Yero & Abdu,
Dida Halake was at home in our country because Yaya and his gang of miscreants made him feel at home and gave him the gren light to engage in playing games on their behalf.. It is only leaders who are up to no good who make outsiders confidants and the free range to mistreat the sons and daughters of the land.
Talking about the failure of capitalism, the same players employing the same tactics that have left the economies of the Western World in shambles are sufacing on the African continent with the help and encouragement of the likes of the APRC regime who do it for their own puny personal gain without care about the long term consequences. From a proliferation of banks that control the flow of money in and out of our countries to the cost of empty plots of land that have skyrocketed to 1 million dalasis. How many Gambians can afford to pay 1 million dalasi for a plot of land? Therefore, Africa is for sale to those outsiders who can afford to buy these plots of land and this will ultimately lead to Africans becomig servants in our own countries.
It appears that most of our leaders have not learnt anything from experiences such as Apartheid in South Africa and the Rhodesian regime which led to the disenfranchisement of Africans in their own country, the remnants of which the people still cannot shed because those who controlled the land and the economy still do and God help anyone who attempts to correct that injustice.
Jabou
-----Original Message-----
From: Y Jallow <[log in to unmask]>
To: [log in to unmask]
Sent: Sat, 21 Jun 2008 12:43 pm
Subject: Re: our resident marxist
Uncle Suntou,
Karim did well by exposing this ‘khakatar’ of a human being called Dida Halake
-halakoh bala. This is all the more reason why it is important to know who to
confide matters with in today’s Gambia.
What caught my attention though, he (Dida) pictured himself as belonging to the
Fulbe tribe. If really so, all the Fulas of Fulladou washed their hands and he
drank that dirty filth. That just choked my neck, because it is a shame that
Dida Halake who came to Gambia recently was meddling the affairs of the country
like he was doing. If for anything, he has taken his share fully. Those that
support wrong doings, hypocrisy and wrong sentiments always fall a trap. Dida
has become of a victim of his hypocritical egos and nuisance. He is probably
looking for an exit door now. To that I say, hurry up!!
Also bro Lang, thanks for your commentaries as well on Obama.
Sometimes, "we have to agree to disagree without having to be disagreeable."
[Courtesy of Dr. Abdoulie Saine, OH]
Regards,
YJ> Date: Sat, 21 Jun 2008 18:33:53 +0100> From: [log in to unmask]>
Subject: Re: our resident marxist> To: [log in to unmask]> > Very
interesting.> Thanks.> Date: Sat, 21 Jun 2008 18:05:03 +0100> From:
[log in to unmask]> Subject: Re: our resident marxist> To:
[log in to unmask]> > Thank Karim, i agree with you but i don't know
about my capitalist democrat advocator, haruna Darboe aka masoud almutawakil. he
may have some disagreement with your commenta about the failings of capitalism.
so dida halaki conatacted you? he is in a mess now.> > ABDOUKARIM SANNEH
<[log in to unmask]> wrote: Suntou> Thanks for the forward. I have
seen marxism so relevant in todays political discuss than ever before. With the
credit crunch, global food crisis, neolibralism dictated by corporation etc
capitalism is failing the poor and world class of the world. The way forward for
classless society is utopian but yet its debate is relevant for our time and
beyond.Is capitalism a guarantor to civil liberty, human rights and social
justice? Does corporate take over of our economies a way forward to our
development? Should civil society surrender their right to life for Shell in
Nigeria to loot the oil wealth in the name of business usual? Pollute the
environment and show no corporate responsibility for human rights and civil
liberty of the indigenous? With these fundamental question marxism is relevant
for the new force of change.> > SUNTOU TOURAY wrote:> Cuuled from the
www.thegambiaecho.com> > Karim Exposes Disgraced Observer Chief Dida Halake > By
Abdoukarim Sanneh, UK > Dida Halake has been keenly following the Gambian debate
on the Internet. Just like the way he used the good and humane nature of James
Alkali Gaye and Gambia's most proud legal professional Hassan Jallow, both
former Cabinet Ministers in the deposed PPP government, this empty barrel uses
Jammeh's regime for speaking or writing against progressive Gambians in
Diaspora. Dida Halake thinks he was doing a good job. Failing to realize that
most of us make the best of our stay here in United Kingdom to get the education
and are ready and determine to serve our country of birth. Dida Halake failed to
realize that among the list here are: - Ebrima Ceesay, Hamjatta Kanteh, Ebrima
Chongan, Yankuba Darbo, Sarjo Bayang, Abdoukarim Sanneh, Dave Manneh, Kejau
Touray, Bunja Touray, Alieu Badara Sowe, NB Daffeh et al whose ideal for the way
forward is misconstrued by the dehumanizing regime as reactionary. Their thought
and ideal (i.e. the Jammeh regime) warned them to kill and bury us> six feet
deep.> Gambians are the most hospitable people I know and I vividly recall
sometime around 2004-2005 when I was living in my Old Trafford den in South
Manchester, just after watching a good Manchester United Championship match, my
home phone rang. Naturally, I thought it was going to be a joyful football
conversation but this time it was not. Who was it? A man named Dida Halake. What
was his mission? > “Mr. Sanneh, he said, I learned that the National Union of
Students of United Kingdom/North West are organising a Noam Chomsky programme.
Can you please send me the detailed information and please expect me around; I
am a Fulani like Gambian.” Halake volunteered. I curiously tried to monitor this
Fulani-like appearance in both the programme in Manchester and Liverpool but to
no avail.> In the beginning I then thought that was the end of the contact but
after the occasion my telephone became the focus of late night discussions from
Dida Halake, trying to build trust and confidence calling Yahya Jammeh a
dictator. For one thing Dida Halake did not know from me was that Yahya A.J.J
Jammeh was part of my MOJA-G Tobacco Road cell along with Momdou Lamin Sanyang
and Edrissa Jobe nor did Halake know the level of hatred we developed in 1987
against P.P.P regime at our gathering on No. 44 Box Bar Road, when our good
father-figure and adviser, the Late Pa Peterson Jobe was the PPP Chairman of
Banjul South. The compound used to be the late evening gathering place for Lamin
Kiti Jabang, Dodou Taal and many PPP figures those days. Amazingly that location
was also the compound we clandestinely conducted our political education, our
library of Marxism books, storage of our clandestine newspapers such as the:
Organs of Revolutionary Student-ORG and also NUGS through> which I attended the
13th Congress of International Union of Students in Cuba in November 1987. I can
recall one late evening taking a local boat from Half Die in Banjul with a
friend who is now a practicing medical doctor in Banjul. All the effort was for
the National Security Service (NSS) and the Criminal Investigation Division
(CID) not to notice our movement given that I was arrested and detained in the
wake of the 1987 student demonstration. With a special transport to Dakar we
landed in at night at the office of the opposition LDMPT Party, which had built
a strong solidarity with MOJA-G because of our advocacy of scientific socialism.
The Cuban congress was an eye opener and when I returned, most of the friends
like Edrissa Jobe and Momdou Lamin Sanyang had travelled to Germany and then I
lost contact. For Yahya Jammeh, I knew much about his lack of ideological
clarity and what I did was to create a distance from him.> When I went to The
Gambia College still determined in my Marxism orientation and just looking into
current affairs with Marxist orientation then I started to regroup through
Student Union activists to loosely discuss issues with friends like the late
Labadie Bojang, Ebrima G. Sankareh et al. Many of these guys did not probably
know my revolutionary background. The only thing they knew was that since my
aunt Nyimasata Sanneh was a junior minister; I might have been part of the PPP
establishment.> With the emergence of the July 1994 coup, I was involved in the
media and also writing articles about the crisis of the farming community while
simultaneously working for Government and later with an NGO. My News Editors
such as Ebrima Ceesay and Demba Jawo always banked on my knowledge about rural
Gambia. When the writing was on the wall from the Pakau Njogu crisis, the
dumping of European Household Waste as fertilizers and many more, I called for
change- for a Second Republic. Why I refrained from the July 1994 revolution led
by a friend and former MOJA-G associate, when most of my MOJA-G comrades had
joined the band wagon can be summed up in the immortal words of the late Thomas
Sankara which constitutes part of my mature political development: - “: A
soldier without political education is (nothing other than) a virtual
criminal.”> > > ¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤> To
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