His Excellency the President Adama Barrow, the Hon Minister of Defence and Cabinet Ministers, his family members, relatives and friends in The Gambia and abroad.

“Burial will take place at his residence in Kerr Serign on Wednesday 20 January at 1400hrs. While asking Allah to grant his family the fortitude to bear this irreparable loss. May his soul rest in eternal peace,” the army said in a statement announcing Faal’s demise.

Dr Amadou Scattred Janneh sells land to man for D2.2M, police open investigation after complaint

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Police have mounted an investigation into a complaint Dr Amadou Scattred Janneh allegedly sold land to Yusupha Saidy for 2.2 million dalasis and failed to transfer the land to the businessman.

Saidy lodged a complaint with police he paid 2.2 million dalasis to Dr Janneh over a piece of land, police spokesman Superintendent Lamin Njie told The Fatu Network.

“We can confirm receiving a complaint against Amadou Scatred Janneh. According to report the complainant paid D2.2M to Mr Janneh over a piece of land. He later realized that the said land is being developed by another person. The Police have opened an investigation into the matter,” Njie said.

Dr Janneh confirmed selling land to Saidy telling The Fatu Network: “I sold a piece of property that was allocated to my company to Mr. Yusupha Saidy. I wanted to develop an alternate site in Gunjur.

“It turns out I can’t transfer the Brusubi plot to Mr. Saidy until it is leased and that process takes a considerable amount of time.

“I therefore offered to refund his money in full or to give him another property. I was informed by our intermediary (Modou Sanneh) that he preferred another piece of property. And that was to be done upon my return from the US.”

Saidy told The Fatu Network Dr Janneh blocked his numbers but Dr Janneh denied ever blocking his numbers.

Darboe turns to his ‘son’ President Barrow, says he never inculcated the habit of lying in him – as the president’s claim gets thrown at him

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UDP leader Ousainou Darboe tendered the disclaimer ‘he’s my son but I did not inculcate that habit in him’ as he said President Barrow spoke falsely about the circumstances around his appointment as foreign minister.

President Barrow’s claim Darboe insisted he could work as foreign minister even after his friend Omar Sey counselled him that his age was against him was thrown at the UDP leader during his interview with Membekering on Tuesday evening.

And reacting to the claim, the UDP leader said: “I know it’s now clear to Gambians that your president that he’s good at saying statements that do not exist. To say I cannot be vice president, that’s true. But Omar Sey was never there during our discussion. It was his press secretary Amie Bojang Sissoho who was there. She was the one inside his office.

“When I told him I could not be vice president, his eyes dropped because it shocked him. Because what he said [is that] he doesn’t like travelling, that entering plane is not something he’s excited about. That he would like for me to go to places that the president should go to. So he was shocked.

“He asked me why I could not be vice president and I told him what disqualified me to contest as president is what disqualified me to be appointed as vice president and that’s the truth. But all he said here that Omar Sey said this… Omar Sey was foreign minister, he has seen foreign ministers who are much older than me.

“So to say those statements is not true but what it has shown is that our this man is very good at saying statements that do not exist.”

And when host Pa Modou Bojang put to him President Barrow was his son, the UDP leader retorted: “He is my son but I did not implant that habit (lying) in him.”

 

Sellers at craft market in Bakau damn coronavirus, disclose low customer turnout

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By Ousman Jatta

Sellers at the craft market in Bakau have said the coronavirus pandemic is having rippling effect on their businesses

The tourism sector contributes immensely to the Gambian economy but the coming of coronavirus has hugely changed the narrative.

The sector employs at least 100,000 Gambians among them those in the craft market sub-sector. But according to Sainey Singhateh the president of Bakau craft market, there is no tourist season for this year which means business is not fairing as expected.

The Gambia’s tourism season usually begin in late October and normally last for a period of six months.

Samba Sarr an artisan at the Bakau craft market, spoke along the same tone as Singhateh disclosing they sit for hours, sometimes the whole day without seeing customers.

Mariama Manneh called on the government to chip in and offer a helping hand in order to compensate for their losses during these trying times of the pandemic.

Gambians turn to tricycles as transportation services get ever problematic

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By Ousman Jatta

Motor tricycles also known as Batch cars are becoming a widely used local taxi transport service by most Gambian commuters mostly during rush hours.

Three wheeled vehicle is based on the same technology as a bicycle and a motorcycle but it’s normally powered by an electric motor, scooter or a car engine.

Amadou Saidy a motor tricycle driver for the past six years said the motor tricycle is a booming business for them nowadays. He says they depend on it to earn income for themselves to be able to put food on the table for their families.

Abdoulie Jammeh is also among the few motor tricycle drivers in Bakau. According to Jammeh, the covid – 19 pandemic has seriously affected their taxi business as they sit for hours without seeing customers.

The cost of fair for the batch cars is five Dalasis, for commuter’s dwelling around Bakau.

With the country now experiencing severe traffic jams mostly during rush hours most people are beginning to turn their focus on the motor tricycles.

 

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