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Missing in Action: Jongkunda Daffeh, Gambian Philosopher, Journalist and Activist

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By Hassoum Ceesay

Jongkunda Daffeh was born in 1947. In 1967, he finished at the top of his A Levels Class in Pure Maths! ‘But I had prize winning aptitude in history, literature, French, and Latin also’, he told me in an interview, a few years ago. In 1967-1968, he was pupil teacher at Armitage High School, then very prestigious.

In 1968-1969, he taught at Crab Island School, then a nursery for activists and political hotheads.

In 1969-1970, we worked as assistant reporter at Information Department, sub-editing The Gambia News Bulletin.

In late 1970, he flew to Paris, France, for further studies. In a short period of three years, Jongkunda had garnered profound experience in teaching and newspaper work. But he had gathered experience in other areas too!

He helped to mobilize Gambian youths to vote YES for the 1970 Referendum which took The Gambia into Republican status. As a member of the Ad Hoc Committee of The Gambia National Youth Council, he toured the country telling youths to end the last relict of colonial rule by voting for a Republic of The Gambia!

Therefore, thanks to Jongkunda’s efforts, The Gambia became a sovereign and free Republic. ‘I was very clear in our rallies: I said we the youths need “complete national independence”, he told me in a rare interview on 29 April 2014, at my office at the National Museum, Banjul.

But Jongkunda refused to support Jawara government’s invitation to President Senghor of Senegal to The Gambia on a State Visit. The Youth Council worked with subterranean youth groups like the Kent Street Vous and Fansoto to disrupt Senghor’s visit. Tear gas welcome the Senegal poet-president at Clifton Road, now Independence Drive.

Jongkunda worked with other activists to protest along the route of the state visitor and they succeeded in making Senghore cut short his visit. ‘Senghor was a neocolonialist. He had just put down a popular student uprising in Dakar University in 1968. He refused to allow Amiclar Cabral’s PAIGC use Senegal territory to fight for their independence against the Portuguese colonial rulers.

He was jailing Cheikh Anta Diop and other progressive Senegal leaders. So for us in the Pan Africanist youth movement in Bathurst, Senghor was an unwelcome guest’, he told me. Thanks to Jongkunda’s intrepid leadership, Senghor gave up all ideas of annexing The Gambia or taking President Jawara into the neocolonial fold.

More, in 1969, Jongkunda used his position in the Youth Council to welcome Mariam Makeba and Stokley Carmichael aka Kwame Ture, the great Black Panther and Pan Africanist, to Bathurst, The Gambia. The popular couple were given a hero’s welcome. They met Jawara, and held numerous meetings at Gambia High School Hall and Brikama Youth Centre, preaching the Black Panther ideology of Black Power.

For a short period during their visit, our The Gambia was the mecca of Pan Africansim, anti-Apartheid, Black Power and Left Wing activism against imperialists. Thanks to Jongkunda’s inimitable mobilizing skills, the Makeba-Carmichael visit became a great success.

What was also a great success were Jongkunda’s academic journeys. He read greatly and widely such that by 1972, he was in the league of great thinkers like Daniel Cohn Bendit, the German avant garde intellectual, who led the 1968 student uprising in Paris which almost brought De Gaulle’s right wing government down.

Bendit saw in Jongkunda a effervescent Marxists intellectual! From Paris, Jongkunda went to USA, where he joined the Student Non Violence Coalition(SNCC), which was fighting the kind of racial injustice that led to the murder last week by Police of the Black American, George Floyd. Jongkunda rose through the ranks of the SNCC so quickly that US Police hunted for him. They got him. That is where his mental troubles started.

Where I will end this piece is that when he was forcibly returned home in the late 1970s, he was a mental wreck by design, most likely as he had been adjudged a ‘dangerous and calculated Bolshevik mass organiser’ by the Western Intelligence agencies. They told Gambian police at the Yundum airport: ‘watch this man, he is dangerous’. Nana Grey Johnson has written eloquently on this troubling stage of Jongkunda’s life; so I need not say more.

Except to add that Jongkunda rested a while and then went back into journalism. It was a brilliant sojourn. Be it the Sun, Hibarr, Sun-Torch, Jongkunda wrote the most profound editorials in town. It was thanks to journalists like Jongkunda that the Jawara regime became respected as the champion for human rights in Africa.

Because Jongkunda and others used the liberal space The Gambian constitution afforded them to scrutinize, criticize government policies and personalities. His ilk did not wallow in cheap penmanship, or inchoate journalism. They did it maturely with decorum, firmness and stealth, sometimes.

For example, in 1986, Jongkunda went to the RVH in Banjul armed with his recorder. He had been told by a source that the jailed Gambian intellectual and politician Pap Cheyassin Secka, was sick and would be in hospital that morning.

For nearly a lustrum, Pap, a brilliant Gambian Marxist theoretician alumni of Columbia University, was held in solitary confinement at Mile Two. Gambians were curious to hear from him.

Jongkunda put his small recorder in a thermo flask and gave it to a nurse saying that it was hot water for Pap. Pap, did what he should do and returned the thermo to the nurse who gave it to the crusading journalist Jongkunda. The next day, Jongkunda wrote a five page transcript of Pap’s interview.

But it was final line of the editorial that caught my eye: ‘I know Pap is worth to The Gambia more outside of Jail than inside it. I know also that Jawara, the Fount of Mercy, knows this. I know Jawara loves The Gambia just as Pap. Pap has no place in jail. Let Pap out!’ A few years later, Jawara pardoned Pap.

My uncle and friend Jongkunda has been Missing in Action for nearly three weeks now. ‘Missing in Action’, because he remains a soldier for liberation, free thought, conscience, and humanism. I pray that he is safe and sound. I pray that he returns to family and friends soon.

Remittances to Gambia plunge pushing families into hardship

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By Fatou Camara

Families in The Gambia have started feeling the pain of the coronavirus pandemic as the crisis has seen a lot of their relatives who live abroad go out of work.

According to the integrated household survey, a government study released in October 2017, more than 122,300 households in The Gambia directly benefit from remittance.

“Things have been very hard for me and my family specially during the cause of the Ramadan and Koriteh. I lost one of my son who was here with me and the one in the Diaspora is not working due to the coronavirus and that is why he is not able to send me anything. However, I pray things get back soon “Aja Binta Jammeh told The Fatu.

Aja Binta Leigh on her part said: “I have brothers in the Diaspora and they used to help the family just like others will do.

“What I want to say is that people should understand that it is due to the coronavirus that is why they are not doing it now.”

A released research document by the international fund for agricultural development, June 2017, showed that Gambian migrants contribute 22% of the country’s GDP in 2016.

The report also ranked The Gambia as the second highest recipient of remittance in Africa.

IS PRESIDENT ADAMA BARROW ANOTHER VICTIM OF DYSLEXIA?

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The number of Gambians I posed this question merely expressed their misunderstanding of the the word or their unfamiliarity with the case. But having watched the Gambian president laboriously struggle with reading some simple English words and sentences and embarrassingly mispronouncing commonly-used expressions and phrases, I am somehow counter-intuitively predisposed to assume him an invalid, hinging on clinical dyslexia. Dyslexia is a brain disorder that makes it difficult for those affected to learn to read or interpret words, letters and other symbols, but are not necessarily unintelligent people.

Over 40 million Americans are confirmed dyslexic victims including prominent celebrities such as Anderson Cooper (CNN), Justin Timberlake (musician), Henry Winkler (actor), Steven Spielberg (film writer, director and producer), the late Muhammed Ali (boxer), Whoopi Goldberg (comedian & actress) and many more successful men and women.

All these people have confessed their harrowing experiences, living and growing up with the handicap and how they had eventually succeeded in overcoming their difficulties although after grueling attempts to hide it from the public and even their charitable teachers to avoid the “stupidity stigma”. Until recently when doctors discovered the defect as a natural condition, little or no scientific remedies were explored to deal with it, attributing the abnormality to utter stupidity. But thanks to modern science and technology, successful educational antidotes have now been put in place to help sufferers. Anderson Cooper in sharing his experience explained how as a top-classed journalist still relies on a team of hired readers and interpreters helping him in his presentations, including the CNN program he anchors, “360 degree, with Anderson Cooper”.  Modern devices have also been invented to assist affected CEOs in their everyday businesses. So, like I said, it has nothing to do with a person’s level of intelligence and productivity especially those engaged in their fields of fascination that I am afraid is outside the orbit of a head of state.

In the 2018  Hollywood movie, Night School, comedian and actor Kevin Hart played the part of a young man Teddy Walker, who after dropping out of school later decided to go back and take night classes for his General Education Development (GED). However, shortly after the commencement of classes it dawned on him that he was suffering from both dyslexia and dyscalculia, with the latter being another mental disorder impeding people’s ability to understand numbers and simple arithmetic. Actor Henry Winkler suffers from the acute form of the problem.

President Barrow often applauded as once a successful rent-collector in the best moments of his adult life, keeping balanced sheets of sizable accounts, cannot possibly suffer from dyscalculia. So it is only the dyslexia condition of our “business tycoon” now president, I want us to scrutinize.

Apparently many Africans or Gambians are unaware of this natural disorder which is tantamount to someone being born blind or deaf and having, like I said, nothing to do with a person’s intellectual ability. Notwithstanding I stand to register my concern over whether a dyslexic person can be an effective president, bearing in mind the continuous volume of written materials brought before him for instant reading, comprehension, interpretation and action. There is no excuse or second guessing about how a dependable “team” is always at his disposal for necessary guidance. If that should be the answer then we might as well forgo electing presidents and start electing board of governors.

But I think it should be obligatory for every head of state to prove his ability to read rapidly with perfect comprehension faculty and an informed-decision-making capability on every policy, treaty or suggestion written and submitted on the spot. Two heads of state are sometimes duty bound to confidentially or secretly meet on consultations and deliberations exclusively restricted to only the two of them, where they would read, discuss and agree on policies before notifying their government agencies. If Barrow is dyslexic then Gambia will logically be  at the mercy of crafty leaders, always driven by their national interests first before the mutual or collective ones.

Subjected to confirmation, witnesses claiming to have access to Statehouse activities have reported incidences where the president was repeatedly coached in series of rehearsals to make him satisfactorily read prepared speeches before he is trusted to deliver the final message for recording; and even with all the run-throughs, the coaches would out of hopelessness settle for one or two mispronounced words or phrases that just wouldn’t sink in. I have always been avoiding to raise this observation about President Adama Barrow but when I lately saw his struggle to read ordinary words like “Addis Ababa” and “money laundering and still got them wrong, I decided it was now due to raise my concern about the possibility of his tribulations with dyslexia.

It wouldn’t be fair to conclude without drawing the attention of my readers to President Barrow’s impressive confidence, eloquence and passion as a normal crafty politician every-time he speaks in the local languages, and yes, from a laudable mind of a rare-multilingual person. Bur additionally, if it is left to my single vote to elect a president into office, no matter how well educated the person, the dyslexic contender will never have it.

Thanks for reading. Till next time.

Samsudeen Sarr

New York City

Niamina’s Omar Ceesay knives government over decision to keep Lumos shut

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The national assembly member for Niamina East Omar Ceesay has said the government has manifested insensitivity to the ‘conditions’ of the people by not letting Lumos (open markets) to open.

The Gambia government has announced it is relaxing restrictions on mainstream markets while also withdrawing the shutdown of mosques and churches. Lumos will remain closed.

Niamina east lawmaker Omar Ceesay in a statement said: “Once again, the government have manifested their insensitivity to the conditions of the people who are most vulnerable by the emergency despite been far from the epicentre. It is not logical allowing the daily markets to open while the weekly ‘ lumos’ continue to be banned. There is not reasonable justification for this move by the government.

“Therefore, I wish to urge the government to alongside consider the reopening of ‘Lumos’ in the relaxation of the restrictions of COVID-19 because, I hold the view that if markets in the urban areas are opened from 6am to 6pm considering how crowded they could be on a daily basis as opposed to the weekly ‘lumos’.

“It is necessary to remind the government that the said food package is not accessible and sustainable to all the electorate and to better help them in the long run especially those in the rural Gambia, there is high need for the reopening of the ‘Lumos’ where 85% of which rely on to make ends meet.”

Government says ‘bandits’ masquerading as activists are indulged in impersonating government officials

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The government spokesperson said on Thursday it has come to the notice of The Gambia Government that some bandits masquerading as activists are now indulged in impersonating government officials, publishing false press statements and memoranda on Social Media purporting to be representing Government.

“These utterly criminal acts are nothing short of malicious propaganda calculated to undermine the Government’s genuine efforts to tackle the Covid-19 pandemic,” Ebrima G Sankareh said in a statement.

He added: “Accordingly, The Gambia Government warns all those involved in this nefarious practice to desist immediately or face the full consequence of their illegal actions.”

It comes as the government spokesperson made a new announcement of the relaxation of measures put in place by the government under the state of emergency.

Sankareh said: “For now though, the relaxed restrictions are confined only to markets, houses of worship, and Grade-9 students about to sit their exams and transition to Senior Secondary Schools.

“Therefore, effective immediately, all Gambian markets shall now open from 6:00am—6:00pm daily regardless of what commodities are sold. However, all market vendors, traders, buyers and sellers are strictly urged to continue to observe all the social distancing restrictions imposed by The Health Emergency Proclamation.

“Beginning Friday 5th June, 2020, all mosques shall reopen while still strictly adhering to Government’s outlined physical distancing and related health measures.

“Likewise, all churches shall reopen on Sunday 7th June, 2020 while also strictly adhering to physical distancing and related health measures.

“Equally, all Grade-9 students will benefit from the relaxation of these restrictions to be formally announced by the Ministry of Basic & Secondary Education at a later date.”

GTBoard petitioned over newly set up group as top hotelier Hatib Janneh calls for an association that represents all players

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By Sarjo Brito

Hotelier and business mogul Hatib Janneh has reacted to the establishment of a stakeholder group by non-Gambians called ‘The Restaurant, Bar and Nightclub Association of The Gambia’.

“You cannot have an association that is representing all bars, nightclubs, restaurants and then you only have Lebanese and Tubab, just one Gambian and now they say two.

“I asked Lamin what position they gave him and he said they made him spokesman and the other guy was made translator. For me that’s disrespect.

“I can never go to Holland, open a small restaurant and become the chairman of the restaurant [and] bar [association] in a million years,” Hatib Janneh told The Fatu Network.

He spoke as the newly formed association whose role is to advocate the interest of the leisure and hospitality industry is accused by aggrieved players including Janneh himself of side-lining Gambian owned businesses.

Major players in the industry like Club Envy and Big Apple say they were never notified about the formation of such an organization and therefore think it is non-inclusive or represents the interest of the wider stakeholder base of the sector.

Janneh and other business owners in the leisure and hospitality industry have since taken up their frustration with the Gambia Tourism Board.

They have petitioned the GTBoard demanding that the plight of the so-called association be ignored until all administrative issues that will make them complaint with the interest of the diverse actors in the sector are rectified.

Army dismisses soldier Nuha Conteh and hands him over to DLEAG

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The army has dismissed Nuha Conteh the soldier that opened fire in the air and fled as drug law enforcement officers closed in on him.

Conteh in May made drug squad officers to run for their lives as he opened fire at Kalagi Police Station. The officers had attempted to search his bag which contained cannabis.

Now one month after his arrest, Conteh has been dismissed from the army and handed over to the country’s drug agency.

Army spokesman Major Lamin K Sanyang confirmed the developments.

S’court gets original justice number as President Barrow appoints Awa Bah and Edrissa Mbai

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President Adama Barrow has appointed Justices Awa Bah and Edrissa F. Mbai as Justices of the Supreme Court of The Gambia.

“The appointments will be effective on 1st August 2020, following the recommendations of the Judicial Service Commission,” State House said today in a statement.

State House added: “The appointments of the two Judges would bring the number of full time, Gambian judges, to seven, with less dependence on part-time judges. It will also provide the Supreme Court with the number required to hear and determine a case of review.

“These latest appointments are central in increasing the number of Gambian legal luminaries in the Judiciary, an important factor in the judicial reforms under the Barrow administration.”

President Barrow to spend weekend in his village – as it’s revealed he will not meet anyone

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The public is hereby informed that President Adama Barrow will spend the weekend in his hometown Mankamang Kunda on a private visit, State House has said.

In a statement today, State House said: “Due to the COVID 19 and the ongoing the State of Public Emergency, the local authorities and supporters are excused from any welcoming arrangements.

“Furthermore, no group or individual appointments will be scheduled during this period. The understanding and cooperation of the public is highly solicited.”

Breaking news: Mosques and churches to reopen as government walks back closure

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By Lamin Njie

Mosques and churches in The Gambia will reopen on Friday and Sunday respectively, the government spokesperson Ebrima Sankareh has told GRTS.

“Beginning Friday, mosques throughout The Gambia shall be open… The churches will open Sunday,” Sankareh told GRTS during its 8pm news.

The government spokesperson says the relaxation of the state of emergency rules has also affected other areas.

“Effective immediately instead of saying people selling essential food items and non-essential food items, there is no difference now in terms of timing. Everybody can go to the market. Normal market structure from 6am to 6pm,” he said.

“Equally, schools will not be open, however the students in Grade 9 will be allowed to go back to school.”

Lamin J Darbo knocks lands ministry after clear-the-air news conference

By Lamin J Darbo

In an extraordinary assault on law and truth, Mr Buba Sanyang (the Permanent Secretary) at a press briefing 02 June 2020 stated the position of the Ministry of Lands (the Ministry) on demolitions: “We are planning to embark on another massive demolition in areas where lands allocated to people by government are annexed by people who have decided to build structures on them. This will come as the second phase demolition to be carried out to enable those people to acquire their lands. Government will not allow people to annex these spaces.”

Herein the lawless propensity of the Ministry!

Under the law, Government can only acquire in the public interest and lands so acquired must be used only for public purposes. The Permanent Secretary must study his critical brief.

He also asserted “… the government will not allow people to take the law into their hands by appropriating public places for their own personal use”.

It is the Government acting badly, and in complete defiance of the law.

In a bid to make more effective use of the Government megaphone, the Permanent Secretary claimed “… the Department of Physical Planning sent a letter to the alkalo of Sukuta in August 2007 informing him that the state was planning to use the land located between the Old Salagi Layout and Pateya village as a residential layout…The alkalo was advised not to process any documentation for land transactions or development for that area and that anyone who had questions should consult the department. This was made very clear to the alkalo”.

Contrary to the assertion of the Permanent Secretary, the competent lead department on land acquisition is the Department of Lands and Surveys not the Department of Physical Planning that purportedly “sent a letter to the alkalo of Sukuta in August 2007”.

As if to put the icing on the cake of state vandalism and utter lawlessness, the Permanent Secretary rather pleadingly intimated to the briefing that “section 38 of the Physical Planning and Development Control Act 1991 prohibits people building without obtaining development or building permit”, and that “… all developments without permit have consequences”.

I am aghast at the cruelty of the Ministry, at the cruelty of its constituent departments of Land and Surveys, and Physical Planning and Housing (DPPH), at their routine violations of the law, and the evasive and secretive conduct underlying their operations.

Aghast at the unwillingness of government to step in and wipe the tears of numerous ordinary citizens dispossessed of their lands by the cruel twins of land administration under this lawless and rampantly corrupt Ministry.

In my possession is documentation including a completed lease originating with the Department of Lands assigning dozens of plots, in some cases more than seventy compounds to individuals out of lands stolen from their customary owners in Salagi. They are refused clearance for development or other purposes but those who purchased these lands through dubious channels including from staff of the Ministry’s constituent departments of evil have no issues with clearance.

And all these lawlessness under purported colour of law and public authority!

Irrespective of the Permanent Secretary’s position on the State Lands Act 1991, the Land Acquisition and Compensation Act 1991, the Physical Planning and Development Control Act 1991, and their subsidiary legislations, the controlling law on land acquisitions is section 22 of the 1997 Constitution of the Republic of The Gambia (the Constitution).

Any law at variance with the Constitution is void to the extent of the inconsistency.

In particular, the lands at Brusubi, Salagi, and Nemasu in Sukuta, and those involving New Yundum, and Brufut, all in the Kombo North District of the West Coast Region, Brikama in Kombo Central, Tujereng and Tanji in the Kombo South, and Bakau in the Kanifing Municipal Council, were trespassed upon by agents, or purported agents of the Ministry on the pretext the lands concerned were confiscated and reserved by Government.

Absolutely preposterous!

Complete nonsense with no iota of truth!

As Government has no land in these areas, it cannot confiscate and reserve same.

In the event Government requires use of private land, it must follow a stipulated legal process. It is for no reason that “Protection from Deprivation of Property” is included among the fundamental freedoms and entrenched.

According to Section 22 of the Constitution:

No property of any description shall be taken possession of compulsorily, and no right over or interest in any such property shall be acquired compulsorily in any part of The Gambia, except where the following conditions are satisfied:-

  • the taking of possession or acquisition is necessary in the interest of defence, public safety, public order, public morality, public health, town and country planning or the development or utilization of any property in such manner as to promote the public benefit; and
  • the necessity therefor is such as to afford reasonable justification of the causing of any hardship that may result to any person having any interest in or right over the property; and
  • provision is made by law to that taking of possession or acquisition:-
  • for the prompt payment of adequate compensation, and

  • securing to any person having an interest in or right over the property a right of access to a court or other impartial and independent authority for the determination of his or her interest or right, the legality of the taking of possession or acquisition of the property, interest or right, and the amount of any compensation to which he or she is entitled, and for the purpose of obtaining prompt payment of that compensation.
    ….

  • Nothing in this section shall be construed as affecting the making or operation of any law for the compulsory taking in the public interest of any interest in or right over property, where that property interest or right is held by a body corporate which is established directly by any law and in which no moneys are provided by an Act of the National Assembly.

  • Where a compulsory acquisition of land by or on behalf of the Government involves the displacement of any inhabitants who occupy the land under customary law, the Government shall resettle the displaced inhabitants ….

  • Any such property of whatever description compulsorily taken possession of, and any interest in or right over property of any description compulsorily acquired in the public interest for a public purpose, shall be used only in the public interest or for the public purposes for which it is taken or acquired.

  • Where any such property as is referred to in subsection (5) is not used in the public interest or for the public purpose for which it was taken or acquired, the person who was the owner immediately before the compulsory taking or acquisition, as the case may be, shall be given the first option of acquiring that property, in which event he or she shall be required to refund the whole or such part of the compensation as may be agreed upon between the parties thereto; and in the absence of any such agreement such amount as shall be determined by the High Court.

Of significant import, the Government must pay adequate compensation.

I must stress that the compensation envisaged by the Constitution is not stealing lands from two people and relocating one of them in the other’s property. Where appropriate, there must be both monetary compensation and resettlement as enjoyed by those in Half die affected by the Banjul Port expansion who were monetarily compensated and settled on Bakau lands.

More fundamentally, the acquisition must be in the public interest and for a public purpose, and “any such property of whatever description compulsorily taken possession of, and any interest in or right over property of any description compulsorily acquired in the public interest for a public purpose, shall be used only in the public interest or for the public purposes for which it is taken or acquired”.

Under section 2 of the Land Acquisition and Compensation Act (LACA), “public purposes” is defined as including:-

  • for exclusive Government use or for community use;
  • for or in connection with sanitary improvements of any kind, including reclamations;
  • for or in connection with the laying out of any new Government station or the extension or improvement of any existing Government station;
  • for obtaining control over land contiguous to any port or airport;
  • for obtaining control over land required for defence purposes;
  • for obtaining control over land subjected to environmental protection and conservation;
  • for obtaining control over land the value of which will be enhanced by the construction of any railway, road or other public works or convenience about to be undertaken or provided by the Government; and
  • for planning purposes.

It is only after land is acquired from its owners by the Government in accordance with the law that it may be designated a State land. According to section 3 of LACA, “any land acquired under the provisions of this Act shall be designated as State lands and shall be administered under the provisions of the State Lands Act”.

And contrary to the assertion of the Permanent Secretary, section 4 of LACA states that “the Minister may acquire any land for a public purpose, paying therefore such consideration or compensation as may be agreed on or determined in accordance with this Act”.

It is a fact that senior employees of the Ministry’s twin departments of evil are living on lands stolen from their customary owners. It is also true that they sold many other lands across Salagi either directly or through third parties to private buyers.

A victim of land gangsterism in Sukuta was told a number of stories by agents, or purported agents of the Ministry’s twin evils. Some told him there are underground cables on his land placed there for special purposes, and others that the Government was creating a housing complex to be used as rest houses by holidaying Gambians settled abroad.
Whatever the truth of these claims, they have nothing to do with the proprietary right of the traditional owners of these ancestral Salagi lands.

The Salagi lands were stolen and not acquired by delineated legal processes.

Consequently Government cannot allocate what it does not own through legal acquisition.

Assuming these are lands which legally belong to the Government – and I reject that emphatically – the Salagi demolitions were conducted in violation of due process according to procedures laid down by DPPH itself.

The Ministry is wrong and the Permanent Secretary must reassess his position. I am in no doubt the land owners will be the ultimate winners as against the public gangsters hiding behind the façade of law.

Gambians are outraged and rightly so by the killings of George Floyd, and Lamin Sisay in the United States of America. I hope we direct part of that energy for justice to victims of Government lawlessness at home over lands in Salagi and elsewhere.

 

Halifa Sallah says George Floyd is sacrificial lamb for USA to repent

Halifa Sallah has said the George Floyd is the ‘sacrificial lamb’ for America to ‘repent’ and ‘heal’.

Below is the Serrekunda MP’s statement under the title ‘A Nation Caged and on Fire Cannot be at Peace with Itself to Prosper; George Floyd is the Sacrificial Lamb for the USA to Repent and Heal’.

When the worst is seen by a people, be rest assured that better times are around the corner, waiting for those who hate to see the worst to take the measured steps to address the challenges of destiny. Each has a duty to discharge our contract with destiny. The options are two. There is no middle road.

We will either live in the hell or the heaven of our own creation. This is the verdict of history and common sense and it is incontrovertible.

This is why COVID-19 is caging the USA and prejudice is burning it into ashes. History has its turns, convulsions and convolutions, its trials and tribulations but it also has its confessions, concessions and conciliations, its dialogue and healing. Hope always dawns when it is almost lost. The might of hope, unity and awareness is much more powerful than the strong current of hopelessness, antipathy and ignorance. The wisdom of the ages teaches that; behind the dark clouds, the glorious sunlight is always waiting to shine and it will shine someday. That is inevitable!

The convergence of the whole world for justice because of one incident is a glimmer of hope for a better world. Millions around the world became tormented as they saw a handcuffed human being lying on his side, unable to pose any threat to any officer, being subjected to excruciating pain by putting the whole weight of a well-built police officer on his neck, with a knee strategically placed on his jugular veins which ferries blood from the head to the heart thus depriving him of breath by relying on his weakest point to rip his lungs to pieces and send him to his grave.

What type of order will allow the transformation of a protector of life and property into a murderer? What property is more precious than personal freedom? It was not difficult to conclude that brother George Floyd was sent to his death without due process because of pride and prejudice that nourished contempt and ill will in the heart of the law enforcement officer. Where law enforcers become law breakers, the law is left without guards and fences. Society becomes a jungle where the fittest survive.

Burning, stoning and looting may continue to vent frustration until it becomes clear that such actions are not sustainable and cannot proffer solutions to the anguish that prejudice, inhumane treatment, alienation and injustice inflict on others.

It is therefore our duty not to provide the unjust with the excuse to legitimise the shooting and torturing of the weak because of their colour by exceeding the bounds of peaceful protest. Those who shook the USA to its knees did so in the 60s through the might of civic awareness and peaceful protest.

The belligerent and incorrigible hate mongers became consumed by the hell fire they lit and lost control of power. The peacemakers who took charge of governance assumed their responsibilities in separating the grain from the chaff, apologised for wrong doing while promising justice to the aggrieved families to cool the last embers of hate and revenge and allow sanity to be restored.

Hence, as we seek for a solution in these tumultuous times, the multitude should leave the street to COVID-19 and return to their separate chambers to speak to themselves in quietude and ask this fundamental unanswered question:

How can there be peace and tranquility, law and order without justice and respect for human rights irrespective of colour or creed?

George Floyd is posing this question for everyone in the USA to answer, each morning when starting a new day until a new USA is born. The USA is now crying for New Citizens and new leadership that could meet the expectations of those new citizens. Destiny makes the USA the nexus of world peoples and civilization.

The Union was founded and built from the blood and sweat of democrats fighting for a sovereign Republic in 1776, abolitionists fighting against those who defied the principle of sovereign equality of human beings, by trying to enslave other human beings, anti secessionists, 170, 000 of whom were Afro-American soldiers who defied disease and death to keep the nation together.

The wealth of the USA cannot be separated from the toil and moil of the enslaved, the indentured servants, the workers, the trillions in trade and investment in USA Bonds from all over the world. The USA is a corpus of world civilization without distinction to colour or nationality.

That is why when the USA is caged, the whole world feels the agony. When it is in flames, the whole world feels the heat. This is why the USA deserves a world class leadership in order to send the torch of justice, love, peace and harmony all over the globe where their ancestors hailed either by force against their will or due to flight from injustice perpetrated against them.

To all those who empathize with George Floyd, I have this to say: He is the sacrificial lamb of history, heralding the end of the days of prejudice based on colour.

Today, each person of African descent in particular or of any descent in general, whether in the USA, the Caribbean, Africa or any where in the globe should dispose of any inferiority complex that may have plagued one’s mind by prejudice and ignorance of one’s embodiment of inalienable dignity and self-worth.

Each must recognize that inferiority complex is a by product of self-hate and self-degradation. It leads one to engage in self-pity because of the inhumanity of others or become inhumane to react to the inhumanity of others. Instead of empathy, we should all celebrate the birth of a new day of awakening, a day when we will mutually commit ourselves to honour with total disregard that there is a white race or black race or red race or yellow race. We must now trumpet from mountain tops for the whole world to hear without any ambiguity or dissonance that there is only one race of people in the world – The Human race.

To look at the sun and say it is the moon is a symptom of mental ill health. To look at a person of African descent and say he or she is not a part of the human race is a symptom of mental ill health. All peoples, irrespective of colour, nationality, gender or place of origin are members of the human race who are endowed with similar capacity to think, invent and build a civilisation they would be proud to bequeath to their children and children’s children (ad infinitum), to eternity.

We must take this opportunity today to declare in George Floyd’s honour that his humanity and standing as a member of the human race stand shoulder high above his murderer. We must affirm that the human race comprises only two types of human beings; the human and the inhumane, the just and the unjust. We must reveal our discovery in his memory that any human being who looks at another human being and display signs of fear because of his or her colour is suffering from neurosis and needs treatment for his or her illness. This is the scientific truth.

It goes without saying that, any person who becomes obsessed with fear, hatred, pride and prejudice to the point of enjoying the perpetration of violence against another because of the colour of his or her skin must be seen to be suffering from psychosis. That is the unalloyed scientific truth. History has placed on the shoulders of all humane and just citizens of the USA in particular and the world over to begin the battle to screen and treat the ill and the unjust in our countries so as to ensure healing and peaceful coexistence. They must no longer be given the credit to think that they are displaying superiority over others by displaying contempt and hate.

The world must put an end to colour prejudice by exposing its source.

Those suffering from colour neurosis and psychosis must be identified and cured. The more they are allowed to increase and go on the rampage the more we have a society of psychopaths behaving like chosen people.

Then hell fire will be our home on this earth for eternity. History has put the salvation of the world in the hands of those who have suffered historical injustice the most, that is still unabated. However, history has rewarded the African people with land, human, material and financial resources in the USA, the Caribbean and Africa due to the vicissitude of destiny. We must now convert this strategic advantage into asset to save the world from the hatred of people that have lost all sense of obligation to humanity.

Once they learn to forgive after all the psychopaths are restrained and humanised, the twenty first century would evolve a human civilization that would guarantee peace on earth and good neighborliness throughout the world. All humane persons in the world must unite to save humanity from the insanity of the inhumane and the unjust.

This is the clarion call of destiny. We must answer to this call or face the abominable peril and the unaffordable cost of chaos, licentiousness and impunity.

Madi Jobarteh and Co’s protest is ‘postponed’ after meeting with police chief

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The planned protest on Monday 8 June against police brutality and racism in the United States has been postponed, Madi Jobarteh has said.

“This is to inform the general public that the planned protest on Monday June 8 in front of the American Embassy on Kairaba Avenue against police brutality and racism in the United States has been postponed briefly,” Mr Jobarteh said on Wednesday.

He added: “We had a meeting with the IGP this afternoon and he referred to the ongoing state of emergency which imposes restrictions on public gatherings. He noted that he would be unjustified to allow this protest to go ahead when schools, churches and mosques are closed and even some imams and other individuals arrested for leading public gatherings.

“The IGP however assured us that he will grant a permit once these emergency regulations are relaxed. It is expected that by June 8 the state of emergency will end. Even if it is extended the expectation is that the restrictions will be relaxed. As law abiding citizens we accepted his reasons and urged him to ensure that our right to freedom of assembly is respected.

“In light of the above we will postpone the June 8 protest and a new date will be set and communicated accordingly.”

OACPS SUMMIT: President Barrow touts SoPE as one of measures Gambia adopted to ward off coronavirus

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President Adama Barrow on Wednesday participated in the Organisation of African, Caribbean and Pacific States heads of state summit, telling the meeting The Gambia like other countries has adopted measures to contain the spread of the coronavirus.

“These include declaring a State of Public Emergency, observing WHO regulations and mitigating the impact of such strict measures on the public,” the Gambian leader told the virtual summit which focused on transcending the COVID-19 pandemic.

The meeting was the first of its kind.

President Barrow added: “Already, however, the pandemic has impacted severely on both the formal and informal sectors of our economy.

“The need to pay due attention to both sectors is urgent, noting that our informal sector contributes crucially towards sustaining livelihoods and to GDP.

“In short, the impact on employment, government revenue and the subsistence of the people is immensely negative.”

Truckers put their despair behind them as government finally pays them

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By Lamin Njie

Government COVID-19 foodstuff transporters have finally been paid by the Gambia government.

The government had contracted several transporters to convey rice and sugar it purchased under a grand relief package.

The truckers had grumbled that they were running into difficulty getting their money from the government – as the Eid celebrations neared.

The Fatu Network has gathered the government has finally paid them, in a contract that ran into millions.

Transporters for North Bank and Upper River Region were paid nearly 11 million dalasis on Friday.

Anger in Barra as man behind ill-fated boat returns but police are warning against vigilantism

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By Lamin Njie

Family and survivors of the Barra boat disaster last year have expressed anger over the return to the town of Ousman Bahoum.

Mr Bahoum is the man behind the rickety boat that sank off the coast of Mauritania in December 2019 – while conveying at least 150 Gambian migrants to Spain.

He left Barra shortly after the disaster but has now returned back to the town.

Survivors and family of those who died in the accident held a meeting in Barra on Tuesday over Mr Bahoum’s return.

They are warning that they could take matters into their own hands if nothing is done.

Police spokesman Lamin Njie (not the author of this story) has however called for calm in Barra – even as he dismissed allegations Ousman bribed the police D300,000.

He said: “We want to assure the public especially ppl of Barra that the panel investigating the matter will not leave any stone untorn. All individuals found wanting will face the full force of the Law.

“We urge them to contain their impatience and not take the law into their own hands as justice will be served.

“The bribery allegation is definitely unfounded.”

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