Every day, scores of lives perish in
the deserts and the Mediterranean Sea. Hardly does a day go by that you do not
read about Gambians dying trying to make it to Europe through the ‘Back
Way’. It is devastating. However, none of what has been happening all
these years but astronomically worsened in the past couple of years, happens in
a vacuum. We’d all have to do something to decelerate it.
I have seen a lot of Gambians take
to social media making “Say No To Back Way”
videos, to sensitize and dissuade our brothers and sisters from venturing into
these very dangerous and uncertain journeys that already claimed more than
enough lives. These [video] efforts are great, laudable and are spiraling.
However, most came short of identifying and addressing the root
causes of the unfortunate tragedy.
The ever growing statistics of the
number of people dying at sea, those ‘lucky’ enough to have crossed to become
illegal immigrants in Europe, are shockingly alarming. The Gambia, the smallest
country in mainland Africa (population less than 2 million) with relative
peace, dwarfs nations like Mali and Syrian that have been in turmoil and civil
unrest for few years now. Gambia’s 1400
(134 minors) to Nigeria's 800, arrived in Italy by Sea in the first quarter of
2015. Just last week alone, there were two boat accidents that had at least
750 and 300 lives unaccounted for, respectively. It’s a sad reality that our
boys and girls are somewhere in that bottomless ocean and will never be buried.
While we’d all love to have our
brothers and sisters stay at home to avoid a literally suicidal journey, we
must also be realistic in recognizing that these kids are being forced by their
circumstances to make a better living for themselves and their families. As
foolish as we think it is for them to see some of us who have ‘escaped’ the
struggle from abject poverty as ‘success stories’, it is an innate desire for a
man to want to be a provider, especially when they are looked up to as the ‘Yakarr’ of the family. We cannot tell
them to not go because is risky when there are no alternatives to the
predicament. This is not to make an excuse for our able-bodied youth but is understandable.
Unemployment is the premier
causative factor of the economic migration that continues to claim lives and in
most cases, levy a hefty financial burden on the already struggling families who
would give an arm and leg for a potentially enhanced livelihood, which most
times is only promissory and in some cases elusive. The pasture isn’t always a guaranteed greener
on the other side. Most of the people who set out on these journeys are poor,
provincial kids who either graduated without jobs or dropped out of school and
are unemployable. These people hail from families who have always paid their
taxes but almost never get to benefit from their government; individually or as
a community. So majority of them become Economic migrants, and a few Political
refugees escaping shackles and political persecution from an oppressive regime.
So the buck stops at President Jammeh and his Government! In plain terms,
Yaya Jammeh DOES NOT CARE if half of the country’s youth raced out of that
country to never come back. As a matter of fact, that is lessening his
burden of having to deal with an unemployed, ‘unproductive’ lot. Jammeh would
have cared if this was anything that posed any sort of threat to his reign. We
have seen how he does not hesitate to launch all these violently aggressive
“Operations” in order to legitimize his use of force to cower and oppress
Gambians further, to deter any potential resistance to his Authoritarianism.
In his characteristic fashion of
abdicating responsibility as the country’s CEO, Yaya continues to deflect
attention from significant priorities where he is found wanting, to play victim.
In his UN address in 2014, Jammeh asked that “The U.N. must conduct a full and impartial
investigation into this manmade sinking, capsizing of these boats carrying
young Africans to Europe,” accusing European Nations of “racist and inhuman behavior of
deliberately causing boats carrying black Africans to sink.”
Lest we forget, a year prior Jammeh
in his 2013 Tobaski address to the Nation, shamelessly went off on a tangent to
blame his ‘Mandingo Brothers and Sisters’, whom he said comprised the 98%
of the youth taking the going to Europe, seeking asylum just to tarnish the
image of the country since 1994. He thought that is not only an unpatriotic
act but Unislamic and is punishable by Treason. Although this came on the heels
of UDP asylum saga, when he’d used his erstwhile unwise Presidential Affairs
Minister Momodou Sabally to accuse the US & UK, and insult a whole ethnic
group for being tribalist, I believe Jammeh sees no urgency in mitigating the
migration because it works in his favor since the troublesome, unpatriotic
bunch are leaving the country to patriots. So he’d not lose a night’s sleep
over their death.
This unnatural, schizophrenic
by-product of mistaken birth, is a delusional hypocrite, divisive lunatic and a
self-aggrandizing, deranged ‘thot’ of
a president who never takes credit for his failures as the country’s Chief
Executive. After claiming to have had evidence that these people claimed
persecution for homosexuality and not on ethnic grounds, how dare he flipped
that to make it about a particular tribe?
But here is a government that does
not have the political will nor the ability to sustain or enhance any sector of
the economy that creates jobs to employ 50 Gambian a year since 2001. A
government with a leadership that believes he’s doing the country a favor by
reigning over her people, giving them cash handouts, food rations and throwing
ridiculously expensive festivals to party their pains away at a time the country is on her deathbed.
Today, the largest sectors that employ graduating students or dropouts are the
Armed/Security Services and Education (teaching). And even for these areas we
have seen active soldiers, police officers and teachers abandoning their posts
to take chance with the risky high seas.
We may never be able to stop the
Back Way venture for ambitious, unemployed youth would always pursue
opportunity somewhere whatever the risk. But had we had a capable, effective
and responsible government they would have:
- Put mechanisms in place to mitigate it by not only going on TV to boast about opening schools but not able to get graduates absorbed in the workforce.
- Be able to open skill centers to train the youth and have careers.
- Liberalize the economy, support and encourage small scale businesses by giving tax breaks and/or subsidize them to be able to flourish and create employment.
- Let the president cease competing with the State and private businessmen as the conflict of interest and competitive advantage is killing the already struggling Gambians.
- Let’s mechanize our Agriculture with adequate focus by revitalizing Jahali Pacharr and other places it instead of Yaya grabbing all arable lands and have the whole country work on his farms.
- Bring back our one-time Tourist Mecca that he’d killed off with his weekly distasteful international headlines that instills fear and erode confidence for tourists.
Evidently, these are not things that
President Jammeh and his administration are capable of doing. That leaves us
with one remedy for the hand that we’re dealt: CHANGE OF REGIME! Yaya Jammeh and the APRC administration are a bad
omen for our nation and they’d have to GO for us to make any significant headway!
Lets continue to sensitize and dissuade our brothers the best we could. The Gambian Artist Bro K has a very messageful song on the 'Back Way'.
Lets continue to sensitize and dissuade our brothers the best we could. The Gambian Artist Bro K has a very messageful song on the 'Back Way'.
Good Morning And Peace To The
Planet!
Pata PJ
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