All, our SOS for Energy is on the prowl for a deal, watch your wallet!! Jammeh denies Eskom deal By Malick Mboob Oct 4, 2004, 09:11 Email this article Printer friendly page President Yahya Jammeh has denied reports that his trip to South Africa was to sign a deal with Eskom, a major supplier of electricity in Africa, to take over from Nawec. Speaking to journalists at the Banjul International Airport on his return from a five day working visit to South Africa and Tanzania on Saturday, President Jammeh said: “I am aware of the lies that were said by the press that I am going to sign a deal with Eskom to come and take over. The issue of Nawec did not take me to South Africa.” Admitting that Gambians are suffering, the President noted that the power outages are becoming unbearable, adding that he has a better solution to the electricity problems. He however declined to elaborate further. President Jammeh also said there is need for leaders in the continent to encourage inter-African trade and partnership in order to create more jobs. He added that there is a lot of “external” trade on the African continent which he said is detrimental to the continent’s socio economic development. “We want to encourage inter-African partnerships and inter-African trade because governments see that there is very little trade between African states. A lot of our trade is external. As long as we do not trade within ourselves. As long as there is little economic activities between African states, development is always in need of...,” he said. President Jammeh said his visit to Tanzania among other things was to see what The Gambia can achieve technologically in the area of agriculture. “They are very advanced in agricultural research and The Gambia is an agricultural economy,” he noted. He added that both countries have universities which will help in the areas of exchange programmes and to establish faculties that are not in the University of The Gambia. The President was accompanied by Babucarr Blaise Jagne, Sulayman Sait Mboob and Edward Singhateh, the secretaries of state Foreign Affairs, Agriculture and Trade, Industry and Employment respectively. By Malick Mboob Oct 4, 2004, 09:11 Email this article Printer friendly page President Yahya Jammeh has denied reports that his trip to South Africa was to sign a deal with Eskom, a major supplier of electricity in Africa, to take over from Nawec. Speaking to journalists at the Banjul International Airport on his return from a five day working visit to South Africa and Tanzania on Saturday, President Jammeh said: “I am aware of the lies that were said by the press that I am going to sign a deal with Eskom to come and take over. The issue of Nawec did not take me to South Africa.” Admitting that Gambians are suffering, the President noted that the power outages are becoming unbearable, adding that he has a better solution to the electricity problems. He however declined to elaborate further. President Jammeh also said there is need for leaders in the continent to encourage inter-African trade and partnership in order to create more jobs. He added that there is a lot of “external” trade on the African continent which he said is detrimental to the continent’s socio economic development. “We want to encourage inter-African partnerships and inter-African trade because governments see that there is very little trade between African states. A lot of our trade is external. As long as we do not trade within ourselves. As long as there is little economic activities between African states, development is always in need of...,” he said. President Jammeh said his visit to Tanzania among other things was to see what The Gambia can achieve technologically in the area of agriculture. “They are very advanced in agricultural research and The Gambia is an agricultural economy,” he noted. He added that both countries have universities which will help in the areas of exchange programmes and to establish faculties that are not in the University of The Gambia. The President was accompanied by Babucarr Blaise Jagne, Sulayman Sait Mboob and Edward Singhateh, the secretaries of state Foreign Affairs, Agriculture and Trade, Industry and Employment respectively. _________________________________________________________________ Don’t just search. Find. Check out the new MSN Search! http://search.msn.click-url.com/go/onm00200636ave/direct/01/ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ To Search in the Gambia-L archives, go to: http://maelstrom.stjohns.edu/CGI/wa.exe?S1=gambia-l To contact the List Management, please send an e-mail to: [log in to unmask] To unsubscribe/subscribe or view archives of postings, go to the Gambia-L Web interface at: http://maelstrom.stjohns.edu/archives/gambia-l.html ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~