But does she have to be impartial? She is not a judge but a prosecutor. The
only serious issue here is her allege use of threats to bully a magistrate
over a judicial decision. That is a very serious offence.

LJD is right. He was not answerable to the Honourable Minister as she then
was but to the Chief Justice and I commend him for his fearless stand in
defence of the cardinal principle of seperation of powers and judicial
independence.

Well done Jula

Daffeh

On Monday, 6 August 2012, C. Omar Kebbeh <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
> Leave the woman to do her job!.
>
> You guys need to deal with the issues in your camp and stop complaining
about everything and anything. The icc is bigger than miss bensouda, and if
jammeh is such a criminal as claimed here, bensouda cannot stop the court
from issuing an arrest warrant for him, just like they did el bashier.
>
> Who is there to corroborate Ljds claims. The whole thing flows like
fiction. For Ansu, no one should take him seriously. He will continue to
hide under this fake identity forever. This is one reason many don't take
the opposition camp seriously. You will never solve any problems and yet
continue to complain.
>
> Leave bensouda alone to do her job. If jammeh is such a problem for you,
get a ticket and go join halifa and sisia, who with all your claims that
Gambia is hell are still there fi
> ghting for Gambians. We have heard enough of your unending complaints,
now it is time for action.
> On Sunday, August 5, 2012, Haruna <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>> Thank you Demba for sharing the intelligent and articulate Ansu Koroma
and Gainako. I share Ansu's sentiments in their entirety to include my
disaffection with Hon. Chief Prosecutor Fatou Bensouda from jump. Like
Ansu, I understood her appointment has very little to do with gender
politics but everything to do with the odiously sequestered nature of
international cartels.
>>
>> I would like to offer this amicus to my friend Ansu related to his
comment that because our local institutions are not strong enough, we can
be forgiven for looking outside of them for secours.
>>
>> In agreement with Hon. LJD, and LJD was aware of the limitations of our
local institutions in accruing salvation, Ansu had declared we look inward.
And it is precisely because all local effort prior had not succeeded that
Ansu suggested we look FURTHER inward. The success or failure of
proprietary mechanics depends largely on design and input management. When
we speak of civil society and political formations, the input is "we the
people". It was never going to be easy and the road ahead is no more
promising. I am of the firm belief that the best, not the only, solutions
to mankind's problems do necessarily come from those who participated in
one way or the other to inure the problems in the first place.
>>
>> The looking inward that Ansu and LJD allude to goes along this same
theme. It will require greater commitment and ingenuity but we have the
solution to our problem of Yahya. Hon. Bensouda is manifest product of that
problem for which we shall accrue solution. Together!
>>
>> The Universal Declaration on Human Rights was a result of a landmark
effort after WWII and in reaction to a scale of crime unprecedented prior.
Since its adoption, the calendar of crime has not abated much. Its
implementation is based on a structure of peer review and no protocol. The
missing link in the efficacy of international declarations is "We the
people" whom they are all too eager to ignore when it matters most. Brother
Ansu alluded to "the wall street party", "Occupy", the "Arab Spring", and
other such protocol. I look eagerly forward to hearing brother Ansu again
on the missing link of the holy grails.
>>
>> Haruna.
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Demba Baldeh <[log in to unmask]>
>> To: GAMBIA-L <[log in to unmask]>
>> Sent: Sun, Aug 5, 2012 7:07 pm
>> Subject: [G_L] Pertinent Questions on Mrs Bensouda's Impartiality to
balance Gov't support vs Execution of Duty??A Rejoinder to LJD's piece!!!
>>
>>
>> "What I’m about to say may come as a surprise but public criticism of
Jammeh, in his capacity as Head of State, by ICC Chief Prosecutor, in my
view, would be inappropriate behavior and devoid of protocol.   However, it
would have been within diplomatic bounce to denounce dictatorships in
general as fertile ground for civil strife that can lead to international
criminal acts.  She missed the opportunity to announce her stance on
repressive governments and the importance of human rights - a missed
opportunity that didn't go unnoticed among human rights activists around
the world". A. Koroma
>>
>> It is obvious this debate is bringing to light more questions not only
about Mrs Bensouda's role, but the larger government and institutional
influence over poitical and diplomatic appointees. Can somebody be
effective and impartial when their success can be attributed to a country's
or institution's sponsorship?
>>
>> Would other African dictators/governments use the Bensouda
interview/stance on Human rights in the Gambia against her credibility?
>>
>>
http://www.aljazeera.com/programmes/talktojazeera/2012/07/20127792042321699.html
>>
>> Would the failures of an African ICC prosecutor be used against
Africans' inability to address their own political and human rights
problems?
>>
>> Is there a historical paralel to the failures of the African Commission
on Human Rights headquarters locations; The AU and ECOWAS chairmanship and
or membership? to this government/institutional support appointment?
>>
>> Read the substance of the Rejoinder by A. Koroma @
http://www.gainako.com/news/  and be the judge.
>>
>> Thanks for reading...
>> Demba
>>
>> "Be the change you want to see in the World"
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