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From:
jawo abdoulie <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
The Gambia and related-issues mailing list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Fri, 26 May 2006 08:24:18 +0100
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Below is a copy of an article by Dr Tajudeen Abdul-Raheem published in Pambazuka News 256. If you are interested to subscribe online to Pambazuka, a highly informative and advocacy paper, please visit: http://www.pambazuka.org.
   
  Abdoulie Jawo
  

   
  AFRICA DAY: WHO SAYS SLAVERY IS DEAD? 

Tajudeen Abdul-Raheem 

In flight to Nigeria, Tajudeen Abdul-Raheem encounters a howling  young man being deported from the United Kingdom. How is it that the  youth of African countries will do anything to leave their place of  birth and slave away in poorly paid jobs in rich countries? What kind  of societies are being constructed in African countries when  remittances act as the only method of survival for whole commmunties? 


Today is Africa Day and I wish to share a very painful story with you. 

One has heard or read many horror stories about detentions, forceful  removals, and deportation of Africans accused of being 'illegal  immigrants' or failed asylum-seekers, almost always from one European  country or the other. Most people are not likely to encounter this  directly. In February this year I came face to face with the inhuman  way it is done. 

I was travelling to Nigeria with a former radical lecturer, mentor to  several generations of Nigerian students and intellectuals, Dr  Patrick Wilmot. In 1988 he was kidnapped by security officials of the  IBB regime (government of Ibrahim Babangida) and forcibly removed  from Nigeria, a country in which he had lived in for almost 2 decades  and despite the fact that he was and still is married to a Nigerian. 

Wilmot's 'crime' was allegedly, 'teaching what he was not paid to  teach'! Wilmot is of Jamaican origin but has lived longer in Nigeria  than in Jamaica and is better known to Nigerians and considered 'one  of us' by many. Yet in one night the military government yanked him  away from his family and academic community and landed him in the  United Kingdom, a country in which he had never lived in before and  had nothing but a painful historical link of slavery and colonialism.  Britain finally gave him legal residence and later citizenship and  London has remained his home since 1988. 

In spite of fears and anxiety by friends and colleagues unsure about  the selective efficiency of the African state when it comes to real  and imagined 'enemies', Wilmot was happy to be returning to a country  from which he was deported. I was never officially deported from  Nigeria but have become expert at being 'prevented to leave or enter  the country' throughout the military regime and even under the  current 'democratic' order. My travelling with Wilmot was both a  personal and political assurance that we could face any trouble  together and tough it out. 

From checking in and boarding you know you are Nigeria-bound and in  many ways feel like you are already in the country. As loud as  Nigerians are infamous for, that evening there was an unusual noise  coming from the back of the plane, distinct from the racket of voices  around. The voice grew more disquieting as we sat so I went to check  in the next cabin. 

At the back of the plane was a young Nigerian man, definitely not  more than 25 years old, sandwiched between two bully-built white  British police/immigration officers and handcuffed to both of them. I  made enquiries from the airhostesses since my initial attempt to talk  to the man's captives was rebuffed. The hostess casually informed me  that it was nothing unusual, that these things happen fairly  regularly, that the man was being 'removed' and assured me that his  noise would reduce as soon as the flight settled. 

Meanwhile, the removal police were trying their best to calm down the  howling young man as they would 'calm' an aggressive dog or cat. On  his part he was just crying, howling, swearing, and whining like a  trapped animal. It was so dehumanising and I felt humiliated for him  and for Africa. Even sadder still was the general indifference of  most of the other largely Nigerian passengers. Many of them have  become inured to this kind of routine humiliation of fellow citizens.  One even advised the whaling young man to 'shut up and try again when  you get home'. 

Here was Dr Wilmot, happy to return to a country from which he was  unceremoniously thrown out, on the same flight with a young man being  unceremoniously returned home. One got the impression that if he was  left unshackled he could attempt jumping out of the plane. He wanted  to be anywhere but home. 

How bad can it be that a young man who should have his whole life  ahead of him should be so frightened of going back home? What kind of  society have we created where our young people see no hope in  remaining in Africa and would do anything to leave it? We are even  beginning to valorize poor jobs, bad pay and immigrant insecurity by  gleefully talking these days about how important 'remittances' are to  the welfare of Africans trapped in poverty at home. This actually  makes it imperative for many young people to devise even more  desperate means to opt out of Africa in order to become Western-Union  life-savers to their families. Some countries are now even trying to  launder that exploitation as part of Overseas Development Assistant  (ODA)! And some of our own organisations in the name of Diaspora  initiatives are directly or indirectly offering justification for  this by only looking at the 'contribution' that remittance is playing  instead of the wider conditions
 and the long term negative impact of  whole communities dependent on handouts. 

We do not tell the truth about the degradation, racism and  exploitation that most of our people suffer in those 'shitty jobs',  'early morning and late night' that makes our peoples the last to go  to sleep and the first to wake up! 

These horror stories about immigration are repeated everyday across  Africa and the world. Some of our own governments, despite being  responsible for the economic and political conditions that are making  many Africans leave home, even connive in the routine humiliation in  their forcible return from different countries in Europe. Some of  them are willing to accept payments from European countries in  exchange for taking fellow Africans (not necessarily their citizens)  that are deported from Europe. 

Who says slavery is dead? This is official people trafficking by any  other name and it is done with impunity by countries who have signed  all kinds of international conventions allegedly protecting human  rights. The same countries that are forcing us to globalise, open up  our economies and markets, but are unwilling to open up their markets  for our goods and our labour. 

In spite of the humiliations many more people from across this  continent will do anything to get a visa to go to the West and if  that fails, anywhere else but Africa. Many years ago I had written  about this phenomenon and suggested then that were a slave ship,  properly labeled, to appear in any port city in Africa, people would  rush into it proclaiming that they were fit to be slaves! It is worse  today; we are in many ways financing our way into slavery both at  home and globally. 

As if the bad treatment from others was not enough, intra African  trade and free movement of peoples are denied through branding of  fellow Africans as 'aliens', 'foreigners', 'non indigenes' and  'settlers' even inside the same country. Pan Africanist entrepreneurs  delivering goods and services to African people as when and where  needed are criminalised as 'smugglers'. 

They say Rome was not built in a day. 

Today being Africa Day, we need to ask ourselves: if Romans were not  there who would have built Rome? You need to ask yourself whether by  your action or inaction you are part of the problem or part of the  solution. 

Happy Africa Day! 

* Dr Tajudeen Abdul-Raheem is General-Secretary of the Pan African  Movement, Kampala (Uganda) and Co-Director of Justice Africa 

* Please send comments to [log in to unmask] or comment online at  www.pambazuka.org  
   
   
   
   
  jawo abdoulie <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
  This APRC news-littering-robot of a paper would like to publish such adulterated information? – the so-called list of Mr N’derry’s informers!! Interesting….. This is another classical manifestation of the would-have-been professors of letters choosing to profess on litters. 

Interestingly, they sound extremely glad, certainly without any iota of professional or moral guilt, to show the whole world that the Daily Observer is daily and breathlessly robotized as a selfish political show house of personal vendettas. Only a newspaper which is desperate to be seen to satisfy some egos would take such junk as newsworthy. 

With all the political, constitutional massacring and grueling economic issues that The Gambia faces, the Daily Observer has embarrassingly chosen to be news-amok again and again!!! If only even one of the persons mentioned in that list could drag this news-littering-robot to court for libelous intent after publishing that so-called list! That would fundamentally teach this APRC Ping-Pong at least one good lesson in objective, critical and dialectical journalism.

Abdoulie Jawo


Sanusi Owens wrote:
This is really pathetic to read. I just wonder what Dr Saja Taal and his gang are up to. Can't he realise that this man 's computer was hacked????. 

There is no iota of truth that the names mentioned in Panderry's list are his informers and any attempt to associate them as infomers is just libellous. 

Regards 

Sanusi 



Fatoumatta Jallow wrote:
readers can anyone help to verify this or can pa nderry shed more light on it.
Freedom Newspaper informers exposed Written by DO Wednesday, 24 May 2006 Pa Nderry M’bai, the editor and publisher of the seditious Online Freedom Newspaper, has made a startling revelation of people passing him information against the government, while shifting allegiance to the ruling APRC and shutting down the paper.
In a list made privy to the Daily Observer yesterday, Mr M’bai, a former journalist in The Gambia and opposition of The Gambia Government, said: “I have decided to stop producing the Freedom Newspaper as I have pledged an allegiance with my brother Ebou Jallow to join the APRC election campaign.” Daily Observer will Thursday publish the names of all those who have manifested malice and hostility towards The Gambia Government through the Freedom Newspaper. 



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