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MLS DEATH: Touma Njie pans Gambia government over its silence

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Banjul South National Assembly Member Touma Njie has expressed frustration at the Gambia government’s silence in the death of Momodou Lamin Sisay.

Sisay, 39, died in the US state of Georgia last Friday following a shooting involving police.

His death has caused rage among some Gambians. Some are planning to stage a protest in front of the US Embassy in Banjul.

Touma Njie wrote on his official Facebook page today on the issue but hers is with the government.

She said: “Again, as I keep saying , it is the corruption and personal interest that is Killing us in Africa .

“Days after the gunning down of a fellow compatriot in the US, we are yet to hear from the Government of The Gambia and yet we have a ministry for Foreign Affairs and Gambians Abroad. Who are they here for?”

We are Going to Protest against Racism and Police Brutality against Blacks in America!

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Tomorrow Monday June 1 we will apply for a permit to the Inspector General of Police to provide security for a peaceful assembly in front of the US Embassy on Kairaba Avenue. The protest is planned for Monday June 8 at 10am. We will converge in silence. We will stand on one knee like Colin Kaepernick to symbolize our mourning and condemnation of the acts of violence meted out to Blacks in the US by the police. By 10:30am we will hand over a signed petition to the Ambassador and then peacefully disperse. You can sign the petition if you come to the protest site.

We will ensure social distancing and we urge all to donate and bring face masks, water buckets and soap and hand sanitizers in respect of the state of emergency regulations.

Why are we protesting?

It was White People from Europe and America who got up on their own to come to Africa hundreds of years ago to forcefully kidnap our ancestors and then carry them into slavery in the Americas against their will. Kunta Kinteh never asked to be made a slave. The kings and people of Niumi never invited White People to visit their village to kidnap Kunta Kinteh. Rather slavery was the imagination and invention of White People and it was Europe and the United States that emerged successful from slavery. The people of Juffureh, Niumi, The Gambia and the entire Africa only lost and became weak socially, economically and politically because of slavery.

Kunta Kinteh and his descendants worked all their lives in the United States to build the country and its vast economy to what it is today, for free. Our Ancestor Kunta was never paid for his labour. Even when the US President Abraham Lincoln declared in 1863 that he had freed the slaves, the US Government until today has failed to pay back its Black citizens their fair share or uphold and protect their rights. Even the promise of forty acres and a mule that the US Government said it would give to each and every Black person since 1865 until today the US Government has failed to fulfill that promise.

Yet after 244 years of the US Declaration of Independence in which US Founding Fathers declared that all human beings are created equal and endowed with the inalienable rights to Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness, the fact remains that African Americans are not treated as such. Look into the social, economic and political indicators in terms of access to power, leadership, resources, wealth, education, healthcare, housing and voice and you will find Black People are disproportionately lower than Whites. Why? Look into the prisons of the US and you will find Black People forming the overwhelming majority. Look into the number of people killed by police brutality and you will find more Blacks being unnecessarily killed than any other group of US citizens. Why?

Therefore, as Africans on the continent we are going to protest this unfair, unjust, illegal and oppressive treatment of our kith and kin in America. It is high time that each and every African in the continent of Africa makes the issue of America a personal and a national issue. Not just because African Americans are our blood kith and kin but also because we have millions of fellow continental Africans living in the United States. And they have not been spared as we have seen in the murder of Momodou Lamin Sisay few days ago as well as the murder of Amadou Diallo from Guinea in New York in 1999 just to mention a few.

Above all the struggle for independence for African countries was initiated and spearheaded by African Americans more than 100 years ago – well before Kwame Nkrumah, EF Small, Amilcar Cabral and Nelson Mandela and our Patriotic Leaders came onto the scene. African Americans have always been in the forefront and have died in the fight against colonialism and imperialism in Africa because they know that the destiny of Africa is intertwined with the destiny of the Black Man and Woman in America. Read your history to know.

If America touts itself as the beacon of democracy and champion of human rights in the world, then we expect the United States to practice what it preaches. We have even seen the United States Government wage wars and impose sanctions on several countries around the world in the name of defending human rights and democracy. Yet inside America itself that same Government continues to blatantly kill its own Black citizens with impunity. This is unacceptable.

We must therefore raise an international attention to what is happening in America just as America is raising international attention to human rights violations in other countries of the world. What is good for the goose is good for the gander. America cannot claim human rights for the rest of the world yet in its own backyard it is committing gross human rights violations. That is hypocrisy that must be confronted by the rest of the world, and Africans in particular must be in the lead against such hypocrisy because it is our people who are the victims.

Therefore, we are going to request a police permit to embark on a peaceful protest in front of the US Embassy on Kairaba Avenue to submit a petition to the US Ambassador. We want to demand that the US Government enforce its own Constitution, uphold its own Declaration of Independence of 1776 and implement all of its civil rights act to protect the lives and dignity of Black People. We demand that the US Government investigates the murder of Momodou Lamin Sisay and George Floyd and Breonna Tayler and all victims of police brutality and hold all those officers responsible accountable. Above all, we demand the US Government to immediately put a complete end to institutionalized racism against African Americans in all spheres of life and society.

Stand up for your sons, daughters, brothers and sisters in the United States. We are one!

…………………………………………….

Madi Jobarteh

Skype: madi.jobarteh

Twitter: @jobartehmadi

LinkedIn: Madi Jobarteh

Phone: +220 9995093

 

Protest looms in Gambia over Momodou Lamin Sisay US death

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By Lamin Njie

A group of Gambians are mobilising for a peaceful protest in front of the US Embassy in Banjul over the death of Gambian Momodou Lamin Sisay.

Sisay, 39, was shot and killed by police in Georgia, United States on Friday. Police there said he engaged them in a shootout.

His death has ignited appreciable anger in The Gambia, coming as protests rocked US over the fatal arrest of black man George Floyd.

Madi Jobarteh who is proving to be the man behind the protest said in a Facebook post today: “Tomorrow Monday June 1 we will apply for a permit to the Inspector General of Police to provide security for a peaceful assembly in front of the US Embassy on Kairaba Avenue. The protest is planned for Monday June 8 at 10am. We will converge in silence.

“We will stand on one knee like Colin Kaepernick to symbolize our mourning and condemnation of the acts of violence meted out to Blacks in the US by the police. By 10:30am we will hand over a signed petition to the Ambassador and then peacefully disperse. You can sign the petition if you come to the protest site.

“We will ensure social distancing and we urge all to donate and bring face masks, water buckets and soap and hand sanitizers in respect of the state of emergency regulations.”

The world’s new Covid-19 epicenter could be the worst yet

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For months, Latin America watched the rest of the world suffer as the coronavirus spread. It is a spectator no longer.

“This is the new epicenter,” said Dr. Marcos Espinal, director of communicable diseases at the Pan American Health Organization.

Months after emerging from a relatively obscure Chinese province, the eye of this viral storm has firmly landed in Latin America.

There are roughly 920,000 confirmed coronavirus cases and nearly 50,000 deaths across the region’s 33 countries, but those numbers are fast on the rise.

As new deaths and cases fall in the United States, Europe and Asia, Latin America now stands as the world’s sole region where the outbreak is unequivocally reaching new heights.

“In many ways this is no surprise,” said Dr. Ana Diez Roux, dean of Drexel University’s School of Public Health. “It was predictable that this was going to happen.”

In conversations with eight different experts, including a former head of state, epidemiologists and top researchers on the region, there is wide agreement that faulty government response coupled with Latin America’s unique economic and public health situation led to the severity of the current outbreak.

The experts were also nearly unanimous in the view that things are likely to get worse.

How we got here

Latin America recorded its first confirmed case in February, when a 61-year-old man tested positive in São Paulo, Brazil after returning from a trip to Italy.

For weeks afterward, things seemed to be under control. Case totals in the region crept only marginally higher. The first death wouldn’t be recorded until March 7 in Argentina.

But some already suspected there would be tragedy to come.

In a March 19 op-ed for the New York Times, Miguel Lago, a Brazilian public health expert, wrote that Latin America was not prepared for the virus and that the region might eventually become worse than Europe.

“[Latin America] could become the biggest victim of Covid-19 if health authorities and governments… do not take immediate actions.”

His words would prove prescient. By the middle of May, Latin America was reporting higher daily case total increases than both the United States and Europe.

Brazil would surge past Italy, the United Kingdom and Russia to record the second highest number of cases in the world.

A global shortage of tests and some countries’ reluctance to mass test have also raised doubts about whether cases and deaths are being accurately counted in the region.

“[The official numbers] provide a false sense of security. The number of cases is not showing close to the magnitude of the problem,” said Dr. Espinal. (CNN)

MADI JOBARTEH – COMMENTARY: US Police Brutality has arrived on Gambian Shores! Time to Act.

By Madi Jobarteh

We are deeply saddened at the news of the shooting to death of a Gambian youth Momodou Lamin Sisay today by the US Police even as we continue to grieve the senseless, deliberate and racist murder of George Floyd by the same US Police. As usual the US Police has come up with their narrative that they came under fire from Momodou and so in the exchange our boy was killed. False!

I reject this narrative 100% which is nothing but the same typical pattern of fabrications that the US Police are notorious of spreading anytime they kill Africans. Once again they victimize the victim! For that matter we demand the release of the police videos to show exactly what happened to Momodou.

At this moment, Gambian activists in the United States are actively engaged on this matter. They are seeking the support of lawyers to ask the courts to make the police release their videos publicly as well as have human rights organizations raise the issue across the nation.

In the Gambia let us raise the issue as well. Let us demand the Gambia Government to summon the Ambassador of the United States to State House to make it clear to him in no uncertain terms the painful grieve and deep concern of the people and Government of the Gambia for the killing of Momodou.

Let our Government make it clear to the US Government our uncompromising stance for justice for Momodou and George Floyd and all those victims of US Police Brutality. Let our Government make it clear to the US Government’s representative in Banjul that we will not tolerate Gambians and African Americans being killed by the US Police with impunity.

Furthermore, let us make our political parties to speak up. America is NOT the Almighty. Let us reject that sense of helplessness and small and poor nation mentality that America is a huge and invincible super power that we cannot do anything about. Let all political parties in Africa begin to act like governments and leaders and take a proactive and definitive stance on fundamental issues affecting African lives across the world.

Let all governments in Africa stand up and speak with one voice that the blatant, indiscriminately and racist attack on our kith and kin in the United States will never go unnoticed and unchecked.

In the name of Kunta Kinteh and Olaudah Equiano and millions of our ancestors of blessed memory who were forcefully removed from Africa to be enslaved in the Americas, let us defend our brothers and sisters in South American, Latin America, Mexico, United States and Canada. We have a duty to stand for them!

Finally, be informed that there are efforts being planned right now to stage a peaceful protest against US Police Brutality against Blacks in America in front of the US Embassy on Kairaba Avenue. You shall be informed as we gather news and progress.

Stand up for the rights and dignity of your people. Today!

Africans for Africans Worldwide!

Gambian shot and killed in US as his father says he was pious ‘somebody’ who abhored violence

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By Lamin Njie

A 39-year-old Gambian has died in the US State of Georgia after a reported police shootout on Friday.

Momodou Lamin Sisay was killed after a shooting that happened on Temple Johnson Road near Pate Road in Snellville, Georgia, according to local media.

Father of the 39-year-old told The Fatu Network while his family is not accepting or disputing the narrative police in Georgia are pushing, they intend to do their own investigation into the circumstances surrounding Momodou’s death.

“The narrative that is being given by the police is that it was a routine traffic stop. Now, from a routine traffic stop you now get to a point they’re claiming he was armed, he brandished a weapon and based on that they called several other SWAT cars,” Lare Sisay, a UN diplomat told The Fatu Network.

He added: “They literally walked towards the car and since this officer reported that he brandished a weapon, they made no attempts to frisk him, to ask him to come out of the vehicle or to say drop your weapon. They just shot. Multiple shots were fired and he died on the spot.

“We’re not saying we accept or dispute the narrative but we want to wait until the autopsy report is out and we do our own investigation. We will do an independent autopsy and we want to get a private investigator to investigate the circumstances of his death and if necessary hire a lawyer to sue the Georgia state police. We’re not going to let it go.

“[I spoke with him] just a few days ago. He’s a very pious somebody, goes to the mosque and prays and even when he was in school, he wasn’t into any sort of trouble that I am aware of. So to say that he has a gun… This is sombody who abhors violence, he does not like violence of any kind.”

Momodou’s slaying comes as US descends into chaos following the fatal arrest of black man George Floyd, which has thrust back to the fore a fresh conversation on how blacks are treated in the country.

Police activated as New Yundum sits on land timebomb

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By Lamin Njie

Riot police descended on New Yundum on Saturday as natives toured a land area they say was being illegally taken from them.

The people of New Yundum have accused the government of orchestrating a wicked plot to seize their land after initially making them believe the land would be reserved for developmental purposes.

The town through its VDC on Thursday issued a statement drawing the attention of Gambians and ‘by extension the Government of The Gambia in particular the Ministry of Lands and the Members of the National Assembly of our utmost dismay, disappointment and frustration of the unlawful allocations of plots belonging to the community of New Yundum to government officials and in particular the Honourable members of the National Assembly of The Gambia’.

“We truly find this regrettable and utterly unease of how insensitive our own Public officials more so National Assembly Members could venture into such act of rubbing the very people they are to serve genuinely. We wonder where we will end up as a country when the apex law making body is bent on such a dubious activity without considering the plight of the very people who elected them into position,” the people of the town said in their statement.

The people of the town on Saturday toured the land in question.

“Usually we do go there for observation to see whether there is any new development. So we realised that there is development at the reserve land so what we did is we consulted the community to go there and find out,” an official of the VDC told The Fatu Network.

He added: “During that process, we met the paramilitary were there, I think two or three vehicles fully armed.

“So we went there, we observed the place and we found out there are some real estates. Of course the government also trying to encroach on parts of the other area that was initially allocated to the MPs and other public officcers.

“So that was our reason of going there. So we had this encounter with them. So guided us up to the place, we observed the place and that was it. It was smooth.”

US: Man dead after ‘shootout’ with police – as reports emerge he’s Gambian

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A man has died in the United States after a reported shoot-out with the police, according to reports.

WSBTV 2 reported on Friday the Georgia Bureau of Investigation has been called to investigate a police shooting involving the Snellville police department and the Gwinnett County police department that left one person dead.

The shooting happened on Temple Johnson Road near Pate Road in Snellville, according to the outlet.

Authorities said it started off as a traffic stop around 4 a.m. and then turned into a chase, the outlet said.

“The driver of the vehicle took off at full-speed and refused to stop,” Snellville police said. “Officers attempted at PIT maneuver on the vehicle, took the vehicle off the roadway.”

The vehicle crashed into the tree line on Temple Johnson Road. Once the vehicle came to a stop, officers approached the car and gave the driver commands but he refused to comply, the outlet reported.

“The subject produced a handgun and began firing at the officers. There was an exchange of gunfire,” Snellville police said.

Snellville police called in a SWAT team from Gwinnett County to assist, according to WSBTV.

“At one point he lifted up his firearm and pointed it at our officers,” Cpl. Michele Pihera with Gwinnett County Police Department said. “One of our officers assigned to the SWAT team fired one round.”

Pihera said right now, they don’t know if that round hit the suspect, but he was later found dead in the car, the outlet said.

Atlanta-based Gambian Banka Manneh said in a Facebook post on Saturday the man involved is Momodou Lamin Sisay.

‘We need more women candidates’: Dr Ceesay says Marie Sock’s emergence will enrich Gambia’s ‘competitive’ political landscape

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By Lamin Njie

Marie Sock’s emergence as a contender for the job of president will enrich The Gambia’s political landscape, according to Dr Ismaila Ceesay.

“Marie Sock joining the race as an independent candidate augurs well for Gambian politics. This will enrich our competitive political landscape. We need more women candidates to come forward and contest for political positions,” the senior political science lecturer at the University of The Gambia tweeted Saturday.

It comes as Sock announced on Saturday she will be joining the race to become the country’s next president.

Gambians will go to the polls in about 16 months to elect a new president. Sock is the first woman to express interest in the job.

On the Death of George Floyd and the Unanswered Questions about Black Lives: Letter to the President

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Dear Donald Trump,

It is 3 AM (GMT) this early Saturday Morning, May 30, as I follow developments regarding the nationwide protests currently being staged as a result of the brutal murder of George Floyd at the hands of your police officers.

Mr. President, certainly the scenes oozing out of downtown Atlanta are quite worrisome as similar scenes evolve across major cities in the United States of America. Truly the land of the free and the home of the brave has not lived up to its bill of rights and liberty as enshrined in the sacred scrolls of the Declaration of Independence. 

As I watch protesters attack the CNN Headquarters in Atlanta, I see the anger and frustration of citizens of your great country across the political and racial divide, all clamouring for the justice that is promised in your nation’s philosophical check book.

Alas! What is happening in America right now would be strange only to those who have no knowledge of the prophesies of the late Martin Luther King Junior who (57 years ago) boldly asserted the inconvenient truth as follows:

 “When the architects of our republic wrote the magnificent words of the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence, they were signing a promissory note to which every American was to fall heir. This note was a promise that all men, yes, black men as well as white men (My Lord), would be guaranteed the unalienable rights of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. It is obvious today that America has defaulted on this promissory note insofar as her citizens of color are concerned. (My Lord) Instead of honoring this sacred obligation, America has given the Negro people a bad check, a check which has come back marked insufficient funds.”

The Donald, it is your misfortune that today (more than ever before), the African race, is ready and eager to demand justice and equality. It falls within the period of your reign that the sons and daughters of the crowd solemnly assembled at the National Monument on that fateful day in 1963, when MLK made that historic speech, stand ready and bold to demand that your federal reserves of justice honour that promissory note and no force on earth can stop this movement.

You have been eccentric, provocative and down right maliciously egocentric, but this is not the time to attempt any egomaniacal shenanigans. You must rise up to the occasion and answer to the call for justice to be delivered in the matter of George Flyod. Your country yearns for leadership and you have woefully failed to rise to the occasion amidst your government’s shambolic approach to the current the COVID-19 pandemic. 

Now, here comes another tragedy on your doorsteps seeking the right mix of legal and sociological answers that would heal and reunite the United States of America. Will you answer to this proverbial 3 A.M phone call that former Presidential candidate Hillary Clinton warned all presidential aspirant about? 

Whatever your answer to the foregoing query may be, you are better off doing some genuine soul-searching and broad-based consultation before you hit your twitter handle.

In parting, Mr. President, I refer you to a warning posted to your office more than half a century ago; that mail was addressed to your your office by no less an illumined soul than the reverend  pastor of the Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta, “the price that America must pay for the continued oppression of the Negro and other minority groups is the price of its own destruction. (Yes it is) For the hour is late. And the clock of destiny is ticking out. We must act now before it is too late.”

Please accept the assurances of my highest consideration and esteem.

Momodou Sabally

Former Presidential Affairs Minister and International Speaker, Momodou Sabally is a prolific author and President of the youth mentorship foundation, Sabally Leadership Academy (SLA).

EU lengthens project which would see Gambia women and their children get D1,500

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In light of the continued low scale spread of the COVID-19 pandemic and its unavoidable socio-economic consequences, the European Union has taken the decision to extend the successful Building Resilience through Social Transfers- BReST project being implemented by UNICEF, the National Nutrition Agency NaNA and the Ministry of Women, Children and Social Welfare until end of August 2020, according to a statement by the EU.

BReST is a successful nutrition, social protection and cash transfer project funded by the European Union in the tune of 3 million Euro and implemented by UNICEF that has been benefitting pregnant and lactating mothers with children under the age of two and has been under implementation since 2017.

The statement by EU on Thursday said: “This 3 months extension will allow for a second wave of emergency COVID-19 cash transfers to the most vulnerable households in the project implementing regions of CRR, URR and NBR. In the last few weeks, the EU BReST project already provided a first COVID-19 cash transfers of 1,500 GMD per mother and child pair.

“This second transfer intends to continue supporting the purchase of essential food and hygiene items to combat the spread of COVID-19 using funds from the final remaining financial balance under the project. It shows the commitment of the European Union to ensure EU funds directly reach the people, wherever possible.”

The European Union Ambassador to the Republic of The Gambia, H.E. Attila LAJOS: ”The European Union continues to stand in support of the Gambian people in their efforts to combat the spread of COVID-19 and overcome its consequences. In this case, the EU is once again using BReST as the main conduit for cash transfers directly to the people. This project is indeed a working example that could be built on for future social protection systems in The Gambia once the COVID crisis is over.”

‘It’s Barrow who’ll lose his money’: Dodou Jah warns that Barrow will lose his money if he gives it to any official of APRC

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APRC deputy spokesman Dodou Jah on Friday responded to claims President Adama Barrow goes about giving money to top officials of the party.

Mr Jah warned that the officials do not own the party and President Barrow will lose his money if he gives it to them.

“If Barrow takes his money and gives it to the executive, whoever it is, it’s Barrow who would lose his money,” the senior APRC official said on Giss Giss.

He added: “Because the people he gives the money to do not own the party. They were only selected to lead.

“The party is owned by the people and what the people want is what stands. So whatever Barrow gives, he would be the one to lose his money.”

Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin is charged with the murder and manslaughter of George Floyd

Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin has been taken into custody over the death of black man George Floyd, four days after he was seen kneeling on his neck in a video of his arrest that has sparked violent protests across the country.

The 44-year-old white cop was arrested by state investigators on Friday afternoon, Public Safety Commissioner John Harrington announced.

Chauvin was one of four officers fired over Floyd’s death earlier this week however, Harrington did not provide details on the other three cops.

The state attorney who would oversee any prosecution on state charges, whose home was also the site of protests, is scheduled to provide an update later Friday.

The arrest comes after days of riots and unrest across Minneapolis – and several states – demanding justice for 46-year-old Floyd. (DailyMail)

SOF visits Garawol Kuta nearly three months after Senegalese gendarmerie entered Gambia and shot man

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Defence Minister Sheikh OmAr Faye visited Garawol Kuta Village in the Upper River Region on Wednesday, nearly three months after Senegalese gendarmerie illegally entered The Gambia and shot a Gambian and then fled with him.

Sulayman Trawally was pursued into the country on March 8.

Defence Minister Sheikh Omar Faye (SOF) has now visited the village, nearly three months after the incident.

“The visit was to reassure the great people of Upper River Region and the people of Garawol Kuta in particular that the Government of Mr Adama Barrow has been working tirelessly since 8 March 2020 when the shooting incident occurred and the subsequent arrest of one of our own Mr Sulayman Trawally,” according to a statement by the ministry of defence.

It added: “He (defence minister) assured the people that the Government of the Gambia will never abandon her citizens and the immediate deployment of a patrol team that crossed into Senegal to follow up the case it’s a clear indication that the security forces and the government will never abdicate their responsibilities.

“At the diplomatic level according to him a mediation team has been composed to work out modalities to avoid the reoccurrence of this kind of incident but however the mediation efforts has been marred by this global pandemic Covid-19.”

President Barrow nearly ties UDP in popularity poll

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By Lamin Njie

Twenty-five percent of 675 people interviewed across the country said they feel closest to President Adama Barrow.

A nationwide survey of The Gambia by the International Republican Institute’s (IRI) Center for Insights in Survey Research was conducted on the draft constitution between November and December 2019.

In the poll, 675 people were interviewed about which political party they feel closest to. Twenty-five percent of the respondents say they feel closest to President Adama Barrow who has formed his own political party, the National People’s Party. Twenty-seven percent said it’s UDP.

The survey used a multistage probability sampling method through face-to-face interviews with 1,178 Gambians aged 18 and above.

The data was weighted for age, gender, urbanicity, and local government area based on results of the 2018 Labor Force Survey of The Gambia.

GMC, PPP, GPDP, GAP and NCP all stood at one percent.

73% of Gambians ‘strongly agree’ d’constitution should establish Gambia is a secular state

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By Lamin Njie

A staggering 73 percent of Gambians have told a poll they ‘strongly’ agree that the draft constitution should establish that The Gambia is a secular state – where the government is neutral in matters of religion.

Secularity proved a vexed issue during the consultative process of the Constitutional Review Commission with Christians campaigning heavily for the new constitution to carry the word ‘secular’. That never happened.

However, a nationwide survey of The Gambia by the International Republican Institute’s (IRI) Center for Insights in Survey Research was conducted on the draft constitution between November and December 2019.

The survey used a multistage probability sampling method through face-to-face interviews with 1,178 Gambians aged 18 and above. A staggering 73 percent of those interviewed said they ‘strongly’ agree that the draft constitution should establish that The Gambia is a secular state.

The data was weighted for age, gender, urbanicity, and local government area based on results of the 2018 Labor Force Survey of The Gambia.

Thirteen percent strongly disagreed.

I am the Captain of my Soul, Master of my Fate

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By Baboucarr Camara

SEOUL – It’s 3:45 a.m. here; most people are in bed. It’s nine hours behind in The Gambia, precisely 6:45 p.m. Instead of getting enough sleep to re-energize my batteries for a 9:00 a.m. class presentation on Zoom, I’m here sharing the inspirational story of how I transformed from a morbidly-obese person to a fine-looking young man in less than seven months.

It was May 5, 2020, and more than four hours since a popular Gambian lifestyle platform WhatsOnGambia shared two pictures of me, taken eight months apart. On its Facebook page, they dropped the bombshell with the simple caption: What an incredible weight-loss transformation! Congratulations Baboucarr Camara!

Within minutes, it generated all sorts of expertise and forensic analysis. While many were left in awe with what I did, an equal number still doubted the story. Bang, dropped a private message from an old acquaintance: “How did that just happened mate?” he asked. “How did you do it? Please help me, you’ve inspired me and before December I must win my battle with overweight.”

Within 24 hours, I moved from a little over 4000 friends to less than a hundred of reaching my maximum 5000 limit. That gave me both a sense of joy and fulfillment, but even more, the desire to help Gambians fight obesity and promote a healthy lifestyle. That is Babou at his passionate best.

Ever since I could remember, sports have been my life. I started as an observer, then I became an analyzer at high school, then a commentator, later an employed journalist, to a full blown addict, landing me my current job as a sports administrator. While most of my pals were busy riding their bikes and playing the games, I was trying to perfect my knowledge of them.

Most would turn to me for opinion whenever they argue about sports, football in particular. They would usually drop the phrase, ‘Baboucarr said it.’ I’m their one reliable arbiter of all things sports. Those folks were not surprised to see what sports has given me today. They were certain I was destined for greatness and it was a matter of when not if.

However, it took me until after my 36th birthday to find my sense of being as someone who truly belongs in a world of sports. Performing the act was of little or no importance to me. The camaraderie and the togetherness, especially during the matches were what mattered to me. My phones would be inundated with calls and messages from family and friends, especially during the summer European football transfer windows, as we share opinions even though we are miles apart.

The competitive part didn’t bother me at all. Of course, having a healthy competition is not a bad thing. But for Babou, my greatest competition is with myself and this has helped me to become a better person in every aspect of my life. So practicing sports was not for me. Sure, I thought. A sedentary lifestyle perfectly suited me for as long as I remain relevant to those who rely upon my expert opinion and skills in delivering the goods. After all, their nice comments massaged my ego.That concept has been banished to history. Today, I can’t imagine my life without sports. I can’t even begin to imagine the thought of physical inactivity for more than two days in a given week. Sports has helped me to find my true identity. I’ve never been more confident in my looks and abilities before. Put simply, me and sports are intertwined.

Beyond my wildest imagination, I now serve as both a fitness adviser and diet consultant to many Gambians, less than a year removed from when I mistook obesity to be a sign of good living. The daily compliments I continue to receive for waking up a sleeping society and serving as an inspiration to many people who now look up to me is indeed heartwarming and at the same time challenging.

It drives me to never get off the track and be the best in whatever goals that I’ve set for myself. That competitive drive pushes me to be at the best of my abilities in even the smallest and mundane areas of my life. I challenge myself to return home with a completely ripped-off body by doing tedious abdominal exercises six days a week, be at my best academically and dedicate my life to spearhead the campaign for others to be in control of their lives as well.

Through sports, I’ve also come to learn something fundamentally very important; no matter how talented you are, you are not always going to be the best. You have to work hard to get what you want. No matter what, you will mess up and someone is going to beat the sh***t out of you. When you put in the time and effort, it pays off. You will also improve and every time and effort becomes worth every second.

Baboucarr Camara is a former Daily Observer Editor. He’s the Director of Marketing & Communications, The Gambia Football Federation. He holds a Bachelor’s in Journalism and is a Master’s Degree candidate in Global Sports Management at the Seoul National University.

Concerns get soothed as draft constitution finally gets published in Gazette

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The Ministry of Justice announced on Friday a Bill for an Act to promulgate the Constitution of The Republic of The Gambia, 2020 and repeal the Constitution of The Republic of The Gambia, 1997 has now been completed and was published in the Gazette yesterday 28th May, 2020.

“This is the first such publication,” the ministry said in a statement.

The statement added: “The second publication of the Bill in the Gazette shall occur 3 months from this date. Thereafter, the Bill should be ready for introduction into the National Assembly at least 10 days after the date of the second publication in the Gazette pursuant to section 226 of the 1997 Constitution.

“The Ministry wishes to thank the general public for their continued interest and engagement in this Constitutional review process.”

It comes as Gambians continued to raise concern President Adama Barrow was sitting on the document nearly two months after it was submitted to him by the Constitutional Review Commission.

I WILL NEVER ADVOCATE FOR WAR BETWEEN SENEGAL & GAMBIA

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Let me start by making it abundantly clear to all my readers that I have not and will never advocate for any kind of military conflict between the Gambia and Senegal, contrary to misconception currently peddled by certain crackpots. What I simply suggested in the article in question was the exploration of the possibility of reorganizing and retraining the Gambia Armed Forces in counter-conventional warfare given their limited capability in offensive conventional war when they are still expected to be efficiently defensive against any hostile foreign aggressors. But for lack of an appropriate adjective, I called it a guerrilla-warfare orientation, capable of neutralizing heavily armed and conventionally trained invaders. It doesn’t however mean underestimating the combat aptitude of the GAF after 22 years of being tested and proven remarkably successful in their national and international duties.

Beside their fortitude and outstanding achievement acclaimed in the international peacekeeping arena, we have witnessed our soldiers crushed insurgencies launched twice by state enemies from Senegal in 1996 and 1997. In October 1996, Kukoi Samba Sanyang, the culprit behind the 1981 abortive coup against the PPP government, foiled by Senegal’s military intervention in which 33 of their soldiers were killed, assembled his hardened gang of international mercenaries from Liberia at the Senegalese towns of Sokone and Tambakunda where after a month they attacked the Farafeni Barracks to overthrow the AFPRC government. The GAF troops captured all attackers except two after they brutally killed 8 Gambian soldiers. The same GAF forces defeated and captured the 1997 armed assailants on Kartong Barracks, another operation marshaled from a paramilitary camp of Senegalese forces in Cassamance; they also killed two Gambian soldiers. And last but not the least, was their spectacular obliteration of an idiotic bunch of armed renegades, sponsored from America in 2014 in the dumbest operational strategy ever orchestrated to overthrow a government.

Ironically, the principal ex-convict and mercenary wannabe in that doomed operation, hatched on a delusional battle plan to overthrow the APRC government and hand it over to a credulous real-estate developer residing in Texas, is the joke today soliciting a heroic recognition. The same fellow who had by all attestations, induced his colleagues into a deathtrap and deserted them at the first burst of gunfire and sprinted across the border with his tail between his legs, shameless expects to be celebrated a warrior. The ex-convict needs to be reminded that warriors are not invented in thin air or by mere pretense but are tested fighters often  unassertive and in most cases detest the description. But once a blockhead always a blockhead. I can’t be distracted, anyway.

I will however continue to reiterate my concerns over our political and military cooperation with Senegal which I believe, if fashioned on a sincere and mutually beneficial cornerstone will yield excellent dividend to both countries, given our inherent destiny to eternally coexist culturally and geopolitically. We are, in a nutshell,  more similar than different in every conceivable state of affair. Except that I am somewhat bothered by our neighbor’s familiar trickery frequently applied on our leaders that had in the past failed our bilateral agreements geared towards consolidating a durable union.

You see, homogenous to the root cause of the political divorce of President Sir Dawda Jawara and President Abdou Diouf, after their confederation, following the 1981 bloody kukoi rebellion mentioned above, was indeed the overarching circumstances that initially brought about a trustworthy cooperation between President Yahya Jammeh and President Abdou Joof in 1994 but eroded in a couple of years from insincerity.

Jawara with every “assistance” provided to save his government, utterly resisted Senegal’s ultimate hankering for an economic union of the two states, clandestinely championed by France where the Gambian had to forgo the dalasi currency for the West-African zone CFA Fran. The Neo-colonial group, composed of mainly Francophone West African nations  and Guinea Bissau continue to annually pay US$500 billion to France as colonial dues.

Needless to say, Jammeh was also very appreciative of President Abdou Diouf’s termination of Senegal’s intention to deploy combat troops into the Gambia to quell the coup on the night of July 22, 1994, but as explained later Jammeh’s trust was clearly betrayed.

I was in the company of President Jammeh on the upper floor of the Statehouse, by his bedroom, when his first phone call, from a number provided by Senegalese ambassador to the Gambia at the time, Mr. Kebbeh, was placed to Diouf’s office to discuss their first bilateral relationship, on Sunday, July 24, 1994.

They both “honestly” pledged to work together amicably in a spirit much better than what had obtained during the PPP regime that led to the disintegration of the confederation; they further agreed to re-explore its possible reestablishment. In his closing remarks, Diouf had assured Jammeh his commitment not to entertain any subversive activities by his adversaries from Senegal, although he had confessed to have offered political asylum to deposed Sir Dawda Dawda with his government officials purely on humanitarian grounds.

During the transition, I can’t exactly say when, but things were so cordial that Presidents Abdou Diouf, Yahya Jammeh and Joao Bernardo Vieira (Nino) of Guinea Bissau signed a defense treaty intended to come to the rescue of any of the three nations aggressed by foreign forces. France was very instrumental in the ratification of the entente.

It was a time when Guinea Bissau was in a precarious economic condition which France exploited and eventually won the loyalty of President Nino Vieira.

Hello my dear President Adama Barrow, are you listening?

Following their independence in 1974 after fighting one of the bloodiest liberation wars in Africa, Guinea Bissau for sometime remained an ally of the Soviet Union, the superpower credited for supporting their war financially and ideologically against the Portuguese colonizers up to victory; Moscow continued the economic and political assistance to its satellite socialist nation in the subregion until the end of the cold war and the collapse of the communist empire in1989. The assistance abruptly ceased, tanking the Bissua economy.

Coincidentally, it was the same year that the eight-year-old-Senegambia confederation unceremoniously ended. The overwhelming majority of the Senegalese military forces in the Gambia had to be redeployed to Cassamance, flaring up the separatists rebellion that started in1982 from a low to high intensity insurgency.

The Bissau government, no long receiving needed hard currency from either Portugal or Moscow, saw an opportunity to make fast money on trafficking their inexhaustible stockpile of  soviet military arsenals to the rebels/freedom fighters in Cassamance. Senegalese forces allegedly captured some armed groups in Cassamance with weapons traceable to Guinea Bissau’s armories and protested to President Nino Vieira. France, on the other hand, realizing the desperation of Vieira’s government for money, literally started buying his loyalty.

They provided him with raw cash that saved his presidency but was also conditioned to explain and take serious action against whoever was involved in selling the weapons to the “Cassamance  insurgents”.

With no reasonable answer to give his French financiers, Nino tried to extricate himself from the  misconduct, putting all the blame on his Chief of Defense Staff (CDS), Brigadier General Ansumana Manneh.

General Manneh was born in the Gambia but migrated to Guinea Bissau when he was very young and where he earned himself a real warrior’s reputation as a member of their liberation-war army, that first elevated his status to full citizenship then to the rank of a general in the army and finally to the position of Chief of Defense Staff. Notwithstanding, he was an illiterate.

General Manneh in turn counter-accused his president for being in the  illegal arms trade  with all of his senior army officers. While the Bissau Army fragmented into two antagonist forces between Manneh and Vieira, France in 1997 at last got President Vieira to do away with the Bissau peso currency for the CFA Fran.

President Diouf wanted Jammeh to do the same with the Gambian dalasi and join the CFA club which would have obviously translated into killing two birds with one stone for mighty France.

But Jammeh by then had lost a lot of faith in Diouf’s sincerity after Gambian dissidents considered his adversaries conducted bloody armed attacks against Gambian troops in 1996 and 1997, as  recounted above.

June 1998, the Bissau parliament, after a thorough investigation of the allegations against CDS Gen. Manneh, confirmed his assertion that President Vieira was throughout aware of the arms trafficking and was indeed a beneficiary from the proceeds.

But France wanted Nino Vieira to arrest and prosecute Manneh, the warrior they feared may undermine their quest to keep Bissau in the Francophone-slavery zone. The day he sent his presidential guards to arrest CDS Manneh was the day the infamous Guinea Bissau civil war started.

Nino’s forces couldn’t execute the arrest plan alone in a fight that almost toppled his government in the first hours of the conflict, prompting his immediate request for military help from President Abdou Diouf.

The Senegalese mobilized a formidable mechanized and artillery battalion and called us at the GNA Headquarters to join them to Bissau invoking the 1996 defense pact.  After two attacks originating from Senegal with ten GNA soldiers murdered, inviting us to join them in an unnecessary fight that was exclusively an internal dispute merely showed their naivety.

However, President Jammeh advised President Diouf to give peace a chance by allowing his foreign minister Dr. Sidat Jobe to spearhead a negotiating team. They refused the proposal hoping that the operation was going to be a cake walk of moving in and killing or capturing General Manneh and his “rag-tag loyalists”. But they got the shocked and surprised of their lives from the ferocious resistance put up by Manneh’s troops causing high number of casualties on both sides. Over 600 people mainly fighters perished in the battle with thousands of civilians displaced.

It finally came to a stalemate, where the Senegalese fighters and Nino’s loyalists took over the main city of Bissau while CDS Manneh’s forces occupied the rest of the country including the strategic and only airport in the country of which several attempts to take it over merely increased the number of their casualties.

To say the least, it was an embarrassing fiasco to the invaders. France in a bid to salvage the little pride left of the establishment troops, came back to the Gambia to explore Jammeh’s peace initiative effectively starting our participation in the conflict. I was then the army commander, Colonel Baboucarr Jatta the CDS and Colonel Momodou Badjie the National Guard Commander.

The French in addition to accepting the Gambia-mediation initiative led by Dr. Sidat Jobe, further offered to fund and equip a peacekeeping contingent to Bissau from the Gambia to join two others from Togo and Benin.

Contrary to the misinformation that I avoided going to Bissau, I was, despite my position as the Army Commander, ordered to deploy to Bissau with the Gambian company.

I had to go because of my familiarity with the political and military evolution that led to the crisis but most importantly, intelligence from Bissau before our departure indicated that the Senegalese forces were misinformed of the Gambian troops’ scheme to support the “rebellious forces” of CDS Brig. Gen. Ansumana Manneh. The same story was circulated at the Dakar port where the vessel that carried us to Bissau had to refuel before our final departure.

We arrived at the port of Bissau around 6:00 pm in the evening and as expected ran into hostile Senegalese forces mounting checkpoints and giving us unwarranted difficulties.

The following morning we sought an appointment to meet the Senegalese contingent commander, one Colonel Koni, a tall officer who, thank God, was very receptive to our objective to work with them rather than oppose their efforts.

For almost a whole week, we shuttled with our white flags to the Airport and back to the city negotiating a peace deal until we finally had a breakthrough. CDS Manneh came to the presidential palace and signed a ceasefire agreement with President Vieira on the precondition that the senegalese forces must withdraw out of the country as soon as possible.

I returned to the Gambia and was replaced by the late Colonel  Ndure Cham who was a major at the time.

The Manneh forces eventually overthrew the Vieira government on May 1999 that started a vicious circle, wiping out all key stakeholders who had fought for the independence of Guinea Bissau. General Manneh was killed in November 2000, later followed by his deputy, Gen. Verissimo in October 2004 after Nino Vieira was killed and mutilated on March 2, 2002.

France still keeps the former Portuguese colony in the franc zone and have since been looking for the opportunity to incorporate the Gambia. Is President Adama Barrow the Nino Vieira they have been searching for? Time will tell.

Thanks for reading, till next time.

Samsudeen Sarr

New York City.

 

Barrow tells UN coronavirus-enforced summit the pandemic has shuttered economies including Gambia’s

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President Adama Barrow has told the UN high-level virtual meeting on ‘Financing for Development on Covid-19’ that Gambia’s economy s among many others that are shutting down due to Covid 19 pandemic, according to State House.

The impact of the pandemic has necessitated the world body to convene this high level event, to discuss strategies towards recovery of economies and financing development in the context of the Sustainable Development Goals, State House said.

“Our economies have been virtually shut down for the past several months as economic growth has become seriously compromised for the foreseeable future,” President Barrow told the meeting, according to State House.

The presidency’s statement added: “The Canadian and Jamaican Prime Ministers have joined the UN Secretary General in convening the meeting. The world leaders through this meeting have formed a consensus that Covid-19 is more than a global health challenge.

“Rather, they consider it “a serious economic and social challenge” for the global economy, with devastating effects on most vulnerable countries such as The Gambia.

“President Barrow told his colleague leaders that it has become more urgent for them to accelerate the implementation of the Addis Ababa Action Agenda on Financing for Development in the Era of Covid-19 and beyond.

“The Chairman of the African Union, President Ramaphosa of South Africa called for total debt cancellation for African countries. He further called on world leaders to honour their commitments to the Addis Ababa Plan of Action.

“A global response package of up to $200 billion is targeted to finance this re-emergence plan. Mr. Ramaphosa expressed his commitment to lead the raising of this funds.

“President Buhari of Nigeria and Kenyatta of Kenya were among those who gave strong support to debt cancellation for African countries.

“The World Bank has called for extension of debt servicing, warning that creditors must not exploit the vulnerabilities of debtor countries during these times.

“The IMF supported the G20’s debt scheme that puts moratorium on servicing debts by developing countries in order to support them build more robust and resilient economies.

“The Secretary General of the UN, Antonio Guterres said it was clear that many developing countries lacked the financial means to recover from the impact of Covid 19 pandemic. Their economies’ financial inflows, tourism, remittances, aviation services have hugely suffered that they need global partnership to emerge from this crisis.”

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