The article by Ndey Tapha is so maturely written, we should salute her three
times. I have just finish reading it, all she said is the truth and facts. I
hope some man lay siege at our cowardly Gambian boys door.
Men, she was on fire, God bless you sister. And thanks to Fatou Jaw for
igniting an excellent conversation. As Ndey Tapha said, Isatou Njie Saidy is
a cold, calculate, deceptive Mother whose late husband lived and died for
openness, transparency and accountability. Sometimes, you think you know
somebody, but hell you don't.
Ndey Tapha also touched on the case of the late Daba Marena and co. I heard
from reliable sources that, Daba's father made his wives enter the 40days
widows mourning. It is said, this report reached the doors of Afan Ibulise
(AJJ). Hence on a trip to Basse, he Yahya send some cronies to extend his
greetings to Daba's father and that he does not know the whereabouts of
Daba.
The father they said, told the delegates, tell Yahya, "my son always call us
every week, he never failed to send us his greetings, so how can my son
escape to Senegal and never call to say where he is for two years?". The
father therefore knew without a doubt his son was murdered, but then like
the silent women Ndey Tapha referred to, shouldn't the father also openly
commemorate the death of his son? The same is true for the families of
Basiru Barrow, Nyang, Dumbuya, Sey etc etc.
Thanks sister Ndey, a mervelous and memorable piece.
Suntou Bolonba
PS... Thanks for reaching out to the upcountry women in the farm, market
place and garden, good on you.
On Sat, Nov 27, 2010 at 3:22 AM, Haruna Darbo <[log in to unmask]> wrote:

> What a beautiful woman inside and out. Ndey Tapha has character and teggin.
> If I didn't know any better, I'd say She and FatouJ are twins. Indeed
> Gambia's women have enormous hope and inspiration. Carpe opportunidadis.
>
>  Haruna. Thank you Olfactor again for sharing. I don't know where you guys
> dig up these gems????
>
>  -----Original Message-----
> From: Haruna Darbo <[log in to unmask]>
> To: GAMBIA-L <[log in to unmask]>
>  Sent: Fri, Nov 26, 2010 1:36 pm
> Subject: Re: Operation Girls Catch Yaya? I am Pissed Off Fatou!!!! by Ndey
> Tapha Sosseh. Courtesy of Maafanta
>
> Woh Olfactor. Thank you so much for sharing Ndey Tapha. I have not even
> finished reading I'm already ecstatic about Ndey. Ndey is my kind of woman.
> She has fire in the belly and she is well grounded. I love Ndey. I believe
> she and I would make great partners at the risk of patronising. Ndey is a
> valuable member of Gambian society and for women all over Africa and the
> world.
>
> Thank you Ndey for you.
>
> Thank you Olfactor for sharing.
>
> Haruna. I will finish reading now.
>
>  -----Original Message-----
> From: Modou Mboge <[log in to unmask]>
> To: GAMBIA-L <[log in to unmask]>
> Sent: Fri, Nov 26, 2010 12:02 pm
> Subject: Operation Girls Catch Yaya? I am Pissed Off Fatou!!!! by Ndey
> Tapha Sosseh. Courtesy of Maafanta
>
>
> Simply a masterpiece.  I salute the indomitable Ndey Tapha Sosseh not
> forgeting of course Fatou Jow Manneh and the many dynamic women who are
> doing their part in the struggle to bring back sanity and dignity to the
> Gambia.
>
> Enjoy
>
>
>
>
> *Operation Girls Catch Yaya? I Am Pissed Off Fatou!!!!
> **- by Ndey Tapha Sosseh
> *
>
>
>    *Dear Fatou Jaw Manneh,**
>    *
>    *Eid Mubarak. * Let me first of all apologise to you for the delay in
>    getting back to
>    you on your article *“Operation Girls** Catch Yahya”* in which you call
>    on
>    Gambian women to take the lead in putting a stop to the madness that
>    prevails in
>    The Gambia today.  I must confess that I felt honored and humbled that
>    you
>    singled me out, alongside a list of women as ‘comrades’ for the job.
>
>    I am more than willing to be enlisted in any legitimate cause that
>    seeks to restore
>    sanity in our dear motherland.  As is evident, given the breakneck
>    speed at
>    which the powers that be, obviously with the support of the women
>    around them,
>    have decided to plunge our dear country into the pits of darkness, many
>    things,
>    many negative things, including the utterly nonsensical call for a
>    Monarchy
>    despite its foolishness, legal implications and complete disregard for
>    our
>    sovereignty as a people are unfolding under our very eyes.
>
>
> As a woman, as journalist and as former columnist specializing in women’s
> issues, I have the utmost respect for the
> average Gambian woman, especially rural women.   My then Daily Observer
> Column, Women In Development led me to
> tours across the country with a view to portraying the rural woman, the
> woman farmer, the woman teacher, the
> housewife, the house help and women in leadership in order to highlight our
> contributions to national development from
> our various quotas.  In all the women that I met, the ones that have
> impacted me so far, have been the rural Gambian
> women who work from dawn to dusk, undertaking arduous, back-breaking work
> and yet still they managed to be
> cheerful in their responsible role as mothers, wives and hosts.  Their
> conversations on a wide array of subjects always
> left me wondering what they would have been had they been offered the
> chances that we have had, to be educated, to
> be adequately sheltered and clothed, to be protected by parents, schools
> and communities.
>
> I must state that the Diaspora women you have listed and countless others
> at home and elsewhere who  in their various
> fields and locations have the commitment, intellect, charisma, endurance
>  and most importantly loyalty to our beloved
> country The Gambia to take the mantle of leadership both in public and
> private life.
>
> I was raised by two women, my biological mother and her younger sister who
> taught me to be God fearing, respectful,
> honest, selfless,  giving but most importantly to have a very clear sense
> of right and wrong and to be truth abiding – at
> all times and at all costs.  I put this last not because it is the least
> important but because it is something that my two
> mothers inculcated in us by action, by punishment and by constant
> repetition.  These are also virtues that I saw
> neighbours’ across the street and in the wider community imbibe in their
> children and us the friends of their children.
> And for this, I will forever be grateful.  The education (formal) I have
> been given aside, I can safely say that my
> character as an individual, as a journalist has very much been defined by
> this constant consciousness to be on the
> side of truth, to speak out against what is wrong and to be completely
> intolerant towards injustice of any kind.
>
> My character could not only have been formed by the influence of my two
> mothers, no.  However to a very large extent,
> what I am today, who I am today has been defined by Gambian woman of great
> presence, women of fortitude, women of
> conscience and women who have given back to their country, their
> communities a thousand fold.  My grandmother the
> late Anna Ngulu Carayol (nee Beigh) used to tell us “even if you think I
> will kill you, you must tell me the truth.”  It is a
> mantra I repeat day in and day out and which has become a sing song for my
> four year old son.  My army of aunts,
> grand aunts and the very many cousins of my parents who have all in one way
> or another, contributed to my upbringing
> and whom I can never thank enough for their role in my life is enough
> material for a book and we’ll keep that for
> another discourse, which I hope this letter will open.
>
> The women teachers and high school principals that I’ve had, never focused
> on just the academic aspects of our lives
> as girl children – we were taught to be responsible and responsive sisters,
> wives and citizens.  I remember very little
> about my day care years but I cannot forget the stern and towering but warm
> presence of the day care’s founder, Aunty
> Leigh.  Years after this, as a high school student with growing interest in
> the political developments around me, I found
> out that she stood as councilor in local government elections. The founder
> of the Saint Joseph’s Primary School (Mrs
> Harriet Ndow) was feared by all students and parents alike for her
> insistence on discipline, cleanliness, good conduct in
> and outside of school.  Young female teachers at the Saint Josephs High
> School including Ms Harriet Chorr, Ms
> Kuyateh, Ms Kippi Coker and senior teachers Mr Helena Njie, the late Mrs
> Harriet Baldeh, Mrs Adele Sock, Mrs Vicky
> Ndure, Mrs Gomez taught in their various disciplines but also inculcated in
> us St. Josephs girls attitudes of self respect,
> service to the community and again drilled honesty and truthfulness as core
> values to be embraced by women of all
> cultures and backgrounds.  The same can be said about Mrs Vicky Clark, Mrs
> Marian Forster of the Marina
> International School where I completed sixth form.
>
> As a trainee journalist, I had women like Bijou Peters (Aunty Bijou), Amie
> Joof Cole and Amie Bojang Sissoho to look
> up, there were the rest, senior ones who read the news well and flawlessly
> but these were the ones I could remember
> who wrote or on their broadcast programmes dealt with challenging realities
> of the day.  Aunty Bijou, despite her age
> and up till now will write an article to speak out against a social ill or
> an issue of concern.  I remember our lengthy chats
> for hours on end and she would despair asking me what is wrong with our
> society.  The two Amie’s used their various
> platforms to speak on behalf of Gambian women from all different
> backgrounds.  These are the two women journalists
> who despite their positions at the State owned broadcasting services,
> walked away with no regrets when they felt this
> was not the enabling environment for journalists, for defenders of the
> truth and for those who serve as the eyes and
> ears of the public to operate in.   These three female journalists were the
> ones that I aspired to be like, in the days that
> I joined the profession as a trainee.  I am equally pleased that over the
> years, they have not let me down and we have
> cemented lasting relationships.  They now serve as my mentors, guides and
> partners.  It is also through my work as a
> journalist that I’ve found friends in remarkable women like yourself, Amie
> Sillah, Fatou Jagne.
>
> Unfortunately Fatou, despite the examples abound of all these exceptional
> Gambian women who are an inspiration to
> me and the many others who serve as an inspiration for the Maafanta team,
> readers and other Gambian women, I
> cannot share your optimism especially in regards to women of the political
> class given the role played by Gambian
> women in institutionalizing a lawless state, and I’ll list a few examples.
>
> Taking us back to April 10 and 11, 2010, it took a woman, whom many women
> look up to, whom many women respect,
> whom many women love, in the person of the *Vice President, Isatou Njie
> Saidy* to have the audacity to use the
> national television, to list for us, all the properties that were destroyed
> by the students, to tell us that the shooting
> actually emanated from the students and then finally tell us that 14
> students died.   Going by the chronology of events,
> it seems to me that the loss of young lives was the least important to her.
>  Apparently after this, she did lead a
> delegation to condole the families and offer some cash on behalf of the
> Government.  *What an insult and I still
> wonder why and how any mother would be convinced to accept such money.
>
> *Still on April 10, disgusted as I was then, I reacted to this as a much
> younger person, more from the perspective of the
> students, than from that of the parents.  Ten years later, as a mother, I
> am more disgusted and usually find myself
> wondering how any mother can allow her teen child to remain obscure and
> become just a number (the fourteen
> children who died on April 10) after giving birth, raising them, educating
> them to a point where they can and should be
> of use to themselves, their parents and their communities and then to be
> taken so cruelly away from you, and then you
> do nothing. You do not demand for justice, you do not commemorate/celebrate
> openly the anniversary of the death of
> your child which is normal in our tradition.*  Whenever I’ve raised this,
> I’ve been told “oh but you know people
> don’t know their rights,” “Ngurr ken du ko heh” and this angers me further.
> * I always illustrate my response to
> that of a mother chicken and her brood.  Should you want to touch any of
> them, the first thing she’d do is to claw your
> eyes out.  And I’m sure that is what I’d do in defense of my child.   I
> daresay that nobody, military, police or any state
> actor does not have the conscience or guts to stop a mother of an April 10
> victim from holding the picture of her child,
> every April 10 with a question* “Where is the Coroner’s report?”
>
> *April 10 is one of the many indefensible acts the vice president has so
> shamelessly defended to date but by far the
> most inhumane and unbecoming of a mother and a woman.
>
> This brings me to the wives, the mothers, the sisters and daughters of the
> victims of the many so called coup attempts,
> from November 11, 1995, if it is not the papers, in particular the online
> papers asking, debating and our making
> reference to them, all dead and or disappeared victims are as good as
> forgotten.  In the case of Daba Marenah and co
> whom the State insists escaped whilst being escorted to another prison,
> mind you from a maximum security wing, to an
> open prison.  *By the way, this information was relayed and defended on
> the international news by a female
> minister then, Nenneh Macdoul Gaye.*  Which mother, wife, daughter or
> sister will accept that a man in your life, can
> have escaped from 2006 to 2010 (four years) and never, ever get in touch,
> directly or otherwise.  So long as they are
> detainees, they are under the responsibility of the State, in particular
> the Prisons Services and the Ministry of Interior.
> The absurdity surrounding their case, and the fact that no family to date
> has challenged this still beats me.  Where
> exactly was the location of the accident?  Where are the prison guards who
> were with them at the time of the escape?
> Where is the driver of the prison vehicle?  These are in my opinion
> legitimate questions to be asked by the female
> relatives of any of those involved.
>
> Fatou, we have not yet counted the scores of state officials and civil
> servants who turn up for work and end up at the
> Mile Two Central Prisons or NIA and NDEA offices for weeks on end, without
> a word from their wives’ even when
> contacted by the press, they refuse to acknowledge that truth.  *What
> message are these women sending to their
> children, in particular their daughters about their future roles as wives?
> *  That it is o.k to run and hide when
> your husband is being bullied?  Is that the role they want their children
> to also play as siblings?
>
> *In her position as minister and before that as a journalist, Nenneh
> Macdoul extolled the very many
> accomplishments of the Jammeh administration especially in terms of
> infrastructural development. * As
> Minister she vilified, ignored and made efforts to destabilize the Gambia
> Press Union which stands to defend her
> colleagues in the profession.   Her other documentary on the President
> Jammeh’s HIV Aids Treatment is so shockingly
> ignorant and lacks any merit from a professional (journalistic) point of
> view, that words need not be wasted commenting
> on it.  *Today, she is running, hiding in fact from her virtuous man, her
> so called man of peace, man of
> development, man of the people, man who he has brought to The Gambia what
> no one has ever done or no
> one can ever do. * *What exactly is she running away from?*  After all,
> female journalists like you, Amie Bojang-
> Sissoho and me are “impolite”, “unprofessional” we think “we are above the
> law” and we “have no respect for the
> powers that be”.
>
> *Like her many of her then so called cabinet colleagues and other
> Presidential appointees like the famous
> or should I say now infamous FJC, who even opined on national TV, as
> Speaker of the National Assembly
> that should Jammeh ask her to polish his shoes, she’d gladly do so,
> insulting the position she held. * Then
> we had *th**e short-lived minister of energy Sira Wally Ndow on how she’d
> serve with her whole being*. I’m
> afraid my being and its service are left for the Almighty Allah and him
> alone, oh I forget *Nyimasata Sanneh Bojang’s*
> claim on Jammeh’s emancipation of the Gambian women and the bringing in of
> the advent of ‘free education’ of the girl
> child, calculating, she probably most likely started her education under
> the colonialists and then later the Jawara
> administration, during which term she was elected a member of Parliament,
> not nominated; under which she served as
> a Minister of State. * So, when we have women, who can forget their own
> personal accomplishments and or
> hand over all the credit of their hard earned status, the credit of the
> input of their own parents and
> communities had in their success, it bothers me and it also makes me afraid
> that we are sending all the
> wrong signals to our children.
>
> We have female ministers calling Jammeh the father of our nation. * I beg
> to differ, I am neither an illegitimate
> nor a fatherless woman.  My father and the fathers of the Gambian women of
> pride and dignity, who know and value
> where they come from would turn in their graves should we  turn to the very
> man who desecrates on everything that
> they have worked for including Independence, to and refer to him as their
> father.
>
> *Where are the Duta Kumasos, the Ramzia Diabs* and until recently the
> former *Speaker Mrs Elizabeth Renner.*
> The rest aside, Mme Renner had already made her name in the history books
> of The Gambia.   Of all the good she has
> *done, what had she hoped to achieve as a puppet speaker? * Now when we
> focus on the famous Mrs Renner, all
> we do is talk about her short tenure as speaker, forgetting the forty odd
> years of selfless service she has given to her
> country.  I feel for her, but she is one of the many Gambian women of
> intellect who have disappointed me and many
> other young women who looked up to those like her by getting involved in a
> situation she very well knew she could not
> positively impact.
>
> These days, there’s talk about this most absurd claim on the formation of
> the Gambia Women’s Federation, even
> today, there’s an editorial on the Daily Observer website claiming “It is
> barely two years since the vice president, Her
> Excellency Dr Isatou Njie-Saidy proposed the formation of a National
> Women’s Federation, with the principal aim of
> boosting the capacity of women organisations and groups, as well as to
> enable government provide more meaningful
> support to women's groups through an umbrella body…”  My goodness! We all
> know that in the early 80s a Women’s
> Federation was formed. If we as journalists want to embark on the
> impossible task of trying to rewrite history to please a
> few, that is one unpardonable act.
>
> What is worse than that though is the silence of those in the know,
> especially us women. * We cannot accept that
> false be made truth and agree to be a part of the rubbish that seeks to
> negate the long held and ardently
> fought for* progress and strides made by Gambian women over the years in a
> bid to please a monstrous leadership
> who wants us to believe that all good things that have come to us as
> Gambian women, including the quality education
> of the Gambian girl child came through this leadership.  What a farce!  I
> wonder how and where this administration
> would have had the pool of professional Gambian women to recycle, reuse and
> be dumping had we only started
> benefitting from and participating in national initiatives in the past 16
> years.
>
> *I do sincerely hope that the vice president in “re-launching” the women’s
> federation will pay homage to
> the late Mrs Cecilia Cole, Bijou Peters, Dr. Florence Mahoney, Mrs Louise
> Njie all of whom are founder
> members of the Gambia Women’s Federation.*   It is also my ardent belief
> that the daughters, nieces and
> granddaughters of these remarkable women will not let those who want to
> cheat their mothers, aunties and
> grandmothers of the fruits of their labour, by allowing such baseless
> claims to hold water.  *Those of us women
> journalists and historians have a responsibility to unearth our archives
> and set the records straight.
>
> *We live in body politic that has evolved dramatically.  This
> administration is not one year old, it is not five years old.  It is
> 16 years old.  If, as Gambian women, in 16 years we choose to be
>  blindfolded and robbed of our very dignity, if in 16
> years we choose to have our intellect and integrity raped and abused by
> non, other than semi-lettered individuals who
> represent no one but their personal interests and nothing else, then there
> is a lot to be desired from the women in the
> political class.
>
> Are these women truly representative of the Gambian women?   I for one do
> not see myself in any one of the women
> that are in leadership today and I am sure that many of us Gambian women
> cannot and do not relate to them for a
> myriad of issues.
>
> *It is not only the female political class that I am fed up with, there
> are the women in business, the women in
> civil society, the women farmers whose family lands are being grabbed by
> the powers that be, the wives
> who join the ‘thousand man marches’ whilst their husbands languish in
> jails, the sisters who die on their
> way to Kanilai farms whilst their brothers are serving prison sentences,
>  the female lawyers who tell us it is
> not the role of the bar association to defend human rights, the so called
> female journalists who bicker and
> fight and make enemies at the Sate owned radio and television just to be on
> the team that covers the
> affairs of the head of state with a view to getting noticed for all the
> wrong reasons and those unethical in
> our profession, the Green Girls who come from communities were their
> mothers and grandmothers have
> been officially labeled witches and forced to confess and drink concoctions
> that have left some dead,
> Where are the mothers of the hundreds of girls that GAMCOTRAP projects have
> supported?  Where are
> the women who willingly agreed to be a part of GAMCOTRAP activities and
> celebrations?  Are they not the
> same women who are now in Court, testifying against them? And the list goes
> on and on.
>
> *On top of all these, are now the women within our communities and inner
> circles who make enemies of us - women like
> me and you, women like Amie Bojang Sissoho, Mariam Denton, Amie Sillah,
> Amie Joof Cole, the late Satang Jobarteh -
> women who choose to see the truth and accept to be one of the few who’ll
> stand up in defence of it.  The name calling
> “nyi amun yarr”, the isolation (you’ve suffered this whilst you had your
> case on in Banjul), the questioning of our
> loyalty.  For this last one, I always have a ready answer. I am loyal to my
> Sate and to my State only, for it is only one
> that is a loyal to a State who will see the cracks, acknowledge them as
> national problems and seek corrective
> measures.  All those who claim there are no problems in The Gambia, there
> are no issues and that we have illegitimate
> reasons to speak the truth (in their opinion lies) are the very ones who
> not loyal as they all contributing in many major
> ways to the destruction of the very fabric of our society for their own
> short term, personal gains.  They, especially the
> women involved forget that The Gambia belongs to no one individual and that
> whatever we systematize or
> institutionalize is what our children and their children’s children will
> inherit.
>
> Fatou, every day, I pray to God, that my offspring will never deify a human
> being as is the case in The Gambia today.  I
> fear that we will have a next generation of young adults who will be so
> afraid to speak out and stand up for what they
> believe and wonder whether there are many mothers out there offering the
> same prayers as mine.   What we have in
> The Gambia right now, is the inculcation of a culture that promotes the
> acceptance of a wrong as a right and truth for
> falsehood,  a culture that does not even enable our children to think, a
> culture that encourages them to accept the
> unacceptable and a culture of mental enslavement.  In a country where
> parents have lost all dignity and would accept
> to make televised apologies for wrongs they have not committed.  How will
> these men in turn look at their children and
> wives?  How will they walk in the narrow streets of Banjul were we all know
> each other and even be comfortable?
> We are setting a very dangerous trend by so easily and comfortably
> distorting history and the facts and these are
> developments that bother me intensely and the issues that I feel that as
> Gambian women we should address if we are
> serious about taking on your challenge to “catch Yayha”.
>
> If The Gambia is as close-knit as we claim, there is no one single family
> or community that has not been affected by the
> vicious cycle that is slowly eating up the very links that join us
> together.  What is wrong with us, that in a short span of
> 16 years, we have set aside blood, communal and national ties to be setting
> the dangerous trend of refusing to be our
> brothers’ keepers?
>
> To embark on your call, to be seen and taken as serious participants and
> contenders for leadership positions, I believe
> we as women must be willing to retrace our steps.  Let us all look up to
> the women who raised and educated us, most
> the women who have contributed immensely to the development of schools,
> communities and social structures in the
> early days are not here with us, but we can draw from their lessons, from
> their pains and their struggles to identify with
> them and seek to impart these values on our children.
>
> We must seek and demand selflessness from all women in politics, who claim
> to represent us and Gambian women.
> The same rule applies to us women in the media and those in civil society.
>  The women who step forth to represent us
> in all domains must be women of truth and women who would die in defense of
> their ideals.  Any woman who is involved
> in politics for their own material gain cannot do it alone, they rely on
> the backing of the Yayi Compins, the women that
> buy the ‘ashobis’ and the women who attend the political rallies to garner
> support for their success and that of the
> powers that be.
>
> *We can build on the efforts of the late Satang Jobarteh to find women* we
> can identify with and relate to, to be
> our female representatives irrespective of political or hereditary
> linkages.  We should caucus, fundraise and rally
> behind women of integrity, women of pride, women of truth and commitment.
>  Added to all this, the women we support
> must who have the capacity to deliver.
>
> The fact that such a debate has begun, spurned by you, a woman, who has
> been victim of the heartless machinery of
> our state, means all hope is not lost!
>
> Aluta Continua.
>
> *Ndey Tapha Sosseh
>
> **P.S
> Please note that the contents of this letter do not reflect the opinions of
> the Gambia Press Union.
> *
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-- 
Surah- Ar-Rum 30-22
"And among His signs is the creation of heavens and the earth, and the
difference of your languages and colours. Verily, in that are indeed signs
for men of sound knowledge." Qu'ran

www.suntoumana.blogspot.com


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