Reports that the Yaya government is contemplating amending the Gambian Constitution in order to avoid going ahead with scheduled elections in The Gambia, is quite disturbing. The opposition should not allow Yaya to use the majority the APRC enjoys in parliament in order to frustrate the will of the people. They succeeded in thwarting the wheels of justice during the Crude Oil probe. We must not allow them to repeat those shenanigans. The opposition must mobilize their supporters to stand up against these shameless criminals that call themselves parliamentarians and the corrupt AG that would let a moron like Yaya instruct him to write such clearly unfair and undemocratic laws. If the AG is eager for a constitutional amendment, he should suggest to Yaya to amend the constitution to include term limits for the presidency. Instead of an illiterate telling the AG what to do, Secka should be lecturing Yaya about the rule of law and the risks inherent in the tyranny of the majority. The majority APRC holds in the parliament is a bogus majority that was made possible by a rigged elections. Parliament clearly does not represent the will of the Gambian people. Therefore, most of the things that go on in that parliament are illegitimate. The opposition should challenge these proposed amendments both in the courts and in the public arena. It is futile arguing with these vermin in the parliament. The fight should be taken outside. We must not allow Yaya to use these quasi-legal apparatuses (parliament) to legitimize such fraud. If the AG wants to impose the will of the APRC on the Gambian people, they should do so through decrees. But opposition leaders should not participate in any way in this fraud. They should not even participate in parliamentary debates aimed at amending the Constitution to suit the needs of the APRC and denying the public their right to vote for local representatives. There is no point in partaking in a fight that one is going to lose. The eloquence of Hamat Bah or Dembo Bojang or Sidia Jatta will not convince any APRC MP to vote against Yaya in parliament. Opposition leaders must make it abundantly clear to their supporters that it is unacceptable for the AG to amend the Constitution thereby robbing people off their right to vote. We have to put together a plan for what we are going to do if the government (as usual) decides to ignore the will of the people and go ahead with the constitutional amendment. Among other things, mass protests should be organized to demand the removal of Yaya and his cronies if they insist on passing these laws. It is only when we meet fire with fire that these people would do what is right. KB _________________________________________________________________________ Get Your Private, Free E-mail from MSN Hotmail at http://www.hotmail.com. Share information about yourself, create your own public profile at http://profiles.msn.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 and remember to write your full name and e-mail address. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------