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ELECTION MANIFESTO 2006

NATIONAL ALLIANCE  FOR DEMOCRACY AND  DEVELOPMENT

GOVERNMENT BASED ON COLLECTIVE  LEADERSHIP AND PARTNERSHIP  WITH PEOPLE 
ORGANISED IN “CIVIL SOCIETY”  ASSOCIATIONS

PRIORITIES:

§          DEMOCRACY AND GOOD  GOVERNANCE  
§         FOOD SECURITY,   AFFORDABILITY AND SELF RELIANT AGRICULTURAL   BASE
§         PROCESSING,   APPROPRIATE TECHNOLOGY AND COTTAGE   INDUSTRIES
§         HUMAN  RESOURCE  DEVELOPMENT, EMPLOYMENT   CREATION
§         ENERGY, MINING  AND  INFRASTRUCTURAL  DEVELOPMENT
§          POVERTY  ERADICATION, INCOME GENERATION AND SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT, 
(SATISFACTORY   CROP FINANCE SCHEME, GOOD NUTRITION, HEALTH CARE, EDUCATION , 
 
SATISFACTORY  PENSION CONDITIONS, HOUSING, RECREATION AND GENERAL   WELFARE)
§         WOMEN,  CHILDREN,  THE DISABLED AND THE  AGED
§          AFRICAN  INTEGRATION AND PARTNERSHIP FOR A NEW INTERNATIONAL  
ORDER 
OF  PEACE  

May 2006

Vision and Mission

Sovereignty   resides in the people. The people of the Gambia are owners of 
public power  and  authority. They have the absolute right to determine how 
the  
Gambia is governed.  Leaders are mere trustees of public power and  
authority. 
They are to utilize  such power and authority on behalf of  the people to 
safeguard their economic,  social, cultural, civil and  political rights to 
ensure 
their collective liberty,  dignity and  prosperity while safeguarding their 
fundamental rights and freedoms.   As public trustees they are required to be 
transparent in their exercise  of  public authority. They are also required 
to render 
account to the  people  regarding their period of stewardship of national 
affairs in  order for the  people to determine whether they are worthy of 
their  
continued trust and  confidence.

In this regard, the facts  reveal that after 12 years of  AFPRC/APRC rule the 
government has not  lived up to its promises of transforming  the Gambia “
into 
a dynamic  middle income country, a financial centre, a tourist  paradise, a  
trading export oriented agricultural and manufacturing nation,   thriving on 
market policies and a vibrant private sector, sustained by a  well  educated 
, 
trained, skilled, healthy, self reliant and  enterprising population  and 
guaranteeing a well balanced ecosystem and  a decent standard of living for  
one and for 
all, under a system of  government based on the consent of the  citizenry” as 
stipulated in its  strategic document, i.e. Vision 2020. Instead of  being a “
dynamic  middle income country” the Gambia has become a heavily indebted  
poor  
country with 69% of its population living in abject poverty. It is  evident  
that export of agricultural produce is being jeopardized by  poor marketing  
arrangement. Manufacturing is almost absent. The  private sector is starved 
of  
investment capital thus leading to the  contraction of the productive base. 
This  
has led to poor revenue  earnings, escalation of internal and external 
borrowing 
to meet the  requirement of both the recurrent and development budgets,   
insignificant growth in employment and income, skyrocketing cost of living  
and  
perpetual rise in poverty.

It goes without saying that  despite all  evidence that the government is 
neither capable nor  willing to empower the  people to take charge of their 
destiny 
nor free  them from economic mismanagement  and poverty, it is making a  
determined effort to perpetuate itself in office  indefinitely. This is  why 
it has 
abrogated the power of the people to elect  their district  and village heads 
and transferred it to central authority. It has   eliminated the second round 
of 
voting and replaced it with the “first past  the  post system”.

The Executive has ascribed to itself the power  to  dissolve parliament and 
remove individual parliamentarians of the  ruling party,  as and when it 
wills. 
Arbitrary arrests and detention  without court appearance  within 72 hours 
have 
legitimized impunity.  The suspension of poverty alleviation  programmes 
alludes to the  existence of chronic maladministration of financial   
institutions.

It has therefore become absolutely clear that   empowering the people to 
build 
a durable democracy that would enable them  to  condition leaders to focus on 
their needs and aspirations is the  first step in a  series of strategic 
interventions that would lead to  their liberty and  development.

This calls for the creation of an  opposition alliance  transcending 
ideological and other differences in  principles, policies and  programmes as 
a united 
front designed to  usher in standards of best practice in  governance and 
democracy,  consolidate a common culture of respect for  fundamental rights 
and  
freedoms so as to build an unshakeable democratic  foundation from  which a 
genuine 
multi party contest can arise to enable the  people to  choose among parties 
by 
comparing their principles, policies,   programmes and practices.

NADD emerged to answer to the call of the   Gambian people for greater 
National unity transcending tribe, religion,  gender,  place of origin, 
birth, 
disability or any other  status.

We do not  seek change for the sake of change; we do not  seek power for its 
sake;  personality or personal interest is not the  issue. The issue of 
interest 
for  NADD is Gambia and her people. What  is paramount is the national 
interest. Our  duty is to change a system  of governance that is increasingly 
centralizing the  power in the hands  of the executive and replace it with a 
system 
that will not  allow  patronage, sectionalism or self perpetuating rule to 
stifle 
the  authority  of the people and bar them from changing their manner of  
government whenever  they deem it prudent to do so.

NADD stands  for a future that will  place your country right into your 
sovereign  hands. NADD aims to utilize the  public power derived from your 
authority  
to safeguard people’s liberty, dignity  and prosperity. After 41 years  of 
Independence, the Gambia deserves nothing  less.

NADD stands  for a dual carriageway to liberate the Gambian  people from  
powerlessness, voicelessness and poverty.

The first  carriageway  is the pathway to democracy. The fundamental task 
shall be to   transform the presidency from being the citadel of power 
usurped by  
the  executive from the people to become a spring for the devolution of  
power 
to the  masses organized in civil societies or associations. We  shall humble 
the  presidency by eradicating autocratic method of  governing and replace it 
with the  system of collective leadership.  This will be marked by 
involvement of 
civil  society as partners in  governance and the consolidation of a culture 
of 
respect  and  enforcement of fundamental rights and freedoms. We shall ensure 
the   performance of public duties, without fear or favour, dictation or   
victimization. We shall nurture a culture of transparency and accountability  
by  
those who are paid from public funds to perform public duties,  through  
safeguarding the freedom to access information by the owners  of the country 
and  the 
right of the media practitioners to uphold  their professional  
responsibilities.

NADD shall engineer a second  carriageway, that  is, the pathway to 
development. It shall promote  investment in the productive  base, instill 
financial 
discipline in the  use of public wealth, boost up small  scale and large 
scale  
enterprises, ensure market access and income generation,  expand the  revenue 
base 
to support human resource development and further   consolidate social 
services 
for the eradication of poverty in particular  and  social development in 
general.

NADD intends to provide a  leadership  that will rely on the collective 
intelligence of the people  and their creative  initiative to guide our 
collective 
destiny  characterized by liberty, dignity and  prosperity.

This is the way  forward. Political awareness is the key  and unity the door 
to become  the guardians of their own destiny.

1.  DEMOCRACY AND GOOD  GOVERNANCE

NADD holds that sustainable  development in the 21st  Century is 
inconceivable 
without building an open  democratic society  where authority to govern is 
derived from the consent of the  people,  freely and fairly expressed in 
genuine 
elections, that are free from   inducement or intimidation. 
It is equally convinced that any government  that  is entrusted with power by 
the people should utilize that  authority to promote  national unity, peace, 
stability, respect for  human rights, adherence to the  rule of law and the 
general welfare or  prosperity of the people. 
NADD  therefore undertakes to put in place a  governance programme that will  
demonstrate its commitment to the core  values of good governance and 
democracy 
characterized by transparency,  accountability, popular participation, 
respect  for fundamental rights  and freedoms, the upholding of the rule of 
law and  
respect for  political diversity and free media.
The programme shall consist   of:

Constitutional and legal reforms through the commissioning of a   
Constitutional Review Commission within a month of the assumption of office  
by  the 
President to ensure a nationwide sensitization and consultation  with a view  
to 
making proposals to amend the constitution so as to  restore the second round 
 of 
voting, ensure the security of tenure of  members of the Independent 
Electoral  
Commission, restore Chieftaincy  and Alkaloship elections, repeal all 
obnoxious 
laws such as the Indemnity  Act and conduct other legislative reforms that  
restrict the freedom of  the press and people in general.

Reform of  the civil service to  ensure professionalism and the performance 
of 
duty to meet  the  expectation of the people in an accountable, efficient and 
effective  manner  without any fear of being subjected to any discrimination, 
 
harassment,  victimization or indignation.

Executive reforms to  make the cabinet  more responsive to standards of best 
practice  established in implementing laws,  orders and policies designed to  
guide the operation of the various departments  of state and further  make it 
a 
practice for cabinet members to face the media to  explain  the policies of 
government and receive opinions on the impact they are   making on the 
population.

National Assembly reforms to amend   provisions that enable the President to 
dissolve the National Assembly  or  empower a party to remove a national 
assembly member by virtue of  party  disputes. It shall strengthen 
parliamentary 
oversight, and  safeguard the  immunities of parliamentarians against 
executive   
encroachment.

Judicial reforms to ensure that there is no  executive  presence or 
manipulation of the Judicial Service Commission.  All district  tribunals and 
adjudicating bodies shall be under the  judiciary and the  appointment and 
removal of 
magistrates and  arbitrators in courts shall be done  by a separate judicial 
service  commission that is completely independent of the  executive. Schemes 
of  best 
practice shall be incorporated to ensure speedy   justice.

Reform of prisons to ensure that they are transformed into   correctional 
rather than punitive institutions. Community service shall be  given  primacy 
over 
custodial sentences; prisons shall be organized in  such a way that  they 
serve 
as conducive environment to rehabilitate  prisoners. Maximum security  wing 
of 
prisons shall cease to be  detention centres. Prison administrators shall  
not 
be subjected to any  other dictate but that of the law and best practice in  
prison  administration and rehabilitation of those who have problem with the  
 
law.

Reform of police, the military and security services to   promote the 
performance of duty on the basis of law and best practice.  Measures  shall 
be put in 
place to protect such personnel for non  compliance with unlawful  
instructions 
especially politically motivated  ones.

Establishment  and/or consolidation of Independent Oversight  institutions 
like the office of  Ombudsman; Commissions such as those  for women and 
children, 
the disabled,  pensioners and human rights.  Such commissions can receive 
reports and conduct  investigations on  complaints of violation or non 
compliance 
with laws and  international  conventions designed to protect the rights and 
interests of given   categories of people in society who may be more 
vulnerable to 
discrimination  or  marginalization.

Separation of the function of Attorney  General  with the function of 
Secretary of State for Justice and Human  Rights. The office  of Attorney 
General shall 
serve as a state function  free from any political  influence so that any 
intervention by the  Attorney General in the judicial  process will be 
motivated by 
the  pursuit of the interest of Justice. The  Department of State for Justice 
 
and Human Rights shall oversee the incorporation  of all international,  
continental and regional conventions into domestic laws to  promote  
economic, 
social, political and cultural rights and ensure that they   inform policy 
and 
practice in state administration.   

10.       Promote popular   participation in decision making by developing 
partnership with civil  society  organizations and empower them to articulate 
and 
protect the  concerns of farmers  and workers, the disabled, women, children, 
 
pensioners, the elderly, youth,  owners of income generating  enterprises, 
members of the chamber of commerce,  media practitioners  and those living 
with 
HIV/Aids and other categories or  interest  groups.

11.       Ensuring  the  protection of the media to receive and give 
information and hold all  state  organs accountable and responsible for their 
manner of 
service  to the people.  The state media shall be opened up to convey 
divergent  
views. The media shall be  encouraged to hold all public service  delivery 
institutions and elected  officials accountable to the public.  The media 
practitioners shall pioneer the  establishment of a self  regulating media 
commission 
to promote professionalism,  ethical  conduct and standards of best practice 
in   
journalism.

12.       Promotion  of  the prestige and image of the country 
internationally 
by being a  signatory to  the Africa Peer Review Mechanism and accede to all  
continental and international  conventions that aim to encourage the  
separation 
of powers and ensure the checks  and balances in state  administration that 
can guarantee transparency,  accountability and  commitment to the public 
interest.


2.  THE ECONOMY  

2.1 Finance and Investment
Development is  inconceivable without  short term and long term investment. 
Investment is the  engine of  growth. Without growth in investment in the 
productive base of the   economy in a sustainable way it will not grow.
Income and employment will  not  be enhanced and poverty reduction or 
eradication cannot be  achieved. How to  promote investment into the 
productive base of 
the  economy shall be NADD’s  number one priority.

2.1.1 Local and  Foreign Direct  Investment

2.1.2 Local Investment
There are three  sources of  investment in the country, public sector, 
private 
sector  and cooperative  sector.

2.1.3 Public Sector investment 
The  government has both  non tax revenue earning departments and public  
corporations.
The current  public investment policy of the  government is grossly 
defective. 
This is why the  volume of revenue  does not match expenditure demands thus 
leading to deficits  and heavy  borrowing. In 2005 alone the government 
budget 
deficit stood at 855.4   million dalasis. To offset the deficit, the 
government 
had to borrow 488  million  dollars from Domestic and 446 million dollars 
from 
external  sources. The fact  that the volume of borrowing is not pegged to 
the  
volume of earnings from public  investment, arrears in the payment of  public 
debt have become the order of the  day. This has given rise to  the public 
debt 
and high debt service ratio. The  total debt of the  country is over 22 
billion 
dalasis. A sum of 1500 million  dalasis is  being paid in 2006 to meet our 
debt 
service obligation. This   constitutes more than 30% of government 
expenditure 
and almost 40% of  government  revenue excluding grants. This haphazard way 
of 
making  public corporations to  finance social programmes that are mainly  
politically motivated, such as July  22nd celebrations, deprives the  state 
of 
public investment capacity.
In the  same vein, public  corporations are drawn into investment programmes 
that are not   subjected to any feasibility studies or cost benefit analysis. 
A 
glaring  example  is the investment of public corporations into GAMCO to  
purchase groundnuts. The  company was transformed into a monopoly to  
purchase 
groundnuts with public  sector finance and guarantees to  receive funding 
from banks 
and the result is  total failure in crop  financing and increase in poverty. 
Similarly, the  state invested 45  million dalasis to purchase Mariatou Beach 
Hotel and 300  million  dalasis to refurbish it by drawing investment capital 
from Social   Security and Housing Finance Corporation. This is a poor 
judgment 
in  investing  public resources.
NADD shall develop a public investment  strategy that will  enhance earnings 
from public sector investments in  order to promote  modernization of public 
corporations and further  enable them to finance social  services.

2.1.4 The programmes shall  consist of 
1. Keeping of  proper records by public corporations to  ensure proper 
auditing and  quantification of profits accrued and  dividends to be paid to 
government 
2.  Proper monitoring and  accounting of corporate resources to ensure 
accurate  quantification of  optimum earnings on an annual basis.
3. The integration in  the national  budget of dividends anticipated annually 
from public   corporations.
4. The signing of a performance contract with the management  of  public 
corporations to honour the provision of dividends  anticipated or risk  
termination 
of office.
5. Safeguarding  management from any termination of  services by subjecting 
any grounds  for termination, under the performance  contract, to a tribunal 
for  
final decision.
6. The establishment of a policy  for annual local  borrowing to be linked to 
dividends anticipated from public   corporations and revenue generated from 
revenue earning departments to  prevent  arrears in the payment of any loan.
To move towards such  surplus financing to  release bank funds to promote 
private sector  investments. 

2.2  Private sector investment 
2.2.1 Private  sector finance comprises banks,  insurance companies and 
bureaux de  change.
In 2008, the volume of  transactions in foreign currency in the  Inter-Bank 
market was 18.98  billion.
This shows the volume of  capital being currently handled in the  financial 
market. It is  estimated that remittances from Gambians working abroad  rose 
from  
509.9 million in 2004 to 856.3 million in 2005.
Private remittances   were projected to be the second largest source of 
foreign exchange after  foreign  direct investment which is estimated at 1.3 
billion 
in 2005.  
It is also  estimated that the travel trade generated an income of 2.2  
billion in  2004.
In short, the private sector has huge potential  for investment in the  
productive base. This has been restricted by  heavy government borrowing 
which  
provides bank with “lazy money”  derived from mere taxation, mediocre 
investment  
policy and poor  infrastructure such as energy, road networks and river  
transport.  

NADD shall therefore 
Ensure financial discipline in  the  management of the public purse so as to 
depend less on domestic debt  and  leave the private sector financial 
institutions to promote private  sector  investments.
Give strategic boost to the energy sector and land  and river  transport to 
enhance investment potential.
Engineer a  comprehensive  prospecting scheme to identify and create an 
investment  plan for the development  of mineral and natural resources of the 
 
country, including oil  exploration.
Validate programmes and  institutions for investment programmes  with a view 
to upgrading their  capacity to evolve relevant and sustainable  programmes.
Match currency  production with the volume of goods and services  and the 
currency  transaction required to back such economic activity. In this  way 
old  
notes can be thrown out of the system and currency speculations that   create 
inflationary pressures   reduced.
2.2.2       Cooperative   Investment
The country has village savings and credit associations  (VISACA)  banks 
which 
belong to communities and micro financial  institutions which belong  to non 
governmental organizations and  cooperative societies.
There is very  little study on the global impact  of these institutions on 
investment and  production and  trade.

NADD shall
1. Cause the undertaking of a  study of the  cooperative financial 
institutions with a view to developing a   comprehensive and holistic policy 
on how they 
can enhance the productive  base  and promote individual earnings to reduce 
poverty.  


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