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Police vow transparency over death of suspected drug trafficker amid claims they killed him

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Police on Saturday vowed to keep things honest over the death of a suspected drug trafficker.

The decomposing body of Matarr Ceesay was recovered on Friday in the mangroves near Bond Road as claims raged he was shot during a showdown with police.

Police on Saturday confirmed the death of the 37-year-old Banjulian as they announced they have opened an investigation.

Police said: “The Office of the Inspector General of Police wishes to inform the public that, it has opened investigations into circumstances surrounding the incident of a single dead body found along the mangroves of Banjul on the 25th September 2020.

“The body was later identified as Matar Ceesay, 37 years old male of no. 14 McDonald Street in Banjul.

“Preliminary investigations revealed that, the found body is linked to an incident reported by the Police Patrols in Banjul dated 19th September 2020.

“The report indicates that during routine patrols in Banjul and its surroundings, the Police came across a vehicle with registration number BJL 2597 H, around Bond road.

“As they approached the vehicle two individuals were seen from a distance running into the mangroves and swimming away. The officers pursued but lost track of them.

“Police officers returned to the vehicle and a search was conducted. They recovered 56 kilos of suspected cannabis wrapped in bundles. An additional unspecified amount of suspected cannabis was also recovered in another bag inside the vehicle. The vehicle and the suspected cannabis were then taken to the Police Station and a case file opened for further investigations.

“Karim Jabbie alias Chana, a mechanic by profession was later arrested in connection to the incident and Usaman Rahman owner of the vehicle was also arrested. They were later handed to the Drug Law Enforcement Agency as it was a suspected drug related matter .

“Police probe further established that, it was Matar Ceesay (deceased) and one Njaga whose whereabouts is yet to be established, who ran into the mangroves leaving the vehicle and suspected cannabis behind.

“The found body of Matar Ceesay has been sent to the EFSTH mortuary for further examination to establish cause of death.

“The Public is assured that the matter will be investigated and the outcome communicated to the public.

“The usual support and cooperation of the public is highly solicited. The public is encouraged to share information that maybe useful to the investigation.”

 

President Barrow details how he told his finance minister it was their heads versus Hakalang road

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President Adama Barrow has lifted the lid on a conversation he had with his finance minister over the Hakalang Road.

The president on Saturday presided over the laying of the foundation stone for the construction of the key Nuimi road.

At the event, the president detailed how he shared with his finance minister his uncompromising stance over the road.

The president said in Buniadu: ” I was teasing the finance minister. I told him I would go and rob a bank and build the Hakalang road if that’s what it takes.

“I told him so anyone in my government that should strive and ensure Hakalang is achieved, be sure that ‘each of you, it is your head versus Hakalang’s’. Hakalang happens, we continue or Hakalang doesn’t happen, we would not continue [working together].”

President Barrow says if it were not for coronavirus, masquerades would have been brought to his Nuimi event

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President Adama Barrow has expressed dismay coronavirus prevented his Nuimi event from being a massive ceremony.

The president is currently laying the foundation stone for the construction of the Hakalang road in Nuimi, a project he says is long overdue.

The president however while expressing joy the project finally got to commencing rued the fact that the flagging event wasn’t big enough.

He said: “As I stand here today, I’m very happy but there’s one thing that saddens me: that is we’re in coronavirus. But if we were not in coronavirus today, we would have passed the night here. Anything that’s culture would all have been brought here.

“We would bring masquerade, we would bring kumpos, we would bring koras, we would have done everything here. It’s worth it. Since before we were not born up till we were born, we have been hearing about Hakalang road. There’s no name in this country that matches Hakalang.

“So the people of Nuimi, be aware that it’s not just you who are happy, it the entire Gambia that’s happy. When we signed the Hakalang road [project] to now, the amount of people that calls me from abroad or within The Gambia praying for me, expressing joy just because of this Hakalang [project]. I was even surprised in the end.

“Roads have long been constructed in the country but why is it that everybody was focused on Hakalang road? That’s why I told them I was ready to go to any length. I had once summoned the minister of finance and the minister of works to my office and asked them to ensure what the Hakalang road means to me meant the same exact way for them. I even jokingly told the finance minister I was even prepared to rob a bank and go and build the Hakalang road.”

President Barrow emphatically tells people of Nuimi the Hakalang road is fully funded by his government

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President Adama Barrow has told the people of Nuimi the Hakalang road is ‘fully’ funded by his government.

Most Gambian roads are funded through loans acquired from development partners but the president has informed the people of Nuimi the Hakalang road is ‘fully’ funded by his government.

“I must mention that the Hakalang project is fully funded by my government. Therefore, completing all the necessary arrangements, I thank the ministry of finance and economic affairs, the ministry of transport, works and infrastructure, the national road authority and most notably the Honourable National Assembly Members who were at the forefront of the deliberation to allocate the necessary funding for the project,” the president said on Saturday while laying the foundation stone of the Hakalang road.

His speech continues…

 

NPP cards get displayed and t-shirts and caps get worn as President Barrow’s Nuimi event gets underway

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President Adama Barrow is currently presiding over the laying of the foundation stone of the Hakalang road in Nuimi.

The key road is set to be constructed by the government and the president Saturday morning left Banjul for Buniadu to bless the construction exercise.

The event has however been embellished as supporters of the president displayed NPP t-shirts and cards amid singing and dancing.

Open letter to UN rep for West Africa and Sahel Dr Mohamed Ibn Chambas

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Doctor Mohamed Ibn Chambas

United Nations Special Representative of

The Secretary General for West Africa and

Sahel and head of UNOWAS

Dear Doctor Chambas,

It is from a compelling concern that I decided to write this open letter to you intended to update you about the current political state affairs in the Gambia and to seek your immediate intervention in what I personally experienced in 2016 as the crucial role you played through its ultimate outcome. I was at the time the acting ambassador of the Gambia at the UN.

It is now coming to four years since I sat with you in your office at the UN high-rise on 1st Avenue, New York City to discuss my fears over the adamancy of President Mackey Sall of Senegal to spearhead a war campaign in the Gambia on lies and personal political ambition. In that hour-long meeting I did warn you about the unintended consequences of starting any kind of war nowadays and even reminded you of its paragon in Iraq and Libya, emphatically illustrating the repercussions of relying on misleading intelligence that in the Iraq debacle demonstrated how the arrogant invaders failed to grasp the underlying religious conflict that for about a century fashioned the political division of the Arab nation. Indeed the Western invaders, deceived into thinking that overthrowing the dictatorial government of Saddam Hussain was not only going to reveal his hidden weapons of mass destruction that never existed but will also bring them honor and respect from the liberated Iraqis but instead ended up bogging them down in a fierce resistance with no glimmer of hope for success. The over-century old Shia-Sunni sectarian conflict was neglected or downplayed out of ignorance, their ultra motives or from outright recklessness.

Doctor Chambas, I still could recall my fruitless efforts of juxtaposing the Iraqi scenario to what might possibly happen in the Gambia from giving Mackey Sall his wish of a war in order to discourage you from supporting the nasty conspiracy. You were convinced by a bunch of crooks that the entire APRC government and their ambassadors in particular were against President Jammeh. For a moment I had even believed that I had caught your attention when I highlighted how Gambia’s political landscape had been before the emergence of the Jammeh government. That it was immensely influenced by tribal and cultural prejudice against the Jola tribe that President Jammeh hailed from. That they were virtually a persecuted ethnic group in the Senegambia subregion, subjected to all kinds of discrimination and marginalization and expected to eternally remain below the hierarchy of human importance that indeed prompted their rebellion in Casasamance since 1982. Before Jammeh came to power and helped in debunking that myth by illustrating how Jolas could equally and effectively participate in every imaginable narrative, they had had no say in the political dispensation of the region regardless of their historic presence in the area far longer than any other ethnic group claiming ownership of the land. And while they were applauded for their handwork, honesty and sense of social harmony, a tribe uniquely free of caste system, the establishment nevertheless systematically denied them the basic political, economic, educational and social opportunities enjoyed by the other “self-anointed superior tribes”. When Jammeh unexpectedly emerged as the winner in the 1994 coup, all that nonsense changed; but the evil concept of taking the Jolas back to where they belong persisted, forming the cardinal foundation of an opposition force that in 22 years made several attempts to overthrow his government or kill him. Protecting his government and his life translated into what his opponents conveniently defined as his intolerance and ruthlessness. Yes, like all mortals and heads of state, he had erred, but trust me Doctor Chambas, the exaggeration like I told you, was implausible.

The blood-thirsty Senegalese who since 1982 could not understand why they couldn’t defeat the determined “rag-tag rebels” in their Southern Provence started the misleading campaign against Jammeh, a proud Jola and made you believe that the Gambia armed forces was a hub for all the Jolas rebels recruited from the MFDC, which I had strongly disputed; you also believed in the misinformation that Jammeh had instructed rebels from Liberia to help execute young virgin girls as ritual to secure his position. They took his statement out of context from once saying that if Allah had preordained that he would rule the Gambia for 1billion years he would, and totally changed it into his assertion that he would rule the Gambia for 1 billion years. Doctor Chambas, you and I know fully well that the Yahya Jammeh who was the president of the Gambia for 22 years cannot be that stupid to utter such a stupid statement.

However, you also confessed to me why you were upset with him after one time enjoying a wonderful friendship with him for a number of years. You accordingly called each other brothers, a friendship you believe was unceremoniously ended by him for no known reason. You only knew after privately visiting the Gambia on few occasions as you often did on his invitation but found him unwelcoming. I could definitely notice how those incidents really hurt your pride.

You also lamented over your failed attempts to talk to him about releasing Lawyer Ousainou Darbo from prison whom you had had tremendous respect for as the leader of the UDP.

But most importantly, I remember you hinting me about how the Gambia could settle all its ethic problems and move forward by later organizing a Truth and Reconciliation Commission, reminiscent of Ghana’s after the military rule of Jerry Rawlings ended. I had questioned the reconciliatory mindset of Ghanians compared to that of Gambians; but it was there that I finally understood that you drank the Mackey Sall Kool-Aid by believing that war in the Gambia was necessary option. And you assured me that everything would be okay. We shook hand, and I left with a heavy heart.

Well Doctor Chambas, four years after, thank god, there was no war; but what happened in the Gambia is nothing resembling okay. First the agreement you initiated and endorsed to ensure that Jammeh left the country peacefully for another country of his choice and could return to the Gambia at any time with his properties spared from any seizure or pillage has all been violated by the Gambia government of President Adama Barrow. To the Barrow government, that initiative and document was meaningless and I have not yet heard you doing or saying anything about it. But that may be secondary compared to what we are facing right now.

Everything that I had feared about unfairly targeting the Jola tribe in the country with the intention of reducing them back again into third-class citizens or worse has been happening at an abominable scale.

Many Jolas in senior government positions have been unnecessarily dismissed from their jobs or redeployed to responsibilities of minimal relevance. Not a single Jola holds a ministerial position, a key managerial job or a top command responsibility in the armed forces while members of other tribes who provenly and loyally worked for Jammeh or his government are untouched. How great do you think that is Doctor Chambas?

I had told you that Mackey Sall and his stooges were lying through their teeth about MFDC rebels conscripted in the Gambia armed forces and would have killed several innocent Gambians and called them the Cassamance Jola rebels; yet still at some point, some Jola Gambian officers and soldiers were arrested and jailed on alleged contentious charges while others were dismissed for no just reason other than being Jolas. Unconfirmed reports were recently circulated that a large number of Jolas were earmarked for dismissal from the Gambia Army to show their fulfillment of the unachievable SSR; but another report has just emerged that the soldiers will no longer be dismissed but organized into new battalions. Thank god for that, if it is true.

Did you know that as of now Mackey Sall has deployed over a thousand ruthless Senegalese combatants to the Gambia to lay siege of the Jola-Region of Foni, where President Jammeh was born and raised? When the villagers of expressed their dismay and organized a peaceful protest over why the siege on them, the trigger-happy outlaws opened fire on the unarmed crowd and killed one Harona Jatta a father and head of a family in the village. Up to this day not a single attempt was made to investigate the incident, let alone to explore how to compensate the family for Jatta’s wrongful death.

These undesirable soldiers have been behaving lawlessly, arresting Gambian commercial drivers and confiscating their vehicles in the name of prosecuting smugglers, a responsibility I thought was for the Gambia police or at least for the Gambia immigration department. Gambian courts have recently passed a ruling for the Senegalese forces to release the unlawfully confiscated vehicles to their owners, but even President Barrow cannot get them to respect the verdict with President Sall now being urged to intervene. The Senegalese troops in the Gambia are not governed by our laws.

I have said that the current government has dismissed all Jola ministers and doesn’t show any interest in hiring anyone again with the same purge happening at our foreign missions where all Jolas were either recalled or fired.

But get this Doctor Chambas, a Janneh Commission of enquiry composed of controversial characters was formed to investigate “corrupt practices” of the APRC or Jammeh government since he took over power in 1994. They flouted the entrenched constitutional clause that forbids any investigation of the activities of the junta from 1994 to 1996 when the old constitution was suspended and replaced by decrees. But again, the commission excluded all Jola participation; and by the end of its mandate, the Gambians were left flabbergasted by the magnitude of corruption in selling or auctioning the numerous confiscated properties of Jammeh, the state and that of the APRC political party. Many items were disposed of in a dubious manner that the country is yet to understand fully.

We also started a Truth, Reconciliation and Reparation Commission (TRRC) that looked or functioned nowhere like the type you had in Ghana, in South Africa or in Rwanda. Can you imagine the South African TRC having to obsessively and compulsively focus on demonizing and criminalizing white South Africans for the role white people played in perpetuating apartheid for close to a century and expect a genuine reconciliation to have happened there? Just fancy the white South Africans being denied senior positions in the government coupled with their residences placed under military siege indefinitely. Ghana didn’t do that to any tribe associated with the brutal regime of former Jerry Rawlings. You know what I am talking about because you served in Rawlings’ government diligently for years. But Doctor Chambers, whether you realize it or not that is the nightmare Jolas are facing in the Gambia today while President Mackey Sall pretends as if he doesn’t know what the hell is going on. He could on a single phone call tell Barrow to stop the nonsense from especially the TRRC and it would happen instantly; but he seems to be enjoying the drama of the Gambians fighting each other while he entrenches his influence and control over us. Troops guarding Barrow now are Senegalese. Is that normal Doctor?

However, as usual, no Jola member was selected for the TRRC. Hence, Jolas are the main target portrayed as murderers, rapists, psychopaths and all kinds of undesirable characters.

And last but not the least, you must be cognizant of the “Jolaless” Constitutional Review Commission (CRC) established three years ago to craft a new constitution to replace the 1997 one and its unsuccessful aftermath. A venture further aimed at delegitimizing the previous one by misinforming the world that it was Jammeh, the Jola’s personal document designed to destroy the Gambia and oppress its people;, no wonder, it ended up as if the Gods were there to expose the whole trickery. After all, one could argue that like all progressive constitutions, the world over, the 1997 constitution was amended here and there; however, considering the caliber and credibility of the chairman of the commission that drafted it in 1996, Dr. Gabriel Roberts and some of his God-fearing assistants such as the late Bishop Telewa Johnson whose finished work was overwhelmingly approved in a national referendum, branding the bill as President Jammeh’s production was totally disingenuous. Upon their failure to achieve a generally acceptable bill culminating into its failure to pass at the National Assembly, several Gambians now believe that the initiative was all about extorting a whopping D116 million from the Gambia’s meager financial resources. That the document was prepared with a hidden agenda and some portions disgracefully plagiarized from the Kenyan constitution. The Gambia is therefore left with no choice but to manage with the APRC/Jammeh/Jola-friendly 1997 constitution.

Yes, the country that you said was going to be united for a better future after Jammeh was out has never been this politically and tribally divided. Those in support of the new draft constitution and those against it have drawn daggers for a potential mortal combat. Amazingly, the government that instituted and tasked the CRC into the laborious exercise is now showing every sign of disapproving the bill while the opposition parties including the UDP still led by Lawyer Darbo deemed the downvoting a national betrayal and disaster. It’s like a political timing bomb ticking before its major explosion

By the way, cognizant of your ever proactive role to butt in as the UN special Rep for the region, why the silence at this crucial moment given the part you enthusiastically played in making the Gambia what it is today? I didn’t see or hear you this time conducting press conferences in that hoarse voice telling the world what you expect from the Gambia government or else……

The UN, UK, USA and EU have all urged the Gambian lawmakers to endorse the draft constitution which didn’t resonate well with supporters of the government and by extension the government itself. Do you know the position of the master conspirator Mackey Sall on the situation? What has happened to the significance of multilateralism that must be respected, no matter what? Oh I know, this is an internal affair, right?

But Doctor Chambas, I don’t know how you are going to react to my letter, but I want you to bear this in mind. Your whole theory of turning the Gambia into a better country after helping Mackey Sall remove the APRC government is turning into disappointment of monumental proportion. You were one person at the UN who acknowledged the fact that the Gambia’s 2016 election results were tainted when the IEC came out three days later with a second set of results, but your anger with Jammeh for betraying your trust as a friend, overshadowed your sense of judgment and corrupted your professional fortitude into aligning with the devil. So It looks like everything is falling apart and requires your urgent intervention.

The Janneh Commission has failed followed by the CRC and without doubt the TRRC will fail too for not being founded on a positive creed and has therefore divided the nation politically and tribally with the Jolas most targeted.

I am afraid Barrow is too slow for my liking or is not up to the task of the kind of leadership Gambia needs now. He seems happy with the sycophants around him assuring him that he could rule the Gambia for 1 billion years if Allah says so. So far, I understand he believes he could at least stay in office for fifteen years because the monk that once prophesied that Jammeh would rule the country for 22 years had shown up at the Statehouse with similar message of his fifteen years tenure..

He should have suspended the TRRC slated to resume in early October to continue their vilification and criminalization of the members of the Jola tribe, not knowing any other way to demonize former President Jammeh.

The APRC party regardless of the unfair treatment they endured since Jammeh departed, maintained a formidable level of discipline and even showed openness to cooperate with the Barrow government, but the man doesn’t seem to understand any of that. There is a pandemic compounding all our problems today with people dying at record numbers, unemployment rising, health care inadequate, confidence in government dwindling, closing diplomatic missions and recalling diplomats from abroad, the Janneh Commssion a failure, the CRC a failure and the government still can’t see the senselessness in wasting more time and resources in encouraging hate-driven retards trying to destroy the legacy of former president Jammeh-no longer relevant to our plight- and members of his ethnic group, the Jolas. It’s like beating a dead horse with no prospect of recovery from the madness. That ends my letter Doctor.

Hope to see you whenever I return to New York, if you wouldn’t mind.

SAMSUDEEN SARR

BANJUL, THE GAMBIA

 

Mai Fatty boldly says Hamat Bah’s NRP has declared absolute allegiance to Barrow and this was why its MPs voted down the draft constitution

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By Sarjo Brito

Leader of the Gambia Moral Congress Party is not mincing any words as far as the draft constitution is concerned. Whilst sharing his position on the rejection of the draft bill, the former Minister took a dig at Hamat Bah’s NRP after five of the party’s MPs voted against the draft constitution.

Giving a breakdown of the 23 members of Parliament that voted No to the draft constitution 2020, the one-time Presidential Adviser said it is an open secret that the NRP has declared absolute allegiance to the political ambition of President Barrow.

Mai Fatty reiterated that the MP’s of the NRP wouldn’t in fact have the audacity to vote against the draft bill if it did not serve the personal political ambition of the president, particularly that the bill in question originated from the government headed by their candidate for 2021, President Barrow.

The NRP leader has said at a political rally last year that the NRP will be led by President Adama Barrow in 2021. Hamat’s statement was quickly dismissed by the Information Minister saying the Tourism Minister’s statement was lost in translation.

LAMIN NJIE – OPINION: Dawda Jallow has suffered his first true excoriation… what it means is that it’s the honeymoon that’s all over

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For those wondering if the nation’s new attorney general will ever learn the harsh side of Gambians, the moment has arrived for you to find the sobering truth.

Since he became the country’s attorney general and minister of justice back in June, it’s been something of a honeymoon and smooth-sailing for Dawda Jallow. There’s never been a moment when he would get home from work and feel hard done by. That’s no longer going to be the case.

But it’s Mr Jallow himself that’s to be blamed for this unfortunate marital estrangement. He consciously took part in destroying one of the most important projects of our road to a true democracy and for that many Gambians will not forgive him.

One of the reasons why President Barrow refused to step down in January as required by the three years deal that brought him to power is a new constitution. He hired people of the best integrity to put one together. He said this was going to be one of his good legacies as president.

As attorney general, Dawda Jallow was last Tuesday expected to defend to the hilt the bill that could see that happen. Really a lot of these ‘NO’ MPs would have voted ‘YES’ if he had made a strong enough case. Instead, he put in a lame performance. There was no adventure. Conviction too. In fact as he spoke, people were sleeping.

There’s actually two arguments being pedaled since his I’m-just-here-to-clarify-certain-issues speech. One is he was told by his boss to come to the national assembly and wear a lazy posture so the draft would fail because the boss is not happy with the charter. The other is he actually didn’t know what he was doing. Some clueless attorney general who has no idea how to defend a piece of legislation he himself made with his own hands.

If you really want to know about Dawda Jallow, he’s not fully up to the task. Since he became the attorney general, journalists have approached him for an interview and all he would tell them is he’s still going through the files bequeathed him by his predecessor. It looks like he would spend his entire time as attorney general reviewing the files.

But the way he’s been roasted by Gambians over the past couple of days can now be considered Exhibit A that his honeymoon is over. Be sure of it.

 

The Draft Constitution Debacle: A Win for Democracy

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Of recent — we have entered a new dawn in my homeland, thus, prompting a myriad of conversations on the idea of justice, of liberty, of democracy, of the state and the demos. These are interesting times — and I am particularly enjoying the fact that we are having debates on the Constitution and demanding what we want from our government. However, democracy is messy, ugly and does not grant us our wishes all the time; but boy, is it sweet when it yields what we want. In the democratic process, if one faction does not get its wishes, it can repackage its message and/or prepare for the next elections. Well, that is if you can have the majority on your side, because democracy is literally the tyranny of the majority. Remember that there is no justice in politics — only interests. Winning is the only thing that matters in politics; hence, why politicians would do anything and everything to win — even if that means voting against a $2M project — the Constitution Review Commission (CRC).

Essentially, I have heard several arguments as to how Barrow and his cabal of aiders and abettors put their self-interest above the nation’s by voting against the Draft Constitution. I find this to be quite interesting, because national interest is always a contested idea — it is not a monolith. Every politician would argue that their interests are not any different from the nation’s. I have been studying political science for a good minute now and I have seldom seen a politician support policies and laws that would essentially end their political career. This Draft Constitution would have simply ended or stunted Barrow’s political career. For example, by retroactively applying term limits, Barrow’s active political career would have ended after the 2021 elections. In addition, Barrow, in my view, would not be able to garner a supermajority in 2021. Therefore, Barrow, like most politicians, would do what he has to do to win. Next time you go to the polls remember that; remember that, in politics, who we vote for is not about our souls, our hopes, our morality, it’s just politics, man!

Notwithstanding, what I witnessed the other day in the Gambian parliament was the true embodiment of representative democracy. Politicians, their constituents arguing about the merits and demerits of the Draft Constitution. People calling their representatives urging them to vote for, or against, the Draft. This is every political scientists’ dream: citizen engagement in the democratic process. From the onset, Gambians were engaged in the CRC, attending meetings, arguing online about the very system of government they wanted. For instance, the idea of secularism, for several weeks, became the bane of existence of the citizenry — from online polemics to religious incantations, to Op-Eds arguing for, and against, secularism. To me, this is progress. This is what democracy is and should be about — debates, citizens engagement. So, if there is anything to take away from the politicking that took place in the parliament, it would be that democracy won and to that, I say, the answer to a conundrum in democracy, in essence, is more democracy, not less.

To that end, remember, democracy is not a panacea or a destination, it is a perpetual struggle. As a case in point — the United States — which is argued to be one of the models of representative democracy, for a century or so — was a colossal disappointment, an experiment which — by its own standards of life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness — failed miserably.

Finally, the Commissioners should resign in protest, the Commission disbanded and, this expensive exercise should, I hope, end our obsession with these Commissions.

Sulayman Njie

Washington, D.C.

9.25.20

Nuimi, here he comes! State House announces President Barrow will travel to Buniadu to bless construction exercise on key road

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State House said on Friday President Adama Barrow will leave Banjul on Saturday for Buniadu to lay the foundation stone to launch the construction works on the Hakalang Road Network.

According to State House, the president will later proceed to Kerewan in the Lower Badibou District, where he will also lay the foundation stone for a new office complex and a residence for the Governor of the North Bank Region.

State House said further: “In the same vein, from 1st to 5th October 2020, President Barrow will lay foundation stones for the construction of a 24km road between Kerr Ayib in the North Bank to Senoba in the Lower River Region, as well as a 10KM road at Mbye Kunda in Sandu, Upper River Region.

“To update himself on the state of affairs, the President will also conduct several site visits to the Farafenni Market, the Senegambia Bridge Toll Booths, Soma Market, Yorobawol Road’s work in Wuli, Fatoto and Basse Bridge works as well as Kaleng – Bush town road in the Central River Region.

“Included in President Barrow’s itinerary is the laying of the foundation stone for the rebuilding of a modern market in Basse to replace the old one that was loss in an inferno in February this year. This event will take place on Saturday 3rd October 2020, at Basse.”

 

ECOWAS to uphold Mali sanctions until appointment of civilian PM

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By CGTN Africa

West African bloc ECOWAS will maintain its sanctions on Mali until a civilian prime minister is appointed, ECOWAS mediator Goodluck Jonathan said on Friday.

A decision on whether ECOWAS will lift its sanctions against Mali was expected following the swearing-in ceremony of Bah Ndaw, according to Jonathan.

“The issue of the sanctions…in Accra, the chair of the Authority of Heads of States and Governments, the President of Ghana, made it very clear that immediately a civilian prime minister is appointed sanctions will be lifted. ECOWAS still stands by that,” Jonathan said.

“That statement is based on the fact that the responsibility of the vice-president, as discussed in Accra, will be maintained.”

In mid-September, ECOWAS said it would lift sanctions once its conditions were met, including the appointment of a civilian president and prime minister.

ECOWAS’ pronouncement came after Ndaw, a retired army officer, was sworn in as the country’s interim leader in Bamako. Ndaw, 70, is tasked with presiding over an 18-month transition back to civilian rule following last month’s military coup.

Ndaw, who also once served as Defence minister, is a well respected individual in the military and by the general public.

Military junta leader Colonel Assimi Goita was also sworn in as the vice president of the transitional government during the ceremony.

Some of the sanctions on Mali, used as leverage in negotiations to restore normalcy in the country, include closing borders and restricting trade and financial flows. They, however, do not affect basic necessities, drugs, equipment to fight coronavirus, fuel or electricity.

ECOWAS had threatened a “total embargo” on the country if the junta decided to appoint military leaders of an interim government.

Ibrahim Boubacar Keïta was ousted from office on August 18 following mass civilian protests against his administration over corruption, the mismanagement of the economy and the fight against Islamist insurgents and a dispute over legislative elections.

 

Government announces airport expected to fully reopen to int’l flights by end of October

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The government has announced the airport is expected to be fully reopened to international flights by the end of next month.

“The Gambia is expected to reopen its airport to international flights, amid tight health regulations, by the end of October 2020,” a government spokesman said in compiled notes shared with The Fatu Network, culled from Minister of Information Ebrima Sillah’s comments during his 8th session of the Inter-Ministerial Press Conference on Friday.

According to the government, renovation works at the main terminal building are near completion and in time for the start of the 2020/2021 tourist season.

The government added: “The refurbished main terminal building will provide more space for both passengers and luggage handling at the arrival and departure halls, and will also have more space for offices, shops and a VIP hall, in the upper floor.

“Similarly, the Control Tower of the airport has been refurbished, upgraded and fitted with new communication gadgets for Air Traffic Controllers.

“The refurbishment project at the Banjul International Airport is aimed at improving the working environment at the airport, making it more secure, effective, efficient and competitive.

“When the airport is re-opened, preventive and mitigation measures will be in place in order to enhance safe and efficient operations of air transport, passengers, pilots and crews.”

Gambian Talents reporter arrested after he tried to cover a chaotic money distribution event

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A Gambian Talents Promotion reporter has been arrested by police as he tried to cover a money distribution event.

Sheriffo Faye is an intern reporter with Gambian Talents but was arrested by police at a money distribution event in Basse Koba Kunda on Friday, Pa Ousman Joof told The Fatu Network.

The Gambia government is distributing money to thousands of less privilege households across the country. Families are being given up to D3,000.

Police is yet to respond to a request for a comment on Mr Faye’s arrest.

Mai Fatty concludes draft constitution’s rejection day will go down in history as the day of ‘The Great Betrayal’

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By Sarjo Brito

One-time Interior Minister and former adviser to the President Mai Ahmad Fatty has joined other political leaders in the country to show his dissatisfaction over the rejection of the draft constitution by parliament.

Speaking at a press conference, the former minister said the day the draft bill was rejected will go down in the history of The Gambia as a day of ‘’The great betrayal’’.

With many believing that the rejection of the draft bill was done along political lines, Honourable Fatty could not agree more.

The former adviser in fact believes that the monumental failure of the draft constitution was masterminded by what he describes as known politicians in the executive and parliament. Calling out parliamentarians, the GMC Leader said their reasons for voting the bill down, reveals nothing but selfish, individualistic and personal interest.

He argued none of the objections of the NAM’s that voted against the bill were grounded either in law, logic or national interest.

The former Minister said 2016 was supposed to be a turning point as Gambians voted on the coalition’s promise for system change and therefore the rejection of draft bill by lawmakers was a direct attempt to kill our collective national aspiration for a new Gambia.

State House announces Professor Jainaba Kah is the new director general of DSPD

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State House has announced the appointment of Professor Jainaba Kah as the new Director General to lead the Department of Strategic Policy and Delivery, Office of the President.

“Professor Kah will lead her team on leadership, strategic management, innovations, talent management and functionality at the Department in liaison with the Office of the Secretary General, the Cabinet Office and other MDAs and stakeholders in government,” State House said in a statement posted to its official Facebook page.

Professor Kah is the former director of Management Development Institute.

Police tell public law around face mask still lives as compliance falls

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Police have said the number of people adhering to the mandatory wearing of face mask is decreasing.

Police said in a statement: “Following the relaxation of the Curfew Regulations and the easing up of the Regulations on closures of Markets and shopping centers, the IGP’s office has observed with great concern that the level of compliance with wearing of face mask at public places is decreasing.

“To this effect the Office of the Inspector General of Police wishes to remind the general public that, other Covid-19 prevention regulations particularly the compulsory face mask wearing regulations are still in effect and enforcement is ongoing. Individuals visiting public places and using transports are strongly advised that, they must ensure wearing of their face masks at all times.

“The public is further informed that the Covid-19 security task forces across the country will pay specific attention to the strict enforcement of the Compulsory Face mask Wearing Regulations. Individuals found wanting of violations will be processed for court.

“The public is urged to support Law Enforcement Officers and the Ministry of Health in fighting against Covid-19 by adhering to the Compulsory Face mask Wearing Regulations.”

Citizen’s Alliance Expresses Dismay on the Rejection Of The Constitutional Promulgation Bill 2020 By The National Assembly.

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When Gambia decided to change its trajectory on December 1st 2016, we sought to build a vibrant and new democracy, which was to be inclusive and equitable, knowing that all Gambians had to be equally served under the rule of law. In order to transition from autocracy to democracy, a series of Transitional Justice processes were initiated to ensure the needed reforms that would put The Gambia on the path of democracy and development. These include the Truth, Reconciliation and Reparations Commission (TRRC), The Security Sector Reform (SSR), The Janneh Commission of Inquiry and a Constitutional Reform (CRC). This was to help us break with our dark past and lay the foundations for a new legal, political, social and economic architecture that will ensure the consolidation of democracy, the entrenchment of transparency and accountability, the assurance of minority rights, the elimination of corruption and impunity and guaranteeing civil, political and economic rights.

The Constitutional reform was the lynchpin of this entire process and it was a national priority for both Gambians and the coalition government as it was supposed to smoothly free us from the much tailored 1997 Constitution. A series of consultations with Gambians at home and abroad, and a bill in excess of D116 Million culminated into a consensual new Draft Constitution.

However, the aims and aspirations of birthing a new constitution came to a painful halt at the National Assembly when the Constitution Promulgation Bill 2020 was rejected by 23 National Assemble Members (NAMs). Clearly, these NAMs did not seem to value the voice of The Gambian people and the urgency for change leaving us disappointed and vulnerable as a budding democracy on the world stage. In addition, our current situation is also partly due to wrong choices made from the onset of the transition when, some key partners of the coalition entrusted with midwifing the process put partisan interest before national interest, abandoned the transition MoU, opted for Tactical Alliance, endorsed the gifting of vehicles to legislators, engaged in piecemeal legislation to suit their interests and encouraged President Barrow to renege on his campaign promise of serving for just three years as a transitional leader.

The Government of President Adama Barrow has also failed to deliver its promise and mandate to The Gambian people. By undermining the passing of the Constitutional Promulgation Bill, the Government has now derailed the entire Transitional Justice process, thus jeopardising the future prospects of this country. Citizens’ Alliance is disappointed that the Government failed to do enough to ensure the passing of a bill it took to parliament after investing so much of our resources. By all indications, the Citizens’ Alliance see no reason why President Barrow should not resign after failing to deliver every promise he made to The Gambian people, thus undermining his own legitimacy.

The defeat of the Constitution Promulgation Bill is an unfortunate situation that has the potential to derail the hopes and aspirations of The Gambian people. The Citizens’ Alliance remains with the zeal and conviction that all is not lost. These events should rekindle our resolve to work harder to build a Gambia for all, taking into account the welfare of future generations, through sacrifice and unity. Our progress depends on our decision as a nation to ensure that our future generations do not inherit the mistakes of the past. We therefore urge our elected representatives to do away with their differences and work together for the interest of the country.

Citizens’ Alliance continues to propagate for needed reforms and calls on the government to immediately unveil a clear strategy and a way forward towards a new constitutional order. Failure to pursue a meaningful constitutional change to provide a new legal framework for the 2021 elections should not be an option.

Citizens’ Alliance reminds Gambians that the ‘New Gambia’ project is not supposed to be based on religion, ethnicity, or unbridled partisanship. The purpose is to build a robust constitutional democracy and a just, inclusive and developed society anchored on solidarity and the rule of law. Now, more than ever, is the time to put country first and unite under a common banner of inclusivity, equity, and prosperity.

God Bless The Gambia.

Innaa passes away: Mother of nation’s former spy leader Yankuba Badjie dies

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The mother of Yankuba Badjie, the former director general of National Intelligence Agency has died.

Binta Daffeh commonly called Innaa died on Thursday at the Serrekunda General Hospital, sources close to the family told The Fatu Network. The Fatu Network could not immediately establish her age.

Innaa’s son Yankuba Badjie is the former director general of National Intelligence Agency. He has since 2017 been held at Mile 2 after being arrested and charged with the murder of Solo Sandeng.

UNGA: President Barrow tells largest gathering of world leaders Gambia accepts work of ICC and then calls on America to reverse sanctions on the court’s officials

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President Adama Barrow has told the UNGA The Gambia endorses the work of the International Criminal Court, using the opportunity to call on America to reverse sanctions against the court’s officials.

The court’s Gambian chief prosecutor Fatou Bensouda and at least one of her top aides have seen sanctions rolled out against them by US for ‘targeting Americans’.

President Barrow speaking virtually at the 75th session of the United Nations General Assembly on Thursday said The Gambia approves of the ICC’s work and called on the US to revoke sanctions against the court’s officials.

The president said: “We endorse the work of the International Criminal Court, and call on the United States to revoke the sanctions imposed on the Court and its officials. Respect for the rule of law benefits all democratic states.”

The United States had always insisted the ICC is not qualified to investigate Americans as it is not a member of the court.

The sanctions against Bensouda and Phakiso Mochochoko, the ICC’s director of jurisdiction, complementary and cooperation division, are a reply to the court’s decision to open an inquiry into war crimes committed by all sides in Afghanistan.

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