Chei "FITNA"!
This is a sad episode in our history.
It a sad circle of Cleevages.
Bad cards go away!
Peace! you are Welcome!
The steam is too much.
Am sad,we are sad,they are sad...Chei FITNA!
Read on....
Senegal may tunnel under Gambia
Senegal's president has suggested building a tunnel under Gambia to link the country's north and south.
Gambia - which is a long thin sliver of land surrounded by Senegal - has a stranglehold on the best routes between one part of Senegal and the other.
Relations between the two countries have become increasingly frayed since a row over increased ferry charges erupted in August.
On Tuesday, some Senegalese soldiers were briefly held in Gambia's capital.
The group of soldiers were taking the shortest route between northern Senegal and its southern region, Casamance, which cuts across Gambia - and doing a little shopping on the way.
They were detained in Banjul market, and taken off to answer questions about what Senegalese soldiers were doing in Gambia, armed and in uniform, without permission.
They had crossed by the Banjul ferry, at the mouth of the Gambia River.
The Trans-Gambia Highway, which runs further inland, has effectively been closed to cross-border traffic for over a month by Senegalese transporters protesting against the sudden doubling of charges to cross the river on the small and unreliable ferry.
The BBC's Elizabeth Blunt says that Senegalese hate the power Gambia has over them, and a clearly exasperated President Abdoulaye Wade this week suggested three ways to break the deadlock.
Gambia should build a bridge over the river
Senegal could operate its own ferry
Senegal could even, he suggested, tunnel right under Gambia - which is only about 35km wide.
He pointed out that there are plenty of much longer tunnels in the world, and claimed that China had offered to help build it.
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Senegal may tunnel under Gambia
Senegal's president has suggested building a tunnel under Gambia to link the country's north and south.
Gambia - which is a long thin sliver of land surrounded by Senegal - has a stranglehold on the best routes between one part of Senegal and the other.
Relations between the two countries have become increasingly frayed since a row over increased ferry charges erupted in August.
On Tuesday, some Senegalese soldiers were briefly held in Gambia's capital.
The group of soldiers were taking the shortest route between northern Senegal and its southern region, Casamance, which cuts across Gambia - and doing a little shopping on the way.
They were detained in Banjul market, and taken off to answer questions about what Senegalese soldiers were doing in Gambia, armed and in uniform, without permission.
They had crossed by the Banjul ferry, at the mouth of the Gambia River.
The Trans-Gambia Highway, which runs further inland, has effectively been closed to cross-border traffic for over a month by Senegalese transporters protesting against the sudden doubling of charges to cross the river on the small and unreliable ferry.
The BBC's Elizabeth Blunt says that Senegalese hate the power Gambia has over them, and a clearly exasperated President Abdoulaye Wade this week suggested three ways to break the deadlock.
Gambia should build a bridge over the river
Senegal could operate its own ferry
Senegal could even, he suggested, tunnel right under Gambia - which is only about 35km wide.
He pointed out that there are plenty of much longer tunnels in the world, and claimed that China had offered to help build it.
E-mail this to a friend Printable version
LINKS TO MORE AFRICA STORIES
SelectNigeria militia violence threatNew unity government for SudaneseTanzanian 30-year pension delayConcert for peaceful Liberia pollEthiopia Jews go on hunger strikeUgandan army abuses probe urgedEthiopians flee from killer lionsSudan's rebels seize Darfur townToronto prize for S African filmBurundians flock to free schoolsEx-ministers face genocide trialPirates dock Somali hostage shipSA kidnap girl's body in suitcaseTadesse and Tulu win in NewcastleYemen holds thousands of AfricansMugabe defends urban demolitionsAir France resumes Cameroon routeTreaty record for Liberian leaderNiger food aid 'no longer needed'Ethiopia strives to feed itselfBurundi: A question of justiceMauritania's deadly daily povertyWho runs your world?Why I Hate 'I Love Africa'Send us your pictures of AfricaProgrammes and schedules [input]
SEE ALSO:
Border shut after soccer clash
09 Jun 03 | Africa
Country profile: The Gambia
11 Aug 05 | Country profiles
Country profile: Senegal
17 Aug 05 | Country profiles
TOP AFRICA STORIES NOW
Nigeria militia violence threat
New unity government for Sudanese
Tanzanian 30-year pension delay
Liberians to party for peaceful poll
getRssUrlStory('/rss/newsonline_world_edition/africa/rss.xml') | What is RSS?
News Alerts
E-mail services
Mobiles/PDAs
BBC Copyright Notice
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