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‘He wanted a position’: MC Cham Jnr takes on new President Barrow boy Asse Sowe who dumped GDC after primary loss

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Asse Sowe never loved GDC instead he was only interested in a position, GDC national youth president has said.

Asse Sowe announced this week he was joining National People’s Party. It came after he lost to Yero Jallow in a party primary to become the party’s candidate in the upcoming Niamina West national assembly by-election.

Sowe had claimed the primary was manipulated in favour of his opponent.

But according to GDC top official MC Cham Jnr, no party leader at the national level interfered with the primary.

“What I can say is that Asse never wanted GDC. He wanted a position and when he didn’t get it, he is campaigning against the party,” Cham said.

 

Mustapha Darboe tops again as he sweeps GPU awards including awards’ top honour

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Mustapha K Darboe dominated on Saturday night at the Gambia Press Union Awards when he cleaned the house with six honours.

The Malagen editor swept aside his challengers in as many as six categories in typical style – building upon his last year success when he won four honours including journalist of the year, the competition’s highest honour.

The awards won by the journalist this year are, human rights, environment, legal afffairs, investigative reporting, special Covid-19 reporting and journalist of the year.

The journalist however blasted that with all the good stories that are being published, they make little impact in terms of government taking action.

“Nobody cares,” he said at the event when asked about his story on sand mining in Sanyang.

Gamworks announces massive grant program for Gambians who operate in the agriculture sector

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Gamworks has announced 10 million euros have been committed under the Gambia Pilot Program for The Gambia to invest in the GPP grants scheme for agricultural infrastructure, for vocational training and skills development, for training and capacity building. GAMWORKS is entrusted with the management of the Program.

GPP is an initiative by the Government of The Gambia and the German Financial Cooperation, through KfW, and will serve as a model for the larger “Regional Stabilization and Development Fund” of ECOWAS.

“GPP started in October 2019 with its activities designated to upgrade agricultural value chains and promote value addition in the target regions of the Lower River Region (LRR) and the Upper River Region (URR) as well as the Greater Banjul Area (GBA), with the overall aim to promote employment and income opportunities for youth, women and other vulnerable groups like returnees,” Gamworks said.

The agency added: “The candidates for grants will be both communal producers and private businesses in all stages of the value chains. However, private companies are asked to co-finance the investments with a percentage depending on the size of their operation.

“GPP is designed as an open program for which eligible communal and private candidates can apply upon a Call for Proposal issued by GAMWORKS. For participation, all candidates need to register with GAMWORKS, sending their organization name and contact details at: [email protected] to receive the application forms with information on procedures and funding criteria.

“Communal projects will be collected first: The deadline for communities submitting Letters of Interest will be before or on November 16. Private sector applicants will receive details and deadlines at a later stage.

“All grant requests will be reviewed by an independent committee comprised of public and community stakeholders, assisted by experts of GAMWORKS supported by the company PEM CONSULT.”

 

 

BABA GALLEH JALLOW – STORY: The adventures of Alkatan – 9

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By Baba Galleh Jallow

As Nyinya walked home she kept laughing nervously to herself. She still felt some fear, but she was reassured by Alkatan’s words. She now had some hope that she would not, after all, be forced to marry Imam Sukuro. She giggled anytime she thought about the fact that Imam Sukuro couldn’t recognize her. At first she thought he was just pretending but now knew that the imam really thought she was an old lady he had never seen before! This strange fact made her hopeful and trust in Alkatan’s words. He had said the imam will not touch me, she thought as she entered their compound and went straight to her mother’s hut.

Natoma lay on her bed, feeling sad as she has been since her husband decided Nyinya must marry Imam Sukuro. She loved her daughter to death and her heart bled that her small baby will be forced to marry a man old enough to be her grandfather; that she will become the fifth wife of an old man and not the first wife of a young and vibrant man as she had always prayed. She was troubled that her prayers were not answered and that her baby’s life will be destroyed through a forced marriage. For how could a woman be happy if she does not lover her husband, of if she is forced to marry a man old enough to be her grandfather? When sometimes the tears flowed down her face onto the pillow, she turned to face the wall and pretended to be asleep when someone came in. Nyinya entered and called her.
“Nna.”

Natoma turned, saw her daughter’s face and immediately sat up, adjusting her head tie and wondering what happened. The last time she saw Nyinya, the girl’s face was a thick wall of pain and her eyes were red and swollen from crying. Now Nyinya’s face glowed, her eyes sparkled and the girl was laughing. Natoma was scared.

“Eh Nyinya. You are happy,” she observed, at once puzzled and frightened at the look on her daughter’s face. “What happened?” she asked.

“Nna, I don’t think I will marry Imam Sukuro again,” Nyinya giggled as she sat next to her mother on the bed. A hesitant smile broke on Natoma’s lips.

“Eh, what happened? Did your father change his mind?” she asked. “Or did the imam say he no longer wants to marry you?”

“No, Nna,” Nyinya replied. “Alkatan said so. I went to him and told him and he took me to Imam Sukuro and asked him not to marry me. Sukuro did not agree but Alkatan said I should not worry, that Sukuro will never touch me!”

“Ah, I hear people say that Alkatan is not an ordinary person. But what will your father say? Only if Sukuro dies before tomorrow can I believe that he will not marry you Nyinya. These men? What they say is what they do.”

“But I believe in Alkatan Nna,” Nyinya said. “When we went to his compound Imam Sukuro did not recognize me. He kept calling me an old woman. He did not recognize me Nna!”

“He did not recognize you? He said you were an old woman? Is he gone mad?” Natoma could not understand what her daughter was saying as Nyinya explained how Imam Sukuro insisted that she was an old woman and not the girl he was about to marry. She told her mother Alkatan said that she should not worry, that she should agree to everything she was asked to do, and that Imam Sukuro will never touch her.

“Hmmn. That is strange,” Natoma said. “But people say Alkatan’s head is wide. If he could throw Degere in a wrestling match and convince Kiyanka to kill thirty cows and give them out as charity and never to take people’s goats again, then maybe he can help us make sure Imam Sukuro does not marry you.”

“He won’t Nna!” Nyinya said, giggling. “I believe what Alkatan said.”

After lunch, Afang Wolemu and other elders sat on mats under the big tree in the middle of his compound, chatting and waiting for Imam Sukuro’s delegation to arrive from the Borati clan. This was not the first time the Borati and Wolemu clans had intermarried. Afang Wolemu was particularly pleased that his daughter was getting married to Imam Sukuro.

“As for us, we should just thank God. Imam Sukuro is a man of blessings and will take good care of our daughter,” Afang Wolemu kept repeating, stopping short of mentioning how happy he was that the imam was well-off and would definitely help him once in a while. “Eh, what is important is that when a woman reaches the age of marriage, she should be married.”

“Ah, that is the truth,” some elders chorused. Someone observed that any woman who was married to Imam Sukuro was assured of heaven because the imam was a man of God and he had no chaakaan. “Imam Sukuro is a man of truth and seriousness,” another elder observed.

As they spoke they saw Imam Sukuro’s delegation enter the compound, with Imam Diyamu holding the bundle of colanuts to be offered, accepted and shared to formalize the marriage. Afang Wolemu and his relatives were a little surprised to see Imam Sukuro among the arrivals. It was unusual that the man who is begging for a wife is among those who came to beg and so the Wolemu elders could not help noticing Imam Sukuro’s strange presence among the Borati delegation. Greetings were exchanged and the delegation invited to sit down on the mats. As soon as Afang Wolemu finished repeating that the Borati elders were welcome, Imam Sukuro said he knew that he was not supposed to be there but he came with the delegation because he wanted to say something to Afang Wolemu before the marriage was tied.

“Yesterday that old man Alkatan came with an old woman to my compound to beg me not to marry your daughter,” Imam Sukuro continued. “They said you did not send them. Were you aware of this Afang Wolemu?”

“No I was not aware of that,” Afang Wolemu responded, looking surprised and a little confused. “Did you say they came to beg you not to marry my daughter?”

“Yes,” the imam said. “But what worries me is that Alkatan said the old woman was your daughter Nyinya. Eh, I don’t want to enter into darkness Afang. That’s why I came here now.”

“Eh, I don’t even know what you are talking about imam because I Wolemu did not send anyone to ask you not to marry my daughter,” Afang Wolemu replied, feeling perplexed. “And I know that my daughter will not dare to do that because both she and her mother will get out of my compound if she did. As for Alkatan, I did not send him to you.”

“Well our elders say you should not buy something you have not seen,” Imam Sukuro said. “You should only buy something when you lay eyes on it and you are satisfied that it is the thing you are buying and not something else. It is for that reason that I came. I want to see the girl for whom all of you elders are here today. I want to make sure that you are giving me your daughter and not an old woman whose origin I don’t know.”

Afang Wolemu and the elders were surprised by Imam Sukuro’s request but they agreed with him that no one should buy what they have not seen. And so Afang Wolemu called out Nyinya’s name and when she answered, asked her to come over. Nyinya came out of her mother’s hut and walked towards the elders. Nyinya arrived and bent her knees in greeting to the elders, and said, “I am here father.” Natoma stood at her door watching.

“Eh Imam, here is the one you want to see, my daughter Nyinya,” Afang Wolemu said, gesturing towards the girl.

“Where is she?” the imam asked. “I mean your daughter Nyinya, for whom I bring colanuts today.”

“Eh, Imam, here is my daughter Nyinya, standing right before you. She’s the only daughter I have and she’s the one you want to marry,” Afang Wolemu said, beginning to get irritated. “You said you wanted to see her; here she is.”

At that point Imam Sukuro lost his temper. He angrily sprang to his feet and shook his fist at Afang Wolemu. Some of the elders grabbed his legs while others stood up, ready to restrain him.

“So you Afang Wolemu think I am a mad man!” the imam angrily said. “So you were the one who sent Alkatan yesterday to ask me not to marry your daughter! If you don’t want to give me your daughter why didn’t you just tell me, ha? Was this not the same old woman who came with Alkatan to my compound yesterday?” he queried, pointing at Nyinya and glaring down at Afang Wolemu. A chorus of voices from the elders pleaded with the imam to take it easy and assured him that the woman standing there was indeed Nyinya. Afang Wolemu and the elders were bewildered and wondered whether the imam had gone mad.

“In fact, this talk is too much!” Imam Sukuro snapped angrily. “You take your daughter and give me back my cow and my colanuts!” With that Imam Sukuro bent down and grabbed the bundle of colanuts and instructed his disciples to go untie the cow tied to a stake nearby. He slipped his feet into his shoes and angrily marched out of Afang Wolemu’s compound. Not knowing what was really happening, the elders loudly wondered among themselves and gradually dispersed. “No one must ever come here to beg for my daughter’s hand in marriage to Sukuro! I will fight whoever dares to come here on behalf of Sukuro again!” Afang Wolemu angrily warned as the elders dispersed.

The next day Nyinya went to visit her best friend Sima at Imam Sukuro’s compound and the imam recognized her. He sat up in his pilyaan as the girl passed and said “Eh, is this not Nyinya? Where were you?”

“Salaam Imam, I’ve been here,” Nyinya responded and walked on.

“You’ve been here?” Imam Sukuro queried, putting his prayer beads into his pocket. He would wait until Nyinya was coming back that way.

Big showdown in Niamina? GDC and NPP both pull large crowds as candidates file in their nomination

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Niamina West is set to witness a high-stakes national assembly by-election after the candidates of both GDC and NPP pulled impressive crowds as they filed their nomination with the Independent Electoral Commission.

Journalist Kexx Sanneh told The Fatu Network candidates for both GDC and NPP have handed in their nomination papers with the IEC in Janjanbureh.

Yero Jallow and Birom Sowe will now have to wait for the IEC to tell them if their nomination have been accepted.

The Fatu Network however understands a lot of NPP supporters have travelled to Niamina from Kombo to cheer the party’s candidate. The GDC candidate has also enjoyed similar backing from some UDP MPs and supporters.

Asse Sowe leaves GDC for NPP after primary misery

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Asse Sowe has said he has left Gambia Democratic Party for National People’s Party.

Sowe had contested and lost in a primary to become GDC’s candidate for Niamina West’s bye-election slated for November 7.

He told National People’s Party TV on Friday his supporters had insisted they convert to NPP. He also said the primary was manipulated in favour of his rival.

Alpha Conde wins re-election with 59.9% of vote – France 24

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Guinea’s octogenarian leader Alpha Conde has won the country’s presidential election with 59.9% of the vote, France 24 has reported.

It comes as the government deployed soldiers to assist the police, and gunfire erupted in the capital, Conakry, on Friday, according to the BBC.

Opposition leader Cellou Dalein Diallo has alleged large-scale fraud and declared himself the winner.

After summit, Gambia For All says it will not take part in Niamina West plebiscite

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The National Executive Secretariat of Gambia for All has said the party has decided at its meeting on Friday 23 October 2020 not to take part in the forthcoming bye–election in Niamina West Constituency scheduled to take place next month, November 2020.

“This decision was taken after an assessment of the party’s current activity programme,” the party said in a statement.

The statement added: “The party is now actively engaged in reinforcing its structures throughout the country and preparing to hold national congressesfor the establishment of both the Youth League and the Women’s League.

“These and other already programmed activities do not allow the party, at this critical juncture, to divert attention to other activities, which carry the potential risk of distracting it from the more important task of preparing for the fast approaching presidential elections.”

Security sector reform: NSA says they’ve conducted study tour to as far as in Kosovo

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By Fatou Camara II

The nation’s security sector reform programme has seen the government embark on study tours that included Kosovo, the national security adviser said on Friday – as the nation’s security leaders engaged reporters on the tedious programme.

“We have done a lot of training regarding sexual and gender-based violence, collaborative policies, human rights and security institutions vetting, counter-terrorism etc. We have also had the opportunity to go on a study tour namely to Ghana, Sierra Leone and to Kosovo, and in each of those study tour, it was not restricted to members of the security institutions. We ensured that the oversight management were part of the tours, namely the ministry, the national assembly etc,” Momodou Badjie said during a news conference in Bijilo.

The President Adama Barrow-led government in 2017 rolled out a security sector reform programme that seeks to bring the country’s security institutions in line with democratic principles. But more than three years since the launch of the programme, analysts have said the process has been slow.

But according to NSA, the government of President Barrow has been trapped in a serious exercise to improve the country’s security landscape.

Mr Badjie said: “It is evident that the government of the Gambia under His Excellency President Adama Barrow has been engaged in a very serious and a rigorous exercise to improve a lot of our security landscape and terrain.

“While enormous progress has been registered in this endeavour, we are not oblivious of the remaining challenges and we are ever determined to tackle them [head] on, but these obviously will be done holistically and when I mean holistically I want to draw you to the fact that there is this saying, ‘security is everybody’s business’. So when we say we’re determined, I’m not restricting the scope to the security sector but every individual including obviously our partners here, the media fraternity.

“Considering the scale of the transitional risks and challenges, and the autocratic rule and the authoritative one and moving to democracy, we are resolved that security sector reform is a must if we are to progress as a peaceful, stable, secure and civilised nation in the 21st century.”

 

 

Goodbye, guys! Constitutional Review Commission announced dissolved but a few officials will stay on till next year

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The Constitutional Review Commission stood dissolved from Thursday October 22, a statement by the commission said.

The commission cobbled nearly three years ago was tasked to build a new constitution for the nation. The commission has since fulfilled that task.

The dissolution came on Thursday and according to a statement by the CRC, it was in line with the CRC Act of 2017 that “requires the Commission to dissolve after one month the Draft Constitution Promulgation Bill is tabled at the National Assembly”.

“The dissolution affects all but the CRC Secretary and a very few members of staff in Finance and Human Resources Departments who will continue till January 2021 for auditing purpose. This extension is in pursuance of section 22(4) of the CRC Act.

“As we are departing on a happy and clean slate, the CRC wishes to thank all its staff for living up to its expectations. Every effort and resources invested was worthwhile and posterity will remember us for the love of country.

“To the media, Gambians and CRC stakeholders, you have all been incredibly amazing throughout the review process. Your level of participation and inclusion in the process was massive.

“We are touched parting with you but happy leaving office with our heads high above,” the CRC said.

SAM SARR – COMMENT: Why I voted for the Biden-Harris ticket

I have in the past four years been wrestling with my thoughts over who would be the most viable Democratic presidential candidate in 2020 to challenge President Donald Trump and win my vote. I had since made up my mind not to cast my vote for any candidate who doesn’t present major-policy-changing ideas and also not ones grounded on merely getting rid of “undesirable Trump” for all his downcast attributes in the past four years. In fact, if it hadn’t been the negative effect of the global pandemic on the American economy, I think Biden would have faced an uphill battle of beating Trump on the health of our economy that he had impressively built.

And to be quite honest when President Trump intimated his intention to go after China for recklessly spreading the plague around the world, I almost thought of rooting in for him because of my invariable conviction that, no matter what, President Xi Jinping’s government or the communist ruling party of China must be held accountable for the destructive effects of COVID-19 on every economy in the world. But that all changed when recent intelligence reports, reiterated by Joe Biden in their debate last night, revealed Trump’s hidden private bank accounts in China where he had been borrowing money for his personal business. As typical of him, he tried to debunk it with not what many Americans were dismissing as baseless allegations but with “I have closed those accounts in China since 2015”. Who would believe that or ever trust his effectiveness in going after China after such revelations and his refusal to still release his taxes?

So as President Barack Obama put it two days ago at a political rally in Pennsylvania in support of his former vice president’s candidature that Trump was in the White House more for his personal gains than that of the Americans in general.

Nevertheless, when Joe Biden finally emerged as the Democratic presidential frontrunner, I thought he was going to run primarily on “Obamaism” until I heard an important statement made by his running mate Kamala Harris during her debate with Vice President Mike Pence on October 7, 2020. That a Biden government would not only decriminalize the possession and use of marijuana at federal level but will go further to expunge the criminal record of the millions of ex-convicts on the substance, mainly black people and minorities, from the national database.

That essentially won my vote for a government which I think will provide us with the most progressive post-coronavirus-pandemic administration Americans will forever extol.

Already 16 states in the USA have decriminalized the recreational use of the “drug” while others are commercially cultivating and harvesting it, with all indications denoting its ultimate national legalization soon.

Then just like in the case of alcoholics most lawmakers now agree that the unfortunate and inevitable abusers and addicts are better of being treated in substance-abuse centers and helped to readjust back to normalcy rather than being subjected to such cruel punishments.

But without a doubt, I think it is well overdue for this long-awaited holistic expunge of the criminal records of these poor folks, locked up in the past and present for possessing or smoking marijuana, a policy that has apparently destroyed the lives of millions of ambitious and brilliant young men and women often condemned to the life of surviving through crime and other unorthodox means.

In 2016, in my neighborhood of Newark, New Jersey, I ran into a 29 year old African American lady selling odd items like winter gloves, scarfs, hats, wallets, belts, incense and other similar things crammed on a small rectangular table.

I cannot remember what I bought from her but I certainly purchased few items out of sympathy after briefly hearing the story of her first major setback in life that drove her into the job of a petty street vendor.

Tameka is the name still echoing in my mind as the one she gave me. She had completed high school at the age of 17 with outstanding performance and had throughout wanted to join the US Air-force. In her entry exams she had scores above the average and was scheduled to report for training when few days before, a white cop arrested her smoking a “joint” with friends at the Branch-Brooks Park on Clifton Avenue.

She was tried and convicted to a jail term of six months and since then all efforts to rehabilitate her life for something better had failed. She told me how most of her friends and family members in the neighborhood caught in the same quandary had to resort to crime for survival and had turned some into repeated offenders constantly going in and out of jail. She never wanted to go back to jail which drove her into becoming a street “hustler”.

These stories of arrests and incarcerations of mostly minorities have not decrease the number of users and abusers of the substance as expected especially after enduring harsh punishments but instead continue to increase and create more criminals everywhere.

In 2018 alone, over 660,000 Americans in possession of or caught using marijuana were convicted by the bias justice system adding to the over-bloated criminal database unnecessarily turning young boys and girls into irreversible delinquents. The Joe Biden-Kamala Harris presidency promised to overhaul the decadent justice system that would, among this one, treat all Americans equally and give a second chance to most hopeless people.

Just for you to know, all three former US presidents before Donald Trump, i.e. Bill Clinton, George Bush and Barack Obama had confessed to have at some point in their youthful or adolescent lives experimented the “drug”. I don’t know about Clinton and Bush who as whites would have most likely enjoyed preferential treatment had they been caught by cops, but in the case of Obama, an African American, his arrest with the substance would have terminated all his hopes and chances of ever becoming a US senator, let alone a president. He would have been among the millions of criminals in the system’s database, permanently destroying his life and perhaps never noticed in history.

Expunging these records will be the greatest thing an American president would be remembered for in modern history. It will be like a gift from the gods in a post-coronavirus pandemic.

For that reason I voted for the Biden-Harris ticket and will urge all my fellow Americans to join me in doing so.

Thanks for reading.

SAMSUDEEN SARR

BANJUL, THE GAMBIA

Health ministry wants security raised at COVID-19 treatment centres to end escape of patients

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The ministry of health has proposed escalation of security at the country’s coronavirus treatment facilities to end the escape of patients.

On Thursday, the ministry said a 36-year-old female patient ‘absconded’ from one of the treatment centres. She is the latest to flee from a treatment centre.

The ministry is now calling for security to be “beefed up at all COVID-19 treatment/isolation centers to prevent the abscondence of patients”.

I have never smoked cannabis, says Interior Minister Yankuba Sonko as he complains journalists are publishing wrong information

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Interior Minister Yankuba Sonko has asked journalists to avoid publishing false information about people, saying he’s been accused of smoking cannabis.

“I have seen somebody made mention of, yes I have drunk. I have never drink in my life. For somebody to say I used to fell down in the street? That person did not know me. That I have smoked cannabis. I have never in my life… So what sort of journalists are we talking of, what sort of information are we… And people are publishing that?” the interior minister said in Bijilo on Friday during a news conference on the country’s security sector reform programme.

According to Sonko, a former police chief, “what we’re seeing now is not healthy for your profession and also for the nation”.

“People sit at their homes and write anything because of democracy. Yes, you have a right to express your opinion but at least take reasonable steps to investigate what happened,” he said.

“There are some news media that I’m not mentioning now. Because what they’re saying, I will be part of something and they’re saying a wrong thing in that thing. Imagine if I am in this meeting and something is said here, it’s obvious to me about what is said here

“It’s only in a peaceful atmosphere that you can operate. I witness the impasse here and journalits were not out. So let us pray for peace and stability in this country,” he added.

Cabinet hands Dawda Jallow authority to initiate talks among Gambians over draft constitution

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Attorney General Dawda Jallow has been handed the mandate by cabinet to proceed and initiate a dialogue among all stakeholders with a view to reaching a consensus over the draft constitution.

The draft constitution has been hanging by a thread after a bill that sought to trigger it got thrown out members of the national assembly last month.

The attorney general who is also the minister of justice had said he was working on an independent body to initiate talks in a bid to finding common ground.

According to the minister of information Ebrima Sillah, “cabinet following an exhaustive discussion, mandated the Attorney General and Minister of Justice to proceed and initiate a dialogue among all stakeholders with the view to reaching a consensus over the draft constitution.”

It came at the seventh cabinet meeting held at State House on Thursday.

 

Preliminary count has Guinea’s Alpha Conde headed toward 1st-round victory

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By AFP

Guinea President Alpha Conde appears set for a first-round election victory, a preliminary vote count showed, after fresh clashes between security forces and opposition supporters disputing the poll.

But opposition candidate Cellou Dalein Diallo has claimed victory in the poll and his camp has accused the government of “large-scale fraud” in counting ballots.

Cities across the West African nation have been plagued by violence that has left around 10 people dead since Monday, according to authorities.

The violence follows a high-stakes presidential vote on Sunday in which Conde ran for a controversial third term.

Months of unrest have seen mass protests against Conde’s re-election bid violently put down. Security forces have killed dozens of people in the past year.

Normally busy streets in the capital Conakry were deserted on Thursday, and explosions could be heard in the distance.

Young people erected barricades, knocked over trash cans, lit fires and hurled stones at police and gendarmes in riot gear, who responded with gunfire, according to witnesses.

“We have not slept all night because of the detonations, of the heavy fire. We feel like we are in a country at war,” a resident of Sonfonia, Mamadou Moussa Bah, told AFP.

“Young children are traumatized while their elders are on the street, violently confronting the police,” he said.

In other parts of the country, clashes broke out in the towns of Pita, Labe and Mali.

“Many of our parents went to the villages, they preferred to take refuge there,” Marwana Soumanoh, a boilermaker in Pita, told AFP, accusing the police of abuses.

Abdoulaye Fily Diallo, the mayor of the northern town Mali, denounced the actions of soldiers “who go into town and shoot everywhere, frightening everyone”, he said, accusing them of wounding several people

Coronavirus patient dies as one, a woman, escapes from treatment centre

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The health ministry said on Thursday a COVID-19 patient receiving treatment in a treatment facility has died.

The death of the 56-year-old has taken the country’s death toll to 119.

It comes as the health ministry said a 36-year-old female ‘absconded’ from one of the treatment centres.

The health ministry also said in its latest national situation report on coronavirus that two new coronavirus cases have been registered. The country’s cases now stand at 3,659.

Mai Fatty says only God knows who will be the country’s next president

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Mai Ahmad Fatty has said it’s only ‘Allah’ that knows who the next president of the country will be, warning that no one can claim to be the ‘anointed’ winner of next year’s election.

The GMC leader speaking to Gambians via his official Facebook page on Thursday said: “Sovereignty is bestowed by Allah to whosoever He pleases. (Quran, Surah 3, Verse 26). Only Allah knows who the next President will be. 2021 may prove shocking to many because the unexpected may happen.

“No one today, can claim to be the anointed winner in 2021. Anything can happen from now onwards and the race remains wide open. Mutual respect is essential. If you respect your Party Leader, accord similar respect to others’ Leaders as well. If you disrespect other people’s leaders, they too may in turn disrespect your Leader.

“This is why mutual respect is key for all of us in the political process. While we may disagree, we should respect each other’s views. That is the cardinal principle of democracy. May Peace prevail in The Gambia.”

Breaking: President Barrow promotes nation’s military leaders

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President Adama Barrow has promoted the nation’s top military leaders, the defence ministry has said.

In a statement, the defence ministry said the president has promoted the nation’s army chief of defence staff Major General Yakuba Drammeh to the rank of Lieutenant General.

His deputy Mamat O Cham has been promoted to the rank of Major General while the army commander Colonel Ousman Gomez and commander of Republican National Guard Colonel Turo Jawneh have been promoted to the rank of Brigadiers General respectively.

UDP confirms it is backing GDC in Niamina West national assembly By-election

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By Sarjo Brito

The GDC Deputy Propaganda Secretary Abdoulie Cham has told The Fatu Network that UDP will be backing their candidate for the forthcoming Niamina West By-elections slated for November 7, 2020.

Abdoulie Cham said the United Democratic Party has decided to not contest for the elections as they wish to back the GDC candidate following the demise of their MP Demba Sowe who suddenly died in Morocco 10 months ago. Cham said the party’s decision to back the GDC candidate is to honour the late MP.

UDP spokesperson Almamy Fanding Taal has confirmed to The Fatu Network UDP will indeed back GDC in the parliamentary bout.

Taal said: “It is true. We are supporting the candidature of the GDC candidate in the by-election because they won fair and square in 2017 and because of a force majeure, the National Assembly Member passed away. We believe that in the interest of multi-party democracy in the Gambia, that this decision taken I think should be encouraged.

“That as many parties as possible should be able to participate in our parliamentary democracy. Therefore, we are supporting them, and we are not putting up a candidate to contest the seat.”

 

Bubacarr Keita rape trial: Witness says her sister was aged 15 when her mother told her it looked like she was pregnant

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By Lamin Njie

A prosecution witness told the high court in Bundung her sister was 15 years old when her mother told her it appeared she was pregnant.

The first witness who is an ex-wife of Bubacarr Keita standing trial for allegedly raping a minor, continued her testimony before Judge Momodou SM Jallow on Thursday.

“She was 15 years,” the witness taking the witness stand in her modernised African dress and ponytail hairstyle said when asked by prosecuting lawyers about how old was her sister when her mother told her it looked like her sister was pregnant.

Earlier on, the witness told the court the relationship between her ex-husband and her sister was ‘normal’.

“It was normal, just like brother and sister,” she said adding, “Yes, there was a joking relationship between them,” when asked if the duo had such relationship.

The witness who said she is a businesswoman who engages in different kinds of business that ranged from designing and make-up artistry said she would normally start her day at work by 9am. She however quickly added her work was contingent upon ‘calls’.

According to the witness, it was frequent for her to work at night and she would usually leave at the house her two kids, her sister (complainant) and her husband at the time.

“Sometimes if I have programs like fashion shows, I would be there until 4am,” the witness said when asked whether it was frequent for her to be at work until the early hours of the morning.

Testifying further, the witness said ‘sometimes we would go together, sometimes we would not go together, sometimes if we go together he would say he was going to his friends and I would be their alone’. This was after the prosecuting lawyer Assan Jobe asked her if she usually went to fashions shows with her husband.

The prosecuting lawyer then asked her: “Now let’s focus on the times when he would tell you he was going to his friends: do you know which of his friends he would usually go to?”

The witness replied: “Sometimes he would tell me, ‘I’m going to meet my friend Ansu’, sometimes he would say, ‘we have a barbecue somewhere’, or sometimes he would say, ‘I’m tired, I’m going home, call me when you’re done [to pick you up]’.”

The prosecuting lawyer examined the witness further: “The times he would tell you he’s going home, did you find out that he actually went home?”

“Yes, he would go home,” the witness said.

She then explained when asked when she got to knowing about the pregnancy of her sister and how she discovered it: “When I discovered the pregnancy was last November. That was when I discovered it.

“I woke up in the morning and I gave my sister lunch (school stipend) as she got ready for school. When I finished (preparing herself), I went to work. I later went to Banjul from work as I had a consignment there to pick up.

“In Banjul, I got a phone call from *Tida’s (sister; Tida not her real name) school. They asked me if I would be able to pick up *Tida because she’s collapsed. I then told them, ‘okay’ – and then I called my mom. I told my mom *Tida has collapsed in school and I wouldn’t be able to go pick her up as I was in Banjul but I would ask the driver to go and pick her up.

“My mom told me, ‘okay, let the driver go get her and I will bathe her with some medication because it looks like these collapse [of girls] is frequent in the school’. Because that was the second time she was experiencing it in the school.

“So the driver took her home (mother’s house) and when I got home, I called my mom. I asked her how *Tida was doing. She told me she was sleeping but told me I should allow her to stay with her for a while so she could keep bathing her with medication and she would not go to school.

“So in the night, I spoke with my mother again before going to bed, I asked how *Tida was doing. She told me she’s woken up and she’s entered the bathroom. So while speaking with my mom, she asked, ‘*Awa, have you noticed *Tida’s condition?’ I told her, ‘notice what?’ She told me, ‘it looks like *Tida is pregnant’ I told her, ‘pregnant?’ I said to her, ‘how can *Tida get pregnant, *Tida is just a chid?’

“I told her, ‘I have never given a chance to *Tida. ‘From classes, *Tida would be in the house’. ‘So how can *Tida be pregnant?’ She laughed and told me, ‘I’m an elder, if I see a pregnant person, I know. ‘I have seen her take off her clothes and going to the bathroom’. She then told me, ‘whatever you’re doing tomorrow, you should come and pick up *Tida and take her to the hospital to have her medically checked’.”

The witness then turned to the next morning upon the prosecuting lawyer asking her to discuss the events around that morning.

She explained: “The following morning, I woke up, made breakfast for my husband and also gave food to the kids to eat. After he (husband) ate, he left the house and I was there with the kids. While I was feeding the kids food, my ex-husband texted me. On the whole while he was leaving the house, he saw his mother washing dishes. He told me (in the text message) ‘you’re sitting inside the house while my mother is outside washing dishes’.

“I told him (via text), ‘you left me in the house taking care of the kids, so if your mother takes her dishes and washing them, what’s wrong with that?'”

The case continues on November 9.

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