Mr. Sey and all those calling for Ebou Jallow'sdelisting
I would ask we do not complicate things by using Freedom Newspaper/Pa
Nderry/Ebou Jallow issue to delist Ebou Jallow. First the the matter did
not take place at G-L neither are we presented evidence that Mr Ebou
Jallow was behind it. Even if he was proven guilty G-L may not have the
power to delist him solely on this act. Secondly it is my personal
believe that while Mr. Jallow's unsual biography isn't all that
flattering, it nontheless does not disqualify him as a G-L member.
Malanding Jaiteh
baboucarr Sey wrote:
>Sis Jabou and bro Ams NO I don´t is a good idea for the L to management team to unsubcribe the big rouge from the list , we need to know what he is up all the time so that we can keep track of him, this man is very dangerous for the Gambian nation, not only did he steal from from the poor Gambian framers, few he tried to form an army to topple Jammeh via Senegal, that failed. Then he tried to framed president Wade for recuting to lead contingent of Senegal soldiers to attack the Gambia. Ams come to think of it who is really behind the fake letter to the Senegal government that lead to arrest of OJ Halifa and Bah.(remember the piece Ebrima Ceesay sent to the list concerning that issue) who fake that letter or mail to Senegal. could it be the same Patten EBOU EBOU THIEF Jallow oh sorry he said he Jammeh Ebou thief Jammeh. Sister Jabou need I say more for the list not to delist sameless thief.
>
>Cheers
>
>Mbye
>
>I would also like to urge the Gambia L management team to unsubscribe
>Ebou
>
>amy jallow <[log in to unmask]> wrote: Sister Jabou,
> I could not help but marvel at your eloquence in responding to this serious atrocity commited by these hackers.No one could have said it better than you did, keep up the good work!
> I definitely do agree that Ebou Jallow should be unsubscribe from the L, until a thorough investigation has been performed.The brother has no shame in him, above everything else he has the audacity to come on line to post such jargon about those so called 'informers' to be prosecute by the the Gambian Government.The APRC is sure good at persecuting the poor, innocent and helpless, so this is nothing new.
> Ebou, like we have been asking you for the last years, what have you done with the money? That is the question of the day, and if you are so chummy with Yahya, you should think about going home for good.( Do you think that Yahya will ever trust you again, after all you have said and written about him)?You sure have the nerve to speak after doing what you have done. You should be extradited to the Gambia to be tried for helping yourself to the state coffers. You are nothing but a traitor to the Gambian people, having stolen all that money from our poor farmers. I wonder how you look at your vile self in the mirror knowing the evil you have committed.
> Be assured that there will be a final day of reckoning for you, Yahya and the monkeys that do your dirty jobs. History has a funny way of repeating itself in the most uncanny way, remember the once mighty Taylor and Doe, where are they now?
>Amy
>
>You are quite right. Unauthorized access into any individual or company's
>data, unlawfully securing that data, and falsely impersonating them in
>disseminating that data is not something that the authorities in this country take
>lightly and I agree that this matter should be pursued to the fullest as it is
>a crime against the Freedom newspaper but it is also a war that is launched
>against ordinary Gambians' rights to freedom of access to information.
>
>The Freedom Newspaper should engage some reputable attorneys and pursue this
>matter with the FCC and the local law enforcement authorities as well as
>with authorities in all of the countries abroad if it is found that anyone in
>those countries took part in this illegal act. Law enforcement authorities in
>North Carolina should be brought into this matter and the FBI should be
>informed by anyone whose life has been threatened.
>
>The law still works in this country and if the APRC and their supporters
>have gotten used to murdering Gambians and engaging in other unlawful bahaviour
>that goes unpunished and uninvestigated with those who are supposed to be
>guardians of the law actually twisting the law to support them in those
>activities, here, people can still have recourse. Witness if you will Sheikh Tejan
>Hydara actually having the audacity to stand in-front of a delegation of the
>African Commission on Human and Peoples Rights and stating that there are no
>Journalists in their custody when the whereabouts of one of the journalists
>from the Independent Newspaper is still unknown since the same government
>arrested him, and likewise stating that the murder of Deyda Hydara and the
>attempted murder of Ousman Sillah are still under
>investigation. Either we must have the most incompetent investigators in the
>Gambia or someone does not want the truth behind these crimes to be known.
>
>The Jammeh regime is escalating their campaign of terror against the Gambian
>people leading up to the October elections and this criminal act is part and
>parcel of that effort.
>However, if Saja Taal can actually carry false information on the front
>pages of the Daily Observer and call it fact, then surely Ebou Jallow can come
>here to post false allegations that Pa Nderry Mbai offered to work for and with
>him. It is all part of the deliberate campaign of lies and false allegations
>but most important of all, it is a symptom of the desperation of this regime
>because they have to be very desperate and worried in order to try to sell to
>the World that the people who have and still very much spend time and energy
>all these years fighting against them and exposing the injustices they are
>heaping on our people have now joined them even though the entire World can
>log onto the web-site of the Freedom Newspaper and see that they are still in
>publication and still very much engaged in exposing this regime, and those on
>the ground reading this paper can still read this paper and see that it is
>still engaged in exposing this regime.
>
>This idiotic campaign must be intended for those people on the ground in our
>country who do not have access to the web and who are not literate and who
>they can possibly fool by publishing untruths in the Daily Observer and feeding
>it to them via the rumour mill. The mass arrest of the subscribers and even
>non-subscribers is to scare people from reading this paper and the lies they
>published is intended to convince people that the paper has ceased to exist
>but one cannot help but laugh at this infantile act because those who can
>access information know these are blatant lies.
>
>However, no matter how much lies nor how much falsehood this regime and
>those who serve them in implementing their evil plans continues to peddle, they
>know they are loosing ground with the ordinary people on the ground and they
>know that these cheap campaigns of fear are the only tools left to them and
>everyone is becoming wise to these tactics.
>
>Governments that are up to no good never want the people to have access to
>information and that is one of the reasons this regime did all they could to
>shut down Mbye Gaye's radio station because he was translating news and
>commentary into all the local languages so all our people can have knowledge of
>what was going on in the country and what those who are governing were up to and
>they knew full well that if the Gambian public in general is well informed,
>this rogue regime, nor any other will last long. The illegal hacking of the
>Freedom Newspaper is the latest version in that campaign to curtail access to
>information but it is a loosing battle they are fighting and they know it
>well.
>
>I would also like to urge the Gambia L management team to unsubscribe Ebou
>Jallow for now until this matter is resolved so that the L does not serve as a
>tool for the dissemination of illegally accessed materials and a smear
>campaign that is clearly intended to not only make allegations against someone who
>is not subscribed to the L at the moment and unable to refute any
>allegations made against them, ( I believe this is one of the bylaws of the L) but also
>may be part of a greater design that is intended to deprive Gambians both
>abroad and on the ground the freedom to access information they have a right to
>access if they so choose. Hacking is illegal and until the matter is
>resolved, the L should not take the chance.
>
>Jabou Joh
>
>In a message dated 5/31/2006 7:57:12 P.M. Central Daylight Time,
>[log in to unmask] writes:
>
>
>Ebou Jallow you should apologize before it is too late
>other wise you will face the same fate the first
>infamous hacker Kevin Mitnick, who was arrested in
>1995 on charges of obtaining unauthorized access to
>corporate computer systems and stealing and copying
>proprietary software. Mitnick was jailed for five
>years.Since then many people are serving sentences
>ranging from 5 to 10 years.
>
>The FBI’s National Infrastructure Protection Center,
>an agency responsible for monitoring computer
>terrorism and oversee FBI computer-related crime
>investigations will be inform to take necessary action
>within 48 hours, if Ebou Jallow fails to come up with
>an apology or an explanation to Pa Nderry and Gambians
>why he should not be put a party to this legal action
>to be constituted by concern Gambians, we will have no
>choice but to go ahead with our plans of action.
>
>Yahya Jammeh cannot silence all the Gambian private
>Newspapers, private Radio Stations and we condone the
>same behavior from him abroad. It is between life and
>dead.
>
>Saihou
>
>
>
>
>
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