List Members: There will be a demonstration in Atlanta on April 27, 2000 at 11.00am. The march will start at the CNN building and end at the City Hall. A copy of the letter listed below was sent to some prominent members in Atlanta. Please turn out in large numbers in order to send a strong signal to that BUTCHER IN KANILAI. Mayor Bill Campbell 55 Trinity Avenue SW Suite 2400 Atlanta, Georgia 30335. Dear Sir: Certain events are unfolding in The Gambia which compel us to write with a sense of urgency and ask for your help. The pages of human history are littered with accounts of man's mistreatment of man, yet certain species of misconduct are so vicious, so offensive to the code of decency, they shock the conscience. Thus murder is murder, yet it is all the more shocking to the human experience when committed by a mother against daughter, father against son, or by one loved one against another. Surely we are no less appalled when a government decides with full deliberation to turn its instruments of war upon its citizenry for no other reason than to quell their determination to exercise their democratic and constitutionally guaranteed rights. On April 10, 2000 the government of The Gambia committed such an offense against its citizens of the most innocent age when it ordered fire on a peaceful demonstration of students as young as 3 years of age. Some were cut down instantly and still others sent home with their garments dipped in blood. From all indications on the ground, we have determined that the peaceful demonstration undertaken by the Gambian students on April 10, 2000 was entirely justifiable and wholly consistent with their democratic right guaranteed by The Gambian Constitution, and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. From all accounts, the following events transpired: 1. On March 9, 2000 Ebrima Barry, a student enrolled at Brikama School, entered into a dispute with his teacher over his seating designation at the school 2. The Brikama Fire Department was called which promptly arrested Ebrima Barry and detained him. In the course of his detention at the Brikama Fire Department, he was stripped of his clothes, his head shaved, his body covered in wet cement and made to ingest the same. Furthermore, Ebrima was compelled to carry from one location to another no less than 40-60 bags of cement, one at a time. Ebrima subsequently died from the injuries he received in the course of his detention. 3. A man in uniform presumed to be a police officer raped a student Binta Manneh, at the Stadium, on March 10, 2000. 4. The Gambian Student Union (GAMSU) was outraged and properly communicated the concerns of its membership to the authorities at the failure to arrest and prosecutes culpable persons. 5. The government's inaction convinced students that the invocation of their democratic right to peaceably gather and express their concerns was necessary to demonstrate their resolve that justice should prevail for their two fellow students. 6. On the morning of April 10, 2000, GAMSU membership was to first assemble at the GTTI where their placards were stored. However, on arrival, paramilitary forces chanting "peace by force confronted them". 7. The paramilitary fired in the air at the GTTI, however it is not clear whether it was live ammunition, blank shots, or rubber bullets that were used at this time. What is certain is that the paramilitary fired in the air in an attempt to disperse the students. 8. Even though the students at GTTI were dispersed after a brief skirmish with the paramilitary, other students en route got word that their colleagues were being fired upon and they scattered. Clusters of students throughout the Serekunda area encountered paramilitary forces in pursuit. 9. In an effort to keep the paramilitary at bay, students burned tires and defended themselves with stones as they marched on. 10. When the demonstration reached the paramilitary base at Bakau and at The Red Cross Headquarters, live ammunition was fired into the students on orders from someone still not disclosed killing Omar Barrow, and wounding several. Omar Barrow was a media practitioner at Sud FM Radio Station who was acting as a Red Cross Volunteer. 11. At no time was any student armed with anything other than stones. Our very humanity, our right of domicile within the realm of human decency is violated and our objection must be emphatically registered no matter the cost. And so it shall be. However, we are determined not to surrender to the temptation of vengeance as comes most naturally to any human being confronted with such calamitous circumstances. Though our blood is turned to bile, we prefer to draw a lesson from the pages of our own prophets like Martin Luther King. Those whose blood has been shed shall not shed blood; and those who have known tears shall wipe them from the faces of others. In the quest for justice, the bravest offer their lives and lay claim to no one else's. We will survive this. However, we shudder at the specter of Somalia, Liberia, or Sierra Leone lurking in the twilight. A government determined to rule at all costs, costs a lot. Eventually, the totality of its misdeeds will grind down the very fabric of human endurance and shatter it. Dissent exists in all known societies, human and otherwise, and must be allowed peaceful expression. That is a necessary condition to peaceful co-existence. Gambians will reclaim our country, how this occurs is entirely dependent on the conduct of the renegade government. As in all critical moments like this a battle rages within each citizen; a battle between peaceful resistance and bloody vengeance. A government that insists on brutality aids the latter and not the former. And then God help us all. We must all work together so that that day never arrives. To this end we respectfully request that you: 1. Join us in a peaceful demonstration on April 27, 2000 to commence from the CNN building and proceed to the Georgia State Capitol Building. 2. Assist us in presenting a draft resolution to the Georgia State Legislature and the United States Congress condemning the brutish murder of Gambian children. 3. Immediately dispatch a letter to The Gambia government condemning the atrocities committed against its innocent citizens on April 10, 2000 and demanding the immediate release of all persons in custody as a result of the events on or about April 10. _________________________________ Respectfully, Momodou K. Ceesay Secretary ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe/subscribe or view archives of postings, go to the Gambia-L Web interface at: http://maelstrom.stjohns.edu/archives/gambia-l.html ----------------------------------------------------------------------------