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From:
Demba Baldeh <[log in to unmask]>
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Date:
Thu, 10 Nov 2011 20:07:24 +0000
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It is really sad that our situation has come down to this... This is why some of us have been calling for restraints and all out engagement from every angle and everybody. 



That partisan division will not take us anywhere... Name calling and labeling each other will only spell failure on our part.. We waited until this last minute to put our good efforts and even that we could only see things in our own ways... 



Apparently we have succeeded in getting to where we never wanted to be.. A division that only shows no winner but the status quo.. Now we can congratulate ourselves for a job well done!!!!! And blame everybody else but ourselves... 



How sad really!!



Demba  

 

Sent via BlackBerry from T-Mobile



-----Original Message-----

From:         Musa Jeng <[log in to unmask]>

Sender:       The Gambia and Related Issues Mailing List <[log in to unmask]>

Date:         Thu, 10 Nov 2011 19:16:23 

To: <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:     The Gambia and Related Issues Mailing List

              <[log in to unmask]>

Subject: Re: [G_L] [>-<] Hamat Bah is legally barred from contesting the presidency as an independent candidate







It is sad that LJD has become a political hag, and is willing to explore legal justification to buttress his political leaning. LJD was someone that STGDP contacted to get his legal advice as far as exploring the possibility of an independent candidacy as a compromise for a united front, and his honest and objective legal advice was very important and relevant to some of the things we were looking at. The latest move from LJD launching an appeal to the IEC to prevent the running of the united front has really changed my view of him, and his dishonesty is as clear as day. It is very apparent that we have a lot of Justice Gomez among us, and it is just a question of whether they have the opportunity to use legal maneuvering to justify the wrongs 







Musa Jeng 







----- Original Message -----

From: "Pasamba Jow" <[log in to unmask]> 

To: [log in to unmask] 

Sent: Wednesday, November 9, 2011 6:23:37 PM 

Subject: Re: [G_L] [>-<] Hamat Bah is legally barred from contesting the presidency as an independent candidate 







L.J.Dardoe, please refer to section 49 of the 1997 Gambian constitution. 

Thanks 





"Challenge to 49.  

Any registered political party which has participated in the 

election of a President  Presidential election or an independent candidate who has  

participated in such an election may apply to the Supreme Court to   

determine the validity of the election of a President by filling a  

petition within ten days of the declaration of the result of the  

election." 



"True peace is not merely the absence of tension; it is the presence of justice." Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. 









Date: Wed, 9 Nov 2011 22:49:03 +0000 

From: [log in to unmask] 

Subject: [>-<] Hamat Bah is legally barred from contesting the presidency as an independent candidate 

To: [log in to unmask] 

CC: [log in to unmask] 







  

  

  

London 

  

The United Kingdom 

  

  

09 November 2011 

  

The Chairman 

Independent Electoral Commission 

Election House 

PO Box 793 

Banjul 

The Gambia 

  

  

Dear Sir 

  

  

Hamat Bah is legally barred from contesting the presidency as an independent candidate  





  

“ No association, other than a political party registered under or pursuant to an 

     Act of the National Assembly, shall sponsor candidates for public elections ” 

                                                                                s. 60(1) of the 1997 Constitution of The Gambia 

  

With less than a day from candidate nomination for the 24 November presidential contest, there are strong indications the so-called “united front” of NRP, PDOIS, and GPDP will attempt to field Hamat N K Bah, erstwhile leader of the NRP, as presidential candidate outside any specific party colours. As the body entrusted with the legal responsibility for managing the public election process in The Gambia, the Independent Electoral Commission (IEC) must remain alive to its obligation in ensuring requisite fidelity to the letter of the law. 

Ala section 49 of the 1997 Constitution of the Republic of The Gambia (the Constitution),  “Any registered political party which has participated in the Presidential election or an independent candidate who has participated in such an election may apply to the Supreme Court to determine the validity of the election of a President by filing a petition within ten days of the declaration of the result of an election”. 

Although I am yet to come across anyone placing express reliance on section 49 of the Constitution for the proposition that an independent candidate is legally able to contest the presidency, there are those, like Foroyaa’s publisher, who take the view that section 104 of the Election Act supports a non-party sponsored candidate for presidential elections. Unquestionably, this perspective is erroneous in so far as it placed exclusive reliance on the Election Act, a 2001 legislation backdated to a January 1996 commencement date. This particular Act started life as (Decree No. 78 of 1996, amended by Decree No.91 of 1996, Decree No. 93 of 1996, and Act No. 7 of 2001). As inferior legislation, it has no capacity to control an express constitutional provision like section 60(1) of the Constitution. 

Pertinently, section 104 (1) states that “The conduct of elections to an elective office in accordance with the Constitution and this Act shall be based on party politics” In so far as this particular section conforms to the Constitutional edict on the point of party-sponsored candidates as the cornerstone of our public election system, there is no question about its validity. However, section 104 (2), in contravention of a specific Constitution stipulation on public elections, states that “ Notwithstanding subsection (1), a person who is qualified to be registered as a voter under the Constitution and this Act may contest as an independent candidate in any election ”. This utterly pretentious posture of section 104 (2) of the Election Act collides with an explicit Constitutional provision on public elections, and must be regarded as of no consequence whatsoever, and therefore void under the supremacy clause of the Constitution 

Although section 49 implies a candidate may contest the presidency as an independent, it is an extremely weak provision when juxtaposed against the express statement of section 60(1) which categorically states that “No association, other than a political party registered under or pursuant to an Act of the National Assembly, shall sponsor candidates for public elections” . Under Interpretation at section 230 of the Constitution, “public elections” is defined as “ the election for a President, National Assembly and a local government authority ”. 

It is noteworthy that section 60(1) was an amendment inserted in 2001, and must therefore be seen as intended to be a definitive declaration of who can sponsor a presidential candidate in public elections. The statement that only a registered political party can sponsor “candidates for public elections” is too categoric a pronouncement to admit of any uncertainty. 

To avoid invalidation, inferior statutory law on public elections, in this case the presidency, must comply with the Constitutional edict on who can contest presidential elections, or be voided to the extent of any inconsistency. In the accepted doctrinal words of Federalist No. 78, “ a constitution is, in fact, and must be regarded by the judges, as a fundamental law. It therefore belongs to them to ascertain its meaning, as well as the meaning of any particular act proceeding from the legislative body. If there should happen to be an irreconcilable variance between the two, that which has the superior obligation and validity ought, of course, to be preferred; or, in other words, the Constitution ought to be preferred to the statute, the intention of the people to the intention of their agents ”.                                                                                              

Should legal and political doctrine not be good enough for the IEC vis-à-vis an independent candidate contesting a presidential election, I revert to the supreme authority of our Constitution. At section 4, and with absolute clarity, the Constitution states that it is “ the supreme law of The Gambia and any other law found to be inconsistent with any provision of this Constitution shall, to the extent of the inconsistency, be void ”.   Clearly, section 104 (2) of the Election Act is wholly void and of no consequence in so far as it frontally collides with the express declaration of section 60(1) of the Constitution on who can sponsor a candidate in presidential elections. It is imperative that the IEC perform its mandated duty and bar Hamat N K Bah from contesting on 24 November as an independent. 

Notwithstanding section 49 of the Constitution, supported as it ostensibly is by sections 104 (2) of the Election Act , Cap 1:01, Volume I, Laws of The Gambia 2009, there is no question regarding the purpose of section 60(1), a 2001 amendment to the text of our supreme law.   Undoubtedly, section 60(1) explicitly bans an independent presidential candidate, and inferior law in the Election Act cannot control a Constitutional provision on the same point.  In so far as legal supremacy goes, inferior legislation, including electoral laws in the Election Act, and, or, IEC rules, at variance with the express mandate of the Constitution, are invalid to the extent of any inconsistency. 

Accepting that independent candidates contested and won in public elections, this is nevertheless not an argument that passes Constitutional scrutiny. The fact that law failed to be enforced by competent authority does not mean a particular conduct is legally permissible. Although I am personally inclined against the illiberal tendency of 60(1), the fact remains it is a bona fide constituent element of the supreme law of the land, and must be enforced. 

Hamat N K Bah must not be permitted to contest the November presidential elections as an independent candidate. To avoid unlawful conduct, the IEC must reject his nomination in line with the clear mandate of section 60(1) of the Constitution. 

  

Lamin J Darbo 

  

Cc: 

Daily News Gambia 

Freedom Newspaper 

Gainako Newspaper Online 

Gambia Echo 

Gambia L 

Gambia Post 

Hello Gambia 

Jollof News 

Maafanta.com 

Senegambia Newspaper 

  







  

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