Joe, you are absolutely right that fair-minded Gambians should protest this INJUSTICE being meted on Dumo et al. This can only happen in a Dictatorship like the one we live in. I wished Gambians saw this lawlessness the same way you see it; i.e. this is NOT the problem of these defenseless captives alone. This is a problem for the whole society. When this injustice first started we told people that Yaya and his cohorts have just lowered the threshold again. All it now takes for an innocent Gambian to be railroaded (abducted and jailed, incommunicado) is for an Italian rat to tell LIES about you. This man could have lied about any Gambian. For instance, he LIED about Gambians from different works of Life. Gambians that NEVER knew each other before this incident. What we should have fought and what we should be fighting for is for the laws of the land to be applied such that innocent citizens are NOT jailed for crimes they NEVER committed in the first place. That is the principle we should fight for irrespective of whether Dumo is our family member or friend or we know the other accused persons. It is WRONG to jail innocent people. Period. It is just mind-boggling to think that we have citizens in the country that have been jailed for more than a year over some spurious and bogus accusations from an Italian rat. But Joe, this INJUSTICE comes as no surprise to a lot of people. I dare say that Dumo et al can count themselves somewhat lucky. I say that because I know of numerous others that have been summarily executed in that country simply because some dubious LIAR accused them of plotting a coup. It might have missed many the other day when that ex-soldier (Kejau) said that his life was once saved by Sam Sarr. Had the man gone ahead and explained what he meant, you will realize the kind of sick society we live in and how paranoid the vermin are. You will then realize how precarious people’s lives are, in the hands of the thugs at the NIA. Kejau is right to say that he would have been history by now, had others not intervene to put reason in Yaya’s thick and paranoid skull. The sad thing though is that had he been slaughtered or jailed, not even his own family members will stand up to fight for his murderers to face justice. This appeasement of tyrants has to stop. You are right that people will not receive anything on a plate from the Dictatorship. People have to fight for what is theirs; starting with people like Kejau that are directly affected by the Dictatorship. Finally, I think it was also timely to try and appeal to the politicians back home. I must admit that I have not been following political happenings thoroughly, but I understand that Local Government elections are in the horizon. This is yet another opportunity for the Parties to come together and explore means of getting rid of the Dictatorship. As always, I am for the removal of the Dictatorship by any means necessary. If it takes Local Government elections, so be it. Let’s just get rid of the vermin. We do NOT need people that abduct innocent citizens, murder children and loot government coffers. KB >From: Joe Sambou <[log in to unmask]> >Reply-To: The Gambia and related-issues mailing list ><[log in to unmask]> >To: [log in to unmask] >Subject: Re: Fwd: Observer on the Dumo case >Date: Wed, 6 Mar 2002 21:42:50 +0000 > >Another sad chapter to the misery of our people. Mrs. Saho we are with you >in spirit and please stay firm. And who said the judiciary is not >controlled by the dictator? Justice denied to anyone is justice denied to >all of us. However, as long as we see this travesty of justice as a Dumo >et >al problem, then justice will forever be denied to us. Any just minded >Gambian should be disgusted with the willful disregard for the rights of >the >accused. Since when does an AG detain folks then begin to scratch his head >as to what charges to make up years down the line? The AG and Yaya do not >have a case and are embarrassed to admit that. A dictator never gives you >anything by just asking, but by demanding and forcing him to leave his >ground. _________________________________________________________________ MSN Photos is the easiest way to share and print your photos: http://photos.msn.com/support/worldwide.aspx ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ To unsubscribe/subscribe or view archives of postings, go to the Gambia-L Web interface at: http://maelstrom.stjohns.edu/archives/gambia-l.html To contact the List Management, please send an e-mail to: [log in to unmask] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~