Wednesday, May 14, 2025
Home Blog Page 293

President Barrow reacts as Pap Saine lands top award

0

President Adama Barrow has congratulated veteran journalist Pap Saine on bagging the 2021 Africa’s Most Respected Chief Executive Officers (CEOs) award in the media-print category by The African Industry CEO Awards.

Mr Saine who is the co-founder of The Point newspaper landed the top award last week.

In a statement posted to his official Facebook page, the president said: “I have the pleasure to extend heartfelt congratulations to Mr. Pap Saine on his recent remarkable achievement as winner of the prestigious Africa’s Most Respected CEOs Award.

“We are very proud of this career defining moment for Mr. Saine as it solidifies his exemplary professionalism and dedication towards his work and importantly upholding the principles of good #journalism over the years.

“Mr. Saine has once again earned the respect and honour the profession demands.”

Bubacarr Keita rape trial: Complainant’s mother says her daughter told her she slept with Keita once, testifies elsewhere she threatened to kill her daughter and herself while quizzing her about the pregnancy

0

The mother of the rape complainant in the rape trial of Bubacarr Keita testified on Wednesday her daughter told her she slept with the businessman only once – while testifying elsewhere she told her daughter she would kill her and kill herself if she did not tell her who impregnated her.

The businesswoman returned to the stand on Wednesday to testify in a trial that has attracted national attention.

Keita, 29, is standing trial for allegedly raping his former wife’s 15-year-old sister, with the incident alleged to have taken place in 2019.

The complainant’s mother had testified last week she felt something like a rock in the belly of her daughter when she personally examined her.

And picking up from where she stopped, she said “when I touched the stomach it was like a rock, I touched again and it felt like something breathing”.

She then testified: “I looked and confirmed it’s a pregnancy. I then asked her to get up. When she got up, I told her ‘I told you it’s a pregnancy and you said it’s not and what I touched is a pregnancy as I have passed through it’. I then told her ‘you’re pregnant, which man did you sleep with’. She told me, ‘no man had penetrated me’. I told him ‘of course yes, because getting pregnant doesn’t come from drinking from a jar, a man must penetrate you to be pregnant’.

“I kept asking her and she kept crying and I took a stick laying beside me. I continued asking her who she slept with but she kept crying and wasn’t looking at me. I think took the stick and said I would beat her if she didn’t tell me. She was still bent and crying. I then slapped her and said to her ‘if you don’t tell me, I will kill you and kill myself’.”

The woman testified that she found the stick from her house when asked by prosecuting lawyer Alasan Jobe about its origin.

“It was in my house. It’s a cooking  spoon. It was laying on my dressing table,” she testified.

And continuing, the woman said: “When I slapped her was when she told me ‘mom, let me now tell you’. She told me, ‘It’s Bubacarr who impregnated me’. I asked her which Bubacarr because there are many Bubacarrs. She told me Bubacarr Keita. I asked her which Bubacarr Keita, she said ‘Bubacarr Keita, [elder sister’s] husband’. I told her not to play with me and tell me who was responsible for her pregnancy.”

Keita’s lawyer protested saying the woman’s last statement about her daughter telling her it’s Bubacarr Keita, her elder sister’s husband is “clearly hearsay and it’s not admissible under Section 19 [of Evidence Act]”.

“If and only if Section 19, my learned friend and the witness is coming from under 19(b) under the exception just the fact that the statement is made, not the veracity of the statement, then it is admissible. But a word a caution my lord: this is a rape case,” Lamin Camara protested.

The judge reacted that the objection would only be viewed as a “pointer on the foregoing”. The prosecuting lawyer then reacted that the witness’s statement was ‘direct evidence’.

“My Lord in fact it is direct evidence. It is evidence that she perceived with her senses. She is in no way saying it’s Bubacarr who impregnated her or not. She is relaying direct evidence of what she heard from her daughter,” Jobe said.

But Camara countered: “My Lord I raised the option in my objection to save time. Because I could have gone beyond what I have just said. I’m not preempting what he is saying. Even if it comes under direct evidence, it’s not still admissible. Direct evidence must be perceived by the senses yes, if it is evidence that was heard must be of the person who heard it. Yes she heard it. That category of evidence is oral evidence. It has to comply with other provisions of the evidence act like Section 19. This evidence cannot be admitted as being the truth of what she said.”

And then Jobe responded: “So she is not saying what she is saying is the truth. So we’re saying the same thing.”

Judge Momodou SM Jallow then overruled the defence lawyer’s objecting. In his ruling, he argued: “ The honourable court would overrule the objection in this case as it holds, agreeing with senior state counsel that indeed the communication between PW2 and the alleged victim could be relied on as direct oral evidence under the circumstances of this case to allow an appeal of this ruling to be heard by the Gambia Court of Appeal if senior defence counsel is so inclined to appeal, that’s all. The court will rely on the statement of PW2 on the foregoing for its veracity.” After his ruling, Keita lawyer said they would like to have a copy of the ruling.

The complainant’s mother in continuing her testimony then said: “When she told me Bubacarr Keita, I told her I cannot believe that, I hope another man had not slept with her. She told me no man had ever slept with her except Bubacarr Keita. I then asked her how she agreed to that. She told me he would try [sleeping with her] like on Sundays when [elder sister] cooks and leaves for her salon and leave her and the kids at the house. She said [elder sister] would ask her to join her at the shop when she finishes washing the dishes and bathing the kids. She said that is when he would try to call her [to join him in his house] but she would go outside and sit there until he leaves.”

The woman said elsewhere after warning she swore to speak the truth: “She said when she (elder sister) leaves her at the house, when this man wants to sleep with her, she would run out of the house and sit outside until he leaves the house. So she is always late going to the salon and her sister would ask her what she was doing at home. She said [elder sister] would sometimes beat her and told her she was late.

“I then told her ‘if that is what was happening to you in the house, that that is what Bubacarr was doing to you in the house, why didn’t you tell [elder sister]?’ She said the reason she didn’t tell [elder sister], Bubacarr told her ‘if you tell [elder sister] I will do to you a terrible thing’. I then told her if she could not tell [elder sister], she could sneak and come and tell me about it.

“I then asked her to tell me how did he manage to sleep with her then and how many times did she sleep with him, she then told me ‘only once did I sleep with him’. I asked her ‘how did he sleep with you?’ She told me ‘[elder sister] had gone to a program I believe and Bubacarr came home. When he came home, he found she was sleeping with the kids in the house. Bubacarr came knocking on the door and she was sleeping. He knocked on the door until he got tired but [complainant] was sleeping and did not open.

“He then sent his brother to scale the fence. Ablie knocked on [complainant’s] window and [complainant] got up. He told her Bubacarr said you should open the door for him. She then went and opened the door for him. When she opened the door, Bubacarr Keita entered and she wanted to go back to her room to sleep but Bubacarr Keita asked her come and sleep in his room instead.”

Keita’s lawyer Camara took to his feet again and argued: “My Lord I hate to interrupt but this has brought us another situation of inadmissible oral evidence and yet it’s direct. My Lord this evidence falls under Section 19(b) of the Evidence Act and there is no exception for the inadmissibility of this kind of evidence. The witness told this court what Bubacarr allegedly told the complainant. My Lord that is not admissible. We object to it.”

The opposing lawyer Jobe when asked if he would admit the objection said: “I will admit in these circumstances. Because that’s what I just wanted to guide her, to just skip all these parts.” The judge then sustained the protest.

The prosecuting then asked the witness to explain what steps she took when she believed her daughter was indeed pregnant.

And the woman testified: “I called [elder sister] and told her on the whole [complainant’s] sickness is due to pregnancy. When I called [elder sister], [she] told me ‘what are you saying?’ She asked me who impregnated her but I told her she should come to the house, that this wasn’t something we could discuss publicly. This was when [she] came and when she came, she found us in my house. When she came, I told her on the whole [complainant’s] collapses and sickness is due to the big devil (pregnancy). I told her [complainant] said Bubacarr Keita is the one who impregnated her. [Elder sister] then asked her and she said ‘yes, he (Keita) impregnated me’.”

‘That is not possible’: Lamin Bojang says UDP will lose December election

0

Alliance for National Reorientation and Development leader General Lamin Bojang has said it’s not possible for UDP to win the December election.

In an exclusive interview with The Fatu Network, Gen Bojang said: “But UDP when they came to Brufut, the man declared that he has already won. That is not possible. Let’s use the last election. APRC at the time won about 200,000 votes, Mamma Kandeh was around 70,000 and Adama Barrow only 218,000. “The coalition government and UDP are the same people. We have seen people cross-carpeting but these are the same people. It’s that same party that split. The number of people that has moved from APRC to Barrow to UDP is insignificant.”

The ANRD chief also said President Barrow also stands to lose the election as he has squandered a lot of great opportunities.

He said: “That chances [of him winning] are very slim. He cannot [win]. InshaAllah he is going to lose December election. There are a lot huge opportunities he squandered, he missed the point and he was completely misled like Yahya was misled in the latter part of his rule.

“Five years down the line, this is not the leader that we want. We want a proactive, robust, smart, motivated, inspired leader. Gambians are hungry to move.”

Voter registration: Police issue statement over ‘unlawful’ practice by party militants and agents

0

Police have issued a statement branding as unlawful party militants and agents interfering with the voter registration process.

Police’s statement read: “It has come to the attention of the office of the Inspector General of Police, that certain individuals, political party agents and militants are interfering with the voter registration process especially on citizenship matters. This practice is unlawful. Consequently, party agents and militants are urged to desist from such practices with immediate effect.

“The laws of The Gambia are very clear about citizenship and there are state institutions responsible for regulation and enforcement of laws on citizenship. Therefore, individuals not mandated by law have no authority to question people’s citizenship or eligibility for voter registration.

“Equally, the electoral laws of The Gambia clearly outline the criteria for registration for voters’ card and as well stipulated the body responsible for overseeing the electoral process. In view of the above, any individual who is not mandated by the laws or the electoral body must not interfere with the process.

“Party agents designated and recognized by the IEC to observe the registration process for accountability purposes are hereby advised to do so in accordance with the laws governing the process.

“Concerns, queries and observations must be channeled through respective Party Heads for redress with the appropriate institutions. They must not be seen in anyway interfering or attempting to interfere with individuals registering or the registration process, as they have no such mandate.

“Similarly, political party leaders are urged to sensitise and encourage their militants to observe law and order at all times especially during the voter registration process, to enable them to operate within the parameters of the law for peaceful and violence free electoral  process. The public, party agents and militants found wanting of violations will be dealt with in accordance with the laws. The cooperation and understanding of the public is highly solicited.”

 

 

 

‘Gambia For Five Years’ vows to not let anyone including President Barrow instigate conflict in Gambia

0

Gambia For Five Years and Peacebuilding said on Tuesday it will not let anyone to stoke conflict in The Gambia, including President Adama Barrow.

The pro-President Barrow group gave the warning in a meeting on Tuesday.

The group’s secretary general Ebrima Sorie Bah said: “We heard people coming out especially UDP accusing IEC of issuing documents to foreigners. I heard that it happened in North Bank. IEC is keeping mute and not talking. That can anger Gambians. There are revising courts and there can be many litigations that could injure the peace in the country.

“So Gambia For Five Years will not accept things like that and that’s why we said the IEC should come out and speak. No one should acquire a voter’s card illegally. IEC should also ask Rohey Malick Lowe to stop and that what she is doing is illegal. Roehy Malick Lowe held a press briefing saying no one will stop her. That she will continue what she is doing and anyone who doesn’t like it can go to court.

“So for us Gambia For Five Years will make sure IEC goes by the law. So IEC should be alert. We do not want conflict, we will not let anyone to bring fitna (conflict) here. Any party, any leader, anyone. Even President Adama Barrow if he wants to bring fitna here or wants to do something, this group will come out and say it’s not going to happen.”

South African woman gives birth to 10 children

0

By CGTN Africa

A South African woman from Gauteng province has given birth to 10 babies, breaking the Guinness World Record held by Malian Halima Cissé who gave birth to nine children in Morocco last month.

Pretoria News reports that Gosiame Thamara Sithole, 37, gave birth to her decuplets – two more than doctors had earlier detected during the medical scans – at a hospital in Pretoria last night, said her husband Teboho Tsotetsi.

He said Sithole, who hails from Tembisa Township in Ekurhuleni, delivered her seven boys and three girls by Caesarean section.

Sithole, who has six-year-old twins, previously said that her pregnancy was natural as she was not on fertility treatment.

Speaking to the Pretoria News last night, Tsotetsi said Sithole gave birth to their bundles of joy 29 weeks into her pregnancy.

“It’s seven boys and three girls. She was seven months and seven days pregnant. I am happy. I am emotional. I can’t talk much. Let’s talk again in the morning please,” Tsotetsi said.

In an interview at their family home in Tembisa last month and the publication of which was delayed at the request of the couple for safety and cultural reasons, Sithole said she was shocked and fascinated by the pregnancy.

She said she had been in a state of disbelief when the doctors told her earlier this year that she was expecting six children (sextuplets) before further scans showed that it was in fact octuplets.

Two others could not be detected initially because they were inside the wrong tube, Sithole said.

France’s President Macron slapped in face during walkabout

0

French President Emmanuel Macron was slapped in the face on Tuesday by a man in a crowd of onlookers while on a walkabout in southern France, video of the incident showed.

Macron’s security entourage quickly intervened to pull the man to the ground and move Macron away from him. Two people were arrested in connection with the incident, broadcasters BFM TV and RMC radio reported.

The incident took place while Macron was on a visit to the Drome region in south-eastern France, where he met restaurateurs and students to talk about how life is returning to normal after the Covid-19 epidemic.

In video circulating on social media, Macron, dressed in shirt sleeves, could be seen walking towards a crowd of well-wishers who were behind a metal barrier.

The French president reached out his hand to greet one man, in a green T-Shirt, with glasses and a face mask.

The man could be heard shouting out “Down with Macronia” (“A Bas La Macronie”) and then he delivered a slap to Macron’s face.

Two of Macron’s security detail tackled the man in the green T-shirt, while another ushered Macron away. But Macron remained in the vicinity of the crowd for a few more seconds, and appeared to be talking to someone on the other side of the barriers.

The presidential administration said there had been an attempt to strike Macron, but declined further comment. (Reuters)

 

Senegalese navy seizes 8 tonnes of cannabis resin from boat

0

By Reuters

The Senegalese navy on Sunday intercepted a boat smuggling over 8 tonnes of cannabis resin through the waters off the West African nation’s coast, the armed forces ministry said in a statement.

The vessel, which was flying a Togolese flag, was stopped 140 kilometers (87 miles) from the coastal capital of Dakar with seven crew members on board.

After escorting the boat to a naval base in Dakar, the authorities discovered the 8.37 tonnes of hashish split between 279 bags. The boat was also carrying sacks of plaster, the ministry said on Monday.

It did not provide a street value for the seized drugs.

Earlier this year, authorities in Niger seized 17 tonnes of cannabis resin worth around 31 million euros ($37 million), the largest bust in the country’s history.

According to Interpol, drug kingpins are sending larger shipments in response to COVID-19 travel restrictions and border closures, which have restricted their ability to more frequently move smaller quantities of drugs via individual couriers.

‘You will destabilize the country’: Imam Chebo Cham warns that it’s not the right time to touch Jammeh

0

Respected cleric Sheikh Chebo Cham has warned that former President Yahya Jammeh has a large support base and touching that would throw the country into conflict.

In a huge sermon this past Friday, the imam said: “You’re shouting human rights and destroying your country. If conflict erupts here, the West will sit and watch us. And there is only because of one man… [Everyone saying] ‘Jammeh, Jammeh, Jammeh’. Why can’t you observe carefully and do what is best for us? I am not saying government should not take a step in Jammeh’s issue but this is not the right time. Why? His support base is large. If you touch that, you will destabilize the country.

“You should be careful. Leave the issue until things calm. There are things we should be focused on. But if you follow these people who are only interested in the dalasi, they will destabilize our country. Billahi Wallahi if you take Jammeh to court and Jammeh raises his hand and asks who would like to be his lawyer, you will see one of these lawyers go to him and say he will be his lawyer. Because of the dalasi (money).

“We have seen countries whose president committed crimes that the whole world recommended was criminal and they ended up becoming their lawyers. Now they’re coming to us and telling us things. They want to instigate bad blood between us.

“You say imams should not interfere in state matters. You’re not speaking the truth. Are we not part of the country? Are we not citizens? Are we not the people who read the Quran and the prophet’s sunnah? Are we not the people who studied how Omar ruled? And you say we should not talk? We’re deceiving each other.

“You can have your seat (presidency), we will never seek it. But you should involve scholars on how to govern the country. They are the people who can tell you how God wants it to be done. I swear by Allah it’s the interest of the nation that made me say this.”

Halifa and his misuse of the constitution is killing democratic politics in The Gambia

By Yusupha Bojang

It’s a bogus claim that politicians cannot give out or make attestations for eligible voters card applicants. Even if such a law is written in the constitution, it’s a stupid law and cannot and should not be enforced.

I don’t know why whenever Halifa speaks in Gambian politics, a shot is fired across the bowel! It’s not every law on the law books are applicable in a democracy. Every law in a democracy must pass the democratic test to be enforceable.

I know judges and magistrates must base their judgments on the law but politicians and political commentators are not magistrates and judges. Gambian politicians especially the UDP politicians must challenge Halifa misusing the constitution as a political football whenever it suits him in trying to give himself political influence in our democracy not given to him by the Gambian people. Halifa is just an MP representing his Serre Kunda constituents in parliament and nothing more.

He’s not a judge, a magistrate or a government minister. He has no discernible qualities on democratic politics and economics. He misuses the constitution to snooker democratic politics in The Gambia into his political slots time and time again.

Halifa is always the first to say on any political governance issues in The Gambia what’ll happen and how according to the constitution apparently. Why should anyone listen to Halifa about what’ll happen in The Gambia and how particularly when he gets the calls wrong? The Gambia is a democracy and not a courtroom!

Let the politics and its outcome generate the laws in our democracy and how the country is governed.

Politics and law are two different domains but intimately related. Laws are byproducts of politics. It’s the politics that creates the laws in a democracy and the laws give frame and structure to the politics.

When a law is in contravention of democratic principles and practices, such a law is null and void and a better law that conforms with democratic values and standards are enacted.

In The Gambia, Halifa and the Sierra Leonean lawyers when it suits them misuse the law to create their own democratic political narrative in the country. It doesn’t work like that-) That’s why we have the problems on how to implement the coalition agreement: the president firing an MP from parliament but turned down by the Supreme Court: taking Sheriffo Sonko to court: taking a brand new draft constitution to parliament for promulgation and the nonsense claim that the Banjul mayoress cannot issue attestations to eligible voters card applicants.

How can it make sense in a democracy that the Mayor, an elected representative of the people cannot issue attestation to whoever she wanted to attest for for whatever reasons?

But every time Halifa speaks in Gambian politics, the prophet has spoken and it’s the gospel. We cannot allow Halifa keep destroying democratic politics in The Gambia quoting bogus anti democratic laws from the constitution: laws that are completely ridiculously undemocratic. The constitution says this and the constitution says that: even when it’s obviously stupid and anti democratic.

And the madness that whatever is not written in the constitution cannot be thought of in the Gambian democracy- we’re human beings: we make mistakes and we are allowed to change our minds

Can we inject some common sense into our democracy and how The Gambia is governed: Common sense democratic political governance of The Gambia in line with democratic values and conventions!

Politicians cannot misuse constitutional laws to stifle democratic politics in The Gambia. Let’s allow our democracy to flourish and blossom and not be bugged down by communist standards political governance practices! The Gambia is a democracy!

The writer, Yusupha Bojang, is a social worker.

‘After that we will see’: Fatou Bensouda laughs at Gambia president question as her time at ICC nears end

0

Fatou Bon Bensouda’s time at the International Criminal Court is set to end next week, nine years after taking the top job.

Bensouda first became ICC prosecutor in June 2012, the first Gambian to have served in the high-level role.

She over the weekend spoke to France 24 on various cases before the ICC including Sudan and Gaza.

But when asked if she is now considering becoming president of The Gambia, she responded laughing: “First of all I believe I deserve a rest. So I’m going to take some time to relax and collect my thoughts.

“But as I always say, until the last day that I leave the ICC, that I leave this office as prosecutor my focus is on that. After that we will see.”

Special Forces commander Assimi Goita quickly appoints opposition leader Maiga as Mali’s prime minister

0

Assimi Goita, the Malian colonel who has overthrown two presidents in the past nine months, said he would oversee a transition toward democratic elections as he was sworn in as interim president on Monday.

Goita, a 38-year-old special forces commander, had already been declared president by the constitutional court last month after ousting Bah Ndaw, but was formally sworn in on Monday during a ceremony in the capital Bamako.

Within hours, he appointed opposition leader and former minister Choguel Maiga as prime minister, according to a decree read on state television.

It was not immediately clear to what extent Maiga’s appointment would satisfy calls from Mali’s neighbours and military allies like France and the United States for a civilian-led government. (Reuters)

Voter registration: Number of Gambians issued with voter’s card in seven days revealed

0

The Independent Electoral Commission has revealed nearly 200,000 people were issued with a voter’s card by June 4.

The IEC in a statement on Monday said it registered 191,509 people between May 29 and June 4. Out of this number, 109,675 were female and 81,834 were male.

Statistics revealed by IEC show Brikama leading where over 60,000 people were registered followed by Kanifing whose registration stands at over 45,000 people.

UDP leader Darboe says he visited Independence Stadium to…

0

UDP leader Ousainou Darboe visited the Independence Stadium on Sunday to throw his weight behind Gambian entrepreneurs participating in this year’s trade fair.

In a tweet on Monday, Mr Darboe said he was at the stadium to “show support to young Gambian entrepreneurs participating in the ongoing 14th edition of the trade fair”.

The annual trade fair is an avenue that provides budding entrepreneurs with the platform to showcase their potentials, Mr Darboe added in his tweet.

Voter registration: ‘Seriously concerned’ Gambia For All issues statement

0

Gambia For All has issued a statement saying it is ‘seriously’ concerned about the ‘disorganised’ manner in which the voter registration exercise is being conducted.

BB Darbo’led GFA’s statement read: “It’s been a week since the start of the all important general registration of Gambian voters for the upcoming national election cycle which starts in the first week of December 2021.

“Gambia For All party (GFA) is seriously concerned about the disorganized manner in which this important exercise is being conducted. After preparations lasting over four years, with millions of dollars of tax payers money spent, the first week of voter registration has only given us frustrating long queues, broken-down registration machines, confusion about whether mayors can or cannot attest document for registration, allegations of ferrying in of voters from neighbouring countries, and pictures of what looks like minors waiting in queues to be registered for voting.

“Granted, the problems are not all of IEC’s making. The Barrow administration has woefully failed to provide adequate and timely support to IEC’s  activities, including importantly, extending voting rights to  hundreds of thousands of Gambians in the Diaspora, a right in The Gambian Constitution, that the GFA party Leader and concerned Gambians have brought before the Supreme court of the land and had a ruling in their favour.

“However, a greater share of the blame has to be laid at the door of the IEC. Whether by design or incompetence, it is not acceptable that equipment made for the purpose of voter registration under the Gambian tropical climate are frequently overheating, and thereby delaying the limited time available for registration.

“As stress, ware and tare increase, we must expect more frequent machine downtime due to overheating. What will this mean for Gambians who would want to register, but could not do so due to no fault of theirs? IEC must provide them with answers.

“GFA will be keenly observing to discern a pattern to this frustrating scenario, and will draw appropriate conclusions as regards the whole registration process, the subsequent election integrity, and will decide what actions if any, to take going forward.”

Top imam says being a leader requires killing certain people

0

Imam Chebo Cham has said being a leader sometimes requires placing people on the table and hitting them or even breaking their neck.

In a fiery sermon on Friday, the famous imam said: “If you choose a leader, he should be in charge. A leader has right to correct people. A leader has right to advise people. A leader has right to say no if it’s something that’s in the country’s interest.

“But what we are hearing if we want to go by that, let it be known that our lifestyles will degrade and our religion will be wiped out. And if these two are wiped out, we will live like animals. If you didn’t accept the imam being a leader, the mosque will not be filled with people, likewise a leader.

“He will slap some people for them to behave, he will place some on a table and hit them for them to behave, he will break some people’s neck for you to survive. This is what leadership is about. A country that refuses to do this will always be in a conflict.

“Allah has mercy than you all but he pointed at some to be killed and they are killed. We are not saying we are supported all the killings that took place. God respects life especially that of the believer. But if they did not kill some, some will not behave.”

 

Mali special forces surround conference centre as Colonel Assimi Goita gets sworn in

0

Coup master Assimi Goita got sworn in as Mali’s transition president on Monday days after he took control of the country.

Goita last week arrested Mali’s civilian leaders after he accused them of sabotaging the transition following last year’s coup. He is the mastermind of last year’s coup too.

Goita got sworn in today at the International Conference Centre in Bamako amid tight security.

Al Jazeera’s Nicolas Haque reported special forces surrounded the centre as the ceremony took place.

50 tractors for nation’s farmers, President says the machines are meant to reduce hardship rural women farmers face

0

President Adama Barrow on Monday officially handed over 50 tractors bought by government from Japan.

The tractors will be distributed to farmers across the country.

Speaking at the official handover event on Monday in New Yundum, the president said: “The handing over ceremony of these much-needed vehicles and equipment is quite timely, noting that our agricultural sector has embarked upon a transformation programme for modernizing and mechanizing crop and livestock production and processing.

“This is explicitly captured in the national development Plan and reflected in the second generation Gambia National Agriculture Investment Plan – Food and Nutrition Security.

“And more importantly, this project seeks to improve food security, uplift income status and reduce hardship for rural women farmers.”

The Gambia-China Diplomatic Ties: 46 Years Ago, President Jawara Visited China and Met Chairman Mao

By Hassoum Ceesay

Exactly 46 years ago this week, our founding President His Excellency Alhaji Sir Dawda Kairaba Jawara, GCMRG, made the first visit to Peking, China, by a Gambian Head of State and met the great Chinese leader Chairman Mao. This visit was indeed one of the most memorable and most important diplomatic outings by any Gambian leader since 1965. Through the State Visit to China, President Jawara was able to sign the Technical Cooperation Agreements which continued to define Chinese support to Gambian development efforts in sports, agriculture, health and infrastructure for the next twenty years to 1995, when diplomatic ties were ruptured unceremoniously by the AFPRC Junta. Through this visit, China became a reliable development partner of our Republic.

Jawara’s visit to China from 10-18 June 1975, came only seven months after the establishment of diplomatic ties between Peking and Banjul in November 1974. In a previous article published in April, I had given the context for Banjul severing ties with Formosa(Taiwan) in favour of Peking as a shrewd and pragmatic diplomatic move by the PPP government.

Soon after Banjul-Peking diplomatic ties were established in late 1974, the Chinese Foreign Ministry showed much goodwill and earnestness by sending  one of their experienced diplomats Mr. Chen Shi-Pei, as Charge D’Affaires to Banjul and he took up post late in December 1974, barely six weeks after ties were established. The Gambian Ministry of External Affairs was also quite in earnest; as early as January 1975, Mr. Alhaji A.B Njie, The Gambian Minister of External Affairs led a High Power delegation to Peking on a ‘Special Mission’. In diplomacy, ‘special Missions’ are ‘missions sent abroad to conduct diplomacy with a limited purpose and usually for a limited time’.

The limited purpose for this special mission, which included the powerful Gambian Secretary General and Head of Civil Service Mr Eric Christensen, was to prepare the way for Jawara’s visit to Peking. Other members of the Gambian delegation were Ambassador Ousman Sallah, Dr. L.J Marenah, Director of Agriculture; and the Inspector General of Police, Fred Lloyd-Evans. The Gambian delegation was in Peking from 28 January to 4 February 1975. On the 3 February 1975, Minister Njie signed the protocols for the Technical Cooperation Agreements with his Chinese counterpart, Huan Hua(died 2010). The visit indeed set the ground for President Jawara’s summer visit to China.

Jawara and his delegation arrived Peking on 10 June 1975. The President was accompanied by Ministers S.M Dibba; A.B Njie and L.K Jabang; civil servants M.B Wadda; Dr. J.A Langley and S.Conateh. For the first time in a foreign visit, Jawara took along a whole press corps to Peking including film cameraman E.Sagnia and reporter E.Cole. This signified the importance that Jawara attached to this visit.

The Government owned Gambia News Bulletin had a banner headline: ‘President Leaves for PRC’; in another issue dated 12 June 1975, the same newspaper had another front page lead: ‘President Jawara Given Rousing Welcome in Peking’. Jawara was received at Peking Airport by a posse of high ranking Chinese leaders including Vice Premier Lii Sien-Nien and Wang Chen and the Foreign Minister Hua. ‘A grand welcome ceremony was held for The Gambian Leader at Peking Airport where he also reviewed a Guard of Honour mounted by the Peoples’ Liberation Army corps’, said a story in Xinhua, the China news agency.

A further testimony for the importance that the Chinese authorities attached to this visit was the fact that Jawara was given the opportunity to visit Chou En Lai(died 1976), the famous Premier and diplomat of China, who was at the time was sick. Jawara went to see him at his hospital bed, and according to Xinhua, the two leaders spoke for 30 minutes, and were both satisfied with the talks.

At a big banquet held for The Gambian delegation at the Great Hall of the People in Peking, Jawara took a toast for the health of Chairman Mao, the Chinese leader, who at this time was also out of sorts. Speaking at this banquet before dozens of foreign diplomats and the Chinese Communist Party functionaries, Jawara said these famous and prophetic words which continue to define China-Gambia special ties:

‘China-Gambia relations have been developing by leaps and bounds since the establishment of diplomatic ties between the two countries. China is a member of the Third World; and we the rest of the Developing Countries are happy to have China as a partner for development as there is a lot we could learn from her development techniques, especially for us in The Gambia, agric expansion schemes, infrastructure and light industries’ The Gambia News Bulletin, 17 June 1975.

Later the next day in Peking Jawara signed agreements worth D13 million for the construction of a sports stadium, which became known as the independence Stadium and Friendship Hostel, and two hospitals, which were later rewired as six health centres at Fagikunda, Kaur, Yorobawol, Kuntaur etc.  Jawara heeded advice from his health experts that at this time what The Gambia needed were not huge hospitals notorious for their specialization, but small health centre able to respond to the immediate health needs of the people of our Republic! It was thanks to these Chinese built major health centres that the Primary Health Care(PHC) became a Gambian success stories. Thanks to the Chinese built Independence Stadium which was opened in 1983, Gambian sports have developed by leaps and bounds so to say. Jawara also signed an agreement to increase the number of China Rice Experts in the country from 32 to 45 to help increase rice acreage in the country. Indeed, there is still a rice variety in The Gambia which is called ‘chinese’ introduced in the late 1970s by the Chinese rice experts in parts of the Maccarthy Island Division.

Jawara visited Nanking, Shanghai and Yunchow cities to see China’s Great Leap Forward projects. In fact, so impressed was the Gambian leader with China that told reporters that ‘China is one giant construction site’; he and delegation also visited The Great Wall, and the rice schemes along the Yangtse River: ‘President Jawara Impressed by Chinese Agric Schemes’ read a headline in a Banjul paper.

Jawara was hugely impressed by Chairman Mao, the leader of the China. After a closed door meeting with the ailing revolutionary, Jawara spoke highly of Chairman Mao: ‘the force of his personality is still evident. On meeting him, you are in no doubt whatsoever, that this is the man who has played such a tremendous role in bringing about a great revolution in the lives of 800,000,000 people of China-a country that had for long suffered considerably at the hands of the invaders, colonialists and imperialists and has suffered all sorts of tribulations, from famine to repression until their great revolution under the leadership Chairman Mao have thrown away the yoke of feudalism and imperialism and famine. Chairman Mao is a great unifier; who has been able to make his words and thoughts the words and thoughts of the many millions in China. China is a great nation to be reckoned with in every way in the future’, The Gambia News Bulletin, 28 June 1975.

In July 1975, First Lady Chilel opened a photo exhibition on Jawara’s famous visit to Peking at The Gambia National Library which attracted a big audience; another indication of the strong ties between The Gambia-China.

Jawara visit to Peking in the summer of 1975 was a watershed moment in Gambian diplomatic history. Jawara and delegation had their eyes wide open to see the Chinese strides to transform their country from a backwater to the world superpower, self sufficient in food, for example, within 25 years from 1949. Through this summer visit, the foundation blocks for China-Gambia mutual relations were laid, and as the ties continue to thrive today, we need to reflect on this famous trip by Jawara to Peking. China inspired Jawara as a country committed to raising the lives of her people from hardship and protecting her sovereignty from invaders. When he returned, Jawara reinvigorated his famous and very useful ‘tesito’ or self-help philosophy through which Gambians were mobilized into patriotic action to develop schools, causeways and roads in their communities in search for autarchy. The Gambia will continue to inspire China for her peace and stability and goodwill.

Hassoum Ceesay, noted historian and author was alumni 2018 Seminar on Think-tanks for English-speaking African Countries, Zhejiang Normal University,  Zhejiang Province, China

 

 

Badou Jack stops Dervin Colina in the fourth round at the Hard Rock Stadium in Miami

0

Badou Jack blasted Dervin Colina to the canvas on three occasions to secure a fourth-round stoppage victory in Miami on Sunday

The two-weight world champion had been set to challenge for a WBA belt, but Jean Pascal tested positive for banned substances and Jack instead ruthlessly stopped replacement opponent Colina at the Hard Rock Stadium.

Jack quickly highlighted the gulf in class, landing cleanly from the opening bell, and Colina was deducted a point as early as the second round as he clung on desperately.

The Venezuelan lost another point for holding in the third and the fight was mercifully halted in the following round.

Jack dropped Colina by the ropes and then bludgeoned him back to the canvas twice more before the fight was waved off. (SkySports)

Reset password

Enter your email address and we will send you a link to change your password.

Get started with your account

to save your favourite homes and more

Sign up with email

Get started with your account

to save your favourite homes and more

By clicking the «SIGN UP» button you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy
Powered by Estatik