Alhagie Demba was the alkalo of Sukutakunda. He was also
a staunch supporter of the ruling government. He had always perceived Buba to be
a member of the opposition, and had seized every opportunity in any village
gathering to derail, trivialized and politicized his community development
efforts in the village.
Buba was a young high school graduate, who had
recently moved to the village from Banjul. He was an avid reader and a
visionary, and somehow felt that as an educated person he had a moral
responsibilty to commmunity organizing. He therefore started to organize the
people. Buba believed that responsibilty should start from the home, then
to the community and finally to the nation. At every level people should have a
sense of responsibilty to their family, to their community and to their nation.
As an educated person, Buba had an inate
disposition to do something about the quality of life of the people; he,
therefore, challenged himself to change the conditions in the village, and make
the life of the people better. He organized the youths to form a youth
organization; he helped the women form a village community garden project, and
he also began the process of initiating a Village Council. Thus Buba was
involved in every aspect of the village community; he was the youth leader as
well as secretary to the women's community garden project, and also the
initiator of the Village Council.
The hostility between Alhagie Demba and Buba
deepened when Buba started to initiate the Village Council. The Village Council
was composed of all the respected elders in the village, and the youth body
was also represented. To Alhagie Demba this was an affront. The Village Council
would have the sole authority to render decisions on all communal issues
affecting the village. This arrangement to Buba was more democractic, than
having a pupet alkalo who propagates the government's political agenda in the
village. Rather than giving authority to one person who may not even
have the interest of the people at heart; the people should be empowered through
a representative Village Council.
Buba sought the participation of Morro Ceesay, the
minister of Local Government to establish the Village Council and give it a
vested authority. The minister had initially accepted to be the guest speaker at
the inauguration, and someone was coming from Radio Gambia to cover
the event. However, three days before the event the minister cancelled his
attendance. Alhagie Demba was in a jubilant mood as he crisscrossed the village,
urging the village elders not to attend the inauguration should Buba choose to
go ahead with the scheduled meeting. He had earlier gone to the minister's
residence with a small delegation, and had convinced the minister not to endorse
the idea of a Village Council because Buba was a strong supporter of the
opposition.
"This young man is against the government,"
Alhagie Demba told the minster. "We have done everything to get him to support
the party but he refused. Look what he did to us when he was part of the
delegation that attended the Prsident's political rally in Bakau. We took him to
the rally to represent the youths in the village, as the youth leader and say
the good things that the government could do for the village. And also affirm
our total support and allegiance to his Excellency, but he dissappeared on us
before it was his time to speak. You were at the meeting; the President was at
the meeting as well as all the other cabinet ministers. We were deeply
embarrased on that day."
"I will talk to the chairperson of the President's Ward
Committee in your constituency. We will take it from there," the minister
assured Alhagie Demba.
Alhagie Demba's face contorted with a big grin
when he left the minister's residence that evening. With the other members of
the President's Ward committee in the village, they carved a vicious scheme and
set Buba up into openly supporting the government. They decided to nominate him
as the secretary of the President's Ward committee in the village in their
forthcoming political rally.
The President of the Republic, established the
Ward Committees in all the wards in the Bakau coonstituency, aimed at
capturing that constituency seat, which the govrnment had lost in all previous
elections. The President personally had commissioned his obsequious Minister of
Agriculture, to head a delegation that organized political meetings in all the
wards and set up committees.
When the Minister of Agriculture came to
Sukutakunda to hold a political meeting, Buba had no idea that such an event was
taking place in the village. He had not been informed of the
meeting; neither was he told that he was a prospective candidate for
nomination as secretary of the Ward Committee in the village. He knew of
the meeting on that very day, when he heard the drumming and a noisy din coming
from the direction of the village arena. He was on his way to watch a soccer
match organized by the sports committee of the village youth organization.
Buba decided to go and see what was going on at
the village arena, before he proceeded to the football field. When he arrived at
the arena, the Minister of Agriculture was addressing the tumultuous crowd.
"Our government has brought peace, stability
and prosperity to our nation. We did this by the grace of God and our
indefatigable President. The President has always committed himself to unite our
diverse people, in our common efforts to bring peace and prosperity to our
country. We know there is a radical political organization that is polluting the
minds of our young people. They have nothing to offer, and their rhetoric is as
empty as a dry well overgrown with weeds. As for the opposition, they have
nothing to offer either. All they have is to rattle insults and
condemnation. All the young people should rally behind his Excellency, and
the youth programs of the party. Long Live his Excellency! Long Live the
party! Long Live the nation."
The Minister was shouting at the top of his
voice above the clamor and drumming that greeted every reference to the
President. Buba was seething with scorn and indignation. He couldn't stand the
hypocrisy any longer, and left the gathering where he stood out of sight, as
surreptitiously as he came.
After Buba left the meeting place, the
nomination for the position of secretary to the Village Ward Committee began.
The chairperson of the Village Ward Committee nominated him. There was a
vote by acclamation. Amost instantaneously hands fluttered in the sky like
clothes peg out to dry in the windy and sultry sun.