As Gambians join the world to remember their fallen heroes, I wish to remind us all to spare a moment or two and remember the greatest sacrifices of humble Gambians, from the trenches of Burma to present day, Sudan, Naples, East Timor and Afghanistan and urge all to renew our pledges to remember them in our prayers in the evenings, at nights and daytimes, for their memories, we promised, will never fade away as those of us they left behind. For if not for the bravery and the sacrifices of these great men and women, the relative freedom that the world enjoy could not have been known!
As we remember men like Corporal Kandy Kassey Camara, Lang Sonna Marnah and Sanyang, whose bravery and candor earned them the greatest respect of the British and other allay commanders. In late1980s, one of them on his wishes, on death was flown from UK and buried in Banjul, near his brave Gambian comrades. The fear of meeting those fierce some juju clad Gambian warriors, did put fear in the mind of even the kamikazes!
 
Lest we forget the two Gambian soldiers, who gave their lives in Liberia and the officer in Naples and over 30 officers and soldiers executed on the orders of Lt. Yaya Jammeh and other conspirators.  
 
Every rise and the setting of the sun, we shall remember them!
 
----- Original Message -----
From: [log in to unmask] href="mailto:[log in to unmask]">Haruna Darbo
To: [log in to unmask] href="mailto:[log in to unmask]">[log in to unmask]
Sent: Sunday, November 08, 2009 12:49 AM
Subject: Re: As the CNDD ship sinks, so does Dadis. Courtesy BBC News

Ginny it is the brilliant mind of the native at work. Bring out the big guns indeed.
Haruna. Nevermind they are ANTI-AIRCRAFT. They are big and scary-looking. Plus they pivot and turn. Make them think you can hit every man everywhere, up and down, all around.
 
In a message dated 11/5/2009 7:57:35 A.M. Eastern Standard Time, [log in to unmask] writes:
Greetings, all,  seems like the anti-aircraft guns are some kind of
odd/weird "security blanket".  Feel threatened?  Want to feel like you
got power?  Pull out the anti-aircraft guns, even if you don't use
them.
Ginny



On 11/5/09, Haruna Darbo <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
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> 'Big guns' herald Guinea's crisis
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> Capt Moussa Dadis Camara seized power in December 2008
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> Tens of thousands of workers in the West African state of Guinea are on
> strike, protesting after government soldiers opened fire on pro-democracy
> demonstrators at a football stadium in the capital, Conakry, last month.
> Mark Doyle reports on how events are playing out on the capital's streets.
> I do not know what it is about anti-aircraft guns that African soldiers like
> so much. Wars in these parts rarely involve shooting down planes.
> But when a crisis strikes, the anti-aircraft guns always start appearing.
> Maybe it is because they are big guns. Or maybe it is because the merchants
> of death, the arms dealers, have a surplus of the things these days. Maybe
> they are cheap.
> Anyway, I was driving past the home of Guinea's defence minister when I saw
> at least three of these giant machine guns mounted on the back of parked
> pick-up trucks. There were hundreds of soldiers milling around the gates of
> his house.
> The minister's residence is large, but the road it is on is very narrow and
> full of potholes.
> Faded promises
> Traffic in the Guinean capital, Conakry, is always chaotic and heavy. So
> what we had here was a sort of militarised traffic jam.
> We edged slowly past the anti-aircraft guns and nudged our way through the
> soldiers. I did not need to encourage my driver to be careful. As a local
> man, he knew the drill.
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> The defence minister is the number two or three in Guinea's latest military
> junta. No-one quite knows the hierarchy any more.
> The minister is an army general, but the junta is led by a man with a far
> more junior rank, an army captain called Dadis Camara.
> Dadis, as he is known locally, was popular when he first came to power.
> He promised a "new broom" purge against corruption and he promised free and
> fair elections in which he, as a military man, would not stand.
> But none of those things look likely now. He has reneged on his promises.
> Massacre claims
> Broken promises are not new in these parts. But worse, much worse, was to
> come.
> On 28 September 2009, a crowd of pro-democracy activists converged on the
> national football stadium. They called on Dadis, the junta leader, to stand
> down.
> Then soldiers loyal to the president surrounded the stadium, walked on to
> the football pitch and the athletics track around it, and proceeded to
> massacre at least 57, and perhaps as many as 160 or more, unarmed people.
> Everyone, apart from the government, agrees that this is what happened.
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>  It was a straightforward, blatant massacre. No doubt about it. The soldiers
> shot to kill.
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> The pro-democracy opposition people agrees this is what happened, of course.
> But so do Western and African diplomats, the United Nations, every man and
> woman on the street I have spoken to, and international human rights
> investigators.
> It was a straightforward, blatant massacre. No doubt about it. The soldiers
> shot to kill. They raped women systematically. They used knives and planks
> of wood with rusty nails to finish people off when they ran out of bullets.
> So now the world has imposed punitive sanctions to punish the killers. There
> are arms embargoes imposed by African countries and the European Union. But
> the regime will not care much about those measures.
> The merchants of death will get round arms sanctions. They always do.
> Rambo ride
> But there are also travel bans on individuals in the regime. And the junta
> will hate that, as there will be no more business deals in Paris, London or
> New York.
> Almost as soon as the travel bans were announced, more anti-aircraft guns,
> or "AAs" as they are called here, came out.
> A man who is supposedly in charge of presidential security, a man who looks
> and dresses like an African Rambo, was seen by a friend of mine driving
> through town in a convoy of seven Toyota Hilux trucks, with three of the big
> guns lashed on board.
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> Soldiers allegedly raped women during the stadium raid
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> Then our old friend the defence minister was seen by another contact of
> mine.
> He left his big house and took to the road, driving through this city of
> some two million terrified civilians, with no less than 26 battle wagons
> with, you have guessed it, at least four AAs strapped on the back.
> These armed men do not trust each other, that much is obvious. I wonder if
> they trust Dadis, the president, and I shudder to think how many
> anti-aircraft guns he has at his disposal.
> The international sanctions have ramped up the pressure. If the United
> Nations does as it has promised to do, it will investigate, then prosecute,
> the football stadium killers.
> That is all well and good, of course, if it happens. But right now it does
> not help the innocent people of Guinea.
> The very idea that an independent body is shining a torch-light into this
> place has terrified members of the junta. Who will be sacrificed to the
> international courts? Who will survive?

> The soldiers do not know. So it is time for them to bring out the
> anti-aircraft guns.
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