Wednesday, May 20, 2015
JAMMEH EMBARRASSES GAMBIA AT ECOWAS; BIDS TO BE LIFE PRESIDENT
When news leaked that ECOWAS were to table a proposal at their next sitting to explore the possibility of instituting presidential term limits for member states, I thought it was a sarcasm. I thought it was an expensive prank until I saw it on the regional body’s site. Then I thought it was a waste of time because a few African Leaders have been overly overdosed on power by an exorbitant quantity they could never have had a unanimous consensus on that item. But why would they be seeking unanimity in everything anyway? Why can't they do quotas or simple majority like they do with the election of a chair? I wish I do understand these politricks.
If anything I was astonished that only two (Gambia and Togo) of the 15 countries rejected the motion. Expectedly, the Gambia’s representative at the summit unashamedly refused to join the civilized community of progressives, to allow you and your children have a chance at managing the affairs of your country at the executive level. President Jammeh, opting to stay away perhaps to avoid the awkwardness and shame plaster on his face, delegated his 18-year long deputy to deliver his position on behalf of the 1.8 million Gambians. Vice President Isatou-Njie Saidy told them that her Boss, is on tour of the country and has an overwhelming endorsement and show of solidarity and love, they wish he stays forever. She referred them to the 1997 Constitution that has no limit to the number of terms Yaya chooses to serve. If that means until Twenty million Eighteen (2,000,018). Therefore, they are relaying that message from Gambians that they would never partake in any ‘illegal’ thing that decent people are putting in place to safeguard the peace and security of the region and member States. And that's on Bilai Walai Talai. Not exactly her words, but that was her message. She flipped them a middle finger!
When lieutenant Yaya Jammeh led a disgruntled gang of armed bandits on the Gambian taxpayers' payroll on a July Friday morning some 20 years ago to conspicuously oust a democratic government, they sort of magically threw acid powder in our eyes to blind us. They met little to no resistance from the many Gambians who were supposed to know better. I remember as a junior high teenager, overtaken by the euphoria and sight of drunken soldiers with guns speeding through the streets of Serekunda.
“We are Soldiers with a difference", they promised, adding they "are not here to perpetuate ourselves and will return to the barracks as soon as we have set things right. We are here for reasons that are peculiar only to Gambia, and what has happened in other parts of the continent, that does not concern us.” They gave all sorts of justifications mainly the three decade one-man rule, flamboyant lifestyles, rampant corruption, nepotism, misappropriation of national resources and underdevelopment. I guess that was the spell that let Gambians gave the would-be criminals the more-than-necessary benefit of the doubt. My cousin who had lived under military regimes in Nigeria and Ghana foretold that the Gambia shall never be the same again, but we didn’t know any better. Since then the rest as they say, is history. Rudeness, disrespect, one-man wealth accumulation, witch-hunting, arbitrary arrests, torture, forceful disappearances, extrajudicial executions are what the smiling coast has been turned to. A Dictatorship. That is the Gambia under Jammeh who clings on for two decades and counting, reneging on everything they had promised.
Therefore, the only positives that came out of this summit was election of Mr Macky Sall as the ECOWAS Chair (congratulations, sir), and the audacity or at least a progressive thought my African leaders to even consider relinquishing power at some point. That is a big positive by a people who until recently would rather die at the helm or groom their families to establish a fiefdom and a dynasty at the expense of their countries. Just look at Africa’s history since independence.
With the recent crop of Western educated Africans who lived in ‘developed nations’ where they tasted and inherited quite a degree of democratic ideals and have served in International Institutions of the highest integrity and reputation, there's hope. These people are giving hope that there is light at the end of the undemocratic, autocratic tunnel. The Macky Salls, Dramanh Mahamas, have been gravitating towards relatability with the African Youth with the importation of ideals that could best shape our continent's children and their future. Unfortunately, the Gambia’s President remains stuck with his premedivial ambition of a lifetime RULER until death snatches him.
Hearing a semi-literate, uncultured and detached president speak of his people as roaches, donkeys and enemies who'd have to have a vulture's patience to succeed him, is not only insulting but a declaration of intent to refuse any sort of power shift, peacefully. For a man who's had several ECOWAS court rulings against his government but refused to honor them, mounts stages to speak of the regional bodies and his colleagues in a derogatory and inconsiderable manner, were evidential that that summit item was never going to get a stamp of approval from him. It was never a secret that Yaya reserves no iota of respect for any authority. In his peanut size brain, the world isn't beyond the stretched walls of the Gambia, thus cares nothing about who scolds or reprimands him for what he'd done in Banjul with/to his subjects. He does not care about legitimacy in the eyes of the international community. For a man who believes he's omnipotent and infallible, it's best we come to terms with reality and explore more pragmatic ways to abort his government. It has to and can only be done in the Gambia, by Gambians. Through the Ballot, Barrel of the Gun or Popular Uprising. All three options must be equally considered.
For a continent ravaged by poverty and embroiled in unending civil wars and all sorts of instability for decades since Independence, the main cause of which has been political power struggle, you’d think our 2015 politicians would know and act better to not plunge it into further mess. Ask Burundi’s president Pierre Nkurunziza. You’d think they would play fair and stop toying with grenade pins by desisting from poking at the ingredients that comprise recipe for disaster. Instead, they continue to be greedy, irresponsible and murderous while they accumulate, syphon and pilfer public resources and funds as their constituents continue dwelling in abject poverty. Meet Gambia’s Yaya Jammeh.
Term limits serve an important purpose of strengthening democracy and ensure long-term stability by checking the concentration of political power. By that, it places a limit to two consecutive terms, prohibits a consecutive for re-election and/or complete prohibition of re-election. In the case of the Gambia and most African states, the demand for reform has been limited to two terms which should not have been a huge ask. It would be a primary conflict mitigating instrument. It curtails the power of incumbency and holds them accountable to their people and think twice about their actions knowing they’d soon be out of power. The longer a president holds power, the more the delineation between the state and the ruling party becomes blurred. Unlimited term limits abrades the balance of power and weakens the authority of sovereign legislatures and judiciaries and competitive political parties. That’s exactly what begets our present day predicament in Banjul. Because we lack effective checks and balances, power has been concentrated in one man, rendering all institutions – political, social, civil – dead or ineffective. Jammeh is the juror, judge and executioner.
WHY SHOULD JAMMEH be interested in term limits, knowing he is not interested in anything that would diminish is powers and weakens his grip? Of everything mentioned above, Yaya is not interested in any. He has no incentive to willingly relinquish power not only because he loves the presidency but he is very much cognizant of the crimes he’d committed in the time that he’s been at number One Marena Parade, his absolute wastefulness of our resources that Gambians would neither forgive not forget. So he resorts to daringly inviting to be killed or at least chased out of his misery. And we can do that. Individually, we are right to be afraid and scared buy collectively, we could pull his cards and expose him for the punk, corny, fraud, scary little man that he is.
Let each reach and teach one. Information-starved Gambians should be told that their president embarrassed them before his peers, by refusing to edge towards giving peace a chance. That he's told the whole world that he has no desire to free Gambians from the 20 year oppression and terror, even after his colleagues offered him an escape route. He's no longer keeping it a secret that wants to choose when to leave and would watch the country go down the drain or in flames before he vacates. We'd have to do something. If we can't pick up sticks and guns, we have our votes come 2016.
Good Morning And Peace To The Planet.
Pata PJ
Friday, May 15, 2015
JAMMEH INSULTING AND DISCRIMINATING AGAINST MANDINKAS ISNT NEW. THEY LET IT!
There are three things among others that I will never be embarrassed or apologetic for - My FAITH. MY RACE. MY TRIBE. These composed my identity and I can't run away from. To disparage me by attacking them amounts to disrespecting and insulting my being. When that happens, I cannot reserve any degree of love or respect for you. It does not make me a Bigot, a Racist or Tribalist. Your identity is Your Pride. I'm not going to be wearing it around my neck to hate, love, and embrace or discriminate. When that happens that's when it becomes abhorrent and dangerous. Allah acknowledges, respects our (distinct) identities - Tribes and Nations in the Quran, and it was not for nothing.
‘O mankind! We created you from a single (pair) of a male and a female, and made you into nations and tribes, that ye may know each other (not that ye may despise (each other). Verily the most honoured of you in the sight of Allah is (he who is) the most righteous of you. And Allah has full knowledge and is well acquainted (with all things).’ – Quran Surah 49:13
While we're worried about President Jammeh and his government looting and misappropriating our state resources, abusing and exiling us, we tend to dismiss his public inflammatory rhetoric as 'insanity' and Jammeh rants. In doing so we are giving him the green card to continue this dangerous path.
What we may be involuntarily doing is fanning his sadistic and dangerous fire by ignoring his incendiary and deliberate tribal diatribes that could plunge the little Gambia into ethnic and civil chaos. From recent history, we've seen how ethic violence in Bosnia, Rwanda and Burundi could lead to an annihilation of a whole ethnicity and their identities, fueled by idiots like Yaya with a platform. Fortunately for us, thus far Jammeh is the only Gambian propagating tribal hatred and discord.
I'd not have any qualms with Yaya Jammeh the person having the sentiments he has towards Mandinkas. That is his prerogative. What troubles and disgusts me is Yaya Jammeh the president of the Gambia's incessant obsession with vile remarks, insults and threats towards a particular group of people because of their ethnicity any time he is accorded the opportunity. As a matter of fact, Yaya's discomfort and resulting vitriol towards the Mandinkas has gone beyond verbal pronouncements to become executive and government policy where they get targeted, discriminated and marginalized. For an elected president to comfortably state or make it a policy that he prefers one particular tribe to another is not only discriminating but troubling, despite swearing to serve and execute his duties without fear or favor, affection or ill-will.
For far too long, we have avoided this conversation in the mainstream discourses for fear of being labeled tribalist. It makes us uncomfortable. For 20 years, we've watched Jammeh say the most disrespectful things on TV and political platforms about a particular tribe and we passingly condemned or laughed them off. Habitually, he'd go to a predominantly Mandinka communities with the likes of Yankuba Touray and the seyfos warning and threatening them against tribal politics and division, setting the stage for Yaya to masturbate rubbish while our parents shamefully grin. He'd wag his fingers, raise his voice at them and call them, their kids unpatriotic souls and enemies of the country. What a disingenuous lie! Objective is clear and the mission defined. This nigga is a divisive, hateful being. What would my parents and I gain in hating the Gambia? Why would I set the one place I call home ablaze?
'WHO TAUGHT YOU TO HATE YOURSELF?' Malcolm X asked his people. Well let's ask ourselves the same question. Could you imagine a little white boy walking around in a black neighborhood screaming "NIGGER!'? Or a black boy in a Klan town singing 'Cracker Cracker!’ So in as much as I want to squeeze the living soul out of Jammeh, I have to be realistic that the Mandinkas made him this comfortable to even have the audacity. If I am comfortable enough to tell your derogatory things about your family, I must have sensed how you feel about your own. I cannot respect a man who pisses on his people just so he could fit in.
Since 1994 there has never been a shortage of Mandinkas used by Jammeh against their own. From Almamo Manneh, Baba Jobe, Tabora Manneh, Yankuba Touray, Kaba Bajo, Momodou Sabally, all would jump at the chance to berate their own parents and their identity just to be close to the president. But good old Yaya ends up destroying them one by one and move to the next. Ndey Tapha Sosseh aptly argued this in her piece a couple of years ago. Yaya will continue to insult us because WE let him. We insult ourselves by running and fighting over his crumbs.
So Who Taught Us to Hate Ourselves? Yaya Jammeh. He is not stupid. Jammeh has succeeded in beating the esteem out of us with the help of shameless, selfish and embarrassing Mandinkas to an extent that we are afraid and embarrassed to identify ourselves as Mandinkas. The Gambian Mandinka is the only kind you'd ask 'where are you from?' and he responds with 'I was born in Jarra BUT I went to school in Kanifing'. We're the only ones you'd ask 'What are you?' and we tell you 'My mom and dad are Mandinkas but my aunt's co-wife is a Hausa'. God forbid you mistakenly take them for a UDP sympathizer. They'd swear that they'd detonate a grenade at a UDP rally. Yaya Jammeh has succeeded in emasculating us. He's succeeded with very little efforts, to have us shun our identity and embarrassed to speak or admit being a Mandinka in public much more before him. He understands the psychological domination, and then dangles a position before these greedy, low self-esteem idiots and they drown each other in a gas tank just to please him. Gathers and calls them filth and scumbags, and they applaud. It is a shame!
I dislike President Jammeh NOT because he is a Jola or he's from Foni. And will not follow that with the qualifying statement that ‘I am not tribalist because my friends are Jolas’. I have never seen the need why people use that defensive line when they do not hold such feeling. I do not support him because I do not agree with the way he runs the affairs our country. This has nothing to do with his tribe. I will not support him because he has become more than everything that he claimed was wrong with the first republic. I cannot be voting or remotely working with an elected president who has no respect for his nationals. In a conscious democracy, Yaya would never utter such slurs towards a demography that has numbers on their side knowing that would cost him. It wouldn't happen. So I am not asking anybody to vote against Yaya on tribal lines, but I will unapologetically ask that you turn your backs on a man who shares nothing in common with you and does not bat an eye to disrespect you in your face. This is not just for the Mandinkas but anybody who respects decency and frowns on the hatred propagated by Jammeh. Today he has his arsenal on the Mandinkas, tomorrow could be you. Politics is an interest game. You'd be foolish to continue voting for a known tribalist and imbecile SOB.He can get raped by a gang of apes and contact Ebola for all I know. This nigga disgusts me!
Pata PJ
Friday, May 1, 2015
JAMMEH IS CHARGING FAMILIES FOR THE SINS OF THEIR RELATIVES: #FreeYusuphaLowe
‘Hurt people hurt people’,
they say. Any man who lacks certain basic human emotions hurt people but they
hardly get hurt. Yaya Jammeh is that kind. Of the eight basic human emotions
President Jammeh is filled with fear stemming from paranoia that his evil deeds
will haunt and yank his disturbed soul out of his chest through his mouth. He’s
angered that he has all his life been deprived of joy and love that those he was
born and grew up around has abundance of, a deprivation that fueled and filled
his life with sadness and depression. That was why Yaya, whom some believe was
a foster child of Asombie Bojang, gets disgusted and envious by the progress,
success, achievements and happiness of others. That is why he craves and pays
whatever price to be validated and belong. This is what drives Yaya’s unexplainable
attitude towards Gambians. That is why he lacks empathy and respect for people
and life.
I have for the longest, struggled to write about
the precarious predicament of the relatives of alleged ‘Statehouse Attackers’ that
I revere and celebrate as Liberation Fighters. Families that
have not in any way participated or known about the actions of their sons and father
have been abducted and whisked away to unknown locations where they have
allegedly been subjected to physical torture. Of those under state-sponsored
kidnapping are mothers and a child, punished for the ‘sins’ of their kinfolks. What
does he hope to achieve? Raise the Freedom Fighters from their honorable death
or force others to return? This is pathetic.
The rhetorical question that many ask, that if
Yaya did tell his mother that he was staging a military coup on July 22, 1994,
has its answer in how Yaya rates his mother and the degree of respect he has
for her. From the accounts of those who know him, he reprimands his mother when
he feels she’d upset and wronged him. He screams and cusses her out that sends
the poor old lady shivering and fearing for her life. I’d not be surprised
because there is nothing that Jammeh believes in other than force and riches – Power.
So a son his breed would not consult or involve his parent in anything he does.
Because of his disdain for Gambians and excessive
intoxication with power, he’d do anything to hurt anyone he believes is a
threat to his seat. That was why I wake up each day disappointed and regretting
how and why Jammeh escaped a bullet to his skull or at least arrested on
December 30, 2014. That was going to get us out of this misery. But since that
failed, Yaya drills out his animalistic traits to hatefully treat Gambians with
contempt as he ventured on an irrational vengeance on innocent people who probably
did not know why they have been abducted.
Yusupha
Lowe (13) and Alieu Lowe (19), whose father and
brother respectively, is a friend of mine are paying for the sins of their
family for a crime he’s alleged to have committed but not guilty of. Meta
Njie, the mother of the late Lamain Sanneh is an innocent, poor village
woman who is carrying the heavy cross of his son as his body lies on ice in the
morgue for four month. How does any man with conscience sleep through that
know?
Our situation as a country and people has been
helpless thus making it pitiful. That sorry state has been compounded by the
absolute absence of any institution that neither defends nor fights for the
rights of people against the authorities. Justice department and the courts
watch as citizens get stripped of their inalienable rights, detained and gone
missing on executive directives. The ministries of Women and Children’s affairs,
Social Welfare and Child Protection Alliance all stayed mute while this goes on.
As a matter of fact Social welfare and Child Protection Alliance bosses clearly
distanced themselves from the issue and quickly narrowed their scopes so this
does not fall under their purview. The religious leaders and politicians are
not able to do anything. Basically, WE
ALL failed as a people for succumbing to the brutality of a Dracula in
needle-spiked boots walking on our spines.
Yaya Jammeh is a spiteful soul wronging and
abusing Gambians. He has a poisonous spirit that is corroding his whole being,
barring him from acknowledging, understanding or relating to indigenous, decent
Gambians. Notwithstanding, we must not beg but demand that Yaya frees his abductees
for them to reunite with their families. They are hurting the same way he and
his wife would should ISIS kidnap his two children and
parade them in orange jumpsuits. He must stop inflicting pain on Gambians if he
wants his post presidency be any peaceful for him, or even his family.
Yusupha
and Alieu Lowe are supposed to be in school today like Mariam Jammeh instead of languishing
in detention. Naa Meta Njie, Alhagie
Kebba Touray, Bai Jobe Njie are all parents like Asombie Bojang and Zineb
Jammeh who deserved to be with their families after more than hundred days abduction.
The Gambian State needs to always remember that it’s her obligation to defend
and protect her citizens’ rights, lives and properties instead of perpetuating perennial
Gangsterism.
All hands must be on deck to hault this speeding training that is about to wreck.
By any means necessary.
Free Our People. Let Our People Go!
Good Morning And Peace To The Planet!
Pata
PJ