"Threatening and eventually rounding up people and shooting them is not and will never be an option, at least not in the society I envision." Jabou, thanks for your comments. I take it that you are responding to my comment to Ebou Jallow. Can you please show me where I used the phrase "rounding up people and shooting them". Jabou, how you choose to relate to Ebou is your prerogative. However, I will continue to deal with Ebou in my own terms and I ask you to please quit trying to persuade me otherwise. We have gone this route before. "Let us reflect on what "ebou colly" had to say and remember that we simply cannot afford to encourage unchecked brutality in our midst now or in the future." Now, aside from the name Ebou Colley, what do you know about Ebou Colley? Has Ebou Colley told us anything he did, or you do not care to ask as long as he point at others? Are we just supposed to absolve anyone that runs to us and point at others? No, a thinking person should ask the Ebou Colleys and Jallows of this world what role they played while they were there? Why they are talking after they were fired or caught stealing? Ebou Colley was detained and tortured by none other than Yaya. However, he turned right back and took an offer from Yaya and gun ran with them until he was fired. It was after he was fired that he came to us. So, I appreciate him telling us what others did, but I equally want to know what he did and why after his torture he still went to work for his torturer. Now, do I ask that of Jabou or any other? No, each to their own. That is all I ask. No blind loyalty from my end. I was forwarded this message, so pardon me if I do not respond to your response in a tinely manner. George, I'll take this opportunity to take your offer to access G-Post. Thanks in advance. Chi Jaama Joe Sambou George & Haruna, Thanks. I want to point out that the re-posts of "ebou colly's" gruesome revelations of murder and mayhem are not intended to be mere strolls down memory lane, but a timed reminder to all Gambians everywhere of the long list of atrocities that have been committed by the APRC regime as relayed by "ebou colly". His allegations must be looked into. Now that the web is closing in on this regime by their own hands, I think these revelations will hold much more meaning and get the attention of all Gambians, as well as remind us that there are a long list of people waiting for justice, and the list keeps getting longer with each passing day that the APRC regime stays in power aided by gullible people. May I also take the opportunity to add that in order to be able to prosecute people effectively, the people need evidence which only the testimony of those who witnessed specific crimes can lead us to. Otherwise, we can ramble all day and in the end, we have nothing, especially in the face of uncollected or destroyed foressic evidence. Threatening and eventually rounding up people and shooting them is not and will never be an option, at least not in the society I envision. Intelligent strategysing that allows those who would be willing to become witnesses for the people to resolve to come forward will be much more productive. Let us reflect on what "ebou colly" had to say and remember that we simply cannot afford to encourage unchecked brutality in our midst now or in the future. Jabou Joh _________________________________________________________________ Working moms: Find helpful tips here on managing kids, home, work — and yourself. http://special.msn.com/msnbc/workingmom.armx ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ To Search in the Gambia-L archives, go to: http://maelstrom.stjohns.edu/CGI/wa.exe?S1=gambia-l To contact the List Management, please send an e-mail to: [log in to unmask] To unsubscribe/subscribe or view archives of postings, go to the Gambia-L Web interface at: http://maelstrom.stjohns.edu/archives/gambia-l.html ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~