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Subject:
From:
"Jeng, Beran" <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
The Gambia and related-issues mailing list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Fri, 14 Jul 2000 16:32:54 -0400
Content-Type:
text/plain
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Ebrima,

I was about to post a similar message but you bit me to the gun. I intended to
entitle it
'The Gambia and G-L at crossroads'.The Gambia at a crossroad was adequately
handle
in your posting leaving the G-L part that needs to be address.
G-L has provided us an open platform for information dissemination,debate on
issues
affecting our people and country with a view to impacting the situation back
home.
We have done a tremendous campaign to oust this murderous and treacherous
Jammeh regime by exposing everything that we can of them to keep the Gambian
Public informed to enable them to make a sound judgement of electing our next
leader.
G-L should capitalize on the influence it has back home and help guide our
people
to make the right choice. There are some on the L who are either members of a
political
party back home or have party affiliations. They should come forward with their
party
agenda for debate as Mr. Mballow tried to initiate. This will enable those of us
who supports
no party now to decide on a party of their choice. For those who may not be
impress by
any of our parties to come up with alternatives. We need tolerance and
discipline to be
worth emulating.

Thank you and your sources for the invaluable contributions.

Beran

"The human tendency to regard little things as important has produced very many
great things"
 G.C.lichenberg





                -----Original Message-----
                From:   Ebrima Ceesay [mailto:[log in to unmask]]
                Sent:   Friday, July 14, 2000 4:40 AM
                To:     [log in to unmask]
                Subject:        My Message to All Gambians!!

                My fellow Gambians:

                All the latest reports and telephone calls from The Gambia which
I have been
                receiving, in addition to the information coming from my
centrally-placed
                sources in The Gambia, indicate extremely worrying trends. The
Gambia is now
                showing distinctive trends of increasing chaos and lawlessness.
People have
                been pushed so far against the wall by the iniquitous actions
and haphazard
                governance of Jammeh's regime, that they no longer care to
follow the
                dictates of good citizenship.  Poverty is at a level in our
country where
                people will do anything just to survive, and to ensure their
loved ones'
                survival in a fiercely competitive society.

                Today, our once-reliable system of care within the extended
family has been
                pushed to extremities: so many breadwinners have been rendered
unemployed
                and disempowered and in fact, the whole fabric of our social
well-being is
                now under terrible threat, thanks to the Kanilai butcher.
People, who no
                longer have ANYTHING, will do ANYTHING to ensure the well being
of their
                loved ones.  It has become a basic matter of survival.

                And needless to say, the disintegration of our beloved nation
under Jammeh
                and his cohort touches every sector: governance, economic,
judicial, social,
                health, educational, artistic, moral: the impact of this
terrible regime
                bites hard in every facet of our daily lives.

                Therefore, it is time NOW for our people to prepare for the
forthcoming
                Presidential election in November 2001 (if it does take place at
all, given
                the political threat under which Yaya Jammeh is labouring) so as
to
                successfully unseat Jammeh from the Gambian presidency: our
country needs to
                be mobilising NOW to ensure that Jammeh is finished by the end
of next year.

                The way forward for The Gambian Nation is for its people to use
the ballot
                box to vote Jammeh out come the next presidential election. The
man's record
                is awful: in power for 6 years, and our country has taken three
or more
                steps backward. We have become the laughing stock of the world,
and the
                "poor boy" of the African continent. Jammeh has brought
notoriety to our
                wonderful country: he is known for his lawlessness, for his
thirst for
                power, for his lust for ill-gotten gain. He dabbles in a
war-mongering
                statesmanship on a stage peopled by like-minded personalities
bent on
                personal gain.

                In any case, we should not be allowing Yaya Jammeh to divide us:
his true
                intention is to "divide and rule". Consequently, we have to do
everything in
                our power to resist this. Only by remaining a unified opposition
to this
                villain will we see the back of him and his ilk. My fellow
Gambians, the
                problem in our country is Yaya Jammeh, not our people and not
those
                unfortunates who have had to seek refuge in our nation. There is
no dispute
                about the fact that Jammeh is, in actual fact, the root and
branch of our
                misfortunes as a nation. So our people have to have the WILL to
get rid of
                the man.

                Our need as Gambian citizens with a deep and abiding love for
our nation is
                for peace, stability and genuine co-existence. These three
things used to
                mark our country. Now we have been betrayed by six years of
brutal
                militarism, dishonesty and "intransparency". And Jammeh has also
done his
                best to play a tribal game in our country; he has tried to set
us against
                each other, and to disempower many of us at the expense of his
favourites.
                But we have to do all in our power to resist this trend, and to
ensure that
                the Gambia remains a polyglot nation with a genuine respect for,
and
                tolerance of, difference. We have to present a united front of
opposition in
                order to uproot the butcher of Kanilai.

                However, we should not fool ourselves: the task in front of us
is enormous,
                especially after Jammeh is gone!  The damage that Jammeh has
done since 1994
                is going to take years to put right. To this end, we need to
undertake a
                massive repair job as soon as we have seen the back of this
despot through
                the ballot box. We need to call on every human resource
available to us: all
                those concerned citizens who have remained in The Gambia, and
all those who
                have been forced by one means or another to flee the country and
settle
                elsewhere in the world. In fact, knowing the gravity of the
destruction in
                our country as a result of Jammeh's ineptitude, I would even
argue that we
                need to be making moves now to bring these people together so as
to tackle
                the human resources problem, which our country is now facing.

                Gambia-L, there is no doubt that the Gambia is at a crossroads;
tension is
                raging in the country as a consequence of Yaya Jammeh's
tyrannical actions
                and heavy-handedness. What Gambians must therefore understand is
that Yaya
                Jammeh has come to bring chaos in our beloved country. He
represents doom
                and despair. He wants to bring turmoil in our country but we as
a people
                should not accept that. We must ensure the continued peace and
stability of
                the Gambia.

                From day one, we have always had a peaceful co-existence as a
people. That
                MUST continue. Consequently, we are now faced with the challenge
of making
                sure that peace and stability are consolidated in our country,
knowing full
                well that if trouble erupts in the Gambia, it is us the ordinary
people who
                will die en masse, while the main culprit (the butcher of
Kanilai) would be
                relaxing in his presidential suite in Kanilai, or in one of his
Moroccan
                palaces.

                Having said that, since it is now clear to us that Yaya Jammeh
only
                represents retrogression and a potential chaos for our country,
we MUST try
                and join hands, despite our differences here and there, and vote
him out of
                office come November 2001. In this regard, all Gambians who have
reached the
                voting age, but who do not possess a Voter's card must make sure
that they
                get a voter's card before the elections. And having a voter's
card and not
                voting on Election Day should also be a thing of the past. All
those who are
                eligible and have a voter's card should go and get dictator
Jammeh out of
                office in the forthcoming election if they genuinely want a
quick end to the
                mess in which our country now finds itself.

                And at Election Day and also during the pre-election period, all
Gambians
                must be vigilant enough to ensure that the possibilities of
rigging are not
                only minimised but also removed completely. To this end, the
role of the
                Independent Electoral Commission (IEC) will be
crucial/paramount, but we as
                a people should also have to be our own police and ensure as
much as
                possible, a totally fair and unambiguous ballot.

                Gambia-L, the stakes are high and needless to say, the ONLY way
forward for
                our beautiful country is to unseat dictator Jammeh from the
presidency come
                the next presidential election. No one in his or her right frame
of mind
                needs convincing that Jammeh has nothing to offer to Gambians
except tyranny
                and corruption. He is nothing but a thief, a murderer, a liar,
and a
                nuisance whose only goal is to swindle public funds.

                He has already done massive damage in our beloved country by
inflicting an
                unprecedented level of poverty; in fact, in a post Jammeh era,
eradicating
                poverty and ensuring the continued peace and security of our
country would
                be paramount. We must, in a post Jammeh era, underscore the need
to promote
                genuine democracy and popular participation in governance
through greater
                pluralism, transparency and respect for fundamental human rights
as a
                precondition for peace and sustainable development. Peace and
security and
                the achieving of sustainable development are very much related.
So it should
                be clear to us that the absence of durable peace and security
will no doubt
                prevent us from achieving sustainable development for our
country. The
                message is therefore clear: in a post Jammeh Gambia, we must
also address
                the twin phenomena of sustained development and peace and
security.

                Whoever is going to succeed Jammeh must articulate a new and
realistic
                development paradigm that can, at long last, address the Gambian
people's
                needs and aspirations. But, meanwhile, our challenge  - if we
really love
                our country - would be to vote Jammeh out of office come
November 2001. We
                cannot afford to give him another mandate. That would be tragic
if it were
                to be the case. How can someone who cannot even manage his own
house be
                expected to lead a Nation? And another thing: once we succeed in
unseating
                Jammeh, we would then have to try him before a court of law and
make sure
                that he accounts for his past deeds and actions. More
importantly, he must
                also surrender all the public money he has siphoned off.

                Meanwhile, we must be prepared NOW to ensure a good future for
our country:
                we have to mobilise every concerned citizen firstly to get rid
of Jammeh by
                peaceful means through the ballot box, and then to work in
harmony together
                to start the mammoth task of rebuilding our nation.

                Ebrima Ceesay,
                Birmingham, UK.

                PS: I am urging Gambians in the Gambia with access to the
Internet to make
                print out of this message and distribute it to those Gambians
without access
                to the Internet.

                Cherno Baba Jallow: Your piece on the Independent editorial was
apt and
                inspiring. Keep it up, and please do write as regularly as
possible; this is
                an era of clarity and, certainly, your beloved country needs you
NOW more
                than before. Also get our sister, Fatou Jaw Manneh, to join the
debate.


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