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GAMBIAN WOMEN FIGHT OVER JAMMEH’S CHICKEN CHANGE AS HE EMPLOYS YET ANOTHER TRICK TO BAMBOOZLE THEM!!! SAM SARR BOUNCES BACK!!!

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Sources have confirmed that there is a fight over money given to the Lord Mayor of KMC, Yankuba Colley to distribute to women accompanying The Gambian Dictator on his nationwide Agricultural tour. According to information reaching The Fatu Radio news desk, the money was provided to women groups by President Jammeh after he pledged to support and empower them. The Gambian President was speaking in The Central River Region where he hailed Gambian women for their loyalty and honesty to him and his administration.

 An angry ‘Yay Compin’ disclosed that she does not believe that Mayor Yankuba Colley declared the whole amount as eight hundred Dalasis for each of them is too small an amount. “I know it’s a whole lot of us here, but I am sure that the President gave the Mayor much more than that, he should give us the entire amount” She said.

A political analyst based in Banjul, expressed disappointment that with the dire economic situation Gambians are faced with, coupled with human rights abuses by one of Africa’s most repressive leaders, fighting over his money seems to be the only preoccupation of that group of women. “Our mothers and sisters should know how valuable they are in the socio economic development of this nation and not let Jammeh play with them like this using a token sum of money” He opined. “If he has respect for Gambian women, why didn’t he get a Gambian wife?” He queried. He added that Jammeh has no respect for Gambian women and that he only uses them for his selfish interest.

In what was considered by observers as yet another scheme to bamboozle Gambian women, Jammeh renamed the Jarra Soma-Basse highway Queen Y2J, saying he named it after Gambian women in general and a particular woman whose name he will not disclose. The 191km road was funded by The European Union at a tune of €22 million which Jammeh did not bother to disclose at the renaming.

In other news, sources have confirmed that former army commander, Samsideen Sarr, who is also accompanying The President on his tour has been appointed as deputy to Momodou Tangara, The Gambia’s Permanent Representative to The United Nations in New York. “Sarr has finally gotten what he is looking for, this is why he came all the way to join Jammeh on his tour, just for a job.  But he will regret it just like others before him” a source said.

TRAVEL DETAILS OF THE GAMBIAN FIRST LADY ZINEB JAMMEH’S 10 DAY PRIVATE VISIT TO NYC IN FEBRUARY

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The Facts about Gambia:

  • 165 out 187 poorest countries
  •    Reports have it that in 2014, over 60 Percent of the population lived in abject poverty.

 

  • First Lady Zineb Jammeh travels with a delegation of over twenty people on PRIVATE trips including a MANICURIST when the average Gambian lives on less than a dollar a day.

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Gambian President Says He Will Slit Gay Men’s Throats in Public Speech

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The Gambia’s notorious dictator Yahya Jammeh recently intensified his anti-homosexual rhetoric, threatening to slit the throats of gay men living in the small West African nation while seeming to claim that the West could do nothing to stop him, according to a translation of a speech he made last week on a nationwide agricultural tour.

The 49-year-old president, who has ruled the country since 1994, was speaking during a tour stop last week in the country’s North Bank Region when he delivered his latest inflammatory comments.

“If you do it [in the Gambia] I will slit your throat — if you are a man and want to marry another man in this country and we catch you, no one will ever set eyes on you again, and no white person can do anything about it,” he said in the Wolof language to a crowd in the town of Farafeni as he spoke about fostering a healthy atmosphere for the country’s youth.

Fatu Camara, a Gambian journalist and former press secretary to Jammeh who fled the Gambia in 2013 to escape sedition charges against her, told VICE News that the reference to white people was likely a nod to Western leaders who have been critical of the country’s harsh policies and poor track record when it comes to gay rights.

The United States and the European Union have both slashed aid to the country in the last year, citing general concerns over continued human rights abuses. Camara believes that Jammeh’s remarks are closely linked to these developments, explaining that the leader has spun the international funding cuts as an affront to the country’s religious values that is directly related to its anti-homosexuality laws — not to the reports of widespread human rights abuses such as prison torture, disappearances, and the persecution of political opponents. An estimated 95 percent of the Gambia’s population is Muslim, and Camara noted that funding from other Muslim countries has continued despite the human rights concerns.

Related: Gambian Coup Plotters Blackmail Military Accomplices to ‘Complete Mission’ to Overthrow Yahya Jammeh

The Gambia’s Foreign Minister Neneh MacDouall-Gaye, a Gambian who lived in the US until her appointment in January, said at an EU event this weekend that the country’s government would observe international laws, but would continue to protect religious beliefs and traditions.

“If you read in between the lines, the foreign minister is also trying to say, ‘We are not going to accept homosexuality,’ ” Camara said. “The president already made the Gambians believe that the reason the EU cut funding to him is because of homosexuality.”

These are just the latest hostile remarks Jammeh has made about homosexuality as the dictator seeks to maintain his hold on power, which was jeopardized by an attempted coup while he was out of the country on December 30. Last year, in a speech given on the anniversary of his country’s independence, Jammeh compared gay people to vermin that should be fought like malaria-causing mosquitos. US Secretary of State John Kerry said at the time that he was “deeply troubled” by this rhetoric. In 2008, he threatened to cut off the heads of gays found in the Gambia.

Last September, the country made headlines when its government approved legislation qualifying gay acts as crimes of “aggravated homosexuality” and punishable by life in prison. Homosexuality has long been illegal in the country — a popular tourist destination on the Atlantic coast that is surrounded by Senegal on three of its four sides — with homosexual acts previously carrying maximum sentences of 14 years. The 2014 bill garnered international outcry, but Jammeh dismissed the criticism and signed the bill into law the following October.

The EU cut off $14.5 million in aid to the Gambia just weeks later, citing systematic human rights abuses as members of the gay community reportedly fled to nearby countries like Senegal to avoid persecution. Similarly, the White House expressed deep concern over continued reports of human rights abuses, particularly the targeting of individuals for their perceived sexual orientation.

Related: Gambian President Returns Home Amid Fears of Brutal Backlash After Foiled Coup

“We remain concerned about ongoing reports of forced disappearances and arbitrary arrests, including of journalists, human rights advocates, and civil servants, as well as continued calls by senior officials for the persecution of members of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender community,” White House Spokesperson Bernadette Meehansaid in a statement in December, shortly before the government cut the Gambia out of the African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA), a long-standing regional trade agreement.

Jeffrey Smith, an advocacy officer with Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights, told VICE News that a struggling economy and a need to bolster public support are likely motivating Jammeh’s renewed anti-gay vitriol. The leader faces national elections in 2016, and while a win is all but guaranteed, the country’s opposition has been notably active in the North Bank Region in recent weeks.

“There is definitely a sinister motive behind President Jammeh’s repugnant rhetoric,” Smith said. “While he has undoubtedly proven to be a virulently homophobic individual, his comments are also meant to divert attention from Gambia’s struggling economy, rising inequality, and the country’s decreasing levels of foreign investment.”

The Gambia is one of 38 countries across Africa where homosexuality is illegal, and the small nation of less than 2 million people has not gone soft on suspected gay citizens and activists. In November alone, eight people — including women and a 17-year-old boy  — were arrested during a government crackdown on homosexuality. The detainees were taken to the headquarters of the feared National Intelligence Agency, where they were told that a device would be inserted into their vagina or anus in order to determine their sexual orientation if they did not confess to being gay,according to Amnesty International.

Some of those arrested in last year’s anti-gay operation were reportedly disappeared for weeks without any communication or access to a lawyer. Camara said that three men are still behind bars awaiting trial, unable to pay the $50,000 bail set for their release, adding that as part of their punishment the men are forced to study the Quran, pray five times a day, and are told that they must get married. Their lawyer is currently trying to negotiate their bail.

Related: US Charges Two Men Over Failed Gambian Coup

Both Smith and Camara called on the US government and other world powers to take action against Jammeh in the face of continued human rights abuses. While the government did remove the Gambia from AGOA, activists and Gambian diaspora members have been pushing for strict sanctions against the dictator, particularly on personal bank accounts to curb spending abroad, considering that Jammeh owns a house in Maryland and his daughter attends college in the US.

“This latest example should both lend credence to what human rights activists have been saying for the past two decades, as well as add momentum to the growing chorus of those calling for visa bans and travel restrictions against President Jammeh,” Smith said.

Follow Kayla Ruble on Twitter: @RubleKB

LIST OF DELEGATES ACCOMPANYING GAMBIAN PRESIDENT YAHYA JAMMEH ON HIS NATIONWIDE AGRICULTURAL TOUR

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Yahya Jammeh’s delegation has over 20 musical groups, 100 members of The Green Youths, women groups and party militants. Below we produce the whole list.

 DELEGATES ACCOMPANYING HIS EXCELLENCY SHEIKH PROFESSOR ALHAJI DR. YAHYA A.J.J. JAMMEH ON THE DIALOGUE WITH THE PEOPLE’S TOUR – 4th-20th MAY 2015

MINISTERS

Secretary General-Minister Presidential Affairs & Minister of Civil Services

  1. Speaker of the National Assembly
  2. Minister of Lands & Regional Government
  3. Minister of Health & Social Welfare
  4. Minister of Basic & Secondary Education
  5. Minister of Works, Construction, Infrastructure &National Assembly Matters
  6. Minister of Forestry, Environment, Parks & Wild Life
  7. Minister of Interior
  8. Minister of Agriculture
  9. President Office / Rep.
  10. National Mobilizer
  11. Chief Of Protocol

  p  PERMANENT SECRETARIES

13   Permanent Secretary – Ministry of Land& Regional Government

14   Permanent Secretary – Ministry of Fisheries

  1. Permanent Secretary – Ministry of Agriculture

Permanent Secretary – Ministry of Youth & Sports

Permanent Secretary – Ministry of Defence

Permanent Secretary – Ministry of Energy

  1. Permanent Secretary – Ministry of Interior
  2. Permanent Secretary – Minister of Forestry, Environment, Parks & Wild Life
  3. Permanent Secretaries – 2 Permanent Secretaries Office of The President and 2 Deputy Permanent Secretaries

PARASTATIALS

  1. Managing Director – S.S.H.F.C
  2. Managing Director – G.P.A with 3 others
  3. Managing Director – GAMTEL
  4. Managing Director – Gambia Road Authority
  5. Managing Director – NAWEC
  6. Director General – G.R.T.S
  7. Director of Health
  8. Director of Youths
  9. Director of Fisheries
  10. Directors of Forestry , Environment, Parks& Wild Life
  11. Executive Director – Women’s Bureau
  12. Director – Food Safety & Quality Authority
  13. Director of Ship Yard
  14. C.E.O Jammeh Foundation
  15. National Food Security Cooperation
  16. Director, Food Safety and Quality Authority (FSQA)

APRC SECRETARIAT

  1. Administrative Secretary 1
  2. National Women Mobilizer
  3. National Youth Mobilizer
  4. Deputy National Mobilizer
  5. Secretary & Other 4 Staff

SERVICE CHIEFS

  1. Chief of Defence Staff
  2. Inspector General of Police
  3. Director General of N.I.A
  4. Executive Director – NDEA
  5. Brig. General, Inspector General, GAF
  6. Director General – Immigration
  7. Director General of Prisons
  8. Chief Fire Officer
  9. President’s Security Team

APRC MILITANTS

  1. Green Youths – 100
  2. KMC Mobilization Committee – 25
  3. Jeck Society – Banjul – 25
  4. Serra Dima – 25
  5. Jammeh Sister’s – 25
  6. Jammeh Foundation – 25
  7. Jammeh Family – 25
  8. Governor Sister’s – 25
  9. HE’s Mum Delegation – 51
  10. Presidential Medical Team – 10
  11. National Youth’s Coordinating Committee – 25
  12. Kunyell Ku Jamat – 25
  13. Others – 50

YAI COMPINS

  1. West Coast Region – 50
  2. Kanifing Municipality – 50
  3. Banjul – 30

STATE HOUSE MOSQUE COMMITTEE

62-66. President – Supreme Islamic Council & 4 others

SOUND SYSTEM TEAM

  1. Mr. Sulayman Gassama

68.Mr.Junkung Tunkara

69.Mr. Mustapha Kujabi with 9 others

PA SYSTEM

  1. Mr. Essa Sarr
  2. Mr. Lamin Jammeh
  3. Mr. Alieu Njie
  4. Mr. Famara Colley
  5. Mr. Njang Joof
  6. Mr. Lamin Saidy

TELEPHONE SYSTEM TEAM

  1. Mr. Charles Roberts (Taflanda)
  2. Mr. Malick Sey

PRESIDENT’S PERSONAL PHYSICIAN, DOCTOR

  1. Dr. Maria & Three Others

STATE HOUSE PRESS

  1. Director of Press
  2. Mr. Sanjung Fatty
  3. Mr. Ebou Taru Njie

PREIDENTIAL HOUSEHOLD

  1. Female – 10
  2. Male – 6

GRTS – RADIO & T.V CREW

20 – Members

INTERPRETERS / ENTERTAINER

  1. a) Momodou Joof
  2. b) Jali Kebba Suso
  3. c) Pa Sainey Jallow
  4. d) Mustapha Saine

OTHERS

  1. a) Majority Leader – National Assembly & National Assembly Members
  2. b) Desk Officer
  3. c) The Paramount Chief
  4. d) Fatoumatta Jahumpa Ceesay
  5. e) Former National Assembly Members – 5
  6. f) Tumbul Sanneh
  7. g) Ansumana Jammeh (PTP)
  8. h) President’s Badge Mates
  9. i) SH Female Workers Association
  10. j) The Gambia Women Federation France Chapter
  11. k) Banjul Mandinka Society – 7
  12. l) Officers Wives Association
  13. m) Solider Wives Association
  14. n) Interior Wives Association
  15. o) Immigration Wives Association
  16. p) Women Federation – 20
  17. q) Area C0uncillors – 10
  18. r) One Love APRC – 10

CULTURAL GROUPS

  1. a) Kebakel
  2. b) Keyen Kalung
  3. c) Sediou Band
  4. d) Jaliba Kuyateh
  5. e) Baati Yaye
  6. f) Jali Kebba Suso
  7. g) Asicko Group North Bank Region (Babili Mansa )
  8. h) Sambou Suso Band
  9. i) Ashombi Bojang Group
  10. j) Ansumana Jammeh Group
  11. k) Oslo Group
  12. l) Kawanorr Isatou Bojang Group
  13. m) Chong Esil Group
  14. n) Scout Band
  15. o) Group Ramou Sabally
  16. p) Nenneh Jali Suso Band
  17. q) Tigan Jaith Coordinator
  18. r) Mam Partnership Dane Troupe ( MAM KAMAJOR )
  19. s) Army Band
  20. t) Humanity Stars
  21. u) Pa Bobo Jobarteh
  22. v) Agwa Kanyaleng Group
  23. w) Rappers – 28
  24. x) Nyako Manjang
  25. y) Foni Brefet Sibing Kafo
  26. z) Sakalanba – Soma Kafo

MAINTENANCE TEAM – STATEHOUSE

  1. a) Baboucarr Badjie
  2. b) Njanga Njie

      ———————-

     ———————–

WEBSITE TEAM

  1. a) Miss Mamie Sarr
  2. b) ————————
  3. c) ————————-

PRIVATE MEDIA

  1. a) ———————-
  2. b) ———————–
  3. c) ————————-
  4. d) ————————–

 

DSTV Technician 

——————

ADVANCE TEAM

Advance Commander / Security – (—————- )

Protocol Officers – (——————-

The Foreign Exchange Rate Crisis and the Impact on Gambians at Home and Diaspora.

Once again, Gambians are greeted with dumbfounded news that major currency values will be pegged and depreciated against the Dalasi through a directive from the Office of the President. The directive, as usual, came-in without warning or engagement with the business sector as expected of any responsible government.

The shock on both businesses and the Gambian diaspora is unimaginably devastating with all the dare consequences on the economy. As of Friday, 1st May, banks were selling £1 at D80, the US1 at D52 and 1Euro at D60.

But since the untimely decision by the Office of the President, banks and money transfer bureaus are forced to sell US Dollars at $1 at D35, £1 at D50 and 1 Euro at D40.
By rough estimate, as from the date of this rash, manipulative, and unwise presidential decision, financial services dealing in foreign currency business are making a loss of D17 per $1, D30 per £1 and D20 per 1 Euro. The loss is within the conversation rates and the transfer fees commission. The loss is further in two fold, the banks lose and the Forex bureaus also lose.

It is against business sense to sell commodities at below the cost price. Forex bureaus, local Gambian banks, Western union, Money Gram, RIA all took Dollars, Pound sterling, Euros from customers at the market price up to the 2 of May, after which period, the ‘government directives’ came into force, instructing banks to buy or sell the foreign currencies at below the market rate.

This is the causes of the serious loses to all players. Within the larger context of cumulative shock and impact, Gambian money transfer bureaus operating in U.K, and other parts of Europe and America are expected to make operational loses of not less than D100million.
It has to be noted that The Gambia economy under the present regime is in a worst situation than it had ever been in her modern history. The standard of living and the purchasing power of the average citizen has declined significantly as a result of the seemingly unstoppable high inflation affecting every sector of the economy. The most noticeable hope for Gambians inside the Gambia is the remittances sent in by diaspora Gambians.

However since the Presidential decision to artificially peg the Dalasi against major international currencies, diaspora Gambians are now forced to send in more funds as financial aid to compensate for the differences between the old exchange rate and the new artificial rate set by the President.

The UDP sees this as yet another deliberate decision by the Executive to manipulate the economy and artificially fix prices as a veneer to cover-up the APRC government’s failed economic policies that have given rise to the unprecedented economic woes the country currently faces.
The UDP strongly condemns this latest interference in the management and the regulation of the markets. It is a serious violation of trust and confidence Gambian people bestowed on their government.
As a party, we sympathise with the Gambian people especially our hard working diasporas who have to adjust at the expense of their pauses and family comfort, to make room for this callous, and unplanned decision by the President to unilaterally appreciate the dalasi against major international currencies.

The combine impact this sudden and drastic tinkering with the exchange rates will cause to the economy is enamours. It will lead to reduced net inflow of foreign exchange to the country, some financial service particularly foreign exchange bureaus will have to lay-off staff, some may default in rent payments, and more seriously, Gambian businesses will eventually lose out because ultimately, with the confusing signal the government is sending out, it may be difficult to get Bank Guarantees and Letters of Credit (LCs) to proof their credit worthiness to their overseas business partners.

The United Democratic Party recommends that, the best way to regulate the exchange rates is to have a stage by stage or incremental appreciation of the value of the Dalasi.
We believe this latest ‘Executive order’ will lead to hoarding of foreign currency, which will create artificial shortage and thus force the exchange rates to go up. The losers here are everyone: the importers, diaspora Gambians, ordinary people, and the government itself in the form of reduced tax revenues.

It is important to note that a country’s exchange rate is one of the most important determinants of relative level of economic health. Exchange rates play a vital role in a country’s level of trade, which is critical to all free market economy. For this reason, exchange rates cannot and should not be meddled with to suit the President’s whims and caprices. Interest rates, inflation and exchange rates are all highly correlated; they impact on each other. The economy should be managed without emotion or undue pressures from the executive.

In barely 3 months, the Gambia government received an emergency loan from the IMF in the region of (US$10.8 million). The fact that we received an emergency loan indicates a budget deficit and inability to finance the government expenditures.
A drastic reduction of foreign direct support to the government because of its lack of respect for human rights and rule of law, have seen the Gambian economy contrast to a near stagnation. Tourism which is one the country’s main foreign exchange earner, has also been severely hit following the Ebola outbreak in West Africa in 2014. Gambia derives 30% of its export earnings from tourism. But a 60% fall in tourism has led to a 12% depreciation of the local currency (Dalasi) against major international currencies causing an accelerated increase in food prices and other consumer goods.

The president and his APRC Party have failed the people and massively for that matter. Power and brute force cannot be used to regulate an economy. Competent and qualified technocrats must be allowed to carry out their duties without fear of harassment. The office of the President has become a cocktail of many blends. This is why the UDP demands an end to the 20 years of failed AFPRC/APRC misrule characterized by irrational, childish and adventurous policies that continue to destroy the fabrics of the very survival of the country.

Lawyer Ousainou Darboe
Party Leader/Secretary General
United Democratic Party
The Gambia

Gambia’s First lady Zainab Jammeh – A drain on Scarce National Resources

Gambian First lady Zainab Zuma Jammeh has always been accused of wasting state monies on private trips fully funded by the Gambian taxpayers. Faturadio can authoritatively reveal details of budgets and numbers of staff that accompany her on private trips, using a private fight which her husband Yaya Jammeh owns but which the state hires and pays for to ferry Zainab on her private trips abroad. The following is a breakdown of the expenses incurred for a 3day private trip to Morocco by the First lady, fully funded by the state. This breakdown covers only the cost of the private plane:

Fuel Bjl/Cas/Bjl: $20,000

Catering Banjul: $2,000

Handling Casablanca: $5000

Fuel Cas/Bjl/Cas: $30,000

Catering Casablanca: $5000

Hotel for crew+ transport $5000

Overflihgt + navigation fees $4000

TOTAL: $71,000 (D3,834,000 @$1 = D54)

Many lament the lack of financial control and spending at the Office of the President as a large chunk of the Nations budget is apportioned to the Office of the President to cover such lavish trips and celebrations. Many have seen other first ladies especially of Senegal taking commercial flights and traveling with a small entourage to save state resources. The high cost detailed above, covers just the private plane to carry the fist lady and her entourage. Many say that with the worsening Gambian situation, the National assembly or department of budgets at the Finance Ministry really need to control the out of control spending of the President and his wife. A source even said that “before telling the chief medical officer to go increase consultation fees for patients to raise revenue for the hospital, Fabakary Tombong Jatta should be telling President Jammeh and Zinab Jammeh to use commercial flights to travel and even justify their numerous private trips and lavish celebrations using taxpayer monies”

Zainab Jammeh is notorious for not just her numerous private trips, her numerous lavish shopping trips, her lack of regard for anything Gambian but also her the huge entourage she travels with even for private trips and all at taxpayer expenses. Many say that Zinab competes with the likes of Michelle Obama, however many will tell you that Michelle shops at “target” and wears “J crew” to promote American brands, while Zinab is hardly seen wearing Gambian brands or shopping in Gambia. “I was expecting that she will wear a Gambian designer to the White House Dinner to promote tourism and Gambian fashion, instead Zinab choose a designer dress more expensive than Michelle Obama, for a first lady from a poor country like Gambia, that speaks volumes” said another observer.

Observers say that the amount spend on a private flights for the first lady, could have been spent on priority areas like the Gambian hospitals and health centers where basic things like gloves and medication are not available prompting the Chief Medical Officer to continuously call on the President to help with medication and equipment for the hospitals. Many observe that with Zinab and her children never using our health services, the President really does not care what state our hospitals are in. “Zainab delivers her children in America, Yaya flies them out even for basic medical care including immunizations, Jammeh himself and his mum fly overseas for medical treatment, yet you expect him or Zinab to care about our health services” said a source. Another priority area that taxpayer monies wasted at the Office of the president could have been spent on is youth employment, skills training and entrepreneurship. Thousands of Gambian youths are dying taking the backway to Europe, the Jammeh government is silent on this human tragedy and not coming up with any policies to address the frustrations that are leading the youth to take the backway to Europe “Jammeh sending immigration officers to Europe to identify and deport Gambian youths is not the solution because they return to face the same economic and social miseries that they left behind, Jammeh really has failed the youths of the Gambia”.

We will be attaching a letter showing the expenses detailed above and another showing the entourage for the first lady on a 3day private visit to Morocco, which includes a manicurist and a hairdresser!! to further highlight the massive drain Zinab is on Gambian taxpayers.

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Gov’t warns against foreign exchange hoarding

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The Office of the President has warned businessmen who are involved in foreign exchange speculation and hoarding to desist immediately or face very drastic action.

A media release from the Office of the President stated that with effect from May 4, 2015, no foreign exchange amounting to more than ten thousand Dollars, Euros and Pound Sterling can be taken out of this country without approval of the Office of The President.

The Government of The Gambia thus noted with great concern the rapid depreciation of the Gambian Dalasi against major international currencies particularly the US Dollar.

Below is the full text of the press release:

The Government of The Gambia has noted with great concern the rapid depreciation of the Gambian Dalasi against major international currencies particularly the US Dollar.

Consequently, with effect from 4th May 2015, no foreign exchange amounting to more than ten thousand Dollars, Euros, Pound Sterling can be taken out of this country without approval of the Office of The President and without declaring it before.

Any foreign exchange being sent out of the country without approval will be forfeited to the state with immediate effect.  The US Dollar cannot be changed for more than 35 to 40 Dalasis to the Dollar. Anybody found hoarding foreign currency in order to cause the depreciation will be charged and tried under the Economic Crimes Act and the immediate amount hoarded will be confiscated.  The Central Bank of The Gambia will set the rates of the Euro and Pound Sterling immediately based on their real value.

‘Operation No Compromise’ which is already against graft and corruption is hereby launched today and service heads are to carry it out to the letter as they have already been forewarned.  Any security personnel found wanting in the execution of ‘Operation No Compromise’ will regret being born.

Businessmen who are involved in this foreign exchange speculation and hoarding are hereby strictly warned to desist immediately or face very drastic action. Though most of them are foreigners, there are a few greedy and unpatriotic Gambians involved.  This ‘Operation No Compromise’ is here to stay until currency speculators and hoarders and the illegal market are wiped out of the system.  This time around, such notorious businessmen will have their businesses closed and if they are foreigners face immediate deportation.

HOW YAYA JAMMEH’S PARANOIA DECIMATED THE GAMBIAN VOUS

The “vous” is a derivative of “rendez-vous” and has long been a Gambian social institution. It is an organization of peers with shared interests, where men, and in some instance women, irrespective of social status, walk of life and political affiliation once loosely organized themselves into a social support group. In turn they would sometimes share the same “grand palace” where they can be found on most evenings chatting over attaya, a game of cards or board games such as checkers.

These get-togethers were where lifelong friendships were formed, mentoring the next generation, business partnerships formed and perhaps more conspicuously, the biggest political, economic and social debates took place before becoming mainstream subjects. This gave members of these “vous”, whether in public service or otherwise a great sense of responsibility as people, especially young people, looked up to them. In turn the sense of responsibility and mentorship acted as a bulwark against abuse of any kind. That is not to say abuse of power and prestige didn’t take place back then; just that it was collectively frowned upon and society made no excuses for people who engaged in it no matter who they were.

In addition to being incubators of social and political discourse, these “vous” also served as political contact groups that gave the citizenry access to elected leaders directly or through intermediaries. On the other hand, it also gave politicians and civic leaders the unique opportunity to have their hands on the pulse of the population; thereby mitigating the possibility of getting out-of-touch with the goings on around them. In other words, these groups carried great social and political clout and the faint details I recall about them is that these powers were exercised in ways that, by and large, benefitted the public good and ensured that people in positions of authority were grounded and attuned to the priorities of the population. This social cohesion was achieved because membership of the “vous” ranged from the cleaner to the Managing Director of institutions.

The environment was open, the discussion was uncensored, the breadth of the topics discussed were virtually without bounds and that is what put them on a collision course when the military dictatorship took over the government of The Gambia in July 1994. The first victims of Sana Sabally’s brutality, as Vice Chairman of the AFPRC military junta, were older men who were members of some of the most influential “vous” in the greater Banjul area but held no political office whatsoever. This struck fear in the populace and especially those who were members of any such groups. After the fall of Saballay and Jammeh’s strengthening, there was this unwritten rule that indicted a whole “vous” should one member run afoul of the dictatorship for any reason and that was when people started to feel unsafe openly associating with groups; even those with no political affiliation. That was clearly a harbinger to what we see today with the illegal detention, humiliation and torture of Gambian citizens whose only crimes are being family members of those alleged to have taken part in the December 30, 2014 insurrection in Banjul.

Although the disappearance of “vous” and “grand palaces” have left a vacuum in the social space yet to be filled, the way forward is already being paved thanks to the wide reach and the nature of social media. A new generation of ascendant Gambians have used social media platforms to ensure Jammeh’s worst fears and suspicions of what “vous” could breed actually becomes his reality. Today, the animated nature of Gambian activists, especially diaspora Gambians, far exceeds anything Jammeh could’ve imagine to be his worst nightmare so  much so that we get special mentions in Jammeh’s regular rants on national TV and radio. The fight to bring back the influence of the regular man and woman who organized themselves into a pressure group is being won not at the “vous” and “grand palaces” but from our cell phones, microphones and word of mouth. Power to the people!

LETTER TO THE GAMBIAN STRUGGLE

Dear Strugglers,

This is your buddy The Struggle. I greet you all with the warmest of greetings from the greatest strugglers before you. A special greeting from Mandela and MLK, they want you all to know that they are aware of your struggles and truly appreciate each and every single one of you for standing up for what is right. They know the sacrifices and selflessness that you all have made for the past 20 years and continue to make. Your dedication and commitment is refreshing to say the least. But I- Struggle do not plan on spending another 20 years with you. Just like your predecessors who went through similar struggles, I will like to say my goodbyes to you guys as well. Don’t get me wrong; you are all awesome brave people with beautiful souls.

There is a reason why my name is Struggle. A struggle should be meaningful, fruitful, and temporal. At the end of each struggle there should be an end goal. There were many struggles before the Gambian struggle and there will be many more struggles after the Gambian struggle. I therefore think it is very vital that I express some of my disdain regarding the Gambian struggle. By no means should this be regarded as me condemning you guys but rather a way forward so that we won’t have to spend another 20 years together.

Leadership, leadership, leadership…..I said leadership? Hear me again; leadership is as important as the air you breathe for every struggle. When will you all realize that you need a symbolic leadership? A leadership symbolizes unity and common goal. Tell me any movement or revolution that you know of that succeeded without a strong leadership? Stop right there, don’t even try it, it has never happened before, I know this because I was there. Why are you all so pessimistic to the idea of choosing a leader? You need a leader who is respectable among many. Someone who will be willing to be the first to go to jail and lay his/her life if need be. You need a leader who will be a concession builder and a unifier. You need a leader who will show no favors or discrimination towards any group. I am not saying that there should be only one group. But your multiple groups should be able to come together to work under one big umbrella group with a vibrant leadership. You may still have a few franchise groups within the struggle who will refuse to join this group or recognized its leadership. But that is ok and it is expected. This though should not serve as an excuse for not seeking a unified and symbolic leadership.

Every struggle is unique in its own form. No two struggles are one and the same. And I have a feeling that some of you sometimes forget why you are in the Gambian struggle or what the main objective of the Gambian struggle is. Incase you didn’t know or you forgot please allow me to indulge you. The main objective of the struggle is for the mobilization of large masses of ordinary Gambian people and the forcible overthrow the existing Jammeh regime (by all means necessary). To transfer power from a small tyrannical minority to a democratic society in such a way that it will lead to the creation of a whole new social economic order is crucial.  If you have a different objective than this then you are in the wrong struggle. I am not saying that it is going to come easy. You of all people should know better than that. Must I remind you all of April 10/11 2000 or the December 30th, 2014 massacres? A struggle is never a simple task. It cost time, patience, wealth, property, friends, family, and even life. But victory is inevitable. We are fighting against a tyrant who has everything to lose when he is out of the sit of power. Don’t be surprise that he is plotting to destroy us as we are plotting to restore democracy. I am not saying these things to scare you, but rather to prepare you for whatever. We should be comfortable with being uncomfortable.

Many Gambians believe that I – Struggle – am incapable of removing Jammeh from office. Removing Jammeh seems like an illusion and an impossibility to many. Many people even go to an extent of suggesting that all revolutions end in failure. And they will cite examples such as the Arab spring revolution that ended in multiple failed states, and the Haitian revolution of 1891 that left Haiti still unstable. But I am not a lost caused. I equally have many successful stories. Many of today’s democratic countries and governments are the product of successful STRUGGLES. The most obvious examples are The English struggle of 1642-49, which broke the power of monarchy and the feudal aristocracy, and the American struggle of 1775, which led to Independence of the free world. The 20th century saw a multitude of national struggles that destroyed colonial rule and established national independence.

It is going to be a mission impossible for Jammeh to persuade us that the Gambia is fine, not to say that he didn’t try to persuade us, but it will be impossible to make us believe in that idea. To be frank, from the look of things he doesn’t have to persuade us at all. All he has to do is to persuade us that there is nothing we can do about it. He has repeatedly voiced that he will not be removed from office – “Not through elections, military coup, rebellion, or popular uprising” and the average Gambian has come to believe that. He has succeeded in convincing all of us to buy into his BS. I can barely keep account of the number of times I heard some of my strongest soldiers in the struggle came out on public forums manifesting that they know without a doubt that they can’t remove Jammeh either via elections, arm struggles, or popular uprising. Even if this is known to be true, I do not expect my best soldiers in the struggle to be limiting our options when it comes to fighting for democracy. Those conversations should only be held within secure forums. Jammeh should be left in doubt. We should stretch his resources as much as we could. He should be timid, nervous, and worried that we may hit him from any angle. When it comes to defending oneself and fighting a bully you do not limit your options. Scratching, biting, kicks in the groins, clawing, spitting, pulling hair, eye poking, and verbal abuses should all be viable options. We do not have the luxury to determine/chose what we want to do and what we don’t want to do. All options should be on the table and whatever opportunity presents itself, it should be highly considered.

Fair and Balance:

The fight against tyranny is not a fair fight and it is far from balance. He has more money, weapons, tools, human power and might than us. We are deprived of fair trials and freedom to express our feelings and opinions. What in this world makes you my fellow strugglers think we can win this fight by being fair and balanced? Need I remind you that you are still struggling and you are barely an organized movement let alone a government? Everything you do, say, and think about should be bias and in favor of winning a struggle. Before you can have a level playing ground you must first have a field. I find a majority of you strugglers very hypocritical sometimes. We are in a war, a war bought to us, we never asked for this. It is extremely sickening to listen to some of you on online radios arguing and revealing our deepest secrets in the name of fair and balance.

Stop airing your dirty laundries in public. You all are too quick to run to public forums to tarnish each other’s characters. You are all guilty of this, from the oppositions to the civil society groups. Sometimes I think you guys can’t wait to have the opportunity to disagree or reveal the shorting comings of your fellow comrades. The oppositions will rather write a letter to a daily news forum expressing their feelings about their fellow opposition groups before they will pick up a phone and call their comrades. Every time you are about to defame a member of the struggle, a civil society group, or an opposition party, asked yourself this question. Is this going to advance the struggle to remove Jammeh? Or is it going to enable Jammeh to tighten his grip on power? I will rather be wrong and see Jammeh go than be right and have him stay even for an extra second longer than he already has.

There is an American saying that talk softly and carry a big stick. I love you guys but some of you strugglers are full of it. Who are you kidding? Screaming, insulting opposing voices, and threatening lives as if you will march to Banjul single-handedly and remove Jammeh for us. We all know what’s up. What you say is as important as how you say it. Quit coming on public forums and threatening the lives/freedom of the Jammeh supporters and your fellow strugglers. We need them as much as we need our freedom. Our message should be reconciliatory towards them all the time. We should extend friendly hands to them even if they despise us. There is a saying that if you can kill with sugar why used poison? We must always remember that Jammeh is our only problem and all our resource and weapons should be targeted towards Jammeh. Some may argue that he has enablers, and to those I will say pre-Jammeh we didn’t have those enablers. Jammeh created those enablers; we are all victims of the same tyranny. It divided us and caused confusion among us. Cut the head off and everything else will fall into place. Majority of Gambians are not necessarily Jammeh supporters, they just don’t feel represented by the struggle or the strugglers. It is your responsibility to make sure that your message is cordial and inclusive. I heard brother Gitteh on the radio talking to a Jammeh supporter who called to condemn the struggle, the intolerant called for him to hang up on the guy. Gitteh stuck to his guns and spoke to the caller, by the time he finished, the caller could not defend Jammeh and ended up saying that he can not answer a question on what he would do if Jammeh arrested his relatives based on his actions as he wanted to keep traveling to Gambia! Thats how you deal with  so called enablers, you expose their motives for not speaking up against injustice!

Who is the enemy here? The most difficult enemy to fight is the enemy within. Sometimes I wonder if you all are fighting jammeh or the opposition. I have a question….Are you guys on the same team with the opposition? I do get confuse by your comments. There are no civil rights groups in the Gambia. The oppositions are the closest thing we have to civil society groups, they are our partners. Why do you all constantly come on to public forums bashing them? They need every financial and moral support they can get from us. Like I said this fight should not be unilateral. We need all possible options, especially the opposition on the ground. And you the online radios are a blessing and a cuss for the struggle. You guys need to choose a side. Either be on the side of the struggle or go to the Gambia with your fair and balance neutralism and see how that will work for you. Before any self-righteous hypocrite come out saying we need to be different from Jammeh. Let me remind you that the idea of fair and balance only applies to democratic societies. The Gambia is neither a democratic nor fair nor a balanced state. Its government is a tyrannical regime that kills, torture, and jails all opposing voices. We are in a chokehold position in the hands of a killer and a bully. We need every advantage we can get to survive. I am NOT asking you all NOT to engage in civil conversations with people of opposing views and opinions, but you should be very careful and differentiate between engaging in meaningful conversations and demoralizing your own support base with illiterate comments. People are hurt and suffering, the last thing they need from those they look up to for moral support or to uplift their spirits is verbal torture in the name of fair and balance. When the Gambia returns to democratic rule – then we can all be fair and balance as much as we want.

Please get your acts together; I am too busy for this. I am very patient, but 20 years is long overdue. Victory is evitable and kudos to the various fractions taking the fight to Jammeh from all angles, but we need victory now more than ever, for the Gambia and nothing else. I struggle, will like 2015 to be the year that i take leave of you the Gambian Struggle, it is possible, if you organize and attack from all fronts.

The Gambia: Reconciliation, no; indemnifying, hell no


It does not come without huge costs. It’s an extremely traumatic experience, which robs citizens of their moral grounding by downgrading their humanity and elevating their materiality. And it poses an existential threat to the very fact of human existence. For a system that desensitizes citizens to devalue the very nature of humanity, no extreme is too far in debasing society. The catastrophic impact of the Gambia’s tyranny is undeniable, and characteristically showcases deep emotional scars far worst than any physical traumas sustained in an accident; it’s brutal and psychologically destructive. In a large number of homes throughout the moon-crater streets of metropolitan Sere-Kunda, innumerable wives lost husbands, and their kids lost fathers, to two decades of sustained state sanctioned murders, executions and political mayhem.

In the Kombo Saint Mary’s, area, far too many mothers and fathers lost daughters, husbands, sons and wives; forever disappeared by the notorious National Intelligence Agency. Throughout the length and breadth of Senegambia, in deep dry wells and shallow graves; in unmarked tombs and animal desecrated corpse sites, in dense forests and the open sea, Gambian and non-Gambian families lost sons, daughters, fathers, uncles, friends and neighbors to the cold, cruel hands of a regime completely oblivious the pain and agony of a nation. And in the Gambia’s gulag prison system and secret detention centers, innocent citizens and non-citizens, alike, are warehoused to languish in dark, dingy cells where many have died behind steel doors and tall concrete walls far from public view. The Gambia is a country whose history, over the last twenty years, is written in the blood of its citizens and non-citizens by a regime whose primitive savagery continues to stun a civilized world. It is a history etched in stone; undeniable, unacceptable and unforgivable.

What is occurring in the Gambia since the military regime seized power in 1994 is a travesty that defies imagination and challenges the conscience of a nation; extra-judicial executions, murders, forced disappearances, and mass incarceration. The end result of twenty long years of pernicious human rights abuse is the unparalleled blight of scruples, aggravated by the collective reticence of citizens to challenge the state’s moral bankruptcy. This state terrorism and citizens’ aversion to standing up to authorized state ruthlessness has engendered a vicious tyranny that has robbed Gambians of their dignities. Even more striking still is the ability of an insignificant number of citizens to derogate the extreme savagery in Gambia as immaterial to the healing and redemption process, in a nation’s deeply scarred by abuse, neglect and mismanagement. The calls for political reconciliation in Gambia disparages the pain and exacerbates the suffering of citizens who lost loved ones to the diabolical depravity and ruthlessness of a hated regime, which long ago lost the moral authority to shape the course of a nation. In spite of the shocking disregard for human life demonstrated by a clueless regime, a few Gambians are driven by self-interest to advance a dubious reconciliation agenda that does not support accountability or penalize the perpetrators of Gambia’s crippling criminality over two decades. It is preposterous to think Gambia will just return to politics as usual, without adequately addressing the catastrophe and burdens of two decades of sanguinary human rights abuses. The rabidity, with which a few Gambians have pursued a deeply flawed reconciliation effort, completely negates altruism as the driving force behind the strategy, and validates the hypocritical superficiality of the exercise. On his own freewill, in 2011, Yahya Jammeh initiated, organized and funded a reconciliation attempt with the dissident diaspora movement, and sponsored the willing few to travel to Gambian for what was labelled the “diaspora summit.”

In the end, it was a complete failure that has since receded into obscurity and irrelevance. But what is scarier than attempts to reconcile with Yahya Jammeh, is what transpired in Gambia since that craven reconciliation endeavor in 2011. Before even the ink of reconciliation dried, Yahya Jammeh had fallen back into his old, familiar disregard for human life, resulting in the execution of twenty-six Mile Two Prison inmates, abduction and assassination of Foni brothers, Wuyeh Colley and Enor Colley, abduction of businessman, Saul Ndow and politician Mahawa Cham, and the abduction and disappearance of two US citizens of Gambian descent. It comes as no surprise that nearly fifty more Gambians and non-Gambians have since been executed, fled the country, are languishing in prison, or abducted and disappeared from the face of the earth. In exhibiting an uncommon level of cruelty, Yahya Jammeh has eviscerated his diabolical character, which makes it absolutely impossible to give weight to his words or rely on his goodwill. The strident anti-reconciliation blowback is less of a reflection on Gambian’s incapacity to forgive, than on Yahya Jammeh’s homicidal misanthropy and untrustworthiness. Reconciliation, in any way it is looked at it, is throwing in the towel and recapitulating to a monster that lacks the ability to rationalize. It is inconsiderate to the pain Gambians feel, but more detrimental, it surrenders justice to a character of international disrepute; Yahya Jammeh. Gambian are about delivering justice for all the dead, the disappeared and those languishing in prison; not ego stroking. Maybe, if Yahya Jammeh resigns, frees every political prisoner unconditionally, and returns his looted \wealth, Gambians will consider sparing his life, but even that is a decision only citizens can make; not a random person purely motivated by self-interest. Until then, Gambians maintain no reconciliation or indemnifying the regime

ASTONISHING REVELATIONS ON THE DISAPPEARANCE OF JOURNALIST CHIEF EBRIMA MANNEH

As the Gambia joins the rest of the World to celebrate World Press Freedom Day today, May 3rd, 2015, I wish to join you (Media practitioners) in commemoration despite being a senior security officer. I am a bonafide senior citizen with a vast wealth of experience in the National Intelligence operations. As such, I wish to assure you that many of us are appreciative of your troubles and efforts towards ensuring a free society in The Gambia. I understand your pains and sacrifices for such a cause.

Today, as you commemorate this Day, I wish to extend special solidarity with the family of Journalist Chief Ebrima Manneh, who was held in incommunicado since 7th July, 2006. I will today make a ground-breaking revelation on all the information that the Gambian authorities are deliberately denying Manneh’s family, professional colleagues and the population, regarding all the events leading to his arrest by our own agents, and what he went through till his subsequent disappearance under their custody.

Just like you practitioners, we the Gambian security officers ourselves and the Gambian populace in general are no longer safe and secure, as long as our Commander in Chief (CiC) remains in power. Therefore, as discreet efforts to unseat him have so far been unsuccessful, one way we can take on him is not through Coup alone, but the quest to expose all the wrong-doings we have been executing against innocent citizens under our CiC’s directives.

I want to take the lead in this crusade, beginning with the Journalist Chief Ebrima Manneh’s case, as per the findings we have made on his whereabouts contained in our case files in the NIA, under the Office of the President.

Considering the failing trend through which our commander in chief (CiC), President Yahya Jammeh is taking, I deemed it imperative to shed light on Journalist Chief Ebrima Manneh’s disappearance. Already, some key people who know, or have hands in the disappearance of Chief Manneh are dying. Therefore, if proper measures are not instituted, a lot of information known to people will die down without any trace, testimony or proper evidence.

Based on our investigations at the NIA and as per the files available at our Desk, I noticed that Journalist Ebrima Manneh, a senior reporter of the Daily Observer newspaper, was picked up by two agents of the NIA. The officers were instructed to effect arrest on Chief Ebrima Manneh on July 7th, 2006, following The Gambia’s hosting of the 7thAfrican Union Summit in Banjul.

Prior to his arrest, Chief Manneh had travelled to the US on the maiden direct flight of the defunct North American Airlines linking Banjul to New York.

From the NIA Red file case, Chief Manneh Vs the State, Strictly Confidential

Below is a synopsis of his activities before his arrest, events leading to his arrest and detention, as well as investigations into his case by our NIA office under the command of President Jammeh.

 

The US trip

As mentioned above, Chief Ebrima Manneh, alongside Hamidou Baldeh, former marketing manager of the Observer Company, in May 2006, travelled to the United States of America on the maiden direct flight of the now defunct North American Airlines linking Banjul to New York. Going by our investigations at the NIA, this journey lasted two days and both of them returned to The Gambia.

Chief Manneh then continued his work at the Observer as a senior reporter attached to State House, covering President Jammeh’s programmes and activities. Records have shown that Journalist Manneh returned to the country and even published stories about their experience with the then newly introduced Banjul-New York North American Airlines flight. Other reports were also authored by him in the Observer, copies of which we already have here at the NIA.

The AU Summit

Going by our files, The Gambia officially hosted the 7th edition of the African Union Summit between the 2nd and 5thJuly 2006 and the following day, July 6th was a public holiday but Chief Manneh went to work alongside his colleagues to do the publication for the next day . While working at The Observer office Bakau on the 7th July, two of our NIA agents went to arrest him.

These arresting officers only received orders to go and arrest, but actually they did not know the reason they effected the arrest. Besides, they were never part of any investigations.

Events leading to his arrest

During the investigations at the NIA, we discovered that Chief Manneh was accused by his former boss, the late Dr. Saja Taal, the then Managing Director of The Observer Company. Dr. Taal complained that Chief Ebrima Manneh had downloaded an article from the BBC website on the internet that was critical of The Gambia’s hosting the AU summit due to its poor human rights records, lack of democracy and press freedom, etc. for publication in the first post-AU Summit edition of the paper’s international news round up.

In fact, after examining the said international news page of that yet-to-be published edition of Observer, another article based on Kofi Anan (former UN Secretary General’s) speech at the AU Summit, was highly critical. That article called for presidential term limits for African presidents, greater democracy and freedom in the continent, which obviously were not pleasant to our head of state. These were to form the next day’s edition of Observer international news page as downloaded by Chief Ebrima Manneh.

Further investigations revealed that Chief Manneh who was on duties that day, printed the said articles into a transparent film and it was sent to the printers in the press room for printing. According to our findings, when Pa Malick Faye, at that time a senior editor at Observer, came to work in the afternoon, he went through the news pages and found that the said articles were included in the news bulletin for the next day.

Our investigations further revealed that Mr. Faye, then picked up the phone and called the late Dr. Saja Taal, to inform him about the said articles which Chief Manneh put in the paper for the next day. Dr Saja Taal, who according to investigations was not in good terms with Chief Ebrima Manneh, then rushed to the office and instructed the printers to halt the printing immediately. We also gathered that about 250 copies of the page that were already printed were ordered to be burnt instantly. The said single transparent paper that was prepared by Chief Ebrima Manneh for the printers was then taken away by the late Dr. Saja Taal. Taal gave the film to the late Momodou Sanyang, former GRTS Director General and board member of The Observer at the time.

It was also found that the late Momodou Sanyang also reported the matter to Neneh Macdouall Gaye, then Minister of Information and Board Chair of Observer. She is currently minister of Foreign Affairs.

Our reports here at the NIA have it that it was Neneh Macduoall Gaye who took the transparent film bearing the articles in question to the president’s office at State House and reported Chief Manneh, going by the information she received from her subordinates – (the late Dr. Saja Taal and the late Momodou Sanyang). This was the exact reason why Chief Ebrima Manneh was arrested by plain cloth officers of our Agency, under the president’s directives.

Also, during the course of the investigation, we were informed that after the said printed copies were burnt, Dr Taal called Lamin Kujabi, former Observer Store keeper to go back to the Observer office that night and give the printers another set of transparent films to restart the printing proper. This was done.

Note: I will also be happy to reveal at this point that the said Lamin Kujabi was my colleague in the NIA and he was sent to The Observer as an informer for the authorities. This was in the days of the late Hon. Baba Jobe. And until he decided to quit the job and travel abroad, he was on our payroll and I can give you his payroll number in the agency’s service.

International pressure into his case

As investigations into Ebrima Manneh’s case deepens, coupled with the pressure and international outcry over his disappearance for many years, both the NIA and Interpol were tasked to investigate his whereabouts. At the NIA, we did not take it seriously because we already knew he was with us and that is why we were moving him from one detention center to another across the country, so that the UN investigators and other human rights agencies will not find him.

Note: The reason why the government was hiding him at the time was because our CiC and president, has already declared that Ebrima Manneh was not in state custody, when that is not true. It now becomes a complicated matter for Chief Ebrima Manneh, after spending years in detention, and could not be produced.

During this period, we (The NIA) have already interrogated the late Dr. Saja Taal, the late Momodou Sanyang. Pa Malick Faye was interviewed by the Interpol in Banjul regarding his knowledge into Chief Ebrima Manneh’s circumstances and the said articles he wanted to print on the newspaper.

Meanwhile, the president should give us orders to arrest and investigate Neneh Macdouall Gaye if he really wants to answer to the international community on Chief Manneh’s case. Also Pa Malick Faye has a case to answer in this, and he should be recalled for a proper investigation, hence Dr. Taal and Momodou Sanyang are no longer living witnesses.

During our investigations, we also received reports of the testimonies of the witnesses at the Ecowas Court of Justice in Nigeria in 2008, during which Pa Ousman Darboe, a former colleague of Chief Ebrima Manneh told the ECOWAS court his knowledge into the case.

We have gathered from our files that in those days at Observer, there were six senior editors running the paper and the management divided them into two shifts. Chief Ebrima Manneh, Pa Malick Faye and Lamin Dibba were on the same shift in one group; whilst Ebrima Jaw Manneh, Pa Ousman Darboe and Abdoulie John were in the other group. Our investigations showed that during Chief Ebrima’s arrest, it was their turn to edit and produce the paper that week.

Torture

Like most other detainees at the NIA, Chief Ebrima Manneh was seriously tortured by the junglars and the military men after his arrest. The officers who tortured him include the late Captain Musa Jammeh, the late Captain Tumbul Tamba, Captain Sanna Manjang active member of the Junglers and the Armed Forces; Lt . Sang Michael Correa, Modou Jarjue, Alhagie Morr Jobe, and other members of the junglars.

I remember a day when the late Tumbul Tamba told journalist Chief Manneh that he (Tamba) hates journalists and will kill anybody who wants to bring down the government. The late Musa Jammeh once drunken, also displayed and shouted loud on top of his voice and said this government is here to stay and they will crush anyone who tries to challenges them.

Until the time he was moved from the NIA, Chief Manneh had collapsed on several occasions due to his physical weakness. He has also been admitted at the RVTH on several occasions. What happens after he was moved from our custody I cannot say. It is not yet proven that he is dead, or in fact alive after this.

Recommendations

In order to give Journalist Chief Manneh justice and have a fair and balanced trial, the international Human rights organizations including the UN, Amnesty International, ECOWAS Court of justice, and all other stakeholders must make sure that all those who played a role leading to his arrest and detention, as well as torture and possible killing, be brought to book.

These include our CiC President Yahya Jammeh, the arresting agents, the NIA director general at that time Harry Sambou, Neneh Macdouall Gaye, present minister of Foreign Affairs, who was the Minister of Information at the time of Chief Manneh’s arrest, Pa Malick Faye, former colleague of Chief Manneh who was mentioned in the case, Lamin Kujabi, former storekeeper at Observer who was called by Dr Saja Taal to supply the printers with another set of transparent films for printing after the burning of the said printed copies, and Alhagie Mor Jobe, Modou Jarjue, Bora Colley, Sanna Manjang, Sang Michael Correa and his colleague serial killers who dealt with him.

Meanwhile, some of the deceased persons who had hand in Chief Manneh’s case were, the late Dr Saja Taal, Momodou Sanyang, former GRTS managing director, the late Captain Tumbul Tamba, the late Captain Musa Jammeh, etc.

IS PRESIDENT JAMMEH RUBBING IT ON FATOU CAMARA’ S FACE?

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Dictator Jammeh wittingly excels in deflecting the attention of Gambians from the deafening cries of the unsettling daily economic hardships faced by most Gambians. Barely a week after obtaining $10.8 million from the IMF as an emergency loan in April to resuscitate the decaying Gambian economy, President Jammeh donated two cars plus an undisclosed amount of cash to Senegalese wrestler Eumeu Sene, a multi-millionaire who scooped more than 60 million CFA in his recent  fight with Balla Gaye.

 The gift generated unprecedented controversy and many observers raised concerns which accentuate the Dictator’s gesture as callous and inappropriate by drawing chilling parallels with the Gambian economic down-turn.

The most notable of those who fervently decried the lavish wastage of Gambia’s meagre resources was Fatou Camara, a one-time Press secretary to Yaya Jammeh. In her YouTube video which went viral within minutes of its uploading, she took on the King of Impunity; systematically laying out how the wasted huge amount of monies could have generated dividend for Gambians if it had been utilised as fittingly as she pointed. Amidst all these lamentably, President Jammeh appears to be rubbing it on Fatou Camara’s face by handing out another brand new car to 2STV presenter Becaye Mbaye last Thursday.

Whatever his motive, many observers regard the gifts as inappropriate and unjustified considering that both could have been decently utilised to purchase medical equipment and medicines for struggling Gambian Hospitals or better still donate the money and vehicles to the Ministry of Youths and Sports to ease the surmounting burden of youth unemployment thus avert them from risking their young lives using the backway to Europe where many perish in the Mediterranean Sea.

True, we may differ in our political view and alignment but the Gambia is one and we jointly own it. Its growth, security and fortification are not the responsibility of only a section of the population. Jammeh wants people who are morally and ethically constipated around him so that they can do his dirty jobs for him.  As a consequence, he ends up making shameful decisions which have lasting devastating consequences on Gambians even long after he is gone. It is not an embellishment therefore to assert that there is no justification for his lavish gifts to both Gambians and foreigners who have not contributed in anyway whatsoever to the welfare and development of the Gambia. Albeit, others will owlishly argue that Jammeh is generous, his generosity is misplaced and often comes with strings attached. Reasons advanced for the gifts to Eumeu Sene is that he fell out with Balla Gaye is is thus using Sene to dent the ego of Balla. Similarly, the only fathomable reason to punctuate his gift to 2STV Becaye Mbaye is to help give his raptured image a face-lift in Senegal and further his propaganda among the senegalese to make it easy for him to hunt Gambian dissident in Senegal, who will not feel welcome in Dakar.

Regrettably, all these wastage of huge amounts are happening at the backdrop of economic hardships, political repression, and corruption with a decaying civil service. Lately, the Dalasi flopped to D80.5 against the British pound and similarly against other major world currencies spelling abysmal living condition for most Gambians. Moreover, three major municipalities could not pay their staff March monthly salary due to empty coffers. What is even more disheartening is the rate in which the Dictator depletes the national reserves and injecting new bank notes into the economy. Cost of living is sky-rocking by the minute yet President Jammeh continues to exude insensitivity and lack of empathy for poor Gambians.

Arguably, some will reason that people deserve the leader they get but Gambians are not known for being callous and insensitive as manifested by President Jammeh. Therefore, why is President Jammeh depriving Gambians their due? Many would have thought he would draw lessons from Fatou Camara’s You Tube video and the many positive observations which complimented it but no, he opts to dish out more cars and huge undisclosed amounts of US dollars to people who have no interest in the welfare of the country.

A MOTHER’S CRY FOR YUSUPHA LOWE

Although I strongly detest and condemn the arrest of young and innocent Yusupaha Lowe 14 years old, I became more engrossed into the fight for his immediate release when I saw his photo.  The picture depicted his beautiful smile and innocence, when he posed for that picture the last thing on his mind must have been to be arrested since 1st January 2015, detained and tortured.

No matter how bad the human rights violations in The Gambia, it is unfathomable to hear arrests and detention of children not because they committed crimes, but because The Gambia Government is detaining Yusupha for a crime allegedly committed by his father Bai Lowe (for his alleged participation in the December 2014 attacks).

We teach our children to be obedient,  we teach them manners and those manners become their insurance policy against being punished.  Imagine his confusion when he knew he did not do anything wrong, but suffers a consequence he does not understand?  My heart is heavy. I have cried so many tears for Yusupha because I am a mother, I have cried many tears for Yusupha because he is being treated unfairly.

As a mother, I fear this horrible experience will impact him very negatively for the rest of his life. How can The Gambia National Intelligence Agency (NIA) officers, most of whom may be parents, allow themselves to be responsible for the inhumane treatment of a minor? How is it possible that his mother Jarriatou Lowe, was also arrested but released and forced to leave her minor child in the custody of authorities?  I cannot imagine the agony of walking away from detention, not knowing what will happen to your child!  When we retire to bed at night, my children and I say “I love you” to each other – I tuck the younger one in….  I think of Yusupha and he is being denied that right.  He is at the ripe age where the challenges of his growth (reaching puberty) are big enough.

As a mother, I am afraid of the new Gambia where children are detained because of the alleged crimes of their fathers.  If we allow this to continue, we are allowing a trend that is not acceptable and should not be condoned in The Gambia.  Once referred to as the “Smiling Coast of Africa”, Gambians now live in a society where Yusupha Lowe is in custody but nothing is being done about it.  Every country has child welfare institutions that protects the rights of children from abuse and exploitation.  In the case of Gambia, when asked by the press to intervene in the abduction of Yusupha, the Director of Social Welfare was quoted as saying “I don’t have permission to talk to the press.” This is surprising to me because I acquired my first employment opportunity with the Department of Social Welfare.  At the time, the Department protected the rights of children all the way to the Ministry of Health and Social Welfare.  If a father was delinquent in their responsibilities to support children, the Department summoned the absentee parent to court and was forced into monthly payments.

When the parent was uncorporative, his salary was garnished and paid to the parent responsible for the care of the said child.  When a child needed critical medical attention overseas, the Director of Social Welfare would coordinate with international sources to take the child for treatment.

I wonder what happened to that same Department fast forward 20 years? Under President Dawda Kairaba Jawara, the rights of the children were protected because they matter.  Under President Yahya Jammeh’s regime, using Yusupha Lowe as a pawn in his dad’s alleged crime becomes normal because the president’s rules and rights supersedes the rule of law and the right of an innocent child.  This young boy has been arrested and has not been in school since his arrest on January 1st, 2015.  Why aren’t people in The Gambia doing anything about his detention? The simple answer is this: fear and intimidation.

I go to bed thinking about the fear in Yusupha eyes,  I think of Yusupha when my boys and I laugh and eat together.  I think of Yusupha when I wake up in the morning because I know he is confined in a place against his will. My heart aches when I sit down next to my children and feel their warmth,  Yusupha is being denied that privilege.   One thing I know for sure is that although people in The Gambia are unable to speak up against Yusupha’s detention, torture and intimidation, he has mothers, fathers, aunts, uncles, cousins, brothers and sisters in the Diaspora.

I am overwhelmed by the level of anger expressed by total strangers, including myself.  People who are afraid of speaking up against Yahya Jammeh because they want to continue going in and out of Gambia are putting those fears aside and standing up against Yusupha’s capture because they know it’s the right thing to do.  People have spent endless hours on Facebook and Twitter expressing their rage.  Yusupha, we may not have access to you right now, but be rest assured you have many who are looking out for you from afar,  we will not let you disappear into thin year. We will not keep your voice silent because we have become your voice, If you would like to be a voice for Yusupha, the “FreeYusuphaLowe” campaign continues on Facebook and Twitter.  As a mother, I am making a pledge that I mention him in my daily tweets and I will talk about Yusupha any chance I get.  That’s my pledge.  Please make the same pledge and visit the “FreeYusuphaLowe” page on Facebook

https://www.facebook.com/freeyusuphalow?ref=aymt_homepage_panel

PEASE LET’S MAKE THE FOLLOWING HASHTAGS TREND ON TWITTER and bring world attention to 14 year old Yusupha’s plight. He needs to go home to his mom! If you are not on Twitter, this campaign should be the reason for you to join – it is easy!

HASHTAGS:

#FreeYusuphaLowe

#BringBackYusuphaLowe

#FreeYusuphaLoweGambia

#FreeInnocentFamiliesOfDecember30

#FreeInnocentMotherOfDecember30.

GAMBIAN PRESIDENT YAHYA JAMMEH DICTATES FOREIGN EXCHANGE RATE AND INTRODUCES EXCHANGE RESTRICTIONS-RENEGES ON IMF PROMISE

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According to breaking news from the Office of the President Yaya Jammeh, and in what has become a common executive occurrence, the office of the President, instead of the Central Bank, has interfered in altering the country’s foreign exchange rate once again, as monitored over the government-controlled TV’s evening news:

“An announcement aired on GRTS radio has it that the office of the President has intervened to regularized the rising amount of exchange rate against the dalasis. Effective today 4th May, no bank or individual should exchange the US dollars for more than 45 dalasis. The new trading rate for the dollar is put between D35 to D45. Rates for other foreign currencies will be announced soon. In the same vein, no one is allowed to take out of the Gambia any amount more than 10,000 dollars, pounds or euros without approval from the office of the president”

In effect, effective immediately, the Office of the President has forcefully “appreciated” the dalasis against major world currencies with $1 now pegged at D34 from D54, £1 now pegged at D50 from D80 and 100Sek now pegged at D500 from D590. Many Gambians in the diaspora are threatening to boycott sending money to Gambia, especially as prices will not be going down, meaning that you would have to send more money for your family to buy the same goods.

The above is in direct contravention of the “Memorandum of Economic and Financial Policies” sent to the IMF in April 2015 in which the Jammeh regime categorically stated as follows “We will fully cooperate with the IMF to achieve our policy objectives, and undertake furthermore not to introduce measures to compound the current balance of payments difficulties in The Gambia, including but not limited to an introduction or intensification of exchange and trade restrictions”, they said. http://www.imf.org/External/NP/LOI/2015/GMB/030415.pdf Many say that this is classic Jammeh’s modus operandi, which is to promise to adhere to any conditions to get money from The IMF, UN, EU etc and as soon as the money arrives, he will not honor any commitments like he did with the UN rapporteurs and now IMF.

The Jammeh government made a similar decisions in 2012 and 2013 around the same time when the predominantly muslim population were preparing for Ramadan.  In 2012, the same office of The President launched “Operation No Compromise on Foreign Currency Hoarding” threatening the general public and licensed foreign exchange dealers against “speculative activities and currency hoarding”, as they forcefully ‘appreciated’ the Gambian Dalasi to all foreign currencies especially the Dollar and the Pound Sterling to some arbitrary numbers. This uncalculated and misguided directive generated a reaction from an International Monetary Fund (IMF) staff David Dunn in 2012, calling on the Central Bank of the Gambia to continue implementing the exchange rate policy for the country’s foreign exchange market to return to full confidence. On August 13, 2013 as Gambians prepared for the Muslim month of Ramadan, similar move disrupted the terrain as dollar and other currencies got pecked, and valid government issued foreign exchange bureau licenses were nullified.  “All licences of foreign exchange bureaus issued by the Central Bank of The Gambia (CBG) has been declared null and void with immediate effect by the Government of The Gambia,” Jammeh said in a press statement.

However many economist saw this coming from reading the loan application above sent to the IMF in which the Jammeh regime admitted that their 2014 economic targets were “out of reach”, a consignment of groundnuts imported in 2014 was returned which means the government did not earn any foreign exchange from Agriculture, meaning that the depleting foreign exchange reserves as detailed in the IMF report have been further depleted, meaning that the former Finance Minister Touray’s statement that “Gambia will not be easy in 2015” was an understatement, considering the current economic crisis with less than half of the year gone in 2015.

Many Gambians eagerly await the response from the IMF as Jammeh’s actions have not only brought uncertainty and lack of confidence in the exchange markets and economy but has blatantly reneged from his promise to not interfere in the foreign exchange markets. Many Observers feel that the Banks have been too lenient on Jammeh and his antics especially as his regime lied before on a loan application to the IMF, which prompted the IMF to demand their money back.

www.imf.org

DICTATOR JAMMEH SET TO WASTE THE MEAGER NATIONAL RESERVES FOR HIS 50TH BIRTHDAY ANNIVERSARY

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Dependable sources disclosed that, Office of The President has set up another national organizing committee comprising government institutions and parastatals tasked with planning the Dictator’s 50th birthday party slated to coincide with Africa Day on May 25. The latest committee to organize yet another waste of taxpayer monies, came as no surprise to many who are abreast with President Jammeh’s obsession with attention, acceptance and greatness.

Members of the committee consist of GRA, Civil Aviation, GAMTEL and GAMCEL.
Many including some close-relatives of Jammeh strongly believed that Dictator Jammeh carefully crafted and invented his birthday date to coincide with Africa day, in a calculated effort to project himself as a Pan-Africanist by both birth and deed. His purported birthday and month being May 25th which Is Africa Day and his birth year being 1965, which is Gambia’s independent year. “Yahya Jammeh had neither a birth certificate nor antinatal records at birth, most of his provincial generation had no birth record. How did President Jammeh know that he was born on May 25th 1965?” Queried one of the sources. Many Gambians not only question President Jammeh’s date of birth but also his  place of birth as his callousness and lack compassion is very much un-Gambian.

Jammeh’s birthday anniversary comes four days after his return from his planned countrywide tour expected to commence on May 4th 2015, with many believing that the planned lavish party to celebrate his birthday is another ploy to downplay the Gambia’s frightening economic crisis.  Recently the Dalasi slumped to D80.5 against the British pound and similarly against other major world currencies spelling difficult living conditions for most Gambians with reported depleted foreign currency reserves further amplifying the country’s economic woes as specified in a government report to IMF.

Gambians would have expected a responsible and good leader to have preoccupied himself with revamping the decaying economy but President Jammeh loves throwing big personal parties at the expense of Gambian tax-payers. GAMTEL/GAMCEL have always been footing the bill for his lavish birthday parties which are held annually at Coco Ocean Spa and Resort.
The guest list for Jammeh’s birthday parties are always so-called celebrities including artist, musicians etc from around the world who help the Dictator to loot the Gambia of it’s meager resources because he is known worldwide for presenting his guest with large amounts of cash in dollars as gifts.

A week after receiving $10.8million from the IMF as an emergency loan in April, Jammeh showered a senegalese wrestling champion Eumeu Sene with an undisclosed amount of cash in dollars and two vehicles which was shown on National TV. Many observers believe that the gifts were inappropriate and unjustified, considering that the gift could have been utilized more appropriately in Gambia to buy medication for the hospitals or the money donated to the Ministry of youths and sports to ease the burden of youth unemployment and maybe prevent them from risking their young lives using the bikeway to Europe with many dying in the high seas.

To add insult to injury, many government Institutions, parastatals and the Gambian populace use the little they have to buy and shower gifts on the President during his birthdays with independent GSM Companies also joining in the lavish gift race by buying and giving the tyrant the latest phones and laptops as birthday presents, while many are struggling to pay salaries at month end.
“Gambians need to realise the fact that Yaya Jammeh is only interested in his own personal wellbeing and not that of Gambians, he can give so called celebrities thousands of dollars in cash as gifts, yet expect poor Gambians to bankrupt themselves giving him their much needed cash and personal belongings”, said another source, “As a result, we must do what is best for the Gambia and change the status quo. The time for change is now” he concluded.

This latest committee tasked with organising another wasteful birthday party for dictator Jammeh taking into consideration the current difficulties in Gambia affecting every sector, just highlights once again Jammeh’s insensitivity and lack of empathy for the suffering masses in Gambia. Many have thus called on their relatives and friends in Gambia to boycott these foolish celebrations to send a clear message to the dictator that enough is enough and after 20yrs its time to go, especially as it was Jammeh who promised in 1994 to rule for not more than 10years and promised to never introduce a dictatorship in Gambia. The reality that he delivered is far from his promises with his regime now notorious for rights abuses and lack of respect for Human Rights, earning him the title of “King of impunity” and the country labelled the “North Korea of Africa”.

JULY 22ND 1994 WAS THE DAY WHEN PRESS FREEDOM DIED IN THE GAMBIA

Today is  the world press freedom day. This supposed to be a day of joy, and a day of celebration for the press all over the world, but our Lunatic President Jammeh turned this joyful day to an emotional day for the Gambian people and African people at large. Because you cannot celebrate world press freedom day in The Gambia without thinking of uncle Deyda Hydara, brother Chief Ebrima Manneh, brother Musa Saidykhan, sister Fatou Jaw Manneh, sister Fatou Camara, brother Pa Nderry Mbai , brother Fabakary B. Ceesay, brother Baboucarr Saidykhan and all those other journalists who were killed, jailed, tortured or forced to exile.

Journalists were killed, jailed, tortured and forced to exile and the government of our Lunatic President Jammeh refused to do or did less investigation. Brothers and sisters today supposed to be a day that we should come out and demonstrate against the barbaric, cruel and brutal regime of Lunatic President Jammeh, and cry for justice for all his victims.

We cannot celebrate a world press freedom day in our smiling coast when we are not having a freedom of press :The right of newspapers to publish stories and articles without being controlled by the government or being harassed, interrogated, arrested, tortured, killed or deported.

The press should work freely and independently. They should have freedom of speech : The legal or natural right to say what you believe is true, without being prevented or punished.  Freedom of choice:  The ability to do what you want, because you have no obligation or responsibilities. Freedom Fighter: Someone oppose a cruel or unfair government. These are the people who are daily being arrested unlawfully, going through brutal torture, interrogation or even being killed. Freedom of Expression: The right to express your opinions.  Free Hand: The ability to make your own decisions, without having to ask any permission. Freedom of information: Is an extension of freedom of speech which is today understood more generally as freedom of expression in any medium, be it orally, in writing or print and these above mentioned points are deffinitelty not what is happening in The Gambia. So folks, let’s get rid of Lunatic President Jammeh so that our freedom of press can be reborn.

THREE SENEGALESE CITIZENS DISAPPEARED IN GAMBIA SINCE TUESDAY

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According to sources in Dakar Senegal, The President of the “Free Karim Wade” movement and two of his members have disappeared in Gambia since Tuesday. The trio Murtala jobe, Amadou Cham and Murtala Gaydel Wane were in Banjul to attend the 56th session of The African Commission on Human and People’s Rights meeting, the commission is headquartered in Banjul.

The three were at the meeting to call on human rights defenders to put pressure on the Senegalese President Macky Sall to free Karim Wade, son of former President, Abdoulie Wade.  Karim was sentenced in Dakar in March to six years in prison on corruption charges. He was also fined a total of 138 billion CFA.

Sources say that The Gambian repressive dictator President Yahya Jammeh could be behind the disapperance of the three to appease President Sall. This came after Jammeh openly said on National Television that he will not allow opponents of the Senegalese President in The Gambia to openly critise Sall. This is therefore President Jammeh in another misguided effort to appease President Sall of Senegal that he will not allow his critics in Gambia in an effort by Jammeh to convince Sall to arrest Gambian dissidents in Senegal and hand them over to Gambia.

Observers say that the move could  create problems for Macky as Senegalesel are not Gambians, as Senegal is a democracy and it’s people always stand up for their rights. Family members of the three men have confirmed that they last heard from their loved ones on Tuesday.

JAMMEH IS CHARGING FAMILIES FOR THE SINS OF THEIR RELATIVES: #FreeYusuphaLowe

‘Hurt people hurt people’, they say. Any man who lacks certain basic human emotions hurt people but they hardly get hurt. Yaya Jammeh is that kind. Of the eight basic human emotions President Jammeh is filled with fear stemming from paranoia that his evil deeds will haunt and yank his disturbed soul out of his chest through his mouth. He’s angered that he has all his life been deprived of joy and love that those he was born and grew up around has abundance of, a deprivation that fueled and filled his life with sadness and depression. That was why Yaya, whom some believe was a foster child of Asombie Bojang, gets disgusted and envious by the progress, success, achievements and happiness of others.

That is why he craves and pays whatever price to be validated and belong. This is what drives Yaya’s unexplainable attitude towards Gambians. That is why he lacks empathy and respect for people and life.

I have for the longest, struggled to write about the precarious predicament of the relatives of alleged ‘Statehouse Attackers’ that I revere and celebrate as Liberation Fighters. Families that have not in any way participated or known about the actions of their sons and father have been abducted and whisked away to unknown locations where they have allegedly been subjected to physical torture. Of those under state-sponsored kidnapping are mothers and a child, punished for the ‘sins’ of their kinfolks. What does he hope to achieve? Raise the Freedom Fighters from their honorable death or force others to return? This is pathetic.

The rhetorical question that many ask, that if Yaya did tell his mother that he was staging a military coup on July 22, 1994, has its answer in how Yaya rates his mother and the degree of respect he has for her. From the accounts of those who know him, he reprimands his mother when he feels she’d upset and wronged him. He screams and cusses her out that sends the poor old lady shivering and fearing for her life. I’d not be surprised because there is nothing that Jammeh believes in other than force and riches – Power. So a son his breed would not consult or involve his parent in anything he does.

Because of his disdain for Gambians and excessive intoxication with power, he’d do anything to hurt anyone he believes is a threat to his seat. That was why I wake up each day disappointed and regretting how and why Jammeh escaped a bullet to his skull or at least arrested on December 30, 2014. That was going to get us out of this misery. But since that failed, Yaya drills out his animalistic traits to hatefully treat Gambians with contempt as he ventured on an irrational vengeance on innocent people who probably did not know why they have been abducted.

Yusupha Lowe (13) and Alieu Lowe (19), whose father and brother respectively, is a friend of mine are paying for the sins of their family for a crime he’s alleged to have committed but not guilty of. Meta Njie, the mother of the late Lamain Sanneh is an innocent, poor village woman who is carrying the heavy cross of his son as his body lies on ice in the morgue for four month. How does any man with conscience sleep through that know?

Our situation as a country and people has been helpless thus making it pitiful. That sorry state has been compounded by the absolute absence of any institution that neither defends nor fights for the rights of people against the authorities. Justice department and the courts watch as citizens get stripped of their inalienable rights, detained and gone missing on executive directives. The ministries of Women and Children’s affairs, Social Welfare and Child Protection Alliance all stayed mute while this goes on. As a matter of fact Social welfare and Child Protection Alliance bosses clearly distanced themselves from the issue and quickly narrowed their scopes so this does not fall under their purview. The religious leaders and politicians are not able to do anything. Basically, WE ALL failed as a people for succumbing to the brutality of a Dracula in needle-spiked boots walking on our spines.

Yaya Jammeh is a spiteful soul wronging and abusing Gambians. He has a poisonous spirit that is corroding his whole being, barring him from acknowledging, understanding or relating to indigenous, decent Gambians. Notwithstanding, we must not beg but demand that Yaya frees his abductees for them to reunite with their families. They are hurting the same way he and his wife would should ISIS kidnap his two children and parade them in orange jumpsuits. He must stop inflicting pain on Gambians if he wants his post presidency be any peaceful for him, or even his family.

Yusupha and Alieu Lowe are supposed to be in school today like Mariam Jammeh instead of languishing in detention. Naa Meta Njie, Alhagie Kebba Touray, Bai Jobe Njie are all parents like Asombie Bojang and Zineb Jammeh who deserved to be with their families after more than hundred days abduction. The Gambian State needs to always remember that it’s her obligation to defend and protect her citizens’ rights, lives and properties instead of perpetuating perennial Gangsterism. All hands must be on deck to hault this speeding training that is about to wreck. By any means necessary.

Free Our People. Let Our People Go!

Good Morning And Peace To The Planet!

Pata PJ

THE JAMMEH GOVERNMENT IMPASSE WITH UDP, A LESSON IN IRONY

A United Democratic Party (UDP) member who was stuck in an impasse with Jammeh’s military police at Fass Njaga Choi described dictator Yaya Jammeh as “the most unfair wrestling competitor, as he ties your hands and legs, then ask you to wrestle with him in the ring”. The statement summing up totally and very aptly the problems the Gambian opposition face trying to compete against Jammeh in Gambia, totally repressed, unable to hold meetings without a permit and facing arbitrary arrest and detention for opposing Jammeh.

Symbolically the Gambian opposition have both their hands and legs tied, by being denied access to the only state controlled TV and media, denied coverage by the other “independent newspapers and radio stations” due to self censorship by the journalist, required to apply for a permit to use a public address system to address constituents at meetings, refused avenues to negotiate much needed electoral reforms, their members threatened with arrest and torture for supporting the opposition, sacked from government jobs and totally weakened by design and not offered any help or recognition by the International community. Thus they continue to fight a loosing battle against dictator Jammeh and his state sponsored terrorism, until recently when diaspora groups and media amplified the plight of the Gambian opposition through social media like twitter, Facebook and online diaspora radios.

Two weeks ago, President Jammeh denied the UDP the major opposition party a permit to use a public address system as they embarked on a nationwide tour to sensitise the population as part of activities leading to the 2016 presidential elections. The news of the permit denial was immediately picked up by Gambian diaspora radios and newspapers, who ran the story of the permit denial and the UDP’s determination to continue with their tour regardless of the denial to use a public address system. Hours later, news began filtering through that the UDP entourage has been intercepted at Fass Njaga Choi by the police and military police who barricaded the road using their cars so that they could not continue on their tour. The police insisted on the UDP returning to Banjul the capital to seek for a permit but lawyer Darboe, the UDP leader insisted that it was their constitutional right to tour even if they are denied a permit to use a PA system. Within minutes of the impasse, news was on social media as well the diaspora radios and picked up by International news media that Yaya Jammeh has deployed armed military police to intercept the UDP caravan and the UDP are refusing to backdown and return to Banjul.

The impasse finally ended on Monday 20th April 2015, with many claiming victory for the Gambian opposition because they were not only finally granted a permit to use a PA system, but they showed resistance in the face of a real threat in a face off with armed security personnel whose record in April 2000 include the killing of 14 innocent and unarmed school students and the maiming of countless others. The single act of defiance by the UDP by refusing to return to Banjul and the five day non violent sit-down resistance that followed with members of the entourage including the elderly sleeping outside in the open on concrete floors highlighted the struggle the Gambian opposition face daily trying to uproot the dictatorial regime of Yaya Jammeh. What was even more galling is that the security forces deployed to block the opposition were not sent any food by the Jammeh administration and in the end the opposition had to share their food with the security forces sent to intercept them, showing the goodness of the Gambian spirit with that single act of sharing of food with your oppressors.

The irony of the situation was further highlighted by the fact that when the Jammeh government denied the opposition UDP a permit to use a public address system on their nationwide tour, their aim was to deny the opposition a platform to talk to Gambians. What the Jammeh regime did not count on was technology and the determination of dissidents in the diaspora to give the opposition the much needed platform to talk to Gambians. People called their families in Gambia to inform them of the blockage and urge them to support the UDP, International media reported on the impasse and the online diaspora radios opened an international platform. Many even argue that if the blockage did not happen, perhaps the likes of Fatoumata Tambajang would have never surfaced or become the face of the resistance to dictatorship in Gambia. Tambajang through her single act of going to going to Fass to show her solidarity with the opposition, opened the floodgates for women to shed fear and standup to denounce dictatorship.

Observers therefore said that through Yaya Jammeh’s misguided attempts to silent the opposition, he inadvertently gave them a global platform to not only channel their message but also expose him for the tyrant that he is. The funds also mobilized in the diaspora within a short time to support the opposition is clear indication of the need and wish for change.

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