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The Gambia and Related Issues Mailing List <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Thu, 11 Jul 2013 23:55:00 +0200
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Che. 
Ramadan mubarak to you too. Am very good takk. I didn't disagree with Raleigh, Che, only with the format and their insistence on putting the cart before the horses and the fact that with its format, it should have come after Stockholm. Now they have only US based groups acting as working groups putting together a steering committee instead of all the groups in the diaspora choosing a steering committee.  A popular US concept, the US is the world, nobody else matters.

Kejau 


Sent from Samsung Mobile

-------- Original message --------
From: "C. Omar Kebbeh" <[log in to unmask]> 
Date:  
To: [log in to unmask] 
Subject: Re: [G_L] Gambia Diaspora - Sweden Thank You Note 
 
Kejau, Ramadan Mubarak... What r u up to. You agree with Sweden but disagreed with raleigh

On Thursday, July 11, 2013, Kejau Touray <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
> http://www.gambiadaily.co.uk/article/press-release
>
> Press Releases
>
> Gambia Diaspora - Sweden Thank You Note
>
> Compatriots!
>  
>  
>
> We are hereby thanking all those who contributed in making the Stockholm Diaspora Dialogue A Successful Meeting!
>
> To all those who answered our call and travelled from afar to grace the occasion , in sharing your experiences, wisdom and vision 
>
> for our Mother-Land; The Gambia! We thank the On-line Media: Gainako, Maafanta, Hello Gambia, Bantaba in Cyber Space, Freedomnewspaper, The Gambia Echo and Kibaaro for helping spread our invitation to the public and for granting us interview airtime to put across our message. Thank you to all those who participated by contributing in cash and kind. To the community of Gambians in Sweden and most especially those in Stockholm who responded so positively in embracing the programme and making it your own, we thank you! To our People back home and around the world who prayed for us and who were with us in spirit, thank you! 
>
> ________________________________
> Date: Wed, 10 Jul 2013 17:53:57 -0400
> From: [log in to unmask]
> Subject: Re: [G_L] Army warns over Egypt 'disruption'
> To: [log in to unmask]
>
> Thanks a lot my brother . May Almighty Allah continue to guide us and accept our Ramadan. Ameen 
> Hous
>
>
>
>
> On Jul 10, 2013, at 6:48 AM, Kejau Touray <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>
> Ramadan Mubarak Hous, 
> The army should have at least tried to be neutral, but they are mostly Mubarak selected and appointed loyalist, so are the judiciary and the executives, the so called the technocrats. This is what pertains from may years of dictatorship and we face similar prospects when we oust the dictatorship in our backyard. 
> Kejau
>
> ________________________________
> Date: Tue, 9 Jul 2013 14:50:23 -0400
> From: [log in to unmask]
> Subject: [G_L] Army warns over Egypt 'disruption'
> To: [log in to unmask]
>
> Egypt's defence minister has warned against any attempt to disrupt the country's "difficult" transition.
>
> His statement comes almost a week after the army deposed Islamist President Mohammed Morsi and appointed top judge Adly Mansour as interim leader.
>
> Supporters of Mr Morsi have been holding demonstrations against his ousting.
>
> Meanwhile, Mr Mansour has been trying to shore up his position by appointing Hazem el-Beblawi as prime minister.
>
> Supporters and opponents of the army's move have been amassing on the streets of Cairo.
>
> Mr el-Beblawi served as finance minister during the period of military rule in the aftermath of Hosni Mubarak's overthrow.
>
> He told BBC Arabic that he would be choosing his ministers based on experience and efficiency, but said it was "difficult for me to specify when" he would finish forming the government.
>
> Mr Mansour has also appointed liberal politician Mohamed ElBaradei as deputy president with responsibility for foreign affairs. He has issued a temporary constitution and a timetable for transition leading to new elections early next year.
>
> The ultra-conservative Nour party said it was still studying the nomination of Mr ElBaradei, a former head of the UN nuclear agency.
>
> His candidacy as prime minister foundered earlier in the week when Nour objected.
>
> The party withdrew from talks to form a new government, but reports on Tuesday suggested it was back on board.
>
> 'Too important'
>
> In a televised speech, Defence Minister Abdel-Fattah el-Sisi said the "future of the nation is too important and sacred for manoeuvres or hindrance, whatever the justifications".
>
> He said that neither the army nor the people of Egypt would accept "the stalling or disruption" of this "difficult and complex" period.
>
> According to the BBC's Wyre Davies, emotions are still raw and compromise is a word many people are still not ready to use.
>
> Egypt has been in turmoil since Mr Morsi was overthrown last week, with protesters both for and against the ousted president massing on the streets.
>
> On Monday, at least 51 people - mostly pro-Morsi supporters from his Muslim Brotherhood movement - were killed outside the barracks where he is thought to be held.
>
> The families of the dead have said they have been told they will only be allowed to have the bodies returned if they accept official post mortem examination reports.
>
> At the main morgue, BBC reporters heard allegations that the army and its supporters in the media were deliberately covering up what had happened.
>
> That is not the only problem facing the new interim administration.
>
> The Muslim Brotherhood has rejected the interim government's new timetable for elections, saying it is illegitimate.
>
> Even the Tamarod protest movement - which led the anti-Morsi protests - has said it was not consulted on the election plan and has asked to see Mr Mansour to discuss the situation.
>
> Financial aid
>
> Mr Morsi was Egypt's first freely elected president. His removal last Wednesday followed days of mass protests by people who accused him of becoming increasingly authoritarian, pursuing an Islamist agenda, and failing to tackle Egypt's economic woes.
>
> Some countries have questioned the necessity for the army to depose a democratically-elected leader.
>
> But after initial concern, the US said on Tuesday that it was encouraged that Egypt's interim government had "laid out a plan for the path forward" in its transition announcement.
>
> The army's moves were welcomed by some Gulf states, and two - the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia - have made major pledges of financial help in a show of support for the new administration.
>
> The United Arab Emirates has promised a loan of $2bn ( 1.4bn) and a grant of $1bn, while Saudi Arabia has approved an aid package of $5bn.
>
> According to the BBC's Arab affairs editor Sebastian Usher, both countries fear and distrust the Muslim Brotherhood, whose members fanned out across the Gulf as teachers and technicians decades ago to escape persecution in Egypt.
>
> Lyse Doucet: The struggle to save Egypt's revolution
>
> Frank Gardner: Is Egypt heading for holy war?
>
> Key players in the Egyptian crisis
>
> Egypt clashes: Divided views
>
>
>
>
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