Cogent and incisive Galleh. If I have it my way, nothing will occupy you  
more than your guardianship here. The dismantling therefore of Yahya is 
imminent  and it will not be his decapitation. Yahya, like the other despots and  
tyrants, is an industry. An odious system that needs trifle input and  
complicit accounting. The dregs of all society. The bottom feeders of the world  
gravitate toward that system to blend their crimes and criminalities into 
the  ambiance of legitimacy. They feed on erstwhile failings of more sober  
humans.
 
Thank you Galleh for the sobriety. The struggles continue.  Unrelenting.
 
Haruna.
 
 
In a message dated 4/5/2010 7:17:43 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,  
[log in to unmask] writes:

Making Enemies, Manufacturing Victims 
By Baba Galleh Jallow 
Despotic regimes have a way of making more enemies that they can handle  
and manufacturing more victims than they can account for. Perched on top of  
his blood-soaked throne, the despot is beset by crippling paranoia on one 
hand  and a bloodthirsty determination to eliminate all that appears to be the  
source of that paranoia. The despot has neither friend nor partner. His 
only  friend is the power he wields, and as long as those under him wielding 
the  guns keep their eyes to the ground and carry out his bloody bidding, they 
are  partially safe. They are never really fully safe, for the despot’s 
paranoia  could possess him so much so that he wakes up from a nightmare and 
the first  loyal partner he has in mind immediately morphs into a mortal enemy 
that must  immediately be eliminated. Thus we have former partners of the 
despot and  former members of his killer squads and loyal cronies suddenly 
tumbling to the  ground or into their graves with no comprehensible reason. Of 
course, a loyal  crony or partner who suddenly finds himself grabbed, 
accused of plotting to  overthrow the state, tortured, and dumped into a mosquito 
and rat infested  cell in a malignant jail can no longer love the 
perpetrator of those deeds.  And so even if they put up a straight face and continue 
to sing the praises of  the despot if they ever get released, there is 
little doubt that in their  heart of hearts, they hate the despot more than they 
hate anything else in  this world. 
Gambia’s despot Yahya Jammeh is a quintessential specimen of his  
bloodthirsty kind. Jammeh believes that he is beyond reproach and beyond the  
fallibility that is every human being’s fate. He believes that whatever he  does or 
says is right and that all who suffer his wrath deserve their fate. So  do 
all despots think. And so over the past twenty years, with the levels of  
his paranoia soaring to head bursting heights with every passing minute,  
Jammeh has made more enemies and manufactured more victims than it is possible  
to compute. Despite the seeming complexity of his actions, they are all  
motivated by one single thing: his obsession with remaining in power forever,  
and his bloody determination to eliminate all perceived threats to the  
achievement of that objective. And so he throws all care to the winds. He  
refuses to see or hear reason. And he is more comfortable dealing with the  
animals in his zoo than he is in dealing with any person who betrays a modicum  
of common sense. He does not care what the laws of the land say and openly  
scoffs at any suggestions of the existence of such a thing as human rights or 
 the rule of law. He invokes the constitution only when it suits his 
nefarious  purposes and tramples on it whenever it suits him. Yet, like all 
bloodthirsty  despots, he has the audacity to pose as the champion defender of all 
human  interests in The Gambia, which he forces himself to believe, belongs 
 personally to him. 
The most recent case of Jammeh’s contemptuous disregard for all sense  of 
probity and of our national constitution is the jailing of opposition UDP  
campaign manager Femi Peters Sr. Femi was arrested and put through the process 
 of a dubious trial, at the end of which he was sentenced to a one year 
jail  term with hard labor, in addition to a ten thousand dalasi fine. Those 
who  know the workings of Jammeh’s dark and sinister shadow state knew from 
the  moment he was charged that no amount of arguments by defense counsel 
could  save Mr. Peters. It was clear from the get go that those judges and  
magistrates who were handling the case had received their orders from Jammeh  
and knew exactly what was going to happen. Jammeh is a vindictive individual,  
a cruel and unjust man who is always eager to show less powerful people 
that  he can put them in one spot. Neither the tenets of natural justice nor 
the  demands of man made law are strong enough to deter a despot from doing  
whatever it takes in his jaundiced imagination to keep his greedy tongue 
stuck  in the national honey pot. 
Section 25, subsection 1 (c and d) of The Constitution of the Republic  of 
The Gambia, 1997 guarantees every Gambian citizen the “freedom to assemble  
and demonstrate peacefully and without arms” and “freedom of association,  
which shall include freedom to form and join associations and unions,  
including political parties and trade unions.” As far as Yahya Jammeh is  
concerned, however, these rights and freedoms are totally subject to his  personal 
whims and caprices. It is clear that Femi Peters Sr. did not break  any law 
in defying the authorities and holding a rally. The police who  repeatedly 
refused to honor the UDP’s formal requests for a permit to hold  peaceful 
rallies are the ones who broke the law. And of course, there is  little doubt 
that the decision to deny the UDP permits to hold peaceful  rallies came from 
Yahya Jammeh. If the ruling party does not require a permit  to assemble 
peacefully, why should any other legitimate and legally registered  party be 
required to obtain such a permit? And if the opposition parties are  bending 
over backwards to accommodate this ridiculous and unjust non-law, why  
should they be denied a permit? It is thus a curious feature of a despotic  
political dispensation that the natural logic of justice is stood on its head.  
Law abiding citizens are bullied, jailed, exiled or killed, while the real  
criminals – the despot and his tools - on account of the power they wield, 
are  elevated and sanctified. Imposing a one–year jail term with hard labor on 
 64-year old and innocent Femi Peters is an act of brutality that can only 
be  perpetrated by the most heartless of tyrants. It is an act that is 
repugnant  to all truth or justice loving human beings.  
And now, sadly, Mr. Peters’ son Femi Peters Jr., who has always tried  very 
hard to steer clear of politics in his brilliant writings, has come out  
with a strong condemnation of the injustice inflicted against his poor old  
father. In him, Yahya Jammeh has made another enemy who, for no fault of his,  
will now be among Jammeh’s most wanted. Who, in Femi Peters Jr.’s shoes 
would  not react in like manner? Who can sit idly and silently by while the 
most  gross of injustices is inflicted upon your 64-year old dad, whose only 
crime  is to insist on enjoying his constitutional freedom of association and 
 assembly?  
Eventually though, the despot will make so many enemies that when the  ugly 
moment of his dramatic fall comes, he will not know what hit him. In  fact, 
from the moment he starts making enemies and manufacturing victims, from  
the moment he starts inflicting cruel acts of injustice on his fellow human  
beings, the despot begins to fall. The ancient Roman thinker and statesman  
Solon put it very nicely when he remarked that tyranny is a very high place  
from which there is no easy way down. Let him ask the various tyrants of  
history. 

 
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