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Subject:
From:
Ebou Jallow <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
The Gambia and related-issues mailing list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Sat, 12 Feb 2005 16:18:39 -0800
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Again Essa please refer below to a newspaper article concerning the issues under investigation.  You were quoted saying that your recall had "political connotations" because perhaps you "had an open door policy to all Gambians".  These are very vague expressions that virtually tells absolutely nothing specific.  Well how can you be accused of "having links with me and other dissidents" whilst you have NEVER opened your "ambassodorial doors" for me atleast in public ?  When I visited the Gambian Embassy at the wake of your departure NOBODY ( I mean from Leena, Pa Njagga, Tijan Cesay to your former driver "Queen" ) has ever said anything negative about you.  Instead they were shocked at your absence and later decision to fade away within the US.

Now my brother, I am just trying to clarify the facts because it concerns me personally.  This has nothing to do with Yaya Jammeh or anybody else.

E.
___




June 25, 2003, Wednesday, Final Edition


SECTION: WORLD; EMBASSY ROW; Pg. A12

LENGTH: 699 words

BYLINE: By James Morrison, THE WASHINGTON TIMES



Gambia denies firing

On the eve of a Washington visit by the president of Gambia, the West African nation's embassy here faced a diplomatic embarrassment.

The Independent newspaper in the capital, Banjul, reported that President Yahya A.J.J. Jammeh two weeks ago fired Essa Bokarr Sey, Gambia's ambassador to the United States for the past nine months.

An African Web site [http://allafrica.com] faxed the article to The Washington Times and other news outlets here.

However, the Gambian Embassy yesterday said the report is false and that Mr. Sey had been recalled routinely to Banjul for another assignment.

The opposition newspaper cited what it said was a message Mr. Sey posted on the GambiaPost and Gambia-L Internet sites. Mr. Sey said he was ordered to "hand over" the embassy with "immediate effect." He called his dismissal a recall but hinted it had "political connotations."

"I was always being monitored because of the open-door policy that I had with all Gambians," he said, in an apparent reference to opponents of the Gambian government in the United States.

Mr. Sey discounted his dismissal because, he said, he already had "picked up a consultancy job in Detroit." Mr. Sey could not be reached for comment.

A spokesman for the embassy said the report is wrong on every account.

"There is no way he was fired. He is still in the government," the spokesman said. "He was recalled. He might be posted somewhere else."

Before his Washington assignment, Mr. Sey was Gambia's ambassador to Taiwan, where he also served nine months, the spokesman said.

Lena Manga Sagnia Seck, the deputy chief of mission, is serving as charge d'affaires in the absence of an accredited ambassador.

Mr. Jammeh is due to attend the biannual U.S.-Africa Business Summit today, along with 12 other African presidents and prime ministers. The summit is organized by the Corporate Council on Africa.

Although Mr. Jammeh faces fierce opposition in Gambia and among Gambian expatriates, he generally is seen as a democratically elected leader who is improving the lives of the country's 1.3 million citizens.

The State Department says his government "generally respected the human rights of its citizens" but criticized Mr. Jammeh for some restrictions on press freedom.

The embassy said Mr. Jammeh has improved health and education in Gambia. His government has opened 10 new hospitals and 65 middle and high schools, up from only one high school under the previous government. The country now has 350 doctors, while there were only 10 before his term.

"The president is a role model for peace," the embassy spokesman said, adding that Mr. Jammeh's government has accepted 30,000 refugees from conflicts in other West African nations.










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