It's that time of the year again. Never gets old. 15 years on, the pain and agony of one of the darkest days of our nation's history remains fresh in our minds. The massacre that went unpunished, persistent ache and sadness of the families and nation with no closure. We pray and mourn.
Like every recurring April and year, we'll continue to hold Jammeh and his administration accountable. They've slaughtered Gambians and drive over the blood and spirits of innocent Gambians in those Kanifing streets EVERYDAY like nothing ever happened. Yaya loses no sleep over it yet we're having Gambians continue to play politics with the Gambian predicament with nonsense talks of 'peaceful' and 'reconciliation' chess match.
I penned this piece last year and I'm republishing it as it still represents my feelings and position today. While you are at it, here is what President Jammeh said on April 16, 2000 as he addressed the nation, after he refused to cut short his visit to Cuba. Allegedly, he'd ordered the security forces to 'kill the bastards'. Upon return, he'd promised full investigations only to reject the Commission and the Coroner's Reports respectively, and indemnified the killers.
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INDEMNITY? HOW ABOUT YOUR CONSCIENCE?
On December 15, 2012, a former Bad Boy Rapper G-Dep walked into a Harlem
Precinct, turned himself in after confessing to a cold case murder. G-Dep owned
up to killing a young man on a botched robbery on October 19, 1993.
Twenty-three summers and winters ago this year, a New Jersey man, Steven Goff, turned himself
to the police for the stabbing to death of a teenager in 1990. A body that would
be found 6 months later in December, 1991. It was so badly decomposed that the
cause of death could not be established.
What do these two scenarios have in
common? Two people who have taken innocent lives with no witnesses at the time.
The perpetrators could have gone to their graves with the crimes bosomed in
their chests but their consciences were never to let them be in peace. They have
wronged God, the victims and their family. As a matter of fact, their souls that
had lived all those years were being eaten up excruciatingly gradually, that
were forced to come plain.
WHERE ARE THE PEOPLE WHO ORDERED THE BRUTAL KILLING OF UNARMED GAMBIAN SCHOOL
CHILDREN? 13 YEARS ON, WHERE ARE THOSE ON THE GROUND WHO PULLED THE TRIGGERS OR
WITNESSED IT? They cannot possibly be of an undisturbed conscience all these
years. Who is going to do the right thing and tell the truth?
Conscience is that one faculty that however dangerous and/or evil a man is,
could hardly succeed in cheating. You may attempt drinking, smoking or praying
them away but the horrendous wrongs you commit would haunt and torment your
conscience till the day you die. Now whether that haunting would push you enough
to free your conscience of the burden by confessing may depend on the degree of
the wrong. The case of April 10/11 in the Gambia is not any different.
On
Monday, April 10, 2000, one after another, students dropped. Some took their
last breath in those virgin streets of Kanifing others in ambulances and chaotic
rooms of Hospitals and Clinics. The smell of Gambian blood blended with tears of
unbelief and despair muddied our clouds. Innocent unarmed students were slain in
broad daylight. Within a very close proximity, heartless uniformed men
masturbated their weapons discharging live ammunition into crowds of children.
Their only crime was peacefully assembling in protest for justice for two of
their colleagues; a male student allegedly tortured to death my firefighters and
a girl allegedly raped from a Junior School in Brikama-Ba. The sameness in these
two cases was SCHOOL CHILDREN and MEN IN UNIFORM paid to protect and serve State
and People. A Calculated and a very responsible student body, GAMSU, exercising
due diligence, had been in consultation with the necessary authorities to have
the accused be brought to justice. Realizing that the Government was stalling on
any efforts to do what was right, GAMSU applied for a permit to stage a peaceful
congregation to show solidarity with their own. A permit request that the
Ministry of Interior denied. Determined, that peacefully concocted assembly of
students in Kanifing (NOT even Banjul) was to go ahead. The rest was/is a sad
history.
14 years on, NOBODY with a conscience would own up to what
happened on that day. From the Head of State to the private soldier or police
constable on those Kanifing streets that pulled the trigger. 14 years on, they
replay the events of the chaotic moments of seeing our brothers falling down
from the bullets that escaped their AK-47s. 14 years on, some or most of them
have kissed their children goodbye to school/work and welcome them home daily,
knowing that they had robbed other parents the joy of parenthood and denied the
country of potential resources.
Meanwhile, Mariam and Muhammed Jammeh
are ‘enjoying’ 24-hour days of armed protection as children of the first family.
Some of the ministers and top Government officials have whisked their children
out of the Gambia to study, live and work abroad. What is even more hurtful is
that, never have the Government in these long, hurtful and agonizing years
showed remorse. There was never any State candle vigils, no public holidays or
national prayer days in honor of the murdered children. In fact, the last time
there was ever any reference to these events from the State after the bogus
findings with all blames thrust at the students for being unruly, rebellious and
suicidal, was when they INDEMNIFIED the security officers. I remembered holding
onto The POINT and FOROYAA Newspaper editions detailing the irrational reasoning
by the Government in not only failing to let justice take its course, but
protecting the criminal(s) who ordered the shooting and those who pulled
triggers. Indeed shameful.
14 years on, the unchallenged audacity, the
preposterous arrogance and machete callousness of an executive to have the Head
of Government continue to say that the children killed themselves is scary. Late
last year, the Vice President was exonerating herself when she said she was not
on the ground, didn’t know what happened but only went on National TV to “say
what I had been asked to say”. This was before any investigations could have
been done. Well she was the #2 and her boss was out of town. A few weeks ago,
the President was having audiences with WAEC officials and said because they
have chosen to do away with corporal punishment, students grew unruly and
indiscipline. So who is standing up for our school children when the government
is putting them in the line of fire?
The Gambia Government is not one of
ample testosterone to assume responsibility of its shortcomings. This Government
is that 14th Century egomaniac African Man who sees accepting wrongs or
inabilities as a weakness and signs of impotence. That is why they find it
easier to always apportion blame – thus the constant firing and recycling of low
and high-ranking public servants while the heads of affairs remain
eunuchoid.
President Jammeh and his regime cannot be any hypocritical
than their dealings with the Gambian students. Much of his regime's infidelity
had been towards the students because he is aware and afraid of the
insurmountable capabilities of a learned and educated group. Anti-Democratic
agents operate that way. So it wasn't a surprise when they set out for the
systematic demise of a vibrant body that clenched its fist in defending their
comrades. Venomously they poisoned and annihilated GAMSU by christening NAPSA.
The financial inducements and scholarships principally to mute one of the
strongest civic bodies into being a closet so bare as a pet cemetery. Our
students have been legally prostituted and politicized. Handouts given with the
right hand while the left snatched their ostensible innocence. Something, among
other things, I'd tried campaigning on when I ran for the University of Gambia
Students' Union Presidency in 2002. An election I'd come to lose.
In
retrospect, that massacre of the children in school uniform was the virginal try
of this administration at testing the Gambian people's level of tolerance and
resolve for it was the first open assault on a non militant or political group
with brute force. When nothing came out of that from any quarters, random
outrageous acts followed suit. The culmination of the little 'justs' that we
brushed off, gave birth of the various magnanimous alleged state-sponsored
crimes up to Imam Baba Leigh's abduction.
Sooner than later, however,
those enjoying the blanket amnesty with the so-called Indemnity Clause, ought
to know that they haven't eluded the wrath of requisite justice. Not in the
sense of witch-hunting, but for fairness and justice for our murdered children
that thus far went unpunished. UNTIL THAT TIME, WE POUR OUR HEARTFELT SPIRITUAL
LIBATIONS FOR THE DEPARTED SOULS AS THEY REST IN PEACE. And for their families
to continue garner the strength to carry on as this time of the year snails by
yearly.
Continue To Rest In Peace!
Saidykhan.
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