Halifa, thanks for your well thought-out analyses of events as they unfold in The Gambia. Your opening statement, “When The Seed Of National Discord Is Sown, A Bumper Harvest Of National Disintegration Is Reaped. Governance in a Sovereign Republic is about people”, strikes at the very heart of our problem, which I will refer to here as “The Gambian Problem” on a micro level and “The African Problem” on a macro level. The Republic of the Gambia is a legal entity created by citizens of The Gambia, to act on their collective wishes, for the collective good, without favor or partiality to any of its citizens and on the flip side to also, not discriminate against any. To execute this contract which was created by a national consensus, through the electoral process (the jury is out on whether the last election was free and fair), custodians were chosen to manage our affairs. Thus, the reason why we call it: government of the people, because power resides with the people; by the people, because members of the society are entrusted with that power to represent the wishes of its investors; and for the people, because collectively, and all things constant, the arrangement should benefit all. However, implicit in this arrangement, the citizens reserve the right to revoke that trust should the custodians breach that trust. How come then, we find ourselves in our current situation? Well, our presidents in the Gambia and most African countries, have two contracts in mind when running for office: the one being what they think the people want to hear and the other, the one they will implement once seated. Thus, they are above the law, own the resources of the people, and reserve the option to tyrannize the people for life. It happens all over our continent. The instrument that holds this arrangement together for them is the “Patron Client Relationship” that exist between them and a section of the population, such as, the July 22 and Military Thugs of our day, solo performers like the Baba Jobes, and the rodents abound. It is not surprising within this context, then, to hear Yahya talk of burying anyone with opposing views, or the July 22 Rodents feed his thirst for mayhem, for you can take the chicken out of the country, but you can never take the country out of the chicken. The moment of truth for all progressive Gambians has come and we either walk the talk or hush up. If we are true to our calling, Yahya and his entire cabinet will be voted out come 2001. I can see folks shaking their heads wondering what has gotten of me. Well, I am level headed and I also have confidence in the power of the people, and Senegal is exhibit one of many examples. You can only lead when you have followers. If the people truly believe they do not want the status quo, no amount of weaponry can make them, and our will to survive slavery is a testament to that spirit. We as a people should not place the burden on a Halifa Sallah or any one individual, for Gambia is the sum total of its citizens, of which Halifa is one of. What we are asking of Halifa, is essentially why we had Kukoi, and now Yahya, the only difference being, we did not explicitly request their (kukoi and Yahya) service. They acted on what they perceived was our wish. Precisely, the reason why Yahya in his delusional capacity thinks we owe him and should be grateful to him for life. We are good at waiting for a “Sacrificial Lamb”. When they fail, we end up with a Kukoi aftermath, and when they succeed, enter Yahya. Therefore, we should each take stock of our level of conviction and ask ourselves thus: what is our freedom worth to us? Are we willing to sacrifice our worth to gain our freedom? Are we fearful of nothing, but fear itself? Are we ready to uphold our principles against all odds? If the answer to all the above is an unequivocal yes, then my friends we are enroute to victory. However, if we have any reservations or hesitation to the affirmative, then we are not ready and do not have what it takes to persevere. Let us not look to what others can do, but rather, what we (self) can do to liberate our collective soul. I am not concerned about what Yahya is going to do come 2001, but rather, whether we as a people are ready and willing to bring the Leviathan down. If we truly want him and his rodents out, then victory is a foregone conclusion. FOLKS, LET’S SET OUR EYES ON THE PRIZE. Halifa, thanks again for your observations. Chi Jaama Joe Sambou >From: foroyaa <[log in to unmask]> >Reply-To: The Gambia and related-issues mailing list ><[log in to unmask]> >To: [log in to unmask] >Subject: Re: Bamba Laye "Mr. Halifa Sallah>>Re: When The Seed >Of............ A Bumper Harvest Of National Disintegration Is >Reaped >Date: Fri, 28 Jul 2000 13:21:42 +0100 > >Bamba Laye, > >You wrote: "You, Mr. Sallah, Sidia Jatta, Ousainou Darboe, Hamat Bah and >all >other activists out there, you are the people that can make a big >difference >in the direction our country will take in coming years. Ordinary Gambians >will rely on you to rescue us from this monster. Please speak a language >this monster can understand. How many letters, articles and debates have >you >gone through to have this guy hear what you are saying? Wouldn't your words >have hit home by now? Please accept the fact that you are dealing with a >mad >man and speak the language mad men understand. Let's not give him the >chance >to do more than what he has already done, please!" > >Bamba Laye, Halifa Sallah, Sidia Jatta, Ousainou Darboe, Hamat Bah and the >other activists are not the custodians of power. It is the people who are >the custodians of power. What they say is of relevance only if they >articulate the concerns of the Gambian people. It is through articulating >those concerns that they can earn the trust of the people. It is only by >earning the trust of the people that they develop the capacity to be able >to >organise them as a unified force to promote their general welfare. > >I must humbly say that most Gambians who read what is being articulated do >approve what is being said. What other language do you want to utilise, but >the language that helps the people to understand that they are the owners >of >power, and that it is only through their enlightenment and organisation >that >they can make leaders to respect their wishes and aspirations. > >It is important to bear in mind that Jammeh is speaking a language that >many >of his supporters approve. The tension developed after the Basse incident >when agitation for revenge intensified among the APRC supporters. Here we >have the danger of ordinary people attacking ordinary people. How is this >to >be handled? This is the question that is being tackled. Any concrete >suggestion will be considered. > >Greetings. > >Halifa. > > >----- Original Message ----- >From: Bamba Laye Jallow <[log in to unmask]> >To: <[log in to unmask]> >Sent: Friday, July 28, 2000 6:03 AM >Subject: Mr. Halifa Sallah>>Re: When The Seed Of............ A Bumper >Harvest Of National Disintegration Is Reaped > > > > Mr. Sallah, > > > > Please allow me to quote you > >---------------------------------------------------------------------------- > >To unsubscribe/subscribe or view archives of postings, go to the Gambia-L >Web interface at: http://maelstrom.stjohns.edu/archives/gambia-l.html > >---------------------------------------------------------------------------- ________________________________________________________________________ Get Your Private, Free E-mail from MSN Hotmail at http://www.hotmail.com ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe/subscribe or view archives of postings, go to the Gambia-L Web interface at: http://maelstrom.stjohns.edu/archives/gambia-l.html You may also send subscription requests to [log in to unmask] if you have problems accessing the web interface ----------------------------------------------------------------------------