As a neighbor it is only right that I congratulate you on your 54th independence anniversary from French colonial rule. Nothing is more worthy of celebrating to me (The Gambia) in April more than 04/04, not April fool day, not world autism awareness day, not world health day, not earth day, and not even world malaria day, but April 4th, the day my dear neighbor attained self rule I will also like to congratulate you for your breakthrough in March 2000 from a pseudo-democracy to a electoral democracy that produces a surprisingly free and fair election and the defeat of the ruling Socialist Party after 40 years in power.
As your best buddy from childhood, we have shared the same food, culture, lifestyle, and sometimes even the same family. I am so proud of you like a father feels towards an archiving son.
But something seems ironical my dear neighbor, there are overwhelming evidence of correlation between the economic development and democracy in Senegal and the lack there of in the Gambia. It seems like the more troubling and backward I become the more prosperous and progressive you become.
Is this a coincidence or what? Please do not take this personal, I am not jealous nor envious of you at all, ok that’s a lie, I am envious of you just a little bit, but no hard feelings it is all in good faith. You and I are practically one, you are me and I am you, sort of, right? Meaning my struggle is your struggle and your success is my success, right? Now you see why I may be confused by our current state in time.
I am struggling, and you are progressing and neither of us is feeling the residual effects of the other party’s situation. But like I said, no hard feelings, I am very much happy for you. I heard that you and your family are having a BBQ to celebrate your independence and freedom but I didn’t get an invitation. I can even smell the delicious food and the flavor drinks. I think it is because you may have missed typed my address and the mail man sent my invitation to the wrong address…Right? That is it, or maybe the mail man stole my invitation, I never trusted that fool, I don’t like the way he looks at my younger daughter.
Either way I don’t believe that you will intentionally leave me out of your guest list especially during these times of difficulty in my household. Which reminds me, my house has been attacked by arm rubbers and they set it on fire 20 years ago and the smokes/flames are still burning. Amnesty International and her children even stopped by to assist. And UN also sent her oldest son to come and check on me. But you my dear neighbor, I didn’t see you.
I thought to myself maybe you didn’t know about it or saw the smoke. I am just giving you a heads up that one of the patios in your big mansion (Casamance) also caught some of the fire. I have a feeling that you are too busy with your own household problems that you barely notice what is happening on my end. But this is not about me; this is about you and how far you have come since childhood. You inspire me every day I wake up in the morning and look over to your house.
I am very proud of how your musicians, wrestlers, entertainers, religious leaders and political prostitutes are always granted invitations to my back yard by the same gang leader who holds me and my family at gun point for 20 years. They receive gifts (both material and financial) worth lots of money from Babili Mansa. Do you remember that chic with the big loppy juice? I think her name is Ndey Gaye, yep that is her name, she reported some time ago that her and her colleagues were given lots of millions for shaking it for the gang leader. I think that requires a special recognition because I and my children are starving.
Our medical system is a failure. Our educational system is a shame. Our energy company is a disgrace. Our religious leaders are getting jailed. Our oppositions are getting intimidated. Our economy depends on western union. But for some reason, you my dear friend and your family have successfully manage to come to my back yard and collect money in lump sums all the time.
Your tourism industry seems to be booming as more western countries label my house as a dictatorial household and avoid it for security reasons. Many businesses are leaving my house and coming to establish their businesses in your house. Major NGO’s and donor institutions are now choosing Senegal over the Gambia. All this things left me wondering if I were you, will I ever be interested in the development of my household? Hmmmmm…scary thought. But again, no hard feelings, it is not your fault that I cannot put my house in order. It is simply opportunity cost. You are such a good neighbor after all.
“In the end, we will remember not the words of our enemies, but the silence of our friends”. In this case I will very much remember the parties and the booty shaking competitions taking place in my own house that I am not invited to, but you my dear neighbor and your family are always listed on the VIP list. That deserve an honorable mention and once again congrats.
If my neighbor’s house is on fire I should not just sit around and say it is not my problem, my neighbors have to put out his/ her fire. A good neighbor will pick up his/her garden hose, plug it to his/her hydrant and help put out the fire. But he/she will not used the opportunity of a neighbor’s house on fire to BBQ and Grill his/her chicken wings and prime ribs. There is a saying that one man’s meat is another man’s poison. No truer statement describes our current relationship right now.
I am not asking you to put out the fire in my house for me, I am only asking you to borrow me your garden hose and may be lend a hand. And if you cannot do any of that, please I am begging you for the sake of my young children do not grill your meat from the flames flying out of my house. That is not neighborly at all. And I repeat, I am not asking you to put off the fire for me nor am I saying that it is your obligation to lend a hand. What I am asking you to do is that if you cannot help put out the fire in my house and get rid of the arm rubbers, please do not come to my house to grill your meat with the gangsters who set my house on fire.
While you and your children are enjoying your chicken legs and lamp ribs, I and my children will be starving here and busy working to put out the fire. Once again, happy Independence Day and may God continue to bless Senegal and her children.
Sincerely Your Neighbor
The Gambia.
THE UDP/PPP POLITICAL CONUNDRUM WE CANNOT AFFORD
The PPP rally in Brikama, seen by many as the re-launching of the party, finally forced out what is seen as the inevitable UDP/PPP political conundrum. For all practical purposes these two parties are one of the same. The UDP came into being back in 1994, at the death bed of the PPP when the new players in town, the Junta made a deliberate calculated decision to ban the PPP and other parties that were seen as stumbling blocks in their desire to take over the country through the political route. The APRC after taking the reins of power through the barrel of the gun, all the established political parties were sent on a political holiday, and most notably was the PPP.
The entire PPP party structure, from “Yayi Compins”, youth groups and sponsors repackaged and created the UDP. The new party, UDP was fathered by the PPP and some members of the NCP elite party players. To sanitize the new structure from the negativity that the PPP was suffering from, a non-political lawyer who was also perceived at that time as someone who could not be tagged with the PPP label, or even a supporter of the party was brought in to lead. Again, it is a fact that during that period the PPP currency was at its lowest value, and no serious political counter to the Junta can be done without distancing from the PPP. The creation of the UDP was a direct tactical counter to deny the Junta’s their plan to monopolize the political space in the new Gambia.
After thirty years of the PPP, the Gambian people wanted something different, and with the wind of change blowing in every corner of the country, the Junta was able to capitalize on this yearn for change among Gambians and lay out every promises to create hope. The final nail on the coffin was the redrawing of the political terrain, and tagging the UDP as the new PPP, basically calling it same wine in a new bottle. During the twenty years of its existence, the UDP still maintains the party structure players of the PPP and the NCP. Even when the ban was lifted and the PPP was reinstated, some of its Yayi Compins and grassroots supporters have moved on and considered the UDP as their new home.
The July coup has really left the mighty PPP in total disarray, some of its party leaders have retired from politics, a good number have already become comfortable in the new UDP party hierarchy, even the Maestro himself, Sir Dawda Jawara, the ex-president was invited back to the country and retired from politics. The little flicker of hope for the comeback of the PPP was in the hands of none other than Omar Amadou Jallow, the ex Agricultural Minister, who refused to bury the legacy of the PPP. After the lifting of the ban, a despondent party reluctantly made OJ the Interim party leader. OJ initially recognized the difficulty for the re- launching of the PPP as a fully fledge party, instead settled for throwing the party support to the leader of the UDP, Alh. Ousainou Darboe. OJ is regarded by most Gambians, one of the shrewdest politicians the Gambia has ever seen, and understood that the only way to effectively take the fight to the APRC is through alliances with other opposition parties.
The APRC has not only become very powerful, but ruthless to anyone who dare challenge or pose a threat to their existence. In his attempt to take the fight to Jammeh and the APRC, OJ has been tortured, sent to the notorious Mile 2 prison several times, but he refused to be silenced. From the outset, OJ understood that to effectively continue his fight against the APRC, he recognized the unpopularity of the PPP among Gambian people who were still riding the change agenda, so he joined forces by supporting the UDP in their quest to run against the APRC. On paper, the PPP still existed as a registered party with the Independent Electoral Commission (IEC), but after their leader for thirty years, Sir Dadwa came back from exile and retired from politics, and the rest of the leaders do not seem to have the will to fight for the recreation of the PPP; OJ settled for the title of Interim leader and continued his partnership with opposition parties, especially the UDP. However, OJ never gave up the legacy of the PPP , and even as he continues to work with opposition parties through building of alliances, he maintains the independence of the PPP that frankly did not have an elaborate executive, and the party structure of yester year was all gone – absorbed by the UDP.
Over the years. most of the PPP campaigns are being waged through interviews and attending UDP rallies. In opposition circles, especially in the Diaspora, OJ has built a reputation of a fearless leader, and as the APRC begin to show its true colors as the worst government within the Africans continent, and whatever semblance of democracy the country ever had was all gone, the thirty year PPP rule was beginning to be seen as not that bad after all. The Diaspora that was the constituency that was adamant in their support to the new APRC back in the early days of the coup in 1994, and believed that the county has enough of the PPP, have begun to revisit the PPP legacy and were convinced that Gambia under the PPP was by far better than what we have now under the APRC.
The Gambia has become a dangerous place for most Gambians: a good number have been sent packing and became dissidents, others sent to the notorious Mile 2 prison, a good number were either killed or gone missing. The human rights record of the APRC has become one of the worst in the entire world, and to majority of dissidents in the Diaspora, at least during the PPP Government; the Gambia was seen as one of the few countries in Africa with the reputation of having a culture of good governance.
As for the economy, what use to cost Gambians D8.00 to import goods from the outside world is now costing close to D45.00, and the entire Gambian economy is now under the tutelage of the autocratic leader. With this kind of transformation of the political dynamics, it became obvious for Omar Amadou Jallowa and his few PPP leaders that the political realities have shifted on the ground and the PPP legacy has become lot more palatable. Not so fast, you will hear from circles, and the reality is that the PPP party structure has been dysfunctional for the past twenty years and re-launching the PPP will no doubt brings rumblings within other parties, especially the UDP.
Trying to bring back the hey days of the PPP basically means having to start poaching, and getting the Yayi Compins and grassroots supporters back in the fold from parties like the UDP to come back home. This exercise has not been easy and could even get lot worst. There is accusation of insincerity, untrustworthy, selfish and a whole lots of bad feelings that have begun to emerge among the party leadership of both parties.
These two parties are in reality one of the same, basically relying on the same constituency, and in a real democratic environment this should be welcomed and very good for the country. But, with the political dispensation in the Gambia, and a possibility of the country becoming a failed state, the country cannot afford the UDP/PPP political conundrum. The country’s political reality is for a united front to take our country back, and build a new democracy that all political parties can compete to win the trust of the Gambian people. The PPP and the UDP should come to the realization that their only way forward is to form a merger of the two parties and come up with a new executive. This of course will be a temporary arrangement, that will make it easy for some of their supporters that are caught in this web and remove the distraction and focus on the APRC and Jammeh. With a new merger, selection of the executive and even selecting of a leader will jump start the first step of a needed alliance, and much easier for the formation of an alliance with the other parties. It is in the interest of both parties to make the move, and it will be in the interest of all Gambians to demand this move from the leadership of both parties. In the absence of that, we will continue to see what happen in Brikama to repeat in every corner of the Gambia. You can bet your bottom dollar that will be the ticket for a landslide victory for Jammeh and the APRC, in fact, Gambians in their numbers will not only boycott 2016 but the opposition parties as a whole.