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Subject:
From:
A Jallow <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
The Gambia and related-issues mailing list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Tue, 14 Apr 2009 11:43:31 +0400
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Suntu:

Halifa Sallah is not and should not be the only person of dignified
conscience amongst the leaders or those who claim to be opposition
leaders in Gambia. What he has done and gone through demonstrates to
all and sundry that you, I and every human Gambian must not stand
aside and look while your fellow Gambian and human is being humiliated
in the most degrading manner. We should be thankful that we know in
Halifa, ONE Gambian that will stand up to the brutalities of the
regime and would rather die or languish in jail than to sit and see
his fellow beings dehumanized in broad day light. To insinuate that
Halifa was looking for personal or political gain in the exercise of
liberating his conscience and dignifying the value of human life,
smirks of debilitating ignorance and an insult to his and our
conscience...God forbid!

-Laye

On Tue, Apr 14, 2009 at 4:08 AM,  <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
> An interesting oped to ponder Suntou. Discerner-in-Chief!!! I think Yahya
> shot himself in the foot. And I'm worried about our two bad left-eyes. New
> Kambians!!!! Haruna. You pamplemousse!!!
>
> In a message dated 4/13/2009 6:29:40 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,
> [log in to unmask] writes:
>
> Monday, 13 April 2009
>
> Halifa Factor In Gambia's Witch Hunt debacle
>
> By Suntou Touray
> With the dust almost settled even though facts about the Gambia’s witch
> hunting episode may all not be known, there is occasion to reflect over the
> whole encounter. Men dressed in red raided settlements in search of witches.
> They captured people of decent background and made them consume lethal
> concoctions in the name of ridding them off witch craft spirits. Some of the
> captives died. Large numbers still remain in biting pains, mostly deep in
> their stomach.
> Former Serrekunda East parliamentary member and sociologist Halifa Sallah
> was last month arrested and detained at mile 2 prisons for over a week. This
> was due to his decision to visit two villages over a witch hunting
> incidence. Halifa after his release commented that he went on a fact finding
> mission to the two villages. More accurately put he tried to proof whether
> the witch hunting story was actually true or false.
> Halifa was arrested afterward because the government felt that, he as an
> ordinary citizen of the Gambia who seeking to impersonate the work of the
> police or state security agents.
> No doubt Halifa by all regards played brave by what he did. Why he did so
> remains a question on wet lips.
> Some people considered it a genuine move by Halifa to prove what others
> thought a mere rumour. To others Halifa was in a publicity campaign for
> himself and certainly scored political points whether he preferred using
> that or not.
> From what came out of the encounter Halifa made us all to know that the
> witch hunting story is real and the actions are sanctioned by Gambia
> government.
> What next after knowing the true story still a valid question for curious
> onlookers. Will there be any lawsuit against the government for the unlawful
> conduct of humiliating and harassing innocent Gambians?
> The witch hunting episode ended up projecting Halifa’s political profile at
> higher levels. He was a victim of arbitrary arrest but that by itself
> arrested the tormenting witch hunt at least until matters settled over
> Halifa’s own arrest and brief detention. The whole saga eventually shifted
> from the witch hunting focusing on Halifa. That earned him a high profile
> victim of the unjust government crime of witch hunting.
> Halifa made noise about the remote control Gambian constitution loud enough.
> He defended his action by quoting various sections of the Gambian
> constitution, a document he knows about inside out. Halifa knows too well
> also that document is serving one man and one man only, Yahya Jammeh the
> current Gambian head of state. Since many Gambians know for a fact that
> document is not protecting their human rights for a number reasons one
> wonders if there was any need for Halifa to labour over constitutionality
> this fragrant government encounter with innocent citizens.
> The gains of Halifa’s intervention can double if he was to help the victims
> pursue claims of damage resulting from such inhuman treatment. The victims
> deserve good compensation.
> The good efforts of Halifa placed him beyond the single position of flag
> bearer PDOIS /NADD to the lofty point of standing tall for Gambian people in
> times of need. This is enough wakeup call for Gambians over length and
> breadth of the country to resist the advances of witch hunters. Halifa can
> draft a comprehensive law suit against the government as seen truly standing
> up for the people. The point of departure would be the constitution, a book
> fully in Halifa’s firm grips. Impeachment proceedings against the president
> can be initiated, thus demonstrating severity human rights violations.
> The law suits may not bear quicker results but to make the government pay
> victims. Through that citizens will go long way in exposing the severity of
> state organized crimes.
> We await Halifa’s future actions concerning the witch hunting debacle.
> Halifa’s political profile is undoubtedly boosted. Other gains exceed
> individual political scores. Yahya should not have arrested Halifa in the
> first place. The only reason one would think he ordered his arrest was to
> cause wider divide among the ranks of the opposition.
> Halifa’s followers have a talking point- our only saviour they would say. He
> emerged hero of the hour. His arrest has potential to change something.
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