Showing posts with label President Jammeh. Show all posts
Showing posts with label President Jammeh. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

To Say My Government Did Nothing is Unfair – Former President

“We did what we could under the
circumstances,” Sir Dawda said,
 at last as he fires back at criticis
Kissykissymansa: Tuesday January 18: Ever since his return home from exile in 2002, The Gambia’s former President Sir Dawda K Jawara has kept a low profile at his residence in Fajara. But his ears are wide open to raging criticisms against him and his government by his ousters and their supporters.
Whether it was part of a condition attached to his return home or he was not given a platform, Sir Dawda never responded to these expressions of simmering discontent that have become a music every Gambian must listen to, like it or not. At last, he fires back!
“To say my government hasn’t done any development is unreasonable,” finally, a reply from The Gambia’s founding father.

"Founding father"

Born in 1924 in Barajally Tenda village, some 150 miles from the capital Banjul, Sir Dawda Kairaba Jawara, was the sixth son of a well-to-do businessman Almami Jawara and the last son of his mother, Mama Fatty.
Thanks to his father’s trader friend, Jawara, at the age of eight, came to the colonial capital, Bathurst (now Banjul) to acquire formal education.  He attended Muhammadan Primary school and Methodist Boys High School before leaving for Ghana and UK respectively to study veterinary medicine.
He returned home in 1953, and served as principal veterinary officer. He gave-up the position to accept an offer to lead a political party. And in the first nation-wide election, when the suffrage was extended to the provinces, his party, (then Protectorate People’s Party), Progressive People’s Party (PPP), won the largest number of seat in parliament. He was appointed education minster and then chief minister. He led The Gambia to independence in 1965, republican in 1970.
He ruled the country for over thirty years before his tenure was brought to an illegitimate, abrupt end by five junior soldiers who now peeled-off their skin to fit among the civilian cohort.

                       "first interview with independent press"

Jawara, now 87 years-old, last week granted an exclusive interview, for the first time since his return home from exile, to journalists from private-independent press, led by a veteran journalist, Swaebou Conateh, the editor/publisher of The Gambia News & Report Weekly magazine.
The interview was to sound his opinion on his award as “Person of the Year 2010” which is an annual award the magazine confers on people who have contributed to the development of the country. Jawara was the twentieth winner. Previous winners range from business persons, a human rights activist, and politicians, among others.

Kairaba, the book
                        The coup was a surprise

When asked about his take on the seemingly ceaseless allegations of rampant corruption in his government, which infact necessitated the coup, Jawara said that is not enough a justification for the coup.
“If you go back to your archives,” said Jawara, who has been globally acclaimed a democrat and a respecter of human rights, but which unfortunately is a travesty under his successor. “All the coups in the world, especially in Africa – whether military against civilian government or military against a military government – are done because there was corruption. But when they come to power they become much more corrupt than the government they overthrew.”
According to him, the 1994 coup came as a surprise to him. But how surprise could he be? For in his celebrated autobiography, “Kairaba,” published last year, he admitted noticing abnormalities upon his return from an overseas trip on the eve of the coup - Thursday 21st July 1994.
As he explained: “On our arrival at Banjul International Airport on 21 July 1994, I caught myself having to piece together a chain of strange events unfolding right before my eyes.
“To begin with, the Vice President and Minister of Defense, Saihou Sabally was not there to receive me. Instead, I was received at the foot of the aircraft by Attorney General and Minister for Justice, Assan Jallow.
“Under the shrill notes of the bugles Hassan walked me to the waiting guard of honour. In all my years of arrival and departure, I had never seen a more excited honour guard commander in action – Captain Sonko clearly appeared nervous.
“I learnt much later that there had been some tension at the airport before our flight landed. The Nigerian Army officer had given instructions to disarm a group of junior officers of The Gambia National Army because it was unusual for them to be armed on official airport welcoming duties.
“Upon alighting from the vehicle at State House, I discovered that Hassan Jallow who had received me officially at the airport was not there. I learnt that he had broken off the motorcade and gone home.”
He explained further: “Tired as I was, the question that kept me awake for a while before I could sleep was the absence of the vice president and the failure of the Attorney General to come for the debriefing at State House.”
According to him, on the following day, Friday 22 July 1994, National Security Service Director Kebba Ceesay and the National Security Adviser arrived in his private quarters at 9:15 am to brief him about rumours of the coup.
“At about 9:40 am my Aide de Camp, Captain Kassama burst in upstairs looking agitated. He urged me leave for the US warship. It was the first time that I heard anything of a warship in our ports. Captain Kassama was beside himself and was insisting that there was a coup taking place and the soldiers were approaching Banjul,” he explained in his book.
The presidential guard was clearly outnumbered and outgunned by the attackers, Jawara wrote. “It would have been suicide not to surrender or relocate.”
That was how the Jawara was forced to leave the country he founded. Alongside his family, and some cabinet ministers, he assailed to the neighboring country, Senegal where he was offered asylum. And on August 27, 1994, he proceeded to his former colonial master, Britain. 
His departure from The Gambia saw the beginning of what could be described as a witch-hunt, but in the name of commissions of inquiry against his officials. Their assets were freezed and confiscated, some detained.
Jawara’s return home following an amnesty does nothing to abate the mounting criticisms against him and his government, by the current government and its supporters, who are claiming lifting The Gambia from nothing to something deemed unimaginable.  

                                           responds to accusations

And until today, Jawara’s government stands accused of not only corruption, but failed to develop the country. These accusations, according to Jawara, are unfair. 
 “We did what we could under the circumstances,” Sir Dawda said. “We were making a steady progress. [Critiques] keep on saying we could not even provide a television. Yes, we don’t provide a TV therefore what!”
“TV was not our priority at the time. It would come as others. We were not having independence, a national flag. We built Central Bank, construct roads, spread education and built hospitals across the country. We had our own currency which was viable while bigger countries could not have a national currency.”
According to him, national development is never completed at any stage and independent minded people will judge him right.
Commenting on the award, Jawara said, he was overwhelmed when the news was broke-out to him. “Like I said, I was inundated with telephone calls. I thank News and Report for selecting me ‘Person of the Year 2010’. It is an honour.”

Sunday, November 7, 2010

Plans to Crown Jammeh King Unveiled


Plans to make president Jammeh a king has been finally made public after months of underground work by the ruling APRC party stalwarts led by local chiefs.


This was unveiled at statehouse on Friday during a meeting claimed to be summoned by president Jammeh to discuss extending the death sentence – from murder and treason - to offences of drugs and human trafficking.

In attendance at the meeting were ministers, ruling party National Assembly members, local government authorities, local chiefs, , religious leaders and his party bigwigs.  

But the meeting, which was designed to dilate on death sentence in the wake of the rising crime rate, witnessed an obvious shift to unmasking plans to transform The Republic of The Gambia into a Kingdom.  


The agenda was set by Jammeh himself as he expressed outrage at ‘troubles elections created in Africa’.

“We all know the problems elections have created in Africa; the problem in Somalia is caused by elections and in many other countries.  “Nearer [to home] in Guinea, people of different tribes are killing one another because of elections,” he said.

As the country prepares to embark on a circle of elections – presidential, parliamentary and local government in 2011, 2012 and 2013 respectively, Jammeh said people will vote so long as the constitution dictates.

“But it is left to you [Gambians]; whatever you decide is what we will do,” he said of the no election campaign

The campaigns for no elections and to crown president Jammeh as King have been in the rumour mill for some time now.

The local chiefs who are reportedly pushing the agenda forward have recently toured the whole country after president Jammeh donated vehicles to them, sources revealed.

However, the Independent Electoral Commission has condemned the move.

“The campaign for no elections is a non-starter and should be discouraged in all its forms,” IEC said, at the recently concluded outreach for National Assembly members, where it was hinted.

Hon. Fabakary T. Jatta, the majority leader of parliament has been warned of contempt of the constitution for saying that the secret ballot is the highest form of hypocrisy.

Undeterred by this warning, Hon. Jatta said at Saturday’s meeting: “I said it once and I am repeating it here that elections, especially the secret ballot is hypocrisy.”
 “Even if it happens that we go to the polls 2011, it might as well be the last election [for The Gambia]” Jatta said.

The governor of North Bank Region Edwar Seckan said chiefs have approached them to make Jammeh a king and they have agreed.

 “The constitution is neither the Quran nor the Bible,” says Alhagie Demba Manneh from rural-Lower River region. “We want to make president Jammeh a King and we will amend it to suit our needs.”

President Jammeh came to power through a military coup in 1994 putting an end to the thirty-year-rule of Dawda Kairaba Jawara, who was re-elected in office 5 times after Independence in 1965.
All political parties and political activities were banned during the two year transition period in the run-up to a return to a democratic civilian government.
The presidential elections held in 1996 saw Jammeh winning with 56 percent of the votes and captured the majority of seats in the legislative elections held in 1997.
Although he dropped to 53 percent of votes in the 2001 presidential elections, he was able to secure a virtual monopoly at the National Assembly after the main-opposition UDP boycotted the elections amid cries of foul play.

In 2006, president Jammeh won 67 of the votes and his party maintained a strong majority in the National Assembly.

Although some local and foreign election observers deemed the elections free, fair and transparent, there were reports of unfair play and the opposition maintained that there has never been a level playing ground for free and fair elections.  

Meanwhile voter apathy has been phenomenally increasing at a worrying rate as over 50 percent of registered voters failed to cast their votes during the 2006 presidential elections.