Thursday, March 20, 2025
Home Blog Page 735

Former Nigerian President, Goodluck Jonathan Poisoned in The Gambia!!!

0

In December 2013, Ayoub Aliris, the Chef at Coco Ocean Hotel in The Gambia was charged with “negligence and food poisoning on Jonathan and his delegation.”   He was alleged to have committed the offense during the then Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan’s two-day official State visit to the West African country in November of the same year.  Jonathan suffered a major stomach upset which required him to seek medical attention at a London hospital.  Babucarr Gomez, a cook at the said hotel was the primary prosecution witness.  Ayoub denied all charges.

As it turns out, Ayoub was right in proclaiming his innocence – he was framed in a scheme that will make for a blockbuster Nollywood voodoo theme movie.  Superstitious undertakings have and continue to cost many lives in Africa because of the sheer irresponsible nature of their execution to the health of their intended targets even if harming the person’s wellbeing is not even the secondary goal.

 

Unconfirmed reports from sources on the ground have it that Modou Jatta, the Chief Security, Household at the Statehouse was picked up this Monday, December 1, 2015 by agents of the National Intelligence Agency (NIA) for unknown reasons.  Faturadio is trying to determine, if true, the reasons as to why he is being held.

Unimpeachable sources at the State house have confirmed to Faturadio that President Yahya Jammeh was the one responsible for Goodluck Jonathan’s food poisoning and that it was this Modou Jatta that he used to execute his plan that almost cost the former Naija President his life.

According to these sources, Jammeh is a strong believer in voodoo and witchcraft.  He also believes that a special concoction of herbs, Islamic scriptures, bananas, and water can produce magical results.  This is the main ingredient behind his “AIDS Cure”.  It was in this vein that he believed he could cast a spell on Jonathan that would make the Naija President to do anything he (Yahya) asks him to do – essentially making Goodluck unwillingly dance to his tunes, by using one of these concoctions.  This concoction is called “Saffara” in the local Wollof language.

Once Jonathan was in town for his visit, a special dinner was organized in his honor at the Coco Ocean Hotel, one of the finest in the region.  According to our sources, before the meal, Yahya gave the “Saffara” to Modou Jatta with special instructions – give the concoction to the cooks in the kitchen of the hotel and ask them to put it in President Jonathan’s food.  The Nigerian had a three course meal and the “Saffara” was put in the main course which was seafood served on a main dish plate.

When Jonathan fell ill, which was not the intent, Jammeh got nervous according to these sources.  To cover his tracks, he immediately instructed Saul Badjie to order the arrest of the cooks at Coco Ocean Hotel, blame them for everything, and they have since been languishing in the notorious Mile 2 prisons.  The Nigerian President who would eventually lose his reelection to Muhammadu Buhari, it seems has since recovered from the illness caused by this incident – Thank God!

Gambia’s Dictator Fires All Deputy Service Chief For Failing To Manage His Rented Crowd

0

Gambia’s unpredictable President, Yahya Jammeh has dismissed with immediate effect, all deputy service chiefs of the security forces except the deputy Inspector General of police.

According to security sources, the dismissal is related to the chaotic manner in which the presidential security details were handled and managed during the President’s dialogue with the People tour which started in the first week of November.

One of our sources said the President was particularly angry with the manner in which security forces accompanying him on his tour managed a crowd of onlookers at his public meeting in Gunjur, Kombo South in the Western Region of The Gambia.

Our sources said the crowd in Gunjur was not only chaotic but also at some point disinterested in what was being said at the meeting to the point that a section of the crowd became much of a nuisance.

At some point according to sources, the deputy inspector general of police, had to intervene himself to personally lead efforts to bring in some form of decorum by trying to control the crowd.

A rather red-faced President who is believed to be seriously sick, blamed his senior security officials on tour with him for not effectively managing the crowd leading to their dismissal.

It has to be noted that President Yahya Jammeh uses all kinds of underhand tactics to potray an image that he is liked and adored by the people. He travels with rented crowds by using the national radio and television to advance and cultivate this personality cult syndrome.

But since the beginning of the tour in November, local people have been turning their backs on a President who has now become a lonely, dejected dictator for his numerous failed promises that have repeatedly been made without being fulfilled.

Fatu Radio will continue to monitor the situation and will update our audience as soon as any new information comes out.

With His Attempt to Silence the Gallant People of Kartong Failing, Jammeh Employs His Most Insidious Maneuver – Divide And Conquer!

0

A whooping five Cabinet Ministers are currently in Kartong, at the home of the Alkalo to be more specific, to “discuss” the sand mining saga that recently saw the men and women of this once peaceful village declaring “enough is enough” and taking to the streets in what one eye witness described as “the greatest act of defiance” he has seen in years in that country.

On the surface, this mission undertaken by these Ministers may seem like a routine act of reconciliation.  However, upon further scrutiny, observers have uncovered a familiar insidious ploy at work that is meant to do nothing but to break the bond of unity that this once divided village (thanks to Yahya Jammeh’s strategy of pitting family against family, tribe against tribe method) has finally accomplished – ironically, thanks to this sand mining protest.

When news of the protest in Kartong broke, it seemed from the beginning that this is what activists both on the ground and in the Diaspora have been waiting for – they took to Facebook, Twitter, contacted international organizations and human rights groups, set up GoFundme account for funds to be raised, private individuals wired money right away, online radios and blogs cranked up their publicity engines to both inform those on the ground of what’s going on (since it was a media blackout in the Gambia as usual) and to amplify the message from the activists on the ground in Kartong, the coordination and messaging were impressive.  Sensing the firestorm this situation has generated and with the potential to rally the entire nation, Jammeh decided to save face and in his usual bravado style, promised during the leg of his Meet-The-People Tour in Gunjur to free the arrested protestors but that “anyone whose parent’s fail to discipline you, the government will do it for them.”

It is against this backdrop that the Cabinet Ministers are in Kartong to get concessions from elders of the town knowing fully well the youths are in no mood for negations or any form of capitulating despite the tortures already meted out on them by the security forces, some of whom currently need medical attention.  The people of Kartong must therefore stick to their position and most importantly maintain the hard fought unity they have finally achieved.  For all the years they have been fighting this cause to see sand mining stopped in their community because of the environmental disaster this has already caused, this is the moment of truth – it is either now or never!  They therefore must make sure this opportunity doesn’t slip – the regime is at its worst, it cannot afford a protracted fight on this matter, Yahya Jammeh is unwilling to engage in a confrontation, and the situation in the country is too shaky to allow for further rocking of the boat.  Do not give up your demands for any promises whatsoever, do not walk away from the streets until all the bulldozers leave town, and make sure you continue to speak with one voice.  The moment you fail in any of the above, you can kiss your noble cause a goodbye!  We are here for support in any way, be rest assured.

Gambian Dictator Fires One Of His Chief Pimps and Confidant

0

Gambian dictator Yahya Jammeh has disgracefully fired his long time stewardess and family member Ndey Jammeh. This is not the first time that Ndey has been removed from State House. The first one was after Jammeh’s failed marriage with Alima Sallah, daughter of The Gambia’s Ambassador to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.

According to our credible sources, Ndey was disgraced by the dictator during his dialogue with the people tour in the Lower River Region (LRR) and was asked to leave the tour immediately. She has also been dismissed from her State House job and indeed all other official role/s she was engaged in.

 

Sources told Fatu Radio Ndey’s dismissal had to do with information that was allegedly passed to the First Lady, Zineb Jammeh which was said to have come from Ndey. In addition, it has been confirmed that Ndey, whose husband Sarjo was a serving member of The Gambia Armed Forces is also said to have been removed from the Army a while ago.

Many at the Office of The President received Ndey’s dismissal as a welcome development saying that she reports to The President everything that happens in that office. She is also said to be in the habit of threatening young protocol officers at State House for communicating with outsiders. One of the girls told Fatu Radio that Ndey threaten them that President Jammeh was always aware of whoever they the protocol girls talk to on the phone. “This alone has been a sure way of controlling the girls who work at the protocol division and to be kept at bay from the public,” says one source. She is also said to be very selfish and receive all the gifts from The President telling the other staff that she will share later which never happened.

Like many Jammeh supporters, Ndey according to sources gossips a lot about the President, saying he is a womanizer and had once told her sister Jimbe to stop dishing out young girls to Jammeh, whose appetite for young virgin girls is overwhelming. An insider at The State house said Ndey has once confided in her that The First Lady is arrogant and she blames The President for marrying an arrogant non Gambian. Like Jammeh she also has the divide the rule attitude, telling staff to be careful of each other, thereby creating mistrust amongst them. “Ndey used to tell us that his late dad did everything for The President when he was a kid, adding that whatever Jammeh did for her and her siblings is well earned” a source said adding “Ndey always denied the young protocols drinking water from the office, and only gives to her sister Jimbe and the rest of the family.”

She is also said to have been complaining about her husband Sarjo, after his removal from the military, saying he is a ‘useless’ man who could not afford anything for his family. Ndey and her family live in ‘Yarambamba’ at a house given to them by The President. Before her sister Jimbe becomes the one who arranges young women for the dictator, Ndey was tasked with that role until Jammeh married Alima who was very closed to her. Jimbe now takes over escorting young girls to the dictator’s bedroom and dumping them once they got pregnant. Jammeh according to his young victims does not use condoms thereby getting them pregnant easily.

Gambia: Release peaceful protesters and community members arbitrarily detained

0

Gambian authorities must release peaceful protesters and community members, including a man in his 70s, who were arbitrarily arrested and detained last week, said Amnesty International today.  At least 40 people were arrested by police during and after a largely peaceful protest by young people and community members in the town of Kartong on Sunday 22 November 2015. The protest, against sand mining in the area, was largely peaceful although witnesses have reported that the situation between some of the protestors and the security forces appeared tense at times.

A blanket crackdown on protestors is not acceptable. The right to freedom of expression and peaceful assembly must not be unduly curtailed because of the suspected unlawful behaviour of some individuals”  Sabrina Mahtani, Amnesty International’s West Africa researcher.

“The police should not arrest people on an arbitrary basis and criminal charges should only be brought against those against whom there is clear evidence.”

Amnesty International has spoken to community members and witnesses who report that police arrested people in a blanket fashion. Some of the people arrested were either peacefully protesting or not involved in the protest at all. Those arrested include a man in his seventies who is said to be in poor health. Police also arrested family members of at least one activist, although the family members were not involved in the protest.

Witness reports indicate that the police used excessive force during the arrests and some people were injured.

On 24 November, 33 of those arrested were charged with conspiracy, breach of the peace, riot, causing malicious injuries and riotously interfering with a vehicle. They were denied bail and are currently awaiting trial in the country’s biggest prison, Mile 2. Family members were not permitted to visit the detainees.

Amnesty International spoke to a local activist and a community member who fear further arrests and reprisals against activists who have voiced concerns at the harmful impact of sand mining on their environment and community.

Amnesty International is calling on authorities in Gambia to immediately and unconditionally release those detained solely because of their participation in a peaceful protest, or those detained on an arbitrary basis.

The authorities should also promptly look into the concerns expressed by the community about the negative impacts of sand mining and take action to ensure human rights are respected and protected in the context of mining activity.

“Those arrested and detained in connection with a criminal offence should have a fair trial and must have their rights in detention upheld. This includes access to their lawyers, families and medical treatment, and the opportunity to challenge their pre-trial detention” said Sabrina Mahtani.

“Any charges should be proportionate and people should not be charged with more serious crimes simply because they were taking part in a protest,” said Sabrina Mahtani.

Gambian dictator orders the court to drop charges against the Kartong 33

0

Few hours after Amnesty International’s strong worded press release, and the continued advocacy of The Gambians in the diaspora, The Gambian dictator has ordered The Brikama Magistrate’s court to drop charges against the Kartong 33 with effect from Tuesday, Dec 1, 2015. The 33  including a 70 year old man were  arrested on November 24 and charged  with conspiracy, breach of the peace, riot, causing malicious injuries and riotously interfering with a vehicle. They were denied bail by Magisterate Hilary Abeke and sent to the security wing of the mile 2 central prison where family members were denied access to them.

Activists say the President’s decision came amidst pressure from the youths on the ground who were prepared to do whatever it takes to see the release of family members and friends. Eventhough the President has ordered for their unconditional release, there is no word yet on whether sand mining will continue in Kartong or not.

Meanwhile, hundreds are out in the streets of Kartong jubilating upon hearing the news.

A Son, Known for His Kindness, Is Mourned After He Is Bludgeoned to Death

0

On an unassuming block of Amsterdam Avenue on the Upper West Side, Bubacarr Camara was murdered on Thursday, bludgeoned to death in broad daylight, the police believe, as he worked at his family’s clothing and odds-and-ends shop. His body was discovered behind the register.

On Friday, men gathered in solemn silence in his father’s apartment on Gerard Avenue in the Bronx, stocking-footed on a carpet of Muslim prayer rugs. To them, Mr. Camara, 26, was not simply a victim of a crime. He was a star soccer player in his homeland of Gambia, in West Africa, they said, a striker with fearsome aim who played for the team in his hometown, Numuyel.

Worker Is Killed During Attack at Upper West Side ShopJUNE 18, 2015
He was a young man called Buba who loved Gambian food, and could not get enough of the peanut butter sauce that is a staple of the country’s cuisine, particularly when cooked up by his stepmother. And he was a father whose toddler son, living in Gambia with his mother while Mr. Camara was away earning a living in America, beams in a plaid shirt in Mr. Camara’s profile on the messaging service WhatsApp.

He had immigrated to the United States only 10 months ago.

On Friday, family and friends clustered in the apartment of Mr. Camara’s father, Bangally Camara, awaiting word from the police about the hunt for the suspects. When a progress report arrived, the men gathered in the living room, some dressed in flowing caftans, perked up, as did the women, their hair covered, cooking chicken in the kitchen to eat at sunset to break the Ramadan fast. But their spirits lifted only for a moment.

“He’s still gone,” Hagie Camara, his uncle, said.

The police said surveillance tapes indicated that three men may have been involved in the murder. But as of Friday evening no one was arrested.

At the shop on Amsterdam Avenue between 104th and 105th Streets, customers gathered outside on Friday, trading stories of Mr. Camara’s kindness. The morning of the attack, said Samuel Cisneros, Mr. Camara had sold him a T-shirt, and when Mr. Cisneros was short of the cost, Mr. Camara let him leave with simply a promise to pay — a typical act for Mr. Camara, his customer said. A metal roll-down gate was pulled over the shop’s glass front, and Mr. Cisneros had filled the metal links with bouquets of flowers and signs written in English and Spanish. Behind the glass, blood could be seen on the floor of the shop.

“The owners of this store are a quiet, humble, hard-working and beautiful family,” one read. Another wished for Allah’s blessing, out of respect for Mr. Camara’s religion, said Mr. Cisneros. A field of carnations in plastic water bottles rested on the pavement; a woman stopped before the display and crossed herself, reciting the Lord’s Prayer in Spanish for Mr. Camara, she said.

In the Bronx apartment on Friday afternoon, Mr. Camara’s father stood in a corner of the kitchen, crying. Nearby, a cousin sat listening ceaselessly to voice mail messages of condolence as they poured in. Almamy Camara, 54, the young man’s uncle, had been the one to call Mr. Camara’s mother, who still lives in Gambia, to tell her that the oldest of her four children — three boys and a girl — had been murdered. He spoke to her softly in their native language of Sarahule. “She was out of control,” he said. “She fainted.”

Out in the hallway, Mahamadou Camara, 23, another of Mr. Camara’s cousin and his roommate in a different apartment in the building, leaned against a wall, his arms folded tightly around himself. He had been doing laundry the last night his cousin was alive, and stopped folding clothes to take a break to eat dinner. When he looked up from his plate, Mr. Camara was busy folding his cousin’s laundry.

“Keep eating,” he recalled Mr. Camara saying. “I’ll do it for you.”

Correction: June 26, 2015
An article on Saturday about the death of a shop worker during a robbery in Harlem misstated the surname of a customer who had visited the store the day of the attack. He is Samuel Cisneros, not Lisneros.

Source : NY TIMES : http://http://nyti.ms/1K2XqU1

AC Milan sue Yusupha Yaffa after discovering he’s aged 28 not 19

0

AC Milan are reportedly taking striker Yusupha Yaffa to court because the 19-year-old is actually 28-years-old. Yaffa, who hails from Gambia, was signed by Milan in 2013 after impressing on trial and was handed a place in the club’s youth team. At the time of the deal, Yaffa told Italian immigration that he’d lost all his paperwork but was 12-years-old, born on 31st December, 1996. However, Gazzetta dello Sport say Yaffa’s real birthday was revealed after pictures and news articles about the deal were posted on Facebook.

Friends of the player recognised him and soon noted that his age was way off. His actual birthday is 31 December, 1996 – making him 21, not 12 when Milan agreed to sign him.
Yaffa is currently playing in Germany for MSV Duisburg and he’s also likely to be in hot water with them over if found guilty of fraud.

Carayol ready to play international football for the Gambia

0

Middlesbrough winger Mustapha Carayol says it is the “right time” in his career to commit his international future to the Gambia.
Carayol, 26, is back to full fitness after suffering a cruciate knee ligament injury which had kept him out for 13 months.
Last month he signed a two-year extension to his contract at Middlesbrough, having been on loan at Brighton, and he says he is now focused on establishing himself as an international with the Gambia.

“I think it’s been a long time coming, I’ve had a few times when they’ve invited me but it wasn’t the right time for myself and my family,” Carayol told BBC Africa Sport.
“A few of the times I’ve had a little injury. So I didn’t really want to come and perform half heartedly. I feel like it’s the right time in my career now,” Carayol explained.
Carayol, who was born in Banjul, is targeting an appearance for The Scorpions in the forthcoming qualifiers for the 2017 Africa Cup of Nations.
“Obviously I’ve spoken to them. I’m looking forward to the official invite and look forward to representing the Gambia in the Africa Nations Cup qualifiers.
“All my family’s Gambian, so everyone’s excited and I’m going to have a lot of pressure when I do get the chance to play.
“But for me, it’s the experience of a professional footballer to go and represent your country. I’ve got quite a lot of support there already and I’ve not even played so hopefully I can live up to the hype when I do play and make a lot of people happy.”
The Gambia have been drawn in Group M of the 2017 Nations Cup qualifiers, along with South Africa, Cameroon and Mauritania.
Despite facing formidable opposition, Carayol believes his country can cause an upset by qualifying for the 2017 finals to be held in Gabon in two years’ time.

“I always see challenges as something you can overcome and that’s why they put challenges in front of you. “At least even if we don’t qualify, everyone can be proud of us and say that we gave it a right go. “But for me personally, I’m looking more forward to the challenge of playing international football.” The Gambia’s first 2017 Nations Cup qualifier is against South Africa next month. Before that, Carayol is concentrating on helping Middlesbrough’s bid for promotion to the Premier League. The club have a 2-1 advantage over Brentford going into the home leg of their Championship play-off semi-final. “The boys are really confident. Keep my fingers crossed and hopefully we can get over the line and I can be a Premier League player next year.”
If Carayol does reach the Premier League with Middlesbrough, he may well come up against other African icons such as Yaya Toure and Didier Drogba – players who have made their name in England’s top flight. “They’re massive role-models because as a young African player, you always look towards the people that you can actually relate to. “Oviously I’ve not had the chance to play internationals yet, but I’ve spoken to a few close friends of mine. “Albert Adomah who’s at Middlesbrough – who represented Ghana at the World Cup – and Yannick Bolasie who’s a really close friend of mine who represented DR Congo in the Africa Nations Cup just gone. “And they’ve all told me good things about playing African football, so I’m excited. I can’t wait to get the chance to go and kick a ball out there and show everyone what I can do.”

By Nishat Ladha – BBC Sport

Swiss coach Raoul Savoy ready to lead a Gambian revival

0

The Gambia return to competitive action this weekend with a new coach as they travel to face South Africa in a 2017 Africa Cup of Nations qualifier.
Swiss Raoul Savoy is charged with reviving the Scorpions’ fortunes as they comeback from a ban that saw them miss the 2015 Nations Cup campaign.
“We can write a new history now, we are starting from zero,” he told BBC Sport. “We have a lot of new players who are just starting out and it is also a young squad with a lot of talent.”

The Gambia 2017 Nations Cup qualifiers:
13/06/15: v South Africa (a)
26-29/03/16: v Mauritania (h)
04-06/09/15: v Cameroon (h)
03-05/06/16: v South Africa (h)
23-26/03/16: v Mauritania (a)
02-04/09/16: v Cameroon (a)

The Gambia were initially banned in May 2014 for two years from all Confederation of African Football competitions for deliberately falsifying player’s ages in an under-20 match.
The ban was lifted just 5 months later after a new Gambia Football Association executive was voted in. The 42-year-old Savoy returns to Africa after previously working in Cameroon, Morocco, Ethiopia, Swaziland, Algeria and the Central African Republic.

As well as South Africa his side will play World Cup finalists Cameroon and Mauritania in Group M of the 2017 qualifiers and he is aware of the challenge ahead.
“Of course, South Africa and Cameroon are more experienced and bigger teams than us but in football you never know,” he said. “If they give us a chance to challenge them and become the surprise of the group, we’ll do it of course. “We are not saying we are victims, we know we have the potential but we are new. “That’s why we must learn match after match and we’ll see – maybe we’ll create some surprises. Why not?”

Savoy is confident that he has the raw materials to work with in The Gambia. “There is a lot of talent here; it’s a talented country,” he insisted. “It’s a small country but they also have a lot of talent based out of the country – in the United States, in Europe, in England, everywhere. “Some of them have already played for the national team, others are new now, they will get their first cap in the next week. “I think I will have a lot of work to do to go and watch all of them (across the world) and chose a better team in the coming months.”

And he hopes that his latest post can be a stepping stone to bigger things and follow the likes of Philippe Troussier and Herve Renard. “Renard was the Troussier of Zambia, I can be the Herve Renard of Gambia!”

By Mark Gleeson – BBC Sport, Cape Town

Lifestyle Example post

0

Cras vitae augue suscipit, aliquet nisl sit amet, pulvinar sem. Nam luctus gravida felis, lacinia euismod neque dignissim ac. Vestibulum tincidunt arcu nec ipsum eleifend dictum. Sed pellentesque lacus massa, interdum placerat lacus tincidunt eget. In ultricies libero sit amet metus volutpat varius. Proin eu ipsum ac metus efficitur lacinia. Morbi luctus purus dignissim, vulputate lacus ut, dapibus nisl. Proin rhoncus mauris nec arcu accumsan rhoncus. Quisque sodales aliquet sem, ut dignissim dui gravida posuere. Nullam malesuada velit non elit facilisis, et interdum justo rutrum. Suspendisse vitae tempor eros, sed porttitor velit. Vestibulum vulputate eget quam at vehicula. Suspendisse imperdiet a lorem non vestibulum. Sed at mattis felis, quis bibendum ipsum. Vivamus a dignissim sapien.

Lifestyle Example post

0

Cras vitae augue suscipit, aliquet nisl sit amet, pulvinar sem. Nam luctus gravida felis, lacinia euismod neque dignissim ac. Vestibulum tincidunt arcu nec ipsum eleifend dictum. Sed pellentesque lacus massa, interdum placerat lacus tincidunt eget. In ultricies libero sit amet metus volutpat varius. Proin eu ipsum ac metus efficitur lacinia. Morbi luctus purus dignissim, vulputate lacus ut, dapibus nisl. Proin rhoncus mauris nec arcu accumsan rhoncus. Quisque sodales aliquet sem, ut dignissim dui gravida posuere. Nullam malesuada velit non elit facilisis, et interdum justo rutrum. Suspendisse vitae tempor eros, sed porttitor velit. Vestibulum vulputate eget quam at vehicula. Suspendisse imperdiet a lorem non vestibulum. Sed at mattis felis, quis bibendum ipsum. Vivamus a dignissim sapien.

Lifestyle Example post

0

Cras vitae augue suscipit, aliquet nisl sit amet, pulvinar sem. Nam luctus gravida felis, lacinia euismod neque dignissim ac. Vestibulum tincidunt arcu nec ipsum eleifend dictum. Sed pellentesque lacus massa, interdum placerat lacus tincidunt eget. In ultricies libero sit amet metus volutpat varius. Proin eu ipsum ac metus efficitur lacinia. Morbi luctus purus dignissim, vulputate lacus ut, dapibus nisl. Proin rhoncus mauris nec arcu accumsan rhoncus. Quisque sodales aliquet sem, ut dignissim dui gravida posuere. Nullam malesuada velit non elit facilisis, et interdum justo rutrum. Suspendisse vitae tempor eros, sed porttitor velit. Vestibulum vulputate eget quam at vehicula. Suspendisse imperdiet a lorem non vestibulum. Sed at mattis felis, quis bibendum ipsum. Vivamus a dignissim sapien.

Who is Seinabo Sey? Introducing the Swedish-Gambian singer inspired by her dual identity

0

Source : http://ind.pn/1K3AHHm

Since the mid-2000s, it seems as though we’ve been stuck in a perpetual cycle of cultural revivalism, calling on the strongly coloured characters of the past to define and celebrate how we interpret the present.

Which is why emerging artists like Seinabo Sey (pronounced Say-na-bo Sea) are so exciting. Her influences, largely formed by her dual Swedish and Gambian upbringing, are unique.

Her sound, just as interesting – a fascinating, accessible blend of Swedish pop noir, African rhythms and down-tempo RnB.

At 23, she’s already scored No.1 hits on Hype Machine and Shazam with her debut single “Younger”. And she looks set to do the same when releases her next single, “Hard Time”, on Monday 14 July.

She’s currently in the studio in Stockholm recording her debut album with Magnus Lidehäll (Mapei, ‘Don’t Wait) – a producer she met via some pretty deft Facebook stalking. It’s out later this year.

Until then, here’s everything you need to know.

She found being a cultural ‘outsider’ was a creative blessing, but a social curse…

“We moved to Gambia from Sweden when I was six years old, because my dad was from there. It was definitely a culture shock.

“I’ve always been a little bit of an outsider where I am and I’ve had to kind of learn to understand people in order for them to understand me. To make them understand me, speak their language, or understand their culture. So it perhaps made me a little bit over-analytical about how people feel. But it helps me with my music and writing because I like to think of lots of different ways to get my message across.

“I had a hard time when I came back to Sweden and started school, because I looked different. And we moved to a really small town on the west coast of Sweden and there were no brown people around. It didn’t really get any better until I started music school at about 10 years old.”

Her earliest memory is the stuff of child nightmares…

“I went to school in this really ghetto part of Gambia, and we didn’t have any doors or things like that. I remember taking these vaccine shots [injections] and I was scared. And I remember getting the vaccine, and getting out of that room, and everyone was applauding and really proud of me. I must have been, like six years old.”

Her dad is the famous West African musician, Mawdo Sey…

“I think his career was a rollercoaster, but when I lived in Gambia as a kid he was quite famous there. I just remember maybe taking the back seat because he was sort of the star. I was around musicians all the time but the spotlight was never on me. No one really cared if I was sitting about in the corner wanting to sing or not. I was kind of shy, so nobody thought about it.

“I’ve always been very impressed by him. He had a vibe and an aura and I remember thinking, ‘People listen to him’. He’s really funny. He’s definitely my biggest idol. I wanted to be like him.”

Her school days shaped her future sound… Well. Apart from the physics.

“I got along with mostly everyone, but music school does that to you. We had to sing in a choir all the time, so we had to get along with everyone. I was really good at English, because I started school in Gambia in English and so I was ahead of everyone else for a while. Physics, weird enough!”

“I remember Alicia Keys and Usher had released a song called “My Boo” and my music teacher got me to sing a duet with a friend of mine and I remember being so nervous, because I loved to sing but I could never fathom singing by myself. And when I did that I remember how proud I was of myself. I was 12.

“I tried to push away the whole dream and thought I had to do something serious, I’m going to be a lawyer, until I was 15 or something. But then I realised I couldn’t really live in that small town so I moved to Stockholm and started music school.

She used to be a rap side-kick…

“Meeting this guy called Frank Noble, and we started this little group called Death Chronic. It was really like experimental, RnB , soulish. We made a couple of songs and got a little bit of attention here in Stockholm on all the blogs and stuff like that. And I remember tagging all the musicians I wanted to hear the song in on Facebook. And there was this rapper that picked up on it and we became friends. I went on tour with him, I became a rap sidekick for a year, it was really random. And then he had a group with the guy producing my record with (Magnus Lidehäll), and he’d produced Britney Spears before. It was a very organic thing.”

If she wasn’t on stage, you’d find her in a museum… Or in a kitchen.

“I love artistry and I’d love to run an art gallery.

“I’m quite an amazing cook, actually. I won’t even be humble about it. It’s not very classical but I can improvise. I make a mean Gambian stew with peanut butter, that you can put meat into if you want. You can convert anyone with that.”

She’s serious about her debut album. And a little concerned…

“I’ve been trying not to be too worried. But I guess a little worry and a little pressure is good. I’m trying to break genres, and not really think about it, putting in as many influences from my life and things that I’ve heard as possible and just keeping really true to my idea with the lyrics. And write about all the important aspects of life. And be quite serious about it as well because I think you need some serious music.”

She’d be a really great Indy People writer, because she loves…

“Speaking to people. How things always seem to fall with bad communication and not being able to express your emotions and I struggle with that every single day. It seems like everything is always alright if you speak up and say what you really feel.”

Arts Example post

0

Cras vitae augue suscipit, aliquet nisl sit amet, pulvinar sem. Nam luctus gravida felis, lacinia euismod neque dignissim ac. Vestibulum tincidunt arcu nec ipsum eleifend dictum. Sed pellentesque lacus massa, interdum placerat lacus tincidunt eget. In ultricies libero sit amet metus volutpat varius. Proin eu ipsum ac metus efficitur lacinia. Morbi luctus purus dignissim, vulputate lacus ut, dapibus nisl. Proin rhoncus mauris nec arcu accumsan rhoncus. Quisque sodales aliquet sem, ut dignissim dui gravida posuere. Nullam malesuada velit non elit facilisis, et interdum justo rutrum. Suspendisse vitae tempor eros, sed porttitor velit. Vestibulum vulputate eget quam at vehicula. Suspendisse imperdiet a lorem non vestibulum. Sed at mattis felis, quis bibendum ipsum. Vivamus a dignissim sapien.

Arts Example post

0

Cras vitae augue suscipit, aliquet nisl sit amet, pulvinar sem. Nam luctus gravida felis, lacinia euismod neque dignissim ac. Vestibulum tincidunt arcu nec ipsum eleifend dictum. Sed pellentesque lacus massa, interdum placerat lacus tincidunt eget. In ultricies libero sit amet metus volutpat varius. Proin eu ipsum ac metus efficitur lacinia. Morbi luctus purus dignissim, vulputate lacus ut, dapibus nisl. Proin rhoncus mauris nec arcu accumsan rhoncus. Quisque sodales aliquet sem, ut dignissim dui gravida posuere. Nullam malesuada velit non elit facilisis, et interdum justo rutrum. Suspendisse vitae tempor eros, sed porttitor velit. Vestibulum vulputate eget quam at vehicula. Suspendisse imperdiet a lorem non vestibulum. Sed at mattis felis, quis bibendum ipsum. Vivamus a dignissim sapien.

French press review 19 February 2016

0

By Jack Fereday

Border control occupies the opening pages of Le Monde this morning, as several European countries move to restrict the influx of migrants. Le Figaro asks whether the government will manage to pass its planned labour reform in parliament and Libération dwells on the pitfalls of massive surveillance.

Le Monde is extremely preoccupied with borders this morning.

Its article on page two reminds its readers that if the United Kingdom leaves the European Union it will probably see its border control on the French side of the Channel move back to England, bringing the migrant camps in Calais a lot closer to home.

Le Monde says that local politicians on the French side are frustrated with the treaties which have left France to do all the dirty work in dealing with the thousands of asylum seekers trying to enter the UK.

But as the Brexit scenario becomes more realistic by the day, Le Monde says the prospect of migrants being able to cross freely over to the UK is becoming an important argument for British politicians keen to remain in the EU.

On the opposite page, Le Monde reports that borders in the Balkans are becoming more and more difficult to cross, due to the increasing amount of controls and quotas being introduced.

Since January 65,000 people travelling from Greece to Germany have passed through the region but many states are now worried that thousands of people will be left stranded on their territory if their neighbors suddenly decide to close their doors.

This week Serbia sent back 200 migrants from Iraq, Syria and Afghanistan who were on their way from Croatia.

And, for the first time since the migrant crisis began, Austria has announced the use of quotas to control how many people can cross its border.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel is now worried about a chain reaction threatening the Schengen zone and has called for a common policy on the question, according to Le Monde.

The conservative newspaper Le Figaro is more interested in France’s plans for labour law reform.

Just hours after Labour Minister Myriam El-Khomri released the first version of the bill aimed at simplifying the country’s hefty code du travail (labour code), many MPs are already up in arms.

Le Figaro quotes Socialist MP Pascal Cherki as saying that the text looks as if it was written by the Medef, France’s biggest employer federation.

The government plans to allow more space for negotiation between companies and their employees regarding working hours and salaries.

But? according to Le Figaro, many dissenting voices are starting to be heard within the ruling Socialist Party and it remains unsure whether the government will be able to pass the bill in parliament.

Le Figaro hints at large-scale demonstrations which could rattle the government in the coming months, a frightening prospect for François Hollande a year away from the next presidential election.

Pascal Cherki has called the bill an “electoral guillotine”, according to Le Figaro.

Left-wing Libération boasts a dramatic front page devoted to surveillance.

The software company Apple is refusing to collaborate with the FBI by letting them retrieve data from equipment used by suspected terrorists.

For Apple this could put it on a slippery slope, as the technology could then one day be used to spy on any of its customers.

In his editorial, Laurent Joffrin asks whether anyone will be able to guarantee security services will work within the legal framework, and answers with a quote from the English writer and politician Lord Acton: “Power tends to corrupt people, and absolute power corrupts absolutely.”

African press review 19 February 2016

0

By Jack Fereday

The presidential elections in Uganda is the subject of most east African editorials today. They continue to raise questions about the electoral process. Some 40,000 tonnes of consigned Pakistani rice and a man stripping down to his underwear in a Nigerian bank complete our press review.

The presidential election in Uganda has made the headlines in many east African newspapers this morning, with many of them worried about the electoral process, as well as the shutdown of Uganda’s social networks.

As voting got underway yesterday, authorities announced that access to social media platforms such as WhatsApp or Facebook were temporarily blocked over national security concerns.

But the East African says its sources indicate that the shutdown was in fact ordered by officials in the ruling NRM party, to silence the avalanche of negative messages aimed at the incumbent president Yoweri Museveni, who is seeking a fifth term after 30 years in power.

In its editorial Kenya’s Daily Nation calls the switch-off “disturbing” and says that “open access to the media is a cardinal pillar in a democratic process”.

It adds that in the context of recent events, such as the detention of opposition candidate Kizza Besigye, the decision “feeds into a feeling that there could be a plot to manipulate the outcome of the election”.

The Daily Nation also calls on Uganda’s Electoral Commission to ensure peaceful and fair elections.

The commission owes it not only to the people of Uganda, but to east Africa and the whole continent, its editor writes.

Uganda’s Daily Monitor says it is willing to give the Electoral Commission the benefit of the doubt, despite questions raised about its integrity, and asks that the EC grasp the opportunity to redeem its image in the public eye.

In a moving editorial, the paper also condemns the acts of violence perpetrated in recent weeks, by “those who prefer to stand still as the wheel of history revolves”.

The paper implicitly blames the authorities for the violence, saying Ugandans had lost their lives at the hands of those who should instead have been protecting them.

As for the elections themselves, the editor prays that those who have planned to tamper with them fail in their endeavour, and says the country “has had enough of those who think it is theirs to do with as they please.”

“18 February,” the editorial reads, “may be recorded in history as the day when Ugandans were able to renew their faith in themselves.”

Business Daily reports that 40,000 tonnes of Pakistani rice are currently locked up in two container freight stations in Mombasa, which the Kenyan Revenue Authority has shut down over alleged dealing in contraband goods.

The Pakistan High Commission in Kenya has asked the country’s Ports Authority and Revenue Authority to release the rice, insisting the consignment was legally imported.

The stand-off is now threatening to affect bilateral relations between Pakistan and Kenya, and their leading exports of rice and tea, according to Business Daily.

Punch tells the story of a video trending in Nigeria that shows a man stripping to his boxers in a Guaranty Trust Bank to get his problem resolved.

Sat on the floor of the banking hall in a pair of underwear and a neck chain, the man tried to share his story with whoever cared to listen.

He said 150,000 Nigerian Naira (680 euros) had been illegally deducted from his account and that nothing had been done about it.

According to Punch, the trending video has elicited strong reactions from social network users, with some criticising the bank for failing to resolve the issue swiftly.

But if you get frustrated with customer service at your local bank you might want to consider other options, as in the course of the five-minute video, banking activities went on around our poor fellow without anyone paying a bit of notice.

French press review 30 November 2015

0

By Michael Fitzpatrick
One single story . . . today’s opening of the heads of state at the UN Climate Conference . . . dominates every French front page this morning. It’s hard to tell if the news is good or bad.

“Can we still save the planet?” asks the main headline in Le Monde.

“There’s a glimmer of hope,” say the optimistic Catholics at Le Croix.

The communists at L’Humanité assure us, with a dubious handling of metaphor, that “The world has its back to the climatic wall.”

Press Review Example

0

By Clea Broadhurst
This week the French magazines continue to dig into the aftermath of the attacks in Paris and they offer different points of view regarding how to fight the Islamic State (IS) armed group, which many French call Daesh, but also how to understand the deadly organisation. Several ask, what are the secret services doing?

Reset password

Enter your email address and we will send you a link to change your password.

Get started with your account

to save your favourite homes and more

Sign up with email

Get started with your account

to save your favourite homes and more

By clicking the «SIGN UP» button you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy
Powered by Estatik