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Darsilami: Scuffle erupts between Gambian and Senegalese troops after ‘heavily armed’ Senegalese troops reportedly attempted to enter Gambia

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By Lamin Njie

Gambian troops and their Senegal counterparts were reportedly involved in a heated exchange in the border town of Darsilami, Kombo Central, sources have told The Fatu Network.

The reported exchange came after heavily armed Senegalese troops attempted to enter The Gambia.

“The incident happened this morning. The Senegalese troops said they wanted to come and greet the alkalo [of Darsilami],” a source said.

Army acting spokesman Malick Sanyang did not pick a call for comment.

ECOMIG, the intervention force that came to the country following former president Yahya Jammeh’s refusal to step down after losing the 2016 elections, is mostly composed of Senegalese troops. Their presence in the country has not been sitting well with members of the Gambia Armed Forces, as it has relegated them to the back.

Meanwhile a top official of the Gambian army told The Fatu Network Wednesday evening there was a scuffle but it was purely due to ‘miscommunication’.

“There was a change of leadership on the Senegalese side and they were on a familiarisation tour. Our troops were not informed of them coming but it has been resolved.

“And this issue has nothing to do with the Gambian army not being happy with the presence of ECOMIG. In fact, that’s not true. We are very much happy to have them here, that’s why are troops are being trained in Senegal for example,” he added.

Lawmakers hold up their endorsement of Barrow’s ombudsman pick as they refer Suwaneh’s appointment to committee

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By Adama Makasuba

National assembly members today referred the appointment of Babucarr A Suwaneh as ombudsman to the public appointments committee for scrutiny and consideration.

Mr Babucarr A Suwaneh, 65, has been chosen by President Adama Barrow to be The Gambia’s new ombudsman in accordance with section 167 (1) of 1997 constitution.

Mr Suwaneh’s appointment by President Barrow according to Vice President Dr Isatou Touray came to effect on 31 October 2019.

“I move that this august assembly do consent and confirm the appointment of Mr Babucarr A Suwaneh as ombudsman by His Excellency of the Republic of The Gambia which effect 1st November 2019 for an initial term of five years in accordance with section 164 (1) of the constitution and section 2 (3) of the ombudsman act 1997 and following consultation with public service commission,” VP Touray told lawmakers.

She informed members of the house that “records show that Mr Suwaneh who is about 65 years of age had worked for 45 years in the Gambian civil service.”

Halifa Sallah the national assemby member for Serrekunda however referred house members to page 66 standing order of 114 – paragraph 2 that “it is saying that it shall be duty of the public appointments committee scrutinize, consider and advise upon all appointments to a public office to be made by the executive and subject to confirmation of the national assemby.”

“In that regard madam speaker, I would want to move that we refer this issue to the substantive committee for advice to the national assemby.”

The lawmakers then agreed that the matter be referred to the public appointments committee.

On the UDP and Its Inexorable Rise to Supra-National Dominance: Can’t Cage Us (Part 2)

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The Gambia’s finest rapper, ST, once  asserted in one of his hit tracks, “we’re bigger than all these stars when shall I become a galaxy?” And from his inspiring lyrics I take my cue to emphatically state the obvious: in the firmament of Gambia’s political celestial bodies, the United Democratic Party is bigger than all these other stars; it’s The Gambia’s political galaxy!”

And so being the galaxy that it is, anytime a self-acclaimed star drifts from the party, another brighter planet emerges in the Yellow galaxy! A couple of weeks ago the lacklustre Karamo Jadama showed his true colours and jumped ship to the flat-tired bus only to be replaced by the towering giant (both literarily and metaphorically) Alhagie Sainey Sabally of Royal pedigree (both from his maternal and paternal sides), as Chairman of the UDP’s North Bank Region. 

For a party that has earned its place as the most youth-friendly party to have Aji Yamundow Yarbo stepping up after our old uncle Mr Bojang’s departure;  in addition to having the legendary Aji Yam Secka as Deputy Secretary General; which entity can claim to be more progressive and gender-sensitive than UDP?

Interestingly enough, in the same song where ST raps about being a galaxy he warns a certain Dembo, saying we “gone by force”. And therefore I paraphrase ST and proudly sing “So nko Dembo yeh UDP is going to State House by Force; no one can stop this trajectory to victory at the impending national polls!” 

As I finalise this second segment of this two-part essay, a very dynamic and influential young man, Bakary Manneh has decided to join the mighty yellow caravan on his birthday. The same day he announced his membership, Sunday December 15, he was able to convince another influential youth leader based in Europe to also make the same decision. This major feat was also preceded by another top youth leader currently doing post graduate studies in Asia also declaring his membership of the UDP after an initial flirtation with a new political party that just did their official launch.

So as this mass movement of the best and brightest into the UDP climaxes, we can do the ST and sing like he did in his song “Tass Dekabi”: this is my zone duntu malango buka taamang taamang jang! (this is my zone, no little ant can perambulate here)

The UDP continues to grow and flourish and the best of its times are yet to arrive. Meanwhile here’s a poem I recently did with the trending hashtag #KanaSong as title addressed to the Secretary General and Party Leader of the mighty Yellow Nation:

Kana Song

Not a story, this is a song

From strings the heart throbs on

Where true convictions belong

Fear not, do not cower to attention

Fair or foul from humans stubborn

We listen to your heart’s song 

The true thoughts you hold strong

Let those ooze out from the bottom

Of your heart purely sung

Stick to that and ‘kana song’

‘Ka Silah wara ka jarra jarra’

‘Kana song jutunna-yaa la’

‘Ka dimbaa toe fo, wo teh daa jani la!’

Sing your own song – Kana Song!

Be glad thou shining yellow stars

Lawyer Darboe yeh banko taa!

Momodou Sabally 

The Gambia’s Pen

Kandeh says Barrow won’t win even in Mankamang Kunda in vicious review

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By Lamin Njie

Mamma Kandeh has said President Adama Barrow does not have the political muscle to win even in Mankamang Kunda.

President Barrow hails from Mankamang Kunda, a small village in the Jimara district of Upper River Region.

Mr Barrow last month went around the country announcing at the end of the tour Gambians want him to continue serving them. As a result, he announced he was forming his own political party.

But speaking at a party rally in Sare Buchu in URR on Sunday, GDC leader Mamma Kandeh reviewed Mr Barrow’s popularity, albeit unfavourably.

Kandeh said: “He doesn’t have a party, it’s a movement he has. But we want to tell him a movement can’t take him anywhere.

“If he’s truly sure of himself, let him form a party. If they’re saying they have taken over the country, the three years is now complete, let him call elections. But if you see him insisting on going for another two years, he is scared.

“He said it’s Gambians who asked him to form a party. We should then go for elections if he truly trusts himself. If people are misleading you (Barrow) saying you have taken the country, you will not have even 10%. You will not be able to win even in Sare Mankamang.”

Securality: SIC vows to continue with its campaign

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By Adama Makasuba

Supreme Islamic Council has vowed to continue campaigning against any plan for the inclusion of the word ‘secular’ in The Gambia’s new constitution.

Debate has been raging over whether the preamble of country’s new constitution should carry the word ‘secular’.

Gambian Christians are strong advocates of the words because they believe it would create a level playing field for all religions in the country. Gambian Muslims on the other hand are against the idea saying the word is anti-religion.

Speaking at a news conference on Tuesday, Sheikh Hamma Jaiteh of SIC said: “If the other religious groups opt or decide to ally with the word (secular) in an ideological fight or competition to deconsecrete or dereligionise and to despiritualise our norms and values, that will never deter us to continue advocating peacefully against the inclusion of the word in the new constitution.

“Secularizing the country is a threat to our religious freedom and practices because Supreme Islamic Council believes that the inclusion of the word is a serious security threat to our religious freedom and harmony and the respect that the country has been known for.”

Another SIC official Cardi Ousman Jah described the word as ‘dangerous’ adding, “we are anti-secular and we don’t want it.”

OPINION: ALHASSAN DARBOE: Barrow can be deposed in a mass uprising

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When Adama Barrow was declared the winner of 2016 elections, I was beside myself with joy. I called friends and neighbors from far and near to celebrate the liberation of our beautiful Gambia from the clutches of a murderous dictator. Few days later, I realized I celebrated too early as Jammeh in his signature “for the purpose of clarity” annulled the elections in totality. I never slept a day and went through and excruciating suspense for weeks until the day Jammeh fled in a hurry to Equatorial Guinea. Of course, in the face of ECOWAS intervention with ECOMIG soldiers.

For The Gambia, it appears like we are back to our time of desperation, confusion, suspense, executive mediocrity and corruption. Our case is like the proverbial one step forward and two steps backward. Whoever sold us the idea of embracing the illusive perception that our worse days are behind us lied to us enormously. Whoever the sales man is or the media committed a great wrong .Are we cursed somehow? whenever we appeared to be on the cusp of finally having our dream leader that will lead us to the promised land, some accidental, idiotic leader pops up with his demonic, clueless advisers and political prostitutes like Henry Gomez, Seedy Njie and Siaka Jatta to derail our march to progress.

Bombastic, unethical, propagandistic presidential advisers and speakers

Regardless of what the government’s spin master Ebrima Sankareh may try to make you falsely believe; you would not be wrong for thinking that: “operation three years Jotna” movement has enough organizational muscle and support of the masses to successfully force Adama Barrow out of power. The recent diplomatic passport scandal, poor state of our health facilities, executive fiscal indiscipline, slow pace of security sector reform and the release of the jungulars are enough ingredients to force a disappointed and angry population to pour into the streets like angry volcano to demand his sacking from the state house.

When Mr. Mballow as the interior minister threatened the “three years Jotna” movement with hot water and Henry Gomez came on board to dare the protesters to come out in December in dramatic fashion littered with threats as the president laughs in the background. With these uncalculated rants by the president’s men, Barrow’s destiny for better or worse this December and January seem to have been sealed by the ironic geniuses he keep around him who invited protesters from all over the country to protest and see the hot water that will be visited upon them. Barrow’s advisers, their lack of education and certified cluelessness reminds me of a chapter in the Bible, proverbs 13:20: “He who walks with wise men will be wise, But the companion of fools will be destroyed”. I pray and hope Barrow’s mediocre advisers and spokesperson won’t destroy him. Amen.

Three years or five years, Barrow can be overthrown in a popular uprising

I have watched so many credentialed idiots say Barrow cannot be overthrown because he is a democratically elected president. This assertion is false, and Barrow can be overthrown in a mass up rising. Don’t believe what I am telling you. Look it up on google. Democratically elected governments in countries like Lebanon, Guatemala,Egypt,Iran,Tunisia,Algeria, Bulgaria, Venezuela, Ukraine, Thailand, Macedonia, Spain, Iceland, Hungary, Moldova, Brazil, Bolivia and Poland were all challenged and some of them forced to step down by mass-based popular uprisings.

Is this the beginning of the end of Barrow or can he weather the coming storm
Is yesterday’s popular uprising the beginning of the end of Barrow or can he weather the coming political storm brewing and percolating through the land from Kartong to Koina? For now, we can’t tell. But I can tell you one thing for sure: if Barrow and his genius advisers don’t handle this well 3 years “Jotna” protest could be his waterloo.

Alhassan Darboe is based in the United States

Editor’s note: The views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect the editorial position of The Fatu Network

Three Years Jotna officials say they’re not scared amid attempted arrest of Sheriff Ceesay

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By Adama Makasuba

Operation Three Years Jotna has expressed concern over the attempted arrest of Sheriff Ceesay, a prominent member of the group.

Police officers from Brikama reportedly went for Sheriff Ceesay twice on Tuesday in an attempt to arrest him.

Sheriff Ceesay, who spoke to The Fatu Network at his home in Farato confirmed: “Yes it’s true. In the morning by 7am, two Police officers came here with their motorbike asking for me.

“They didn’t meet me here and by 11am they came back with a red double cabin from Brikama CID. That’s what they said and that they’re looking for me.”

According to Mr Ceesay, his lawyer Yankuba Darboe asked him to go to Brikama Police to find out why he police were asking for him.

“They confirmed now that the order came from the Police headquarters in Banjul. I have not done anything wrong and I am not scared because this is my fundamental right.

” I still standby my words, and if I am arrested Adama Barrow will be arrested for threatening the nation in Brikama,” he said.

Abdou Njie, group’s chairman while confirming Mr Ceesay’s attempted arrest said the days of arresting people in secret have ‘now gone’.

“You must arrest people on good reasons,” he said.

On the Shenanigans of his Advisers: All the President’s Men

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We all know for a fact that President Barrow does not have what it takes to run this country successfully due to his lack of public service experience and many other critical factors that I would prefer not dwell on for reasons of decorum. Barrow happens to be our Head of State and Commander in Chief, and we bear collective responsibility for that, granted that the circumstances surrounding his ascent to power were quite exceptional.

We all believed that with the right mix of technocrats in his cabinet and well-chosen advisers, the man at the helm of our affairs would do well at the average mark. However, what transpired during these past three years has shown us that our President will not even get to the average cutoff mark but he will fail dismally at this historic period of our evolution as a nation. This grim prognostication is anchored on nothing but the type of people our President has decided to surround himself with.

Sometimes I just decide not talk talk about President Barrow and launch my critical ‘missiles’ at his Ministers and advisers on policy matters so as to send genuine advice his way without bruising his ego. But after almost two years of doing this, the situation keeps getting worse. As if having people like Mambury Njie in his Cabinet were not bad enough, Barrow has men like Henry Gomez and the schizophrenic dunce, Saihou Mballow, as his close and trusted advisers. 

This certainly does not augur well for sanity at State House. What triggered this article is a video I watched this morning showing senior adviser Henry Gomez at yesterday’s “3 Years Jotna” protest scene attempting to provoke the massive crowd gathered to peacefully send a genuine and timely message to the man they elected to serve them for a 3-year transition period. This is a most brazen attempt at unwarranted provocation that could have set this county on fire; but thank God the police intervened on time. And this came from a man that is supposed to be knowledgeable and responsible enough to advise our Head of State on how to run this country. Indeed,  “if such are the priests, then God bless the congregation!”

This situation just reminds me of a Facebook post I did immediately after the infamous Brikama rally where President Barrow and his team of advisers and Ministers threatened a whole nation with violence with Barrow himself pounding his chest with the statement “whether you like it or not, I am here to stay as President till 2021. With Henry Gomez himself being just about the worst performer at the Brikama melodrama, I posted on social media “perhaps the President himself needs to advise his advisers!” But the lesson was not learned and it was after that meeting that he added yet another moron, Saihou Mballow as another Presidential Adviser.

With former Observer editor Baboucarr Camara lamenting Henry Gomez’s unruly behaviour at yesterday’s protest scene on Facebook, my comment on his lament is this: with such personalities as advisers of your Head of State, you surely know that your country is doomed!

May Allah protect our dear motherland, The Gambia. And may He (subhaanahu wa ta’aalaa) save us from the impending perils of the gathering storms.

God bless The Gambia and May Allah bestow genuine wisdom on our leadership.

Amen.

Momodou Sabally

The Gambia’s Pen

Police reportedly looking for Three Years Jotna top official after his comments

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By Lamin Njie

Police CID officers are looking for Three Years Jotna top official Sheriff Ceesay, The Fatu Network has gathered.

Officers went to the house of Mr Ceesay twice today but have not been able to meet him there, sources have told The Fatu Network.

It comes a day after Mr Ceesay told The Fatu Network Operation Three Years will stage a fresh protest on 20 January 2020 if President Adama Barrow refuses to leave office.

“The message is that he has to respect the three years. Without that, we are coming back on the 20th of January in that we will never go back until he resigns but there is a room for dialogue from now to the 18 of January,” Mr Ceesay said on Monday as thousands of Gambians took to the streets to demand President Adama Barrow step down from power.

Meanwhile, a Three Years Jotna top official has confirmed that police went to the house of Mr Ceesay.

“The entire executive [of Three Years Jotna] will soon leave for Brikama [Police Station] to try to find out why they are looking for him,” he added.

Yahya Jagana: 15 people including minor face up to life in prison

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By Lamin Njie

Fifteen people have appeared before the Brikama Magistrates Court and charged with conspiracy to commit felony and attempted murder.

Last week, an angry mob sparked outrage after it was seen in videos savagely beating Yahya Jagana, a 50-year-old farmer.

Mr was returning to his house on Thursday when natives of Busumbala allegedly descended on him after word went around that he was a child kidnapper. The Tabokoto resident had in his car six children.

On Monday, 15 people were dragged to court and charged with various offences that include attempted murder.

Prosecutors have asked the Brikama Magistrates Court to transfer the case to the high court in Banjul. They face up to life in prison.

A Government That Lies and threatens Citizens Endangers Human Rights!

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The Jotna Movement staged their protest on December 16 in peace and calm and in total obedience to the requirements of the police permit. Not a single report of violence or hate speech was reported. Yet before the protest, The Gambia Government at all levels continuously spewed lies that this public assembly will bring conflict in our society! For that matter they have caused so many citizens to forego going to work or school, or open their businesses today hence causing huge economic loss to the country.

 

Human rights cannot be achieved in the absence of openness, accountability and the Government’s expressed commitment to the Constitution and the rule of law. When a Government chooses to deny rights the first thing they do is to concoct lies and misinformation and then issue threats in order to circumvent the Constitution and the rule of law. They do this to generate fear and anxiety in citizens in order to control and contain the people and therefore prevent the people from holding the Government accountable.

 

Since the Barrow Government was established it appears this act of lying and threats was the first lesson it borrowed from the Jammeh Regime which they seem to be perfecting everyday even though they always get exposed, even if they do not get ashamed or afraid of lying and threatening citizens again.

 

The Brikama Rally of the President in June 2018 could be descried as the first major platform where they launched intercontinental ballistic lies and threats when the President of the Republic himself fabricated the falsehood that the Three Years Jotna protest will bring chaos in the country. It was at this same rally where the former Interior Minister Ebrima Mballow and the so-called Youth Adviser Henry Gomez and series of other speakers took turns to either lie or threaten citizens about the Three Years Jotna protest.

 

The next major platform of lies and threats was the propaganda television show dubbed ‘National Dialogue’ hosted by the President’s Press Secretary Amie Bojang Sissoho in September where her panelists were military, law enforcement and intelligence chiefs among others. In the show, hosted on GRTS top security chiefs concocted lies and threats that the protesters will be on drugs and will burn down this country. The Army General Mamat Cham went even further to say that the army was ready to confront citizens as if the Gambia was facing a foreign invasion!

 

At various other times the Minster of Information Ebrima Sillah and the Government Spokesman Ebrima Sankareh also joined the lying and threats jamboree to claim that this protest will cost the country dearly given the festive season in December. Because of these lies and threats we saw the Ministry of Youth and Sports go to the ridiculous height of postponing the NAYCONF which was to be held at this time. Continuously we saw this Government use every opportunity to scare citizens by highlighting security concerns with the NIA even going bonkers saying social media is a challenge to national security.

 

Because of these lies and threats they have managed to influence and scare so many citizens to the point that citizens began to engage in severe infighting among themselves. Some strongly believed the lies of the Government that the protest will undermine the economy, destroy tourism and cause conflict in the country. Those who support the protest are vilified as unpatriotic while they also in turn would severely caricature other citizens who oppose the protest. In the end the Government’s lies only succeeded in dividing the society thereby undermining national unity, peace and progress of the country.

 

Such a situation only helps to undermine democracy and injure human rights because when people are preoccupied with lies and threats they tend to not realize how their best interests are being eroded. If only citizens could see through the lies and threats of the Government we would have realized that we should rather unite and demand honesty and truth from the President and his Government. By failing to reflect on the statements from the Government but rather swallow those lies and threats hook, line and sinker the people only succeeded in dividing and weakening themselves.

 

But today we have all witnessed the protest and no one saw any single incidence of violence and hate speech. The protesters respected the permit even though that permit was utterly unreasonable, ridiculous and intended only to suppress the protest. The Government only gave that permit because they realized that, after all, their lies and threats were unsuccessful and so they decided to issue a permit intended to further weaken and derail the protest. But they failed.

 

Therefore, if there is any lesson to learn is that citizens must become vigilant and smart so that we listen carefully to what the Government tells us so that they do not divide and weaken us with their lies and empty threats. This Government led by Adama Barrow is a Champion of Lies and Threats next to only Yaya Jammeh’s Regime if not higher. And this is where citizens must be concerned and become even more vigilant. When a Government is ready to lie and threaten its citizens then such a Government is not committed to democracy and the protection of human rights. This is the fact of history.

 

Therefore, citizens must demand accountability for the lies and threats from this Government. Citizens must demand that the National Assembly impeach the President for the lies he has released on Gambians so far that directly violate the Constitution and undermine the protection of human rights. Citizens must equally demand the National Assembly to pass a motion of censure against Ministers who have been blatantly lying and threatening citizens without shame. Similarly, citizens must demand the sacking of the heads of the armed and security institutions who have lied and threatened citizens without shame or fear.

 

Let us defend our Republic. Let us not sit by and taking things for granted as we have been doing for more than 50 years. Let us not underrate any word or action from the President and his Minsters and Generals. When we ignore or take things for granted or merely underrate the State rest assured we will soon find ourselves in a sea of tyranny. Mark my words!

 

Don’t accept a Government that lies like a passerby!

 

For the Gambia Our Homeland

…………………………………………….

Madi Jobarteh

Skype: madi.jobarteh

Twitter: @jobartehmadi

LinkedIn: Madi Jobarteh

Phone: +220 9995093

Sheriff Ceesay reveals what Three Years Jotna will do if Barrow refuses to step down

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By Lamin Njie

Operation Three Years will stage a fresh protest on 20 January 2020 if President Adama Barrow refuses to leave office, Sheriff Ceesay has said.

“The message is that he has to respect the three years. Without that, we are coming back on the 20th of January in that we will never go back until he resigns but there is a room for dialogue from now to the 18 of January,” the top Operation Three Years Jotna official told

The Fatu Network on Monday as thousands of Gambians took to the streets to demand President Adama Barrow step down from power

President Barrow in 2016 promised political parties that backed him that he would preside over a transition government of three years. He has now changed his mind saying he will be in office for five years ‘whether one likes it not’.

Meanwhile, Operation Three Years Jotna has handed over its petition to President Barrow through government spokesperson Ebrima Sankareh.

In it, the group demands an announcement from Mr Barrow before the 19 January 2020, as to when “you intend to hold the Presidential elections agreed, in which you will not be a participant and will remain impartial without favour for any candidate of that election and will hand-over power honourably and graciously to whoever emerges as the victor of that election.”

Madi Jobarteh says Barrow should pay for ‘lie’ Three Years Jotna planned to set country on fire

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By Lamin Njie

Many Gambians skipped work on Monday amid fears Operation Three Years Jotna was planning to throw the country into turmoil.

Students also skipped school as some businesses also closed after claims and counter-claims that members of Operation Three Years were a bunch of criminals who had planned to set the country on fire.

Three Years Jotna on Monday staged their protest after months of controversy but the pressure group’s protest attended by thousands of Gambians was mostly peaceful.

Madi Jobarteh in an exclusive interview with The Fatu Network said the Gambia government pushed a false narrative to scare Gambians.

He said: “You can see what cost their lie made on our economy. A lot of people didn’t go to work. A lot of people did not open their shops. A lot of school children did not go to school. That is irreparable loss. For me, somebody should pay for it.

“President Barrow should pay for this and each and every head of that security agency should pay for this and they should pay for generating a lie in order to scare Gambians and to deny Gambians opportunities.

“Many people lost opportunities, a means to survive, a means to put bread and butter on the table because of a lie from the Gambia government, perpetrated by security chiefs and condoned by President Barrow.”

Three Years Jotna insists in petition Barrow’s five years plan would amount to treachery and fraud

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Operation Three Years Jotna has called on President Adama Barrow to abandon any plan aimed at casting aside an agreement that was reached between him and coalition partners in the lead up to the 2016 presidential elections.

Members of the pressure group on Monday took to the streets to demand Mr Barrow leave power. Leaders of the group met with government spokesperson Ebrima Sankareh at Denton Bridge to hand him a petition addressed to President Barrow.

Below is the full petition:

THE 3 YEARS TRANSITION PLEDGED AND THE 3 YEARS ‘JOTNA’ – THE PETITION
Our Ref: ​Petition/16/12/2019
Your Ref:

16 December, 2019

President Adama Barrow
Office of The President
State House
Marina Parade
Banjul, The Gambia

Your Excellency,

Re: The 3 Years Transition Pledged and The 3 Years Jotna – The Petition

On 14 October 2016, you signed a memorandum of understanding with six political parties and one independent candidate of the Gambia, which set in motion the formation of what later became Coalition 2016. The motivation for such a momentous initiative was spurred by national interest over all party or individual personal interests, at the time, as it was encapsulated in the preface of that agreement, which reads:

“We, the signatories of this memorandum comprising the representatives of the member parties of the Gambia Opposition for Electoral Reform (GOFER), the aspiring Independent Candidate from the Civil Society and the invited participants from Civil Society, putting their differences aside, in pursuance of the supreme National interest, do here agree” …

Thereafter, on 30 October 2016, you were elected, as the flag bearer of the opposition Coalition of that six political parties and one independent candidate, agreeing to adhere to the Coalition’s Memorandum of Understanding, which was published the next day on 1 November 2016 confirming the formation of Coalition 2016, grounded on the following principal terms. These were that:

i. the elected flag-bearer of the Coalition would contest the 2016 election, as an independent candidate for the Coalition with no allegiance to any one political party of the coalition;

ii. the flag-bearer, once elected as President, shall head a transitional government for 3 years, as President;

iii. the flag-bearer, once elected as President, shall organize and supervise presidential election, at the end of the 3 years term, which he will not participate as a candidate until after the first term of his successor.

Your excellency, in countenance to that MOU Agreement or acquiescence to the same, on 3 November 2016 you wrote a letter of resignation to the United Democratic Party (UDP) – the party you belonged at the time and was representing – to confirm your resignation from that party, in adherence to the terms of the Coalition MOU. As a result, you became the Coalition Flag Bearer for the Presidential election of 2016.

You further confirmed your countenance to the Coalition MOU in your subsequent Manifesto document for 2016 presidential election, in which you pledged:

“………, I (Adama Barrow) have offered myself as an Independent Candidate who will serve for only three years at the head of a broad based and inclusive Coalition Government aimed at conducting Constitutional, institutional and administrative reforms that would establish the foundation of a democratic system of administration that would put an end to the culture of impunity and self-perpetuating rule and usher in an era for Gambians to enjoy liberty and prosperity under a system of government that is sensitive and responsive to the needs and aspirations of its citizenry.”

This was further reiterated in your political campaign posters, which were inscribed with the same pledge that:

“Adama Barrow does not aim to be a President for life but is committed to serve as a transitional President for 3 years to consolidate democracy and create a level playing field for parties to contest elections.”

In addition, you and your Coalition 2016 campaign entourage toured the length and breadth of the Gambia, reaffirming that pledge to serve 3 years transitional government, after which you will hold presidential election, which you will not be a candidate, and will graciously hand-over power to whoever is voted – by the Gambian people – as your successor. You promised this was necessary to create a level playing field for the foundation of a genuine democracy in the Gambia, in which – at the outset – was not aided or influenced by the advantages of incumbency of the incumbent president.
Your excellency, we the supporters of that 2016 presidential election Manifesto and Campaign Pledge, and the principals of your Coalition 2016 Agreement, at the behest of whom your Coalition partners, who entered into that agreement with you were acting for – as supporters and members of their various political parties namely: UDP, PDOIS, GMC, NCP, PPP, and GPDP; we seize this opportunity to remind you of the terms of that agreement you entered into with us.

We wish to emphasise to you the significances of the terms of that agreement to our national interest, which – as we noted above – will help our country to establish a genuine democracy, founded on a presidential election, that was unfettered by the advantages of incumbency.

Your excellency, the Gambian people desires for such a democratic foundation in the Gambia, which you agreed, promised and pledged to deliver for them after 3 years. That 3 years has now dawn on us without any signs of your willingness to commit yourself to the full implementation of that agreement, promise and pledge to us. Thus, your excellency, as concerned citizens and supporters of the Coalition MOU, we have now mobilised ourselves under the brand name of ‘3 Years Jotna’ (which translates to mean: “it’s now 3 years”), dedicating our course to the implementation of that agreement entered between you and our political party representatives. Thus, we send you this petition, as members and supporters of that course, to remind you that, it is now 3 years, which marks the end of your transitional government, as agreed and affirmed by the Coalition MOU 2016 and affirmed by your Campaign Manifesto of 2016.

Your excellency, we now demand an announcement from you to the Gambian people before the 19 January 2020, as to when you intend to hold the Presidential elections agreed, in which you will not be a participant and will remain impartial without favour for any candidate of that election and will hand-over power honourably and graciously to whoever emerges as the victor of that election.

Your excellency, we refuse to accept that you have already made such a decision to negate on our agreement, affirmed by your 2016 Manifesto and Campaign Pledges. And for the sake of our country and its prosperity, we hope you have not. For the Gambian people will not batter their future for yours or any other President. Thus, it is important that you take time to ponder on that announcement very carefully.

Your excellency, whilst pondering on that announcement, we crave your indulgence to factor in the following significances of the 3 years transition to the Coalition Agreement 2016. Without which, we assert, there would have been no Coalition of opposition parties in 2016. And without the Coalition Agreement of 2016, there would have been no victory against Yahya Jammeh, and you would have never been the President of the Gambia.

This was confirmed by Honourable Halifa Sallah, a prominent member of the Coalition 2016, who served as the spokesperson of the Coalition, and current member of Parliament, explained the significance of the 3 years stipulation in the Coalition agreement in a press conference of 16 August 2019, in which he stated:

“That is why we said the person who will be there will be there for 3 years, why? It is because it endears the person to the electorate after 22 years of self-perpetuating rule of the Second Republic and 30 years of self-perpetuating rule of the First Republic. This would have been a ‘nenemajo’. That is the reason. It endeared the country to its people and to the world – that was the reason. The whole objective of saying that the person will not contest in the next election is to eradicate incumbency. Everywhere in this world, incumbency is the first way of rigging elections because it puts you at an advantage. So we said let us get rid of advantage, let us get rid of incumbency – the person will not stand in the next coming elections. To move further, we said the person will not support any party in the next election to ensure that there is real democracy where there is level ground for multi-party contest.”

Thus, it is conspicuous enough that your pledge to serve a transitional government of 3 years was aimed to influence Gambian voters, which is reflected in their votes for you, as the Coalition 2016 presidential candidate. In contrast, both of your opposing contestants: Yahya Jammeh and Mama Kandeh, campaigned for 5 years term and both lost, however your campaign for 3 years resonated with the people, which resulted in your victory.
Thus, your excellency, any negation from fulfilling the Coalition 2016 agreement, would amount to treachery and fraud, which would not be done against just your Coalition partners, but that of the many Gambians, who voted for you on 1 December 2016. The consequences of such infidelity will not only impugn your legacy, but will further perturbed the integrities of your coalition partners, and the Coalition 2016 model, which could serve as a paragon for many countries and generations to emulate and emancipate themselves from the shackles of dictatorships and tyrannical rules.

Your excellency, you said you are a man of grace, honour and sincerity! For our sake, we hope you are indeed of these qualities; for our country and our people cannot afford to be led or headed by another leader of debased and depraved qualities. And your qualities in the eyes of the people will be judged by your fidelity to your promises, pledges and agreements. It may not matter to you, but as decent people, it matters a great deal to the Gambian people, to be led by a leader who has honour, grace and sincerity.
Your excellency, of recent you have cited the constitution, as the supreme law of our land, which is agreed by all sound and sundry Gambians! And all shall endeavour to do their utmost to adhere to the dictates of that constitution. However, we wish to assure you that there is nothing in the constitution that prohibits you from fulfilling your 2016 agreement with us. Our agreement was designed in contemplation of the constitution extant, which accommodated the possibility of a President resigning at anytime of the elected term of 5 years. The constitution never envisages or dictates that a sitting President cannot resign during the elected term of 5 years. For the 5 years elected term provided in the constitution merely refers to the maximum term an elected President can serve in office, but did not command the President to serve the whole of that term in office.
Thus, it was never the intention of our constitutional framers neither the Gambian people, who voted for the same in 1997 – to become their supreme law – to place any compulsory obligation on you or any other President to serve the whole of that 5 years term in office. We submit that that simply could not have been attributed to the intentions behind the 1997 constitution. For, if such is their intended command, the framers of our constitution would not have catered or accommodated the possibilities of the President’s death, infirmity, impeachment, and resignations. Since their command would have been for the President not to die whilst in office, or suffer infirmity or be impeachable or be able to resign during the five years of the elected term of office. We therefore submit that, your excellency that the 2016 MOU agreement for you to serve 3 years transitional term in office was in total alignment with our constitution and honouring the same causes no breaches to our constitution.

This was further corroborated by Honourable Halifa Sallah in the same press conference of 16 August 2019 that:

“Section 65 of the Constitution provides for the resignation of the President so it is wrong to say that the Coalition partners did not know the Constitution, otherwise they would not have said three years. It provides for a vacancy in the Office of the President through resignation or death of the president. If the Constitution says 5 years and you die before the 5 years, will you still remain to be the president? A constitution must provide for resignation, it must provide for death, it must provide for vacancy and it does and we realise that. That is why we said the person who will be there will be there for 3 years, ….”

Your excellency, we have been told many a times that you have already taken a decision to renege or show infidelity to our Coalition 2016 MOU agreement. We hope you will take time to reflect and ponder over that decision and its consequences and implications: on your personal legacy, that of the Coalition 2016 members, and that of the Gambian people.
We remind you, your excellency, as you were once reminded by Sheriff Kijera – vice chairman of the Gambia’s Centre for Victims of Human Rights Violations, at the inauguration ceremony of the TRRC on 15 October 2018 – that there is life after Presidency. We elaborate further that that life after presidency can be full of grace or disgrace, depending on the choices or decisions you take and the timing of those choices or decisions. We wish to remind you that the most regrettable choices or decisions taken by leaders of the past, were mostly inspired by their aspirations to perpetuate rather than to relinquish power at the right opportunity. One clear example is your predecessor, Yahya Jammeh, whose decision to renege on his acceptance of the election results of 1st December 2016, led to his disgraceful exit and exiling to Equatorial Guinea.

Your excellency, the right opportunity for you to make that right decision about your future and that of your country, is at the end of the 3 years, which has now dawn on us. Any attempts to perpetuate would tarnish the much-cherished legacy you crave for and further spell bad omen for the Gambia, the country you claimed to have loved dearly. For the Gambia has since independence been led by leaders who hanker to perpetuate than to relinquish.

Your excellency, if you made the wrong decision at this right moment, you will be known among many of our leaders gone and yet to come, as the worst betrayer, who betrayed his own published agreement with the Gambian people. You will jeopardise the much-cherished treasure of our nation, which is peace. Though, the Gambians will go to any length to protect that peace, but be reminded that peace is not the absence of tension but the presence of justice. And it is not just for you to defraud our people in the manner that is as treacherous, as promising to serve 3 years, only to extend that to 5 years through the backdoor.

Your excellency, if you negate on the 3 years transition agreed, pledged and promised, you will lose the trust and confidence of the Gambian people and will lack credibility of our people, which will attract defiance from the people for the rest of whatever days you usurp power, as a result of the treachery and deceit of your apostacy to our agreement.
Your excellency, on 1 December 2016, the Gambian people voted for change and that change had inspired our citizens to take responsibility of their future and to sacrifice, just like the national martyrs of Solo Sandeng and Solo Kuruma, in order to hold our leaders accountable for their actions, statements and deeds. This is a responsibility, we the citizens take very seriously, in order to prevent our country from returning to dictatorship or self-perpetuation.

Thus, your excellency, today, 16 December 2019, thousands of Gambians have converged on the Banjul High Way, between Sting Corner Junction and Denton Bridge to show their support for the Coalition 2016 Agreement with you and admonish you to adhere to that Coalition 2016 Agreement. The same numbers or even more after the success of this event intend to march to State House on 19 January 2019, and will not adhere to any police permit restrictions to manifest their grievances against your breach of the Coalition 2016 Agreement.

Unless you act as petitioned in this letter, which is for you to announce before the 19 January 2020, the date you will be holding presidential elections, as envisaged in the Coalition Agreement of 2016, in which you will not be a participant and will handover power to your successor. We demand that this presidential election be staged before or on the 9 September 2020 but not later than that date.

We understand that this will require changes to our current constitution at Section 46, which states that:

“46. There shall be an election for the office of the President in the three months before the expiration of the term of the incumbent President. The dates for the nomination of candidates and for holding the election shall be determined by the Independent. Electoral Commission.”

Thus, we further demand before the 18 of February 2020, an amendment bill for Section 46 of the Constitution be tabled before the National Assembly, where we believe there will be sufficient support for that amendment, in order that the amended bill will read as follows:

“46. There shall be an election for the office of the President in the three months before the expiration of the term of the incumbent President; or three months after any date the office of the President becomes vacant – due to: death, impeachment, infirmity or resignation of the incumbent President; or three months after an incumbent President has written to the Speaker of Parliament and IEC Chairman requesting for such an election to be held. The dates for the nomination of candidates and for holding the election shall be determined by the Independent. Electoral Commission.”

We believe such an amendment to our current constitution, which is long overdue, will enable you to fully implement the noble ambitions of our Coalition 2016 Agreement. Any negation to the above, your excellency, will have dire consequences for our country and our future.

We thus hope, for the sake of our much cherished national treasure of peace and stability of the Gambia, you will see sense and do the honourable thing and make plans for a peaceful and impartial presidential elections to take place before the 9 of September 2020; which you will not participate and will be an impartial arbiter for the sake of our country’s future and the a successful conclusion to our Gambian story of defeating tyranny through the ballot boxes and replacing it with a successful democratic transition, that enjoyed freedom, rule of law and respect for fundamental freedoms, capped by impartial democratic presidential elections akin to none.

Your excellency, that will be the beautiful ending of our 2016 success story, and any other ending will be ugly and undeserving of the Gambian people.

We look forward to your response to our demands by the 10th January 2020, if we receive no positive response from you by that date, we shall assume that you have resolved to proceed with your treachery to usurp power through the backdoor. This will leave us with no choice than call on every patriotic and reasonable Gambians to take to the streets on 19 January 2019 demanding for your resignation.

We look forward to your response.

Yours faithfully

On behalf of all in support of the 2016 Coalition MOU
CHAIRMAN, 3 YEARS ‘JOTNA’
Cc: Gambia Press Union Members, Members of the Diplomatic Corps, Gambia Political Leaders, International Organizations in the Gambia, CSOs, etc.

Thousands take to the streets to demand Barrow step down from power but drama erupts over Gambian leader’s envoy

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By Lamin Njie

Thousands of Gambians on Monday took to the streets to demand President Adama Barrow step down from power by 19 January 2020, as part of an agreement that was struck in 2016.

President Barrow in 2016 promised political parties that backed him that he would preside over a transition government of three years. He has now changed his mind saying he will be in office for five years ‘whether one likes it not’.

On Monday, members of Operation Three Years Jotna, a pressure group that is campaigning for him to respect his pledge took to the streets to demand he leave power.

“People thought we couldn’t do this but we thank God that people have answered our call and have turned out in their large numbers,” Operation Three Years Jotna chairman Abdou Njie told The Fatu Network at Sting Corner as the protesters gathered for a march to Denton Bridge.

At 10;30am, the protesters began a five kilometers walk from Sting Corner to Denton Bridge, chanting ‘three years, three years’.

At Denton Bridge, there was mild drama after some of the protesters reacted with anger over President Barrow’s decision to entrust government spokesperson Ebrima Sankareh with the task of meeting with the protesters. Some of the protesters insisted he was junior government official who they should not hand their petition to.

On three years versus five years: Coalition’s ruination, Gambia’s quandary

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Gambians are unequivocally divided on the contentious issue of whether President Barrow should honor the three-year coalition agreement or serve the full five-year constitutional mandate. What is crystal clear though is that the initial euphoria that surrounded the democratic transition is wearing off if it has not worn off already, giving birth to the upcoming politically tense conundrum. The fundamental question to ask is what exactly went wrong, and how did we find ourselves in this sticky situation? An understanding of human behavior is enough for one to be startled but not shocked by our current situation or state of affairs. It is often said that morality is an endangered species, on the verge of being extinct. Since we have abandoned systems of morality for we seem unable or unwilling to live by hopelessly flawed dogma. Some people take the explicit morality route, others take what they can get away with, and there are many who just do what feels right more or less.

In the annals of Gambian politics and our unflinching determination to untether ourselves from dictatorship and tyrannical rule through democratic means, I could not think of anything as monumental as Coalition 2016; a force that ravaged the Babili State House and sent Jammeh packing. With The Gambia being the common denominator that bounds the coalition partners, the fulcrum of that force is the Coalition’s Memorandum of Understanding (aka MOU). Having put an end to a twenty-two-year brutal dictatorship, The Gambia had an opportunity to start afresh. This brought renewed hope that we were heading for posterity. Our biggest shock or disappoint came sooner than later when the formation of cabinet excluded key coalition partners in the PDOIS. The absence of PDOIS in that cabinet was quite startling and many of us found it extremely difficult to come to terms with that unfortunate reality. The leadership of the PDOIS has been asked the fundamental question of whether they were offered ministerial positions or not a dozen times, and from my vantage point I see an attempt to shy away from the question or a deliberate refusal to answer the question for reasons which might be obvious to some but best known to the PDOIS. Every single time that this question resurfaces in an interview, the response from the PDOIS leadership leaves me with more questions than answers, forcing me to ponder whether PDOIS is avoiding to come off in a certain way.

In 2017 Halifa Sallah appeared on Kerr Fatou and was asked this question, and his response was that they were only helping a process and that President Barrow did not see in him that he was interested in a position. The follow-up question to that statement would be because President Barrow did not see in Halifa Sallah that he was interested in a position, so he decided not to offer him a position? On the Perspective Show on GRTS, he was asked the same question once again, and the response from him is that they were never interested in positions. The fundamental question Halifa Sallah is not whether you were interested in a position or not, but whether you were offered a ministerial position? PDOIS were either offered ministerial positions or they were not offered. The situation cannot fall between those two, and the leadership of PDOIS dare not tell us that they do not know whether they were offered positions or not. Personally, I believe PDOIS were offered ministerial positions and they turned down the offers, but they do not want to say this simply because they do not want us to see that they rejected the clarion call to serve the coalition government whose formation they orchestrated from its conceptual stage.
The next wave of disappointment came from the UDP’s Lawyer Ousainou Darboe when he threatened to take to court anybody who attempts to force President Barrow to step down after three years instead of allowing him to serve the full five-year constitutional mandate. I found that statement to be very toxic because it came at a time when national unity was at its embryonic stage and needed to be safeguarded, so anything that could disintegrate it into fragments would undoubtedly be frowned upon. To issue that kind of threat publicly when he could have brought it up in cabinet or in a coalition partners’ meeting for them to find a way to resolve the issue amicably was just uncalled for. Many argued that threat played a major part in the disintegration of the coalition and emboldened President Barrow. Additionally, Lawyer Darboe and Hamat Bah each appeared on the Giss Giss and Kerr Fatou shows respectively in which they both argued that the coalition MOU was never signed. Hamat even challenged the hosts to show him the signed MOU. I struggled to wrap my head around their attempts to find a flaw in the MOU to justify the disregarding or the deliberate flouting of that monumental agreement. If Hamat does not know a lot about contract law, Lawyer Darboe undoubtedly knows that in contract law, there is what is called agreement by conduct. What made Barrow to put his name on the ballot paper at the convention? What made him to resign from the UDP and run as an independent coalition presidential candidate? The conduct of the parties to a contract can constitute an agreement, and President Barrow’s conduct in this case constitutes nothing but an agreement to the MOU. Mr. Darboe challenged or questioned the constitutionality of the three-year agreement. It would be interesting to know if he still maintains that position since that constitution hasn’t been amended yet. In a recent press conference, we saw him present the UDP’s position asking for Barrow to honor the three-year agreement. Many of us find it difficult to identify the clear-cut dichotomy between Lawyer Darboe’s position and the position of the party when he speaks as secretary general and party leader.

We were inundated with another massive wave of disappointment from the coalition partners as a collective when they succumbed to Lawyer Darboe’s threat to take to court anybody who tries to force Barrow to step down after three years. Did that threat leave the coalition partners with no options? Certainly not! The partners knew very well that there was nothing in that agreement that says the President was going to be forced to step down after three years. Instead, he was going to resign on his own accord as per the agreement and this was not going to be an unlawful act nor was it going to be in contradiction to the constitution, hence the resignation provision of the constitution. Could the coalition partners have called for a meeting under the leadership of Madam Fatoumata Jallow Tambajang where they would have reiterated their position on the three-year mandate, making Lawyer Darboe and Barrow understand and possibly accept that the coalition partners were not oblivious of the five-year constitutional mandate? Could the partners have vowed to serve for only three years and then resign should President Barrow choose to extend his mandate beyond the three-year agreement? They knew the constitution has a resignation provision, and the three-year mandate was premised on that provision. Were those options not available to the coalition partners? So how that threat numbed or incapacitated them is beyond comprehension, knowing fully well that the threat was never going to come to fruition because there wasn’t going to be any attempt to force the President to step down. If that threat caused serious damage, what happened to damage control, or why was there no attempt to repair the damage? Was the damage irreparable? The truth be told, most of the partners except for PDOIS were in ministerial positions, and I bet they were not averse to longevity in those positions. To choose to not do something to avert a situation when you had the option to act, and then come back to point fingers at the person who issued the threat as if the country gyrates around that person is just not good enough for people of their caliber. However, this does not absolve the issuer of the threat from responsibility. To add salt to injury, we saw fringe coalition partners convey an emergency meeting, and then advance to the State House to inform the President that they have extended his mandate from three to five years as if the five-year constitutional mandate given to the President is unbeknown to them. Embarrassment and mediocrity characterized that move.

The most gigantic wave of disappointment emanated from the epicenter of this whole conundrum, and that is the President himself. In the early days of his presidency, he said that he wasn’t going to renege on his promise to lead a three-year transition, but that was buried under the carpet soon afterwards. The Gambia slipped and fell into a perilous ravine the very day that President Barrow jettisoned the transition plan and coalition agenda, and welcomed aboard the agenda of self-perpetuating rule. The President got blindfolded by the desire to cling onto power, forgetting what brought him to the State House in the first place. The unfortunate reality is that Mr. President and his inner circle are fixated on cementing their position at the mantle of leadership forcing them to throw over board the very raison d’être of Coalition 2016 thereby jeopardizing the efficacy of the Coalition. The nation is faced with the conundrum of trying to put herself on the right footing amid rampant novice mediocre leadership that is stifling her efforts to head in the right direction. After untethering ourselves from domineering rule, we thought we were going to present to the world our quintessential leader in President Barrow, who was going to lay down that unbreakable solid foundation for subsequent leaders to build on. That has become an illusion. Had the president done what was expected of him per the coalition agreement, or exhibit exemplary leadership by effectively communicating with the coalition partners and the Gambian people on the contentious issue of three or five years, this political quagmire might have been resolved. Instead, the President and the people he barricaded himself with all presumed they have both manpower and firepower to assume absolute control; a reason why they threatened to crush three years ‘jotna’ protesters, at the infamous Brikama rally. Instead of being serene about an imminent peaceful protest, the administration’s protest-phobia and paranoia escalated beyond elastic limits, making it feel like some outcast.

The fundamental question to ask is whether President Barrow should serve three years per the coalition agreement, or the full five-year constitutional mandate under the present circumstance? I dare not ask what is going to happen if the President steps down because the constitution is not ambiguous on that. What is quite obvious though is that the current administration made zero preparation for elections in 2019. Also, I hope I am not under the illusion that if the President were to step down today either voluntarily or forcefully, the vice president would see out the remainder of the term since there won’t be any elections sooner? That is not the spirit of the MOU. Per the coalition agreement, there was going to be a constitutional amendment to enable us go for elections within ninety days of the President’s resignation, and we would have had electoral reforms and other significant changes to prepare the grounds for free and fair elections amid a level playing field. Everything that was supposed to happen for us to go to the polls in 2019 never happened. As a result, I would not say it will be impossible to hold elections now, but the impracticability of doing so is quite obvious. Let us go for five years Gambia for we seem unprepared to hold elections now.

The Operation Three Years Jotna movement’s protest is slated for Monday, December 16th 2019. This movement is going out to express dissatisfaction over the President’s decision to renege on his campaign promise and the coalition agreement. I presume this protest will be peaceful. However, the protesters, the government and its security apparatus ought to be reminded that thuggery and lawlessness will not be condoned because we are a country of laws. We must not sit by and watch familiar places we live in turn into battlefields with some people clearly under the illusion that they can take the law into their own hands without facing the consequences. The protesters should go out to agitate peacefully within the permitted time frame and the parameters of the law, and then disperse to their various homes or wherever they may wish to go. At the same time, the security apparatus is expected to provide the much needed security and not attempt to provoke or be trigger-hungry. Matter of fact, they should employ better crowd control techniques to prevent the situation from escalating. During the political impasse, we showed the world how exemplary we are as Gambians. So let us continue to exhibit remarkable decorum because no progress can be made in a state of chaos and anarchy. Matter of fact, those epitomize failed states today. The Three Years Jotna movement need not attempt to force President Barrow to step down. The President has decided to deliberately flout the MOU by choosing to lead a five-year transition and then have is name on the ballot paper in 2021. The Gambian people will decide whether to retain the current leadership or replace it with a new one come 2021, knowing fully well that being elected to office by the general populace provides no guarantee that national leaders will be effective or dedicated to the national interest . This is a time when we must reason with our heads and not with our hearts. Greed, dishonesty, moral misconduct and other factors should not and must hide our desperate need for guiding principles. Our decisions and actions have more profound consequences than we might think. Finally, I maintain my position that a disregard of the MOU by President Barrow finds him culpable of moral misconduct, compromising his integrity.

The writer, Dibba Chaku, wrote from the United States

Mamma Kandeh says Barrow used ‘window’ to State House …GDC leader also wonders why Gambian leader gets angry when reminded of his 3 years vow

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By Lamin Njie

Mamma Kandeh said on Saturday there cannot be any leader that came to power through the ‘window’ than President Adama Barrow as he shared his view on the Gambian leader’s plan to serve for five years.

President Barrow came to power in 2016 with the backing of seven political parties – after initially agreeing to preside over a transition government of three years. Mr Barrow has now astonishingly changed his mind because according to him, that’s not what the constitution says.

GDC leader Mamma Kandeh speaking at a party rally in Kulari, URR hammered Mr Barrow for not keeping his promise.

“If there is one person who came through the window it’s President Barrow because he campaign to serve for three years when the constitution says five years ,” Mr Kandeh said.

The GDC leader added: “The constitution says five years but they went and campaign for three years and came he to power through the window. He now always says anyone who wants to be president should come through the door when he (Mr Barrow) came through the window.

“Now, whenever you’re reminded of that vow, you get angry. A president saying something and then toppling it with another statement? You now get angry when someone reminds you and it’s you who said it?”

Sabally Urges Young People to Vote for Change

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Former Secretary General and Head of the Civil Service, Momodou Sabally has urged Gambian youths to do everything within their democratic rights to make sure there is a change of government in the next general elections. 

Sabally made these remarks as he addressed youths at the Sannehmentereng Bureau of the UDP in Brufut under the aegis of a group called the UDP Human Rights Wing.

Addressing the gathering that included opinion leaders from the surrounding settlements, Sabally decried the lack of opportunities for young people in New Gambia and opined that the current administration does not accord the young people the due priority and seriousness that their situation deserves. He then warned the youths that if this administration is allowed another mandate, their suffering  would be further compounded to their own detriment.

He touted the new level of commitment and determination of Gambian youths in the evolution of our politics in this era and urged them to maintain that momentum while ensuring respect for the laws of the country. 

He however did not mince his words as he emphatically urged the youths to make sure that they take every step necessary to vote out the current administration which he accused of hijacking the people’s revolution and handing a popular mandate fought for by the poor and downtrodden to the bourgeoise. He averred that the Barrow administration has been hijacked by the mafia to the detriment of the poor and vulnerable whose voting power ushered in the change in 2016.

Sabally went on to tout the leadership style and character of the UDP’s Secretary General and Party Leader Lawyer Ousainou Darboe and urged the young people to emulate his character and follow his guidance as the UDP consolidates its dominance both in the Gambia and the diaspora. He further urged the youths to make sure that in the process of rewriting our national statutes, the wrongs and  injustices of the past are not further entrenched by what he called “malicious agents who may want to disenfranchise certain individuals and groups using the obnoxious legal relics of a system hitherto accused of flagrant injustice and abuse of judicial process”.

“Power belongs to the people, and if democracy is anything to go by then the wishes and aspirations of the majority should prevail at the end of the day in a fair and sane system” he asserted.

The meeting was attended by scores of young people in Brufut and the surrounding villages, and presided over by town elders Ba Jamba Bojang, Omar Bojang, the Ward Councillor, and other UDP stalwarts in the Sannehmentereng Constituency.

 

A case of being at the wrong place? Police detain two men over Busumbala savagery but two men’s family say they’re innocent

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By Lamin Njie

Police in Brikama have detained two men over yesterday’s roadside savagery in Busumbala, The Fatu Network has gathered.

A 50-year-old man was hospitalised after he was savagely beaten by an angry mob in Busumbala.

Yahya Jagana was returning to his house in Tabokoto on Thursday evening when natives of Busumbala allegedly took out their anger on him after they mistook him for a child kidnapper. The farmer-businessman had in his car six children.

Mr Jagana’s treatment has sparked anger with many calling on the police to arrest his attackers.

Police in Farato today invited Buba Jatta, 34, and Ba Yankuba Jatta, 25, for questioning, their sister told The Fatu Network. CID officers have transferred them to Brikama where they will spend the night, she added.

The Jatta brothers’ family however say their loved ones were not the attackers.

One of the sisters said: “They were called by police because one of my brothers escorted the man to the police station.

“He was all along trying to protect the man from the angry mob but since the police could not identify anyone they contacted my brothers and detained them.”

Three Years Jotna’s Darboe sheds light on death threat reports

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By Lamin Njie

Yankuba Darboe has insisted no one can intimidate him following reports of a group of people plotting to murder him.

The UK-based Gambian lawyer is in the town and will be taking part in Operation Three Years Jotna’s protest on Monday.

On Friday, reports made the rounds of a plot to kill one of the group’s most distinguished members. The wild reports claim a meeting to kill Yankuba Darboe took place at State House, and that it involves hiring rebels from Casamance.

Mr Darboe told The Fatu Network Friday evening a friend apprised him of a plan to eliminate.

“I don’t think this is credible but it comes from someone very credible,” he said.

“But I think is just a trick to try and instil fear and that was what I was trying reproof saying that you can’t intimidate me.

“The way I go on my normal day is how I am going to continue.”

The Fatu Network contacted State House director of press and public relations Amie Bojang Sissoho but she said she would not be able to know anything on issues involving killing. She advised the security people be contacted.

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