Mr. Sidibeh, I agree with you too. I understand exactly what you are talking about. Being an eye witness to moms who had travel miles on horses' or donkey carts to deliver, I can attest to how much those folks will feel if they have a road to take them to a near by health center. It is easier said than done. Anyone could list their priorities, but just as you pointed out, it all leads to the same thing: A better Gambia for all. What I do not like is when people say that the Jammeh government is busy building infrastructures instead of trying to eradicate poverty. What is he going to do? Give EVERY Gambian some phiysical cash? I hope not, what of the ones who come in the next decades? The cash will be gone. That is why he has to continue to focus on the infrastructure and everything else will unfold by themselves. I am sure all those who might have a different approach, would not deny that they would not invest in a neighborhood or a country without the basic infrastructures; good roads, good running water, electricity and good communication. Why would a hotelier who might employ hundereds of people go build a hotel in an aera without those amenities? So let us encourage the development and give it time to grow. Ousman Jallow Bojang. Original Message: ----------------- From: Edi Sidibeh [log in to unmask] Date: Thu, 10 Oct 2002 14:59:40 +0000 To: [log in to unmask] Subject: THIS OBVIOUS BUT...... <html><div style='background-color:'><DIV> <DIV> <DIV> <DIV> <DIV></DIV> <DIV></DIV> <P>Mr..Bojang,</P> <P>Thanks for your response and I commended your takes on the issue. However, Education health, food, and employment sufficiency in my opinion cannot materialized properly without the infrastructural building that will sustain and contain the above aspects of life. It is as well obvious that, there is no use in building hospitals, schools as such, without enough educators and doctors, but on the other hand, it a necessity for every Gambian to be able to get easy access to hospital as much to have a little bit of education. However, it is okay too to ponder on other things as priority than the infrastructure saga, as everybody has your own aspects on how things in your opinion should be dealt and you never can't be wrong knowing how to defend your stands. Of course others who thing infrastructural development shouldn't be the first priority are not wrong too as you point out, they are of the same ambition but different approaches.</P> <P>To start with, more people are employed as laborers, brecklayer, carpenters, engineers metal workers etc and etc in the process of infrastructural buildings, again when those buildings are ready, more and more gain employments on the long run and foreign investors are now given an assurance to easy access to transporting their goods and the reliability of the electric city which seems a big headache fro the government to sustain as promised or maybe they need Dam to make the part sustained. However, eradication of complete poverty does not happen in a year in my opinion but years. On the other hand, there are simple thing like rule of law, corruption mis-managements are really reducible or can be totally eradicated in couples of years as they are also having great impacts on people's living conditions as such, eradicating those mean making people's life easier and prosperous too.</P> <P>Again Bro thanks for your takes</P> <P><BR><BR><BR> </P> <H5><EM><U><FONT color=#336699>Better now than ever > cooperation and understanding featuring better Gambia and willingness of her people to commit intellectually<IMG height=12 src="http://graphics.hotmail.com/emthup.gif" width=12></FONT></U></EM></H5> <DIV></DIV></DIV></DIV></DIV></DIV></div><br clear=all><hr>Chat with friends online, try MSN Messenger: <a href='http://g.msn.com/1HM1ENFI/c144??PS=47575'>Click Here</a><br></html> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 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] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -------------------------------------------------------------------- mail2web - Check your email from the web at http://mail2web.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 To contact the List Management, please send an e-mail to: [log in to unmask] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~