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University Of The Gambia Again: Governing Council Passes Resolution Series Of Petitions By Aggrieved Lecturers

All is still not going well at the University of The Gambia (UTG). For the past several months, aggrieved staffers of the UTG have been writing tons of letters protesting their conditions and the way they are treated by the university administration.




 

Now after several months of foot dragging, the Governing Council of the University of The Gambia finally met to discuss the petitions by the lecturers and other aggrieved staffers.

 

 

 

Most of the complaints from the aggrieved staffers have to do with “the bad experience and or treatment by the Finance Director.” Many of complaints were about non-payment of Per Diems and other entitlements.




 

Some of the staffers have been complaining about how their salaries were randomly reduced without proper explanation. Other familiar complaints include favouritism and cronyism where the UTG Finance Director a certain Mr Joko and his Senior Management Team (SMT) are accused of deliberately side-lining experienced staff members of the university whom they consider critical.

 

 

 

In one of the petitions, the Finance Director was accused of using the UTG funds to pay his housemaid. The University Governing Council in their recent meeting, reprimanded the Finance Director and urged him to stop forthwith using the UTG funds to exclusively pay his maid for private jobs at the Finance Director’s residence. The Governing Council urged the Finance Director to restore the services of the maid to exclusively work at the UTG serviced houses in BRUSUBI or she be hired privately by the Finance Director.




 

But some of the aggrieved staffers have rubbished the decision of the Governing Council of UTG as too weak on the Finance Director and his Senior Management Team (SMT). One of the staffers told the Fatu Network: “it has to be understood that many staff actually signed a petition letter and sent it to the Governing Council for the removal of Kojo the Finance Director but still they are spinning and doing a merry-go-round thing. We have also seen that since we submitted our petition to the Governing Council, the allowances of the members of the Governing Council have been increased and since then they have been swaying away from the real issues regarding our concerns as staffers.”

 

 

 

The aggrieved staffers have also questioned why the UTG still does not have a new Vice Chancellor. According to UTG staffers, the members of the Governing Council are paid allowance every month when they do not sit every month. “All these are the reasons why the Governing Council members are in for the Finance Director because they are always in for their own interest. The council monthly sitting allowances need to be investigated. Why are they receiving what they don’t work for?” asked one of the petitioners.




 

The aggrieved staffers have finally called for the sacking of the Finance Director.

However the Governing Council of the UTG in their response to the aggrieved staffers said the Finance Director was given a three year contract in 2010 with a provision to renew it by mutual agreement. “Given the fact that the Director of Finance is still in office with tacit approval of the University administration, there is an implied mutual agreement for a renewal of the contract in November 2013 for another three years, which ends on 10th November 2016,” the Governing Council.

 

The Governing Council finally called on the petitioners to direct their concerns to the Senior Management for appropriate action.

Gambian Youths: Thou Shall Not Be Divided and Manipulated

While a lot of people believe that it is the security service personnel of the Gambia who hold the balance of power in favour of Jammeh, others believe that it is our hard working and indefatigable women who are actually the backbone of his regime. However, my contention is that it is the vibrant, intelligent and dynamic youths of the Gambia who are the real deal makers or breakers. The future of our beloved country lies squarely in the hands of our youths as the last frontier of hope especially with regards to a political change. The writings are clearly on the wall for all to see.

 

 

One manifestation of this fact was on the 4th April when the UDP congressional convoy arrived in the Kombos from Basse. Following the rumours that there was a major demonstration unfolding in the streets of Banjul, there was a plethora of commentaries on social media and some online radios by some Gambians in the diaspora calling for the youths to come out in the streets in full force.

 

 

The impression was that once the youths managed to cross Denton Bridge, Yahya Jammeh will quickly take to the sea and be a refugee in Senegal like Baba Jawara did in 1994. However with the border closure in place, my guess was that Jammeh will not move an inch but will put up a fight. Anyway it was just a rumour and it seemed that the youths have apparently already made a decision of their own that they would not be drawn into any form of violence. Their message was loud and clear: they will not be used by any interest groups whatsoever!!!

 

 

Another example was about 3-4 weeks ago in a political rally in the village of Mariama Kunda. During the adoption ceremony of Mr. Dahaba as the father of the village, a pronouncement was made that the Kombo North Region is a no go area for the opposition. With no legal basis for such a declaration and not a chance that the security services would implement such a whimsical and wishful thinking, this was a ploy to instigate the APRC youths against the opposition. But the fact that the PPP, PDOIS and UDP are all over the Kombos holding political rallies is yet another proof that our youths have reached that level of enlightenment where they can no longer be used by politicians or their sycophants.

 

 

A third incident is a video which is currently online in which the Gambia’s Minister of Interior was addressing what appeared to be APRC youth militants. In this video, the Minister talked about the APRC youths as being not only the biggest in numbers but also the most hot-blooded. He asserted that they will not trouble anyone but anyone who troubles them will be dealt with using the full weight of the security forces. To me, this was a blatant attempt to divide the Gambian youths by drawing a battle line between “us” (the APRC youths) and “them” (the opposition). Again I am certain that our youths have passed the stage in which they can be divided and manipulated by any minister, governor, or other politicians. Not even by President Jammeh himself.

 

 

The wind of political change has finally arrived in The Gambia and change will certainly happen. In addition to overstaying in power, there are so many other reasons why we need a change in political leadership. One good reason is that for 22 years, Jammeh has made numerous promises and revealed several visions of the Gambia becoming an economic superpower and yet we are not even among the list of the top 100 wealthiest countries of the world. In the contrary and according to the World Bank, The Gambia is in fact among the top 10 poorest countries in the world.

http://www.cheatsheet.com/business/10-of-the-richest-and-poorest-countries-in-the-world.html/?a=viewall

Clearly, Jammeh and his government cannot and will not deliver The Gambia to the promised land of freedom and prosperity and so it is therefore time for a change. However, resorting to violence to achieve political change is absolutely not an option. If we set our little country on fire and shed each other’s blood, we will not even be on that list of the top 10 poorest countries at all. Instead, we will join Somalia on the list of failed states. Our voters’ cards are our bullets and the ballot boxes are our guns. By using this powerful weapon, we will achieve change in peace and security without any struggle, violence, reporting each other to the security or even trading insults at each other. We are too civilized, too enlightened, too closely related and too peaceful for all that.

 

 

In conclusion, I challenge each and every youth to go all the way out to convince our mothers, grandmothers, aunts and big sisters (who are the backbone of Jammeh’s regime), to also vote for change this year……even if that change is in the form of a Serrer man from Njongon village in the North Bank Region!!!

 

 

Long Live the Republic of The Gambia, long live our peaceful and harmonious co-existence!!! We can all smile and no one has to cry!!!!

 

 
Author Gano
Posted on April 12, 2016

Breaking News: Journalist Alhagie Ceesay rushed to Emergency ward; Cannot speak as at now

The Fatu Network has received credible information that the embattled journalist, Alhagie Abdoulie Ceesay has been rushed to the emergency ward of The Edward Francis Small Teaching Hospital in Banjul, the capital city of The Gambia.




Ceesay is said to be suffering from a serious illness which The Government has still refused to disclose to his family members. He has been rushed to the hospital several times the latest being few days ago where he was released on the same day and returned back to his prison cell.

 

 

This latest one however is said to be so serious that our sources said the prison authorities had to scramble an emergency ambulance which rushed him to the hospital.




Security officials have told The Fatu Network that as at now, Journalist Ceesay cannot even talk. His situation is said to be serious.

 

 

Although details are still being complied, there are concerns that the journalist may have contracted one of the many deadly diseases rampant in The Gambia’s congested prisons.




Indeed Right Groups have documented numerous mysterious deaths in The Gambia’s Prisons due to tourture but also poor diet.

 

 

We are monitoring the situation and will keep you updated.

Sixteen years on, families of April 10th victims still waiting for justice

By D. A. Jawo

 
It is 16 years today (April 10) when our own security forces brutally put down a peaceful procession organized by the Gambia Students Union (GAMSU), resulting in the deaths of at least 14 innocent children and the maiming of several more.

 
We can quite vividly recall those fateful two days when such brutality was unleashed on innocent Gambian school children while their only crime was to insist on staging a peaceful demonstration in order to protest against certain grievances, including the alleged killing of one of their colleagues by the fire brigade personnel in Brikama.

 
Even though it is 16 years since one of the most dreadful events in the history of the Gambia happened, yet still, the aggrieved relations and friends of those innocent young souls are still waiting for justice for their loved ones, while those who are still nursing the wounds of their offspring had been abandoned to their fate.

 
Certainly, the memories of those little souls who were brutally shot and killed in cold blood for merely coming out to exercise their most fundamental rights to peacefully march and show their grievances, will never fade away from the hearts and minds of those people of conscience who care about humanity and the crave for justice.

 
The only way that such naked injustice against the innocent children and indeed all people of conscience can be mitigated is for those who perpetrated the crime to be brought to justice and punished for their crime, which, unfortunately, this regime does not appear to ever intend to do.

 
Many Gambians still recall the events that led to the mayhem which resulted in the indiscriminate shooting to death of those innocent children. It started on the morning of 10 April 2000 when students in the Greater Banjul Area, under the leadership of GAMSU decided to stage a peaceful demonstration against a host of grievances, including the alleged killing of their colleague, Ebrima Barry by personnel of the Brikama Fire Brigade as well as the alleged raping of a girl student by a member of the security forces. Despite giving enough notice to the authorities about their intention to hold a peaceful procession to vent out their grievances, the police and those in authority, no doubt out of their arrogance and intoxication with power, apparently ordered the security forces to prevent the march at whatever cost, including the use of live bullets, which eventually led to the deaths of the 14 young people and maiming for life of several of their colleagues.

 
However, despite the widespread condemnation of the unprovoked shooting to death of the innocent children in the Greater Banjul Area on the 10th April, the security forces still went ahead to repeat that same brutality the following day in Brikamaba and other parts of the country, shooting to death several more children. It is even alleged that some of those who escaped death were subjected to untold brutality in the hands of the security forces while under detention, resulting in some of them being maimed for the rest of their lives.

 
Even though there was unanimity in the national and international condemnation of the brutality unleashed on the defenseless children by the security forces, the Gambian authorities have since been trying to wipe out that memory from the minds of the people of this country. Not only is any commemoration of the event totally forbidden, but the government has also done virtually nothing to assist the families who lost their loved ones or those children who were maimed. They are instead abandoned to their fate and the families of those who were maimed are left to continue to take care of them with the meagre resources at their disposal, and with no input from those who gave orders to the security forces to open fire with live bullets, and then went on the public media to tell big lies about it.
Therefore, instead of ensuring that justice was done in order to at least help ameliorate the psychological trauma of the affected families, the government decided to instead indemnify all those who were found culpable of unleashing such violence on innocent Gambian children. There is in fact enough indication that the authorities not only did not have any remorse about what happened, but that they have also given clear indication that they would not hesitate to do it all over again against anyone who challenges their hegemony.

 
The regime did not only stop at indemnifying the perpetrators of the unprecedented violence against the children, but they also went ahead to launch a systematic programme to annihilate GAMSU by creating their own surrogate student body; the National Patriotic Students Association (NAPSA), using public money and other incentives, and even coercion to entice students to become members of that puppet body, eventually making it the only legal student body in the country, enjoying unlimited financial and moral support from the authorities.

 
Therefore, through various overt and covert tactics, the authorities succeeded in transforming NAPSA into a formidable student union whose members were given all kinds of privileges and using them as proxies to control the activities of their fellow students and ensuring that they (the students) not only will never again challenge the authority of the government, but they were also instead left with no alternative but to submit to the dictates of the NAPSA leadership who had been imposed on them by the authorities.
What have we seen since then is that most of the original leadership of NAPSA have been absorbed into privileged positions in the government, including some of them being nominated as Members of Parliament and several other prominent positions in the public services. This is apparently as compensation for their role in helping to pacify the students and make them not only forget the brutalities that were meted out to their colleagues a few years earlier, but NAPSA was also effectively used to neutralize GAMSU and all other student bodies that had existed prior to the April demonstrations.

 
It is indeed hard for anyone to imagine that a government which makes so much noise about its concern for the welfare of its people would allow those who have committed such heinous crimes against the children of this country to not only continue to roam the streets with impunity, but for some of them to still continue to occupy important public offices and being paid from the public coffers.

 
There is however no doubt that most Gambians are anxiously looking forward to the day when the names of all those innocent young children whose lives were cut short by bullets of our own security forces, will be engraved in gold in a fitting memorial to be erected in a prominent place in the Greater Banjul Area. Also, those who were maimed and their lives left in miserable conditions would be given the maximum care by the state, while those found culpable for unleashing such brutality on them would be brought to book and justice will be finally seen to be done.

The lives of Dictator Jammeh’s cows are rated higher than that of ordinary Gambians

Wonders shall never cease to end. Gambians; can you imagine that for the past one week, dictator Jammeh has dispatched a full team of intelligence operatives and members of The Gambia Armed Forces to fully investigate and report to him the mysterious disappearances of a number of his cattle from his various ranches.




The security task force has since been visiting various abattoirs to ascertain the true ownership of cattle slaughtered at these abattoirs. Butchers are being forced to surrender the skin and head of any animal slaughtered to ascertain that they have not be stolen from The President’s many ranches.

 

 

Just three days ago, the cattle authentication team of security officers arrested three State Guard officials at The Abuko abattoir accusing them of stealing cattle from The President’s ranch and selling it to butchers. The incident came about when the intelligence officer stationed at The Abuko abattoir sent an anonymous text message to General Saul Badjie, National Guards Commander and Yankuba Badgie, National Intelligence Director, about an attempt by some soldiers to sell meat which he believed came from a suspicious source.

 

It was then that some officials were dispatched to the abattoir and upon arrival the State Guard officials were arrested and accused of stealing by person while on duty at one of The President’s ranches.




Interestingly, a lot of people are surprised about the apparent urgency in looking for missing cattle from The President’s ranches when human beings (innocent for that matter) are still missing in that country and are unaccounted for.

 

 

A lot of people who spoke to The Fatu network have expressed shock and dismay at the lack of interest to conclusively investigate the cases of two US citizens, Alhagie Mamud Ceesay and Ebou Jobe who are still missing in The Gambia and numerous others whose cases are still not investigated, only to discover that Dictator Jammeh has been spending so much resources and security personnel to investigate his missing cattle.




A concerned Gambian who spoke to The Fatu Network has likened dictator Jammeh’s actions to that of a hungry, angry and useless wild beast which does not care about its own family. Another also opined that it is clear now that The Dictator has no respect and value for the lives of The Gambians.

 

 

The Fatu Network is equally shocked with this tasteless move by a  Dictator who continues to willfully and unlawfully arrest, torture and detain incommunicado.

Young Gambian woman writes to Dictator Jammeh expressing her opposition to The Islamic State project

 

Here we produce the letter from a young Gambian woman opposing Jammeh’s idea of turning the country into an Islamic State.

 

 

His Excellency

The President of The Republic of The Gambia

Yahya A.J.J. Jammeh

State House

Banjul

 

 

Your Excellency,

 

Open Letter to the President: I Oppose the Idea of a State Religion

 

I am writing to express my deep concern with your declared intention to transform the Gambia into an Islamic State Republic. In this connection, you indicated in your address to the National Assembly that you will cause a piece of legislation to be tabled soon before the National Assembly to begin the process of its implementation.

 

 

 

In light of the foregoing, as a citizen of this country and a Muslim, I feel it is my national duty to exercise my right to take part in deciding the fate of my society especially on such an important issue as this. My position is unequivocal and that is, I am totally opposed to the declaration of the Gambia as a religious state, any religion. I wish to therefore submit this letter to you in your capacity as the legal and political head of this country to hear a concern from a citizen like yourself and I wish you will give this concern the utmost attention and consideration it deserves. I would like to remind you that much as you are the president of this republic, yet the Gambia is the full and total collective property of each and every citizen and no one has a singular right, authority and power to determine the fate of this country more than anyone else. We are all equal and therefore any major decision especially that which deals with our sovereignty must be a privy of only one person or few people to decide. All must take part to decide, hence the reason for this letter.

 

 

 

Mr. President, The Gambian constitution guarantees to all persons not only freedom of conscience but the right to profess, practice, and propagate religion as stated in Section 25 (1) of 1997 constitution. Furthermore Section 100 subsection 2 states that,

 

 

 

The National Assembly shall not pass a Bill-

(b) to establish any religion as a state religion;

 

These are entrenched clauses that require that if the contrary is to take place there must be a referendum. These above provisions even buttressed the first section of the constitution which states that the Gambia is a sovereign secular republic.

 

In addition to these national laws, the Gambia as a party to international treaties have committed itself to ensure freedom of religion among other fundamental rights.

 

The African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights (also known as the Banjul charter), states in Article 8 that:

 

“the profession and free practice of religion shall be guaranteed. No one may, subject to law and order, be submitted to measures restricting the exercise of these freedoms.

 

Article 19 of the same law states that,

 

“All peoples shall be equal; they shall enjoy the same respect and shall have the same rights. Nothing shall justify the domination of a people by another.”

 

 

Mr. President, freedom of religion is a fundamental human right. In a multi-religious society as the Gambia to therefore proclaim one particular religion as the official faith is a clear discrimination of other religions and potentially endangers the practitioners of all other religions other than the state religion. What would be the justification for choosing Islam as the State religion of the Gambia? If it is because the majority of Gambians are Muslim, then are you implying that in also determining the official national language of this country we should identify Mandinka as the state language? These decisions are unfair and unscientific hence my opposition. What we expect of your leadership and government is to create an environment for all cultures and religions to be promoted and protected by the State so that believers, practitioners and adherents are free to openly practice what they believe.

 

 

Mr. President, each day, we are anxious and frightened as to how we will try to navigate through an Islamic state that may not recognize our existence as a people of single destiny with common inspirations and aspirations. Those who do not belong to Islamic religion will often feel oppressed and fearful.

 

 

There is no gainsaying that despite its percentage, Christian community in The Gambia, has contributed greatly in the development of this country since the colonial days. A glaring example is Edward Francis Small, the father of Gambia’s nationalism who fought against injustice and for the independence of our dear motherland. The contribution and impact of Christian citizens can be felt in every sector of the government and society and our lives.

 

 

 

What Gambians need is a secular state in tune with democratic principles and practices. It is obvious that religion in politics is an old tool that governments have used for centuries to create fear and to control the population. We do not want our country to be subjected to such a situation where people may even vote for representatives just because of their religion first and foremost. Keeping the Gambia secular keeps it neutral and allows different religions to coexist harmoniously as we have been doing for centuries. Our people do not want a situation where politicians use Islam as a platform to gain votes when they do not necessarily even truly believe in Allah or live their lives according to the tenets of Islam at all. Besides, a government organized in the name of Islam can be as equally or even more corrupt as a secular republic as is the case in many parts of the world, not least the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. .

 

 

 

The   Gambia needs true democracy that must ensure justice for all citizens. Gambia should be able to move forward at our own pace, without arrogance, without maximalist orthodoxy. We do not need terrorism, democratic totalitarianism and democratic avatars or democratic patching up. What we need is a law that will give us a sense of belonging and responsibility as people of the Gambia

 

 

The APRC Government promised Gambians a dispensation that would bring real change in our lives. Gambians especially the youth, expect the government to fulfill those commitments, and it is our expectation that the government of the day will deliver on those promises. It is time for the government to ensure that it remains focused on the people it serves.

 

 

 

Mr. President, I believe there are many draconian laws which the government needs to amend instead of implementing an Islamic law or Shariah. For instance, disappearance of persons without trace, unlawful arrest and detention without trial, press censorship, monopoly of state property by the government, electoral reforms among so many issues faced by people. A responsible government should be ready to listen to the concerns of its people at all times. Why should Imam Sawaneh still be under custody after the court ordered his release Mr. President? Why is the journalist Alagie Ceesay still being dragged to court unnecessarily when there are no witnesses?

 

 

 

Mr. President, I would like to suggest you take the responsibility to make the Gambia Government open and become more tolerant with the people it serves. We expect your administration to be honest, and sincere in your efforts to serve the public interest. Gambians expect the government and its leadership to abide by the rule of law at all times and not to engage in actions that endanger national security and harmony.

 

 

 

In the service of our country, I remain

 

Yours sincerely,

 

Fatou Janneh.

 

 

Breaking News: Journalist Alhagie Ceesay’s condition worsens; Family in fear about what may befall him

The Fatu Network is getting news that Journalist Alhagie Ceesay who was rushed from his prison cell to an emergency admittance at the Edward Francis Small Teaching Hospital in Banjul is now nowhere to be seen at least according to credible sources on the ground.




One of our credible sources who has been working with us on Ceesay situation has told The Fatu Network that the State is refusing anyone to have access to the journalist either directly or indirectly. One of the sources who saw Alhagie Ceesay on his hospital bed said the journalist was gravely ill. This was also confirmed by loved ones and his media colleagues who saw him few days ago.

 

 

But apparently even our sources within the security network have all declined to make a tacit comment about Alhagie’s situation. Interestingly, Journalist Alhagie Ceesay has not been seen since his release from hospital a few days ago.




The family is said to be seriously concerned about Alhagie’s situation and that they have solicited support to prevail on The Gambia Government to get him released. There are also concerns that his health condition might have deteriorated so badly that the prison authorities are not allowing anyone to have access to him.

 

 

When contacted for reaction, Jeffrey Smith, an international human rights consultant who has worked closely with Gambian activists said “That Alagie Ceesay remains arbitrarily detained after nine months is both a monumental injustice and entirely unsurprising. The Jammeh regime has proven itself over the course of more than two decades that it cares little for the basic human rights of Gambians, least of which journalists and perceived dissidents in the country”. Smith added that “In fact, today, April 10, is the anniversary of the year 2000 student massacre in which Gambian security forces opened fire on peaceful protesters, killing 14 youths. If the Gambian security apparatus brazenly guns down people in broad daylight, one can imagine the terror being inflicted on Alagie Ceesay behind prison walls”.

 

 

 

Alhagie’s case is a stark reminder of the brutal realities of life in this impoverished country of 1.8 million inhabitants, and journalists have undoubtedly taken the brunt of the madness – President Yahya Jammeh, it seems has truly made good on his promise that “They talk about rights, human rights, and freedom of the press, and say that this country is a hell for journalists. There are freedoms and responsibilities. The journalists are less than 1 percent of the population, and if anybody expects me to allow less than 1 percent of the population to destroy 99 percent of the population, you are in the wrong place.” The Gambia is branded by Human Rights and journalist rights groups as the worst country for journalists – none like it in Africa. Since his coming to power in a military coup in 1994, hundreds of journalists have fled, essentially wiping the entire country of any semblance of an independent press. Except for Foroyaa Newspaper whose journalists write under the shied of the opposition PDOIS political party, none other dares even highlight the cases of missing, killed, tortured, illegally detained, and disappeared Gambians in whose circumstance the government is suspected to have had a hand. The ones that fled are the lucky ones – renown journalist Deyda Hydara and journalist Ebrima Chief Manneh were not so lucky – the former was murdered in cold blood while the latter’s disappearance has still not been solved, Yahya Jammeh’s involvement in both crimes being pretty all but confirmed at this point.

The Fatu Network is monitoring the situation and will keep you all posted.

Gambia is left alone to face the whims of the deranged President Yahya Jammeh

By Con Coughlin

When the Prince of Wales represents the Queen at next month’s Commonwealth summit for heads of government in Sri Lanka, he will no doubt be relieved to find that he no longer needs to deal with an African dictator who indulges in witchcraft and puts his foes before a firing squad.
Commonwealth conferences have a long and undistinguished history of providing dictators with a public platform they would otherwise be denied as a consequence of their murderous domestic policies. For example, Zimbabwean dictator Robert Mugabe liked nothing more than to berate the “imperialist” Western powers when he was still allowed to participate in the summits.

 
There have also been occasions when members of the Royal family have not covered themselves in glory, such as the time the Duke of Edinburgh, when introduced to the Nigerian secretary-general of the Commonwealth, who was dressed in ceremonial robes for a state dinner, remarked: “You look as though you are ready for bed.”

 
But at least Prince Charles will now be spared the discomfort of having to deal with “His Excellency Sheikh Professor Doctor President Yahya Jammeh of the Gambia” after his surprise announcement that he is ending his country’s association with the Commonwealth because of its “neo-colonial” associations.
It is a moot point whether, by announcing Gambia’s immediate withdrawal, Mr Jammeh jumped before he was pushed. These days, thanks to the principles set out in the 1991 Harare Declaration, the Commonwealth does not tolerate repressive dictatorships. Having been initially suspended for breaching the Declaration in 2002, Zimbabwe was forced to withdraw its membership the following year.

 
And there was every prospect that Gambia, given its recent human rights record and Mr Jammeh’s wanton disregard for the rule of law, would be only the second country to follow suit, had not its long-serving dictator spared the Commonwealth the trouble of going through the expulsion formalities.
Since seizing power as a 29-year-old lieutenant in 1994, Mr Jammeh’s rule has been marked by his increasingly eccentric conduct and a ruthless determination to suppress any hint of political dissent. In a country where the average tenure of the interior minister amounts to no more than a few months, and the infamous “Mile 2 Hotel” prison on the outskirts of Banjul, the capital, is filled with political prisoners crowded into mosquito-filled cells, Mr Jammeh has established himself as one of the region’s most enduring despots.

 
But thanks to the economic benefits – built mainly on a thriving tourism industry – that the country has experienced as a result of Mr Jammeh’s political dominance, the Commonwealth has tended to turn a blind eye to his wanton disregard for some of the more important principles of the Harare Declaration, such as the rule of law and respect for individual liberties. After all, the African continent can hardly boast too many economic success stories.

 
It has only been in recent years, as Mr Jammeh’s conduct has taken a more bizarre turn, that the outside world has begun reviewing its relations with one of Africa’s more outlandish characters.
Before coming to power – a feat he achieved through the simple expedient of being the first officer to reach the presidential gates during the 1994 overthrow of his predecessor, Sir Dawda Jawara – Mr Jammeh had a reputation for blending witchcraft with statecraft. After one of his aunts died, apparently the victim of witchcraft, more than 1,000 “sorcerers” were rounded up at gunpoint by the “Green Berets”, the presidential guard unit, and forced to drink hallucinogenic poisons designed to “exorcise” them.
Mr Jammeh’s passion for witchcraft has also led him to claim that he has invented a herbal cure for Aids, forcing hundreds of Gambians to risk their lives by undertaking his programme instead of the standard retro-viral treatments used to deal with HIV.

 
But it is the brutal treatment meted out to Gambia’s political dissidents that has caused most concern, especially after the president made the surprise decision in August last year to suspend the country’s 27-year moratorium on the death penalty and executed nine prisoners by firing squad, deliberately ignoring pleas from other Commonwealth governments to show mercy.

 
His decision was particularly harsh given that, in Gambia, political opponents can be jailed without charge simply for questioning Mr Jammeh’s declaration that he intends to rule for a “billion” years. Nor did he endear himself to world leaders at last month’s UN summit when he declared that homosexuals were “very evil” and posed the greatest threat to human existence.

 
The dictator’s irascible conduct laid the foundations for Gambia’s political isolation, a process that ultimately has led to the country’s decision to withdraw from the Commonwealth.

 
Certainly, the Commonwealth, which stands to nurture the principles of democracy and the rule of law in countries where they might otherwise wither on the vine, will be strengthened by no longer having to tolerate a regime that openly treats such values with contempt. The tragedy for the Gambian people is that they must now face the vagaries of their deranged dictator on their own.

 

The Telegraph

 

Mamma Kandeh’s Gambia Democratic Congress Finally Joins the Fray!!!

A new party calling itself The Gambia Democratic Congress filed registration documents with the Independent Electoral Council this past Thursday, April 7, 2016, finally laying to rest rumors and speculations as to the intent of its leader, Mamma Kandeh. GDC is waiting to hear from the IEC according to Independent Electoral Commission insiders.

 

If all goes well, GDC will be joining existing registered parties; People’s Democratic Organization for Independence and Socialism (PDOIS), People’s Progressive Party (PPP), National Reconciliation Party (NRP), United Democratic Party (UDP), Gambia Moral Congress (GMC), Gambia Party for Democracy and Progress (GPDP), now being unofficially called Group of 6 (G-6), and ruling Alliance for Patriotic Reorientation and Construction (APRC).       Not much is yet known about this new party other than information The Fatu Network was able to gather from supposed sympathizers that one Mamma Kandeh is the leader. Kandeh is onetime National Assembly Member of the ruling APRC for the Jimara Constituency seat. He was later expelled from the party by President Jammeh for breaking code of conduct rules according to APRC. Many at the time of his expulsion attributed his sacking to suspicions within the APRC, and particularly by President Jammeh himself, that Mamma had Presidential ambitions. This suspicion was so deep, Jammeh, according to sources, was sending people to determine the nature of Kandeh’s relationship with his African Union Parliament colleagues a lot of whom went on to hold key positions in their countries – President John Mahama of Ghana was one of those colleagues. Mamma was also a big proponent of the Two-Term Limit, something Jammeh opposes vehemently. Fatu Network has gathered that Kandeh’s sponsor of an Independent candidate for a councilor seat was the last straw that broke the camel’s back leading to his final ouster.

 

Fatu Network has not seen any manifesto or official documents from the GDC, so it would be premature to ascribe any policy positions at this time. Not much is yet known about the leader but efforts are ongoing to have Mr. Kandeh himself for an interview so as to ascertain what his party’s plans are for the upcoming December 1st elections and also what his political philosophy or policy positions are. According internet search results, he was born in 1965 and is from Central River Region, he used to run a lodge called Baobab Lodge. No information is available on his educational background or family status.

 

The upcoming Presidential elections has already been very uncertain with major players like Omar (OJ) Jallow of the PPP and Lawyer Ousainou Numukunda Darbo of the UDP constitutionally out of the ring, leaving Halifa Sallah of PDOIS and Amat Bah of NRP as the only viable contenders. With Kandeh’s entrance, the uncertainty will be even more pronounced in an election where barring a coalition of all opposition parties and fight for electoral reform to level the already uneven playing field, incumbent President Yahya Jammeh will easily cruise to victory, albeit a stolen election according to observers.

BREAKING NEWS!!! Alagie Ceesay Collapses and Rushed to the Hospital!!!

According to an urgent alert sent to The Fatu Network by Ministry of Interior insiders, Journalist Alagie Ceesay collapsed in Mile 2 this Friday, April 8, 2016 and rushed to the hospital. His condition was described as serious when this article was being put together.




 

This latest incident came on the heels of reported denial of visitation rights for the journalist whose incarceration was met with condemnation from both human rights groups and governments around the world alike. Senators Dick Durban and Patrick J. Leahy were the latest to issue statements urging the Jammeh regime to release the young man. Even the UN Human Rights Council was unequivocal in its condemnation of Jammeh’s continuing abuse of Alagie, calling his detention Arbitrary. Below we produce the letter:

 

Senators letter to Dictator Jammeh

 

 

 

According to the Ministry of Interior sources, Alagie’s ongoing illness which was attributed to torture he received in the hands of the security agents and poor food he is forced to eat – since his family has been denied the access to him after repeated requests to be given a chance to bring him food, took a turn for the worse this past Thursday, April 7, 2016. True to form, the Prison ignored his request for medical attention leading to his collapse the next day.




 

Alagie’s ordeal epitomizes the degree to which human rights abuse in this country of 1.9 million inhabitants has worsen – the state machinery is being used as an instrument of oppression. Murder, torture, disappearance, illegal firing, and humiliation of innocent citizens have become so common place, Alagie’s torture and subsequent incarceration on bogus charges didn’t even raise eyebrows of this traumatized population. The burden of fighting for his freedom inevitably, just like many others before him, fell on the Gambian activists in the Diaspora and human rights groups. Jeffrey Smith, a former Africa Advocate at Robert F. Kennedy Center has been very instrumental in highlighting his plight. The concern among Gambians is that if the world doesn’t act on Alagie’s behalf, he will eventually fall in the same category as Sheriff Dibba, a former Trade Unionist who died in detention because of the abuses and denials of critical medical care at time of need leading to his death.

 

 

 

The kangaroo court through which Alagie is being tried and the proceedings of his case have been described by observers as nothing but a joke and typical travesty of justice that has been pervasive in The Gambia since Yahya Jammeh’s forceful takeover of power in July 1994. This past Thursday was the umpteenth time the case has been adjourned and mostly for the most frivolous of reasons: Judge has a seminar to attend, Alagie is too sick to come to court, witness cannot attend, among many others. To make matters worse, and a glaring example of the gross injustice of the case, is the absconding of the key Prosecution witnesses, one of them Alagie’s girlfriend, to a neighboring country claiming they were being forced to lie about Alagie because Jammeh wanted to continue forcefully sleeping with his girlfriend. As it turned out, Alagie was also the subject of the regime’s which-hunt because the radio station he manages was translating news articles, some of which are critical of the regime, into local languages – Jammeh found that unacceptable. So the case has been fraught with convoluted, unrelated, and mostly trivial issues not worthy of any investigation, from the beginning, confirming the suspicion of critics from the get-go that this case is nothing but yet another effort by President Jammeh to silence yet another innocent Gambian.




 

Fatu Network is following this latest development with keen interest and will update our readers and listeners as more information becomes available.

Has Dictator Jammeh Back Down On Renewal Of Tenure Of IEC Officials?

The Fatu Network has got credible information that the government of Dictator Yahya Jammeh has withdrawn the controversial Bill that it sent to the National Assembly seeking to amend Section 42 Subsection (4) of the Constitution of The Gambia dealing with the tenure of office of members of the Independent Electoral Commission (IEC).




 

In the proposed Bill, the government sought to amend the 1997 constitution to “allow for the appointment of members of the IEC beyond two terms of office and for connected matters.”

 

 

Further, the proposed Bill was to amend Section 42 subsection (4) by substituting for the words “one further term” with “further terms of office.”

 

 

The reason cited by the government was to ensure that “experienced members of the IEC are maintained to lend their expertise to the younger generations of the commission as long as they are able to do so.”

 

 

The proposed amendment Bill was set for discussion in the ongoing sitting of the National Assembly but all of a sudden when members resumed from their short break, the amendment Bill was withdrawn from the agenda.




Speaking to the Fatu Network, a credible source said the move by the government to withdraw the proposed amendment Bill might have been triggered by a chorus of condemnations and opposition to the amendment.

 

 

Indeed opposition parties in The Gambia have been openly questioning the credibility and impartiality of the Chairman and other senior members of the IEC accusing them of doing the bidding of the ruling party.

 

 

Some seven months ago, a combined group of opposition parties had written a 13 point document to the IEC demanding a series of changes to the electoral system to ensure credible, impartial, free and fair electoral processes.




Strangely however, the IEC has neither acknowledged the letter from the combined opposition parties nor has it acted on any of the concerns raised by the opposition. This and many other belligerent postures from the IEC towards the opposition prompted the political parties to openly issue threats of defying the electoral commission as well as to institute legal action against it.

 

 

Now that the controversial Bill has been removed from the agenda of the current session of National Assembly for now, many people are wondering what might have triggered it. Some believe that the dictator is probably afraid of the new defiant mood among The Gambian populace by he is trying to avoid anything that could galvanize people to pour into the streets to vent their anger.




But true to its traits, it may be also that the dictatorship is buying time and could return the Bill back to the Assembly.

 

 

Whatever the case, the Fatu Network will continue to monitor this story.

President Jammeh – A part of the Gambia’s problem?

By D. A. Jawo

 
The Gambia, like all other countries, has its own peculiar problems, which include both economic and social. However, in our own case, those problems are also compounded by the very attitude and comportment of no less a person than our own head of state.

 

 
It is indeed very hard for anyone to imagine why President Yahya Jammeh would spend a greater chunk of his time always talking about religious matters and scheming to transform the Gambia into an Islamic State when he has other much more relevant mundane issues to deal with. We have recently seen, for instance, that every time he opens his mouth, all that he talks about are matters dealing with Islam like he is the Imam Ratib instead of an elected head of state. Rather than concentrate on affairs of the state and leave the preaching to the Imams, he is all the time encroaching into their domain.

 

 
We have seen that during every occasion that he addressed the nation, including his recent State Opening of Parliament, rather than concentrate on the dire economic and social situation confronting Gambians, his emphasis had always hinged on the Gambia being an Islamic State, emphasizing that Muslims form the majority of the population, as if that matters to anyone. He certainly seems to be obsessed with religion, which is definitely not his domain as a head of state of a secular nation like the Gambia.

 

 
Unlike what is expected of the head of state of a democracy, he neither seeks advice nor entertains anyone’s contrary views on the subject. We have seen for instance that in Liberia, when there was a proposal to change the constitution and declare Liberia a Christian nation, there was a vocal opposition to the idea and the government listened to them. That is exactly what we expect from a leadership that respects the people.

 

 
During the State Opening of Parliament for instance, President Jammeh admitted that religion is a personal affair, and yet, he is doing everything possible, even to the extent of violating the Constitution to transform the Gambia into an Islamic State, which will no doubt result in regulating the personal lives of the citizens and also disadvantaging those with contrary views as well as the minorities. It is quite obvious that a vast majority of Gambians would prefer him to concentrate on his role as head of state rather than encroach into the roles of the Imams and other religious leaders. As head of state of a multi-cultural and multi-religious secular nation, he is expected to steer clear off direct interference into religious matters.

 
We are told to “Give to Caesar what is Caesar’s, and to God what is God’s”, but in President Jammeh’s case, he seems to be trying to perform both roles which definitely would not auger well for the country’s social cohesion.

 
Another unfortunate phenomenon in almost all his speeches is the tendency to clearly divide Gambians into Muslims and Christians, by saying “We” (Muslims) and “They” (Christians), as if he is talking about two different nations, and by implication, treating our Christian compatriots as second-class citizens. It is definitely quite unfair for him to discriminate against the Christian minority in his unjustified drive to transform the Gambia into an Islamic State.
Therefore, his recent donation of a huge sum of money to the ‘Christian Community’ is seen by some people as a shrewd attempt to bribe them into submission to his scheme to implement his unorthodox religious ideas.

 

 
There is absolutely no doubt that a vast majority of Gambians had been quite happy and comfortable with the status quo, with the Gambia always being seen as a haven of peace and religious tolerance, and therefore, with his encouragement of the Islamic fundamentalists and radical elements, he seems to be steering the country into an unpredictable future.

 

 
Looking at all the possible negative implications of President Jammeh’s uncompromising push to transform this country into an Islamic State, one would wonder what benefits there are both for him and the citizens by adopting such radical religious views when the rest of the world seem to be on the side of moderation and peaceful-co-existence. There are those with the view that his objective is to attract economic assistance from conservative Arab states, but is it really worth all the trouble he is subjecting ordinary Gambians to?

 

 
Meanwhile, as President Jammeh is busy trying to implement his Islamic State project, relations between the Gambia and Senegal have taken a nose-dive, with the closure of the border, prompted by the decision of the Gambia Ports Authority to unilaterally increase the tariffs for Senegalese transports on the ferries at the Trans-Gambia crossing.

 

 
It appears at first the Gambian authorities did not take the border closure seriously, hoping that like in the past, the Senegalese transporters will make noise for a brief period and things will get back to normal. However, with the border closure lasting for more than a month now, with economic activities at the Trans-Gambia ferry crossing as well as at almost all border crossings being virtually at a stand still, they are beginning to feel the pinch, particularly after the government losing the hundreds of thousands of Dalasis they used to collect on a daily basis from the ferries.

 

 
While the Gambian authorities seem to be on their knees to get the blockade lifted through diplomatic channels, but it appears the Senegalese are not ready to play ball unless the Gambian side meets certain conditions. These include reversing the decision to increase the ferry tariffs, as well as the Gambian authorities expediting the construction of the Trans-Gambia Bridge and repatriation of the Senegalese fugitive from justice. Boy Djinne, who had been allowed to remain in the Gambia, ignoring Senegal’s request for his extradition.

 

 
There are also reports that the Gambia has written a letter of complaint against Senegal to the ECOWAS Commission on the border closure, accusing Senegal of subjecting the Gambia to some economic blockade. However, Senegal is said to have insisted that that letter must first be withdrawn before any negotiations would take place between officials of the two countries.

 
Whatever the outcome of the negotiations, it is quite certain that the Gambia, being the obvious under-dog, in this instance, would have to make some concessions before things get back to normal.

The Gambia’s Eccentric Dictator Is Now Even Forcing His One-Time Supporters To Flee

NEW YORK — Fatou Camara thought she was safe. The mother of two had built a successful career on Gambian television and had the president’s ear. Then, on September 15, she was suddenly detained and thrown into a roach infested prison cell and held there for 25 days. The Gambian authorities accused her of sedition for allegedly smearing the president in statements to an opposition website, and eventually set her free on bail. She immediately fled the country, first for Senegal and then settled to the U.S. Camara denies the allegations, and calls the charges a political set up.

 

 
“I know some people are tortured, but I was not,” Camara told BuzzFeed by phone from Georgia. “For this to happen to someone like me is what scares people. People were not expecting this. I worked for the president, and we’ve been very close.”

 

 
The west African nation of the Gambia, home to just 1.8 million people, is mainly known for its beautiful beaches — but it is also home to one of the world’s most ruthless, and eccentric, dictators, Yahye Jammeh. Opposition activists say Jammeh rules the Gambia with an iron fist. Political opponents are frequently harassed, arrested, tortured, and put through sham trials, while Gambians are kept in a constant state of paranoia through tight media control, according to human rights groups. Jammeh bans most foreign journalists and human rights organizations from operating in the country. He has also claimed he can cure AIDS, and has outlawed homosexuality.

 

 
“The world is looking at the Gambia as not very important, but the Gambian people need help,” Camara said. “You cannot speak out in the Gambia. You can be killed. You can be arrested. You can be kept in prison for a long time. You can disappear. Nobody will help. Everybody is too scared.”

 

 
Lisa Nikolaus, Amnesty International’s Gambia expert, says that several recent developments indicate an increase in government repression. In June, the government increased its hold on the media by raising the penalty for derogatory statements against the government to 15 years in prison. The summer before, on Aug 23, Jammeh ordered the secret execution of nine death row inmates, reportedly by firing squad. It was the Gambia’s first executions in nearly 30 years. An estimated 38 more prisoners remain on death row, several of whom are reportedly Senegalese nationals. A prominent Gambian Muslim cleric, Imam Baba Leigh, spoke out against the executions in December, calling them “un-Islamic.” He promptly disappeared for five months, and refused to discuss his circumstances upon reappearing.

 

 
Reports by political opponents outside of Gambia also describe an increasingly erratic leader. Jammeh has ruled the country since 1994, when he seized power in a military coup, and has since been reelected in four elections, widely criticized by the international community. Jammeh is said to act outlandishly, making statements comparing himself to God. He is also notorious for hiring and firing ministers, and reportedly imprisoning people for the slightest personal offense. In Oct 22, he reportedly ordered three political prisoners to confess to sedition on national TV.

 

 
“I wouldn’t be surprised if they find he’s had a serious mental problem, but as a leader he’s been able to get away with it,” said Amadou Scattered Janneh, a former information minister who now heads the Coalition for Change-Gambia (CCG) from exile in Georgia. He has been in the U.S. since September 2012.

 

 
Gambian police arrested Janneh in June 2011 for distributing T-shirts that read, “End to Dictatorship Now.” At the time, Janneh was an organizer with the CCG in collaboration with Gambians abroad. Janneh told BuzzFeed he was held in the Gambia’s notorious Mile 2 Central prison along with the nine prisoners later executed. He has published an e-book, Standing Up Against Injustice, recounting the horrific atrocities he witnessed during 15 months in prison. Janneh is a U.S. citizen, and his arrest raised international outage. Amnesty International and the Reverend Jesse Jackson ultimately led a successful campaign for his release.

 

 
Amnesty International and Gambian diaspora civil society groups, like CCG, have called on the European Union to adopt tougher measures, like targeted sanctions and travel bans, against the Gambian regime and to ensure international access to Gambian prisons. So far, however, the responses have been tepid, with no official announcements on a larger strategy.
“It’s not hard to make a case against the regime,” Janneh said. “But when it comes to action, that’s where we’ve been missing.”

 

 

Amnesty International has not been able to work inside Gambia since 2008, according to Nikolaus. Instead, the human rights organization conducts research from Senegal and abroad, where they can work more freely. But Gambians can also face trouble in the Casamance region of Senegal, which lies along the Gambian border and is ripe with anti-Senegalese government rebels, several of whom are supported by Jammeh, according to activists.

 

 
Nana Ndow, a 28-year-old Gambian consultant living in Brazil, has started an online campaign for the release of her father, Saul Ndow, who went missing in Senegal last April, along with a Gambian opposition leader, Mahawa Cham. Ndow told BuzzFeed by telephone from Rio de Janeiro that she suspects that agents working for Jammeh in Senegal abducted her father while he was on business in the country and smuggled him through Casamence back into the Gambia. The president, she said, “has always said that he wanted my father dead or alive.” Nana and her family have contacted the Senegalese government regarding her father’s whereabouts. They have so far received no response. Her family now fears he is dead.

 

 
Amnesty International has investigated the case, but cannot confirm Ndow’s allegations, Nikolaus said, since collecting and verifying information in the Gambia is a near-impossible task.
“It’s really sad that families feel like they have to go public like this because they are not getting support from the Senegalese and Gambian governments,” Nikolaus said by phone from Senegal regarding Ndow’s case. “The UN and regional African countries need to provide support for getting them information on their loved ones.”

 

 
Camara told BuzzFeed she will not go back home as long as Janneh remains in power.
“You cannot have a country where all the people are running away,” Camara said. “There are a lot of Gambians who want to go home.”

 

The Gambia, a tiny west African nation, is ruled by one of the world’s worst dictators — but opponents feel left in the dark as their stories go largely unnoticed by the international media.

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CIVIL ATTORNEY TEAM

Gambia complains against Senegal’s border closure to Ecowas

Gambia has filed a complaint against Senegal to the regional bloc court over the closure of its land border month ago.

 

 

A leading Senegalese daily Le Quotidien on April 2, 2016 reported that Gambia’s complaint was filed on Friday.

 

 

Gambia accuses Senegal of violating the regional bloc’s, Ecowas, principle of free movement of people and goods.

 

 

Gambia claimed that Senegal was crippling its economic through high cost of basic commodities.

The closure of the border was seriously affecting the economic activities in Gambia, which relies heavily on imports from Senegal.

 

 

The regional court has responded to the complaint, promising to dispatch investigators to hear the Senegalese party.

 

 

Gambia’s decision to sue Senegal followed failure of an official Gambian delegation on Thursday in Dakar to convince the Senegalese government to lift the blockade.

 

 

The latest border closure followed new tariff of $500 the Gambian government imposed on February 11, 2016 on all Senegal’s commercial trucks entering the country.

 

 

The Senegalese transport union describes the levy as “unrealistic and too expensive”.

The Union then banned the entry of Senegalese commercial vehicles into the Gambia and a similar measure on Gambian commercial vehicles.

 

 

Since then, Senegalese commercial trucks have been bypassing the Gambia ferry crossing to drive around and the long way to enter the southern Casamance region of the country.

 

 

Gambia earns thousands of dollars daily from Senegalese vehicle drivers who pay to the Gambia ferries authority to cross them to the southern part of Senegal.

 

Story culled from Africa Review

Gambia’s Islamic State Project Will Be Officialised Soon With A Bill To Make Sharia The Supreme Law Of The Country

Gambia’s iron fist dictator Yahya Jammeh has warned that his attempt to make the country a full Islamic State will soon be finalised with a Bill to be tabled before the National Assembly that will officially recognise Sharia as the “supreme law of The Gambia.”




 

Dictator Jammeh was speaking at the State Opening of the National Assembly on Thursday March 31st when he made the pronouncement. The dictator who is known for making good of his wild threats even if they defy logic and conscience, said the Islamization drive was in line with the popular wish of the majority of Gambians who want to live an Islamic way.

 

 

 

Disregarding every constitutional provisions that guarantee the secularity of The Gambian State through entrenched clauses of the constitution, Dictator Jammeh said there was no turning back on the drive to establish a just, equitable and progressive society in The Gambia through Islam and the Sharia law.




 

Surprisingly, just two days before his highly anticipated speech which was cancelled two weeks earlier in the last minutes for unexplained reasons, the dictator invited the governing body of all Christian denominations in The Gambia to the State House where the Vice President Mrs Isatou Njie Saidy dished out 2.3million Gambian Dalasis (about $70 000 cash) to them as a gift from the dictator himself.

 

 

 

The occasion to dish out cash to the Christian Council which was recorded live in the full glare of TV cameras is seen as a tacit attempt to push them into silence and submission over the Islamization Project being slowly implemented.




 

In what appeared to be the biggest blunder in his speech characterised by rambling and incoherence, the dictator condemned those who brand the dreaded ISIS Group as terrorists. The dictator was at pains as to why commentators in the media and Western governments could brand ISIS a terrorist group because they are Muslims “when the KKK in the United States of America and other skin head groups in Europe are being treated differently.”

 

 

 

At a time when terrorist groups are wrecking-havoc even in the Gambia’s backyard by staging daring attacks on hotels and other important public installations, Dictator Jammeh is busy denouncing efforts to contain the threats posed by the terror groups.




 

Just recently Senegal and a few other countries in West Africa have been warned by the US and its allies in the war against terror to put their forces on alert for eminent attacks on their soil. Mali, Burkina Faso and just recently Ivory Coast have all suffered devastating terrorist attacks where a large number of people lost their lives.

 

 

 

Currently there is an ECOWAS wide initiative to contain the risks associated with terrorism where member countries are joining their strengths together to share intelligence to contain the influence and threats posed by terror groups like ISIS and their sleeper cells in the region.

 

 

 

Although Dictator Jammeh in his incoherent speech said he was against what he called the nefarious activities of terrorist groups, many believe that this is just one of those deliberate schemes by Jammeh to pretend to be condemning something in public when in private, he supports it and in some cases even promote it to get to his perceived enemies.




 

Of particular concern here is the implication Dictator Jammeh’s Islamization Project will have on Senegal’s efforts to secure its borders against terrorists and their threats to the country. The Fatu Network has gathered that Senegal is one of the countries in the region that is on the hit list of the terror groups.

 

 

 

Many are worried that The Gambia with its weak security and intelligence capabilities to handle even the simplest of threats within its territory, could be used as both a breeding and hiding ground for sleeper cells to possibly lunch attack on Senegal and other countries in the region.

With Senegal on His Mind, President Yahya Jammeh’s Sharia Declaration Was an Open Invitation to Terrorist Groups!!!

When he spoke at the State Opening of Parliament on March 31, 2016, President Jammeh’s remarks did not disappoint once again – after all, this is a man that has made a name for himself in raising eyebrows and issuing threats meant to blackmail others.




 

Jammeh said many things, but of particular interest to observers was his statement in which he declared that Sharia will be implemented as the law of The Gambia and proceeded to admonish the Western countries for calling ISIS, Boko Haram and other terrorist organizations Islamic terrorists while not calling the KKK in the United States Christian terrorists. This; according the observers is not just mere words of a mad man but beneath may lie a very insidious plot meant to destabilize Gambia’s neighbor, Senegal which has recently taken a more hardline position against his many years of belligerence towards her.

 

 

 

Fatu Network reached out to insiders in the regime and security experts to shed light on this declaration and criticism of the West. The answers received are both troubling and dangerous to say the least – observers are right – Jammeh was giving an open invitation to the terror groups that have been threatening to strike Senegal after successful attacks in Mali, Ivory Coast, Burkina Faso, and Nigeria. According to these people, Jammeh has become miffed at the ongoing border closure crisis between Gambia and Senegal, and particularly Senegal’s refusal to negotiate after several advances from him, and this is his effort to show the bigger neighbor that she either come to the negotiating table or he (Jammeh) will be sure to unleash a more deadly enemy on her.




 

Yahya’s latest move to blackmail Senegal would be considered nothing new except for the scale of brutality he is willing to instigate against Senegal – he has always used the Casamance rebellion as a scarecrow when it comes to his dealings with Senegal. We have witnessed instance after instance in which he would supply guns and ammunition to those rebels fighting for autonomy in Southern Senegal and encouraging them to intensify the war as a means to force Senegal to succumb to his demands because he has presented himself as the only one able to calm the tensions. This bargaining strategy finally lost its value since when Senegal was able to acquire a peaceful settlement with the rebels.

 

 

 

Observers are now saying this act by Yahya amounts to a declaration of war against Senegal, and they insist that the Senegalese must not take this very lightly because the catastrophe that will ensue could have devastating consequences for that country’s economy, not to mention loss of human life.




Fatu Network is closely monitoring and will report accordingly.

UDP Congress In Basse: Lawyer Darboe Calls For Collective Action To End Tyranny In The Gambia

 

The Leader of the opposition United Democratic Party, Lawyer Ousainou Darboe has called for collective, concerted action to end the dictatorship that has shed enough blood, inflicted untold suffering and misery on ordinary people through tortures and unexplained disappearances, economic stagnation and subjugation. Lawyer Darboe was speaking in Basse at the start of the opening of his party congress.

 
Below is the full text of Lawyer Darboe’s speech:

 

Mr. National President of the UDP, members of Central Committee, members of National Executive, representatives of Area Committees, representatives of sister political parties, ladies and gentlemen, it is with great honour and pleasure that I address you all on the opening day of our party congress. A lot has happened to our party and to the country since our last congress in Soma and I would like to express my gratitude to all of you here present, and all others who have not been able to come yet wish they could be with us, for your devotion and dedication to the party. This year is election year and this gives our congress added importance. We look forward therefore to discuss not only the abysmal state of our country but we will together review the activities of the party and trace the way forward to the forthcoming elections and beyond. The congress will decide the team who would be entrusted with the running of the party at all levels for the next two years.

 

 

 

It is in the nature of our very existence as humans that from time to time, friends, colleagues and relatives leave us permanently in accordance with Allah’s will. This party has had its share of these tragic departures and with all representatives of our membership present here in Basse, we will remember them and pray for them as we have always done since they left us. WE remember some who were officials at the last congress – Alhaji Karamo Fatty Chairman North Bank Region Area Committee, Mustapha Joof, Chairman Banjul Area Committee, Sana Bojang, Chairman West Coast Region Area Committee, Baba Touray, Secretary Elders Committee, Momodou Lamin Shyngle Nyassi, National Organizing Secretary and the veritable face of our struggle, Boro Suso, Senior Executive Member, Alhaji Suntou Darboe, Chairman Upper Niumi Constituency, Babanding KK Daffeh Former National Assembly Member, Kiang Central Modou Jallow, Secretary Banjul Committee. They join scores of our devoted and dedicated members and officials who have passed away since the inception of our party. Let us pray for all of them.




 

The demise of some of our indefatigable officials has been trying and unfortunate but we will not be daunted in our resolve to continue the struggle to which these people and many more in the party have devoted their entire lives. We will therefore rededicate ourselves to continue executing our mission to liberate The Gambia.

 

 

 

The situation of our country is deplorable. This is due to the misguided policies of the Jammeh administration that continues to wreak havoc on the population. Prices of commodities, particularly our daily necessities, have gone up and this has not been accompanied by a commensurate rise in salaries and other income. As a result, the level of poverty has risen to the chagrin desolation of the average Gambian. The 2016 budget has seen unjustified increase in government expenditure, particularly in defence and office of the President whilst the social services such as health, education and agriculture benefited from meagre increases.




The inability of the Jammeh administration to make satisfactory arrangements for the equitable and timely purchase of the groundnut produce, the lack of other production avenues for farmers, the non-existence of employment opportunities for youths, the gradual collapse of our private sector, the non-existence of viable small and medium scale enterprises, have all impoverished the country and make life extremely difficult for the average person.

 

 

 

Admittedly, we have learnt to live with the vicissitudes of politics but when outlandish developments are experienced within the body politic of the nation, there is absolute cause for alarm. The canker-worms that are crawling from within the body politic of this nation risk embroiling us all in a quagmire of constitutional and political crisis of proportions hitherto unknown. The incessant conflicts with Senegal, leading to the devastating border closure is not only disturbing but disastrous for our already tattered economy.




 

In December 2015 as the Christian community was preparing to celebrate the birth of Christ, the entire country, indeed the whole world was hit by President Jammeh’s declaration of the country as an Islamic State. The Gambia has always been a unique society whose citizens do not only believe in the values of peace, tolerance, justice and good neighbourliness but practice what they believe in without any hindrance. We have always been an example of inter religious harmony worthy of emulation. It is therefore a matter of regret that the President of The Gambia who took the oath to protect and defend the constitution of The Gambia and other laws will declare Gambia as an Islamic state. The secular status of The Gambia is not only spelt out in our Constitution but ensconced deeply in our way of life long before we became a Nation.

 

 

The President’s anti-religious pluralism declaration was made in the guise to fight imperialism but this is no justification for disturbing the peace and harmony built up in our country for centuries. This is a sinister attempt to distract the Gambian people from the real problems that they face daily. Problems such as the skyrocketing prices, collapsing economy, inadequate health service, poor education standard, mass exodus of youths to Europe by the back way, threats to the independence of the judiciary and dismissal of public servants on executive directives.




 

Mr. President, comrades 2016 is a defining year for The Gambia. It marks over two decades of misrule. It is also the year in which the fourth cycle of elections in the Second Republic will be held. Our party, more than any other opposition party, has had more trials and tribulations. We have suffered arbitrary arrests, detentions, imprisonment, disappearance and death. The party has however always been resilient and has always emerged from these trials and tribulations fortified and more determined.




 

Since we are a grassroots party, present even in the smallest hamlet of this country, we have constantly engaged in and embarked upon permanent dialogue with the people. The Women’s Wing and the Youth Wing have been exceptionally active over the years and they deserve our gratitude and encouragement. The Youth Wing, under the dynamic leadership of Lamin Darboe, has organised dozens of very successful sensitisation tours throughout the length and breadth of the country. With him as leader of the Youth Wing he has shown the whole world that despite his visual impairment, one can with determination and sense of purpose, achieve wonders. We thank Lamin and team for a wonderful job. They have been the vanguard of the party’s political education and sensitisation.

 

 

 

It is during these trips that new members are recruited and hundreds of these are former members of the ruling party. WE welcome them all to the party of peace, justice and progress. We have no doubt that they have seen the difference between the two parties like night and day.The Youth Wing also satisfactorily spearheaded our participation in the recent voter registration exercise.




 

In April 2015 an event took place in Fass Ngagga Choye that brought an end to the unfair treatment our party receive from the Police in our requests for permits to use a public address system at rallies and other public meetings. A countrywide caravan led by members of the National Executive, including myself, was stopped at Fass Ngagga Choye village in Lower Niumi ostensibly because no permit was granted. The most remarkable standoff in the history the Second Republic took place. At the end of 4 days, the Police issued the permit and the tour continued. The Fass Njagga Choye standoff proved that with the determination and steadfastness, we can and will surmount all hurdles and obstacles put in our way to obstruct our efforts to meet and talk to the people of this nation. The standoff exposed the true nature of the United Democratic Party. The members of the UDP are not timid; they respect law and authority but fear no one whatever that person’s position is in the country.

 

 

 

At the international level, the Party has had its presence registered at various meetings in Africa, Europe and South America.These meetings were held under the auspices of the Socialist International, along with its affiliated Youth wing – the International Union of Socialist Youths.




 

In March 2015, I led a delegation to attend the very successful meeting of SI Africa Committee in Mali. The meeting was hosted by the Malian party member of SI – the ADEMA, and it brought together various socialist and social democratic parties in Africa. The UDP delegation, apart from participating fully in the deliberations, was able to consolidate relations with sister SI members and exchanged experiences particularly those parties that are, like the UDP, in opposition in their respective countries.

 

 

 

Earlier this year, I made a private visit to the UK and this provided me the opportunity to meet with officials of our counterpart party. I had discussions with the secretary general of the Socialist International, whose headquarters is in London. Several public meetings were organised by the UK Chapter of the UDP and I spoke to a large group of Gambians and non Gambians in Birmingham. Some of the attendees travelled from London, Coventry, Manchester and Nottingham. The meeting was very successful and I believe that the participants were better informed of the situation in our country and the state of politics in readiness for the impending elections.




 

With the widespread use of the internet and the media, particularly electronic – online newspapers and radios, have become easy to access and what is happening in the Gambia now becomes international information in minutes. Gambians have not lagged behind in following what is happening in their country and more and more of them are able to be making informed opinions and take decisions regarding their party and their country.

 

 

 

Our relations with our sister opposition parties have been neither up nor down. We have always nurtured friendly and respectful relations with each other but we have never been able to move to the desired plane of coming together to confront a common adversary. The failure of the parties for not coming together is not due to the lack of efforts to do so.

 

 

 

Mr. President, with the support and encouragement of the National Executive, I suggested to my colleagues the leaders of the other opposition parties the holding of joint rallies which I named GUC i.e. Gambians United for Change together with PPP and GMC. The GUC successfully organized rallies at the buffer zone and in Brikama.




 

Our party is the only party which since its inception has always participated in all the elections in alliance with other parties. Our record therefore is glaring for all to see. In the past every effort undertaken by the party to form a united front based on the true and tried principles of coalition building has fallen short on account of recalcitrance and intrigue from fringe politicians with few supporters but great capacity to feed cynicism and drive up apathy as less discerning citizens who just want to see a unified opposition lump all the parties together and blame them for what they perceive as politicians deliberately letting the country down. On the other hand, UDP as the largest opposition party has been looked upon by its membership and a preponderance of the population both within and outside of the country to bring together the other parties opposed to the regime to present a united front. WE will continue to spare no effort to explore all possibilities of working together to achieve our sacred objective. However, faced with a tyranny that is determined to use every means to thwart the capacity of the Gambian people to freely elect their leaders, the UDP will not be delayed by dysfunctional and unreliable allies in the opposition. Our country increasingly facing an existential threat, the UDP will therefore, have no recourse but to chart a clear and achievable course that directly mobilizes all Gambians who wish to act affirmatively to end dictatorship.

 

 

 

Everybody knows that our party has the capacity to assert a muscular and defiant political strategy that can galvanize the whole nation which by all measure, want regime change. We will succeed if we make our intentions clear to the Gambian people, inspire them on the need for shared sacrifice to save the land of our ancestors from the clutches of this vile regime that has brought so much pain and misery to far too many households. Therefore our party because of its numerical strength, tested and proven over four generations of elections, its commitment to the principles and values of democracy and considering the very precarious state in which our country finds itself, has taken it upon itself to lead the struggle to rid this country of tyrannical rule. If we don’t, we will face the greater danger of conceding our country to merciless tyrant who has shed the blood and tears of our people for more than two decades and who is hell bent on perpetuating himself in power.




 

Mr. President, in the 2012, the UDP with five political parties did not participate in the National Assembly Elections held that year. UDP’s non participation in the 2012 elections was due to the refusal of the Independent Electoral Commission to reschedule the elections and allow time for all stakeholders to discuss the concerns raised by the opposition parties. The IEC’s refusal to reschedule the elections was based on the reason that the demands jointly made by the opposition parties was not made timely. Drawing experience from the IEC’s reaction to the joint opposition demands, the UDP invited all opposition parties to a meeting to examine the Elections Act and the provisions of the constitution that affect the conduct of elections and come out with a set of proposals and demands for consideration and implementation by the relevant authorities. My colleagues, leaders of the other opposition parties responded positively to the invitation and accorded me the honour of coordinating the activities of what has now come to be known as the G6 as far as electoral reforms matters are concerned. They demonstrated their absolute commitment to the creation of a level playing field, transparent, free, fair and credible elections. Let me acknowledge the leadership qualities shown throughout our discussions.

 

 

 

Finally let me say this.Today the vast majority of the Gambian people have now mustered courage and are speaking out openly against a government that has institutionalized corruption; betrayed the confidence of its people; continues to use deception to divide people through narrow fault lines of tribe and religion; and continually ignoring the plight of our farmers and youths. For the past year, the UDP has reorganized and started fruitful engagement with the Gambian people. As a result, we have now succeeded in overcoming the “fear syndrome” that has encompassed the life of ordinary Gambians for a long time.




 

The President and his party are indeed highly shaken by a rejuvenated UDP. The Gambian opposition are not demanding anything other than a free, fair and credible electoral process. With the obnoxious amendments recently passed by the APRC dominated National Assembly, President Jammeh has already, as he had done in the past, stacked the cards in his favour. We shall nonetheless continue our struggle to defeat him in the next polls. Gambians are now determined to put an end to a system that allows its leaders to perpetuate their autocratic rule through fraudulent and sham elections. We are therefore putting on notice the international community and indeed member countries of ECOWAS and AU that we will not accept any fraudulent results in the elections

 

 

 

Comrades, I wish to express my gratitude for the constant support that you have given me and the Party in the past years, particularly in face of some of the most trying times ever experienced under the Jammeh administration. Admittedly, we have learnt to live with the vicissitudes of politics. But these must not and will not derail us in our determination to keep this country clear off the cankerworms of rash, unguarded utterances and decisions that are crawling from within the body politic of this nation risk embroiling us all in quagmire of constitutional, and political and international crisis of proportions hitherto unknown in this country since Independence in 1965. We have to be prepared to put a stop to this by making sure that the Jammeh and the APRC are not given another term in office.

 

 

 

I would like to thank our hosts the Upper River Region Committee for preparing and organising this important encounter. URR has always been in the forefront of our party’s activities and what I am able to see already shows that they are living to that reputation.




 

Mr. Chairman, fellow delegates, let me thank all of you present today for making the trip to Basse in the service of your party and your country. We all look forward to a very successful congress.

Long live the UDP
Long live the Gambia.

“It behooves us as opposition to come together as one and try to get rid of this despotic regime” Says Inter-Party Committee on Opposition Unification as it hosts a historic Press Conference!!!

The TANGO hall in Kanifing was on this Tuesday, March 29, 2016 the scene of a historic Press Conference hosted by a group calling itself the Inter-Party Committee on Opposition Unification. The body according to the organizers, was formed not to compete with the ongoing efforts of the opposition parties but rather to complement the efforts of the Group of 6 (G-6 for short, was formed by the 6 main opposition parties in the country to address the unleveled election playing field) on the issue of Electoral Reform. As part of this agenda, the group will push to get the leaders “united as one opposition family.”




 

In his opening remarks, one Mr. Singhateh, in an emotional plea, said people have lost hope in the way The Gambia is being ruled by the APRC Party under the leadership of President Yahya Jammeh, and therefore “it behooves us as opposition to come together as one and try to get rid of this despotic regime.” He reminded the attendees, local, and international press that the tactics being used to suppress and oppress Gambians are on the lips of everyone, that the quest for genuine democracy are also being discussed everywhere, how we have witnessed amendments; from the electoral Acts passed through Parliament which are neither genuine nor accommodating, and in the process denying even The Gambia citizens in the Diaspora their right to choose their leaders. The APRC regime, he continues, is “manipulating and clinging to power by whatever means it takes.” The Inter-Party Committee according to him is taking a bottom-up approach to how it will pursue its agenda and urged the people to give support. This, he insists is the way of the grassroots coming together so as to not leave the “mammoth task” of unity pursuance to the leaders alone, but help them achieve that objective through complementing. So as not to create any confusion, he was quick to caution that this is not an effort to create a coalition or selecting a flagbearer, but rather to get the party supporters and sympathizers to come together to achieve the common objectives.




 

Before the Secretary General, Musa Sonko read the Press Statement of the group, UDP youth leader, Solo Sandeng was quick to butt in to stress the last remark made by Singhateh regarding choosing a flagbearer. He firmly stated that this effort is simply to complement the efforts of the G-6, not to form a coalition but “coming together to fight the bad laws.”

 

 

During his turn, Secretary General Sonko started by reminding all that a united front is needed to defeat Jammeh at the polls, and that the uneven playing field was created to stifle the opposition at the polls, it is therefore important the opposition demonstrate their firm stance on individual liberty. He said this group consists of supporters and sympathizers of UDP, NRP, NDAM, PPP, GPDP, GMC, GPD, and independent Gambians and urged all to put country first before any party. “No single Party can defeat the APRC at the polls” he emphasized. Sonko’s particular clarion calls to the population saying “respond to destiny calling”, “wake up from slumber and cast away our fear” were duly noted by observers who say this could prove to be a turning point in this terrorized country’s political history.




 

The group’s structures according Sonko, are as follows: Central Committee: 5 members per party. Coordinating Committee: 3 representatives from each party. Finance and Fundraising: 5 representatives from each party. Mediation and Advisory: 2 representatives from each party. Regional Sub Committee: 3 representatives from each party. Stressing that Electoral Reform and Electoral Act 2015 is the most important agenda of the body – dealing with all fraudulent practices by the APRC Party, teams will be dispatched around the country to sensitive the Gambians. Alternative moves if electoral reform is not achieved are all in place to strengthen the opposition resolve – this group is willing to among other measures, go to court and stage street protests if it comes to it.




 

This new initiative according to observers, has given hope to many Gambians who have been waiting for a more determined approached to end tyranny in The Gambia. The hope is that if partisanship doesn’t rear its ugly head, this group could finally prove to be the answer to all the years of prayers of this traumatized population. The world is watching and history is recording.

A Staff Member of Ministry of Fisheries Arrested for Giving True Account of Number of Trawlers the Department Owns!!!!

Imagine being asked to write a report on the assets your Ministry owns, and when you write true account of it, you get arrested because you were not supposed to state the facts – no, this is not a comedy script, and yes; indeed this happened in the Gambia.




 

So what happened? Ebou Mass Mbye, a 30-year veteran of the Ministry of Fisheries was arrested and taken to the National Intelligence Agency (NIA) last week for writing a report that said the Ministry owns 85 fishing trawlers. This is because the Director of the Ministry said he saw only 30 trawlers. So where are the rest of the boats? One would assume that instead of arresting an innocent man, a finding would be made as to whether 85 trawlers actually exist or whether Mr. Mbye is just inflating the numbers. What interest Mbye will have in inflating the numbers we don’t know, but we can safely say that there are fishing trawlers being used by the navy that are raking in millions of dollars a year, all of which go into President Yahya Jammeh’s account, when those boats were donated to the Gambia government. Could these be the trawlers the Director is not accounting for?




 

It could be recalled that few weeks ago, reports were made by the Gambia government in which it among other things accusations against a former Naval Officer, Momodou Badjie of embezzling funds belonging to the navy and urging the public to provide any information regarding his whereabouts. Turns out, Badjie had already absconded safely to Senegal. Upon further investigation, Fatu Network uncovered a scheme in which Jammeh had for years forced Lieutenant Badjie and his junior officers to go fishing, using the donated boats that he at that point claim as his, paid them with tax payer money, and putting the proceeds in his (Jammeh’s) own account. These funds are what the government claims are stolen – obviously, the truth is a whole different story. Other Navy staffs have since been arrested too.




 

In the meantime, Mass Mbye was taken to court on Thursday, March 24, 2016, bail was set at D2,000,000.00 ($50,000) against which he put up his home and was released on Friday. He is expected to report back to court this Tuesday, March 29.




 

Fatu Network will continue the monitoring of the case, especially as it relates to the ongoing arrests at the Navy.

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