Saiks, What a master piece. I personally do not know Korro Ceesay, but his murder can never be forgotten and the fact that there are people like you reminding some of us about him from time to time tells us that the Struggle never stops. Your brief background on MOJA just thought me once again how MOJA went silence in Ghana, Burkina and a lot of other countries within the sub-region. People who never were involved or been part of any "Cells" or a "Nucleus" may not be able to comprehend fully why people like you can never keep silent on a matter like this. I have no doubt that even the MOJA members who jumped in the band wagon when the military came to power in the Gambia, went in with the feeling that hence the corrupt Jawara regime was gone this was an opening to view. And you know what, in any struggle, not everybody is going to have the endurance to continue. A lot of them will argue that the best way to make an effective change is to stay within the system and drive the rest to a change for the better, but what most of these people failed to do is to maintain their loyalty to the people and not an individual. I am sure had Korro Ceesay showed his loyalty to the military regime alone and not the people, he would have still been alive. Keep up the struggle and the enlightening of some of us. Korro will never be forgotten and I am sure sooner or later, the whole truth will appear. I hope it becomes sooner than later. Ousman Bojang. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe/subscribe or view archives of postings, go to the Gambia-L Web interface at: http://maelstrom.stjohns.edu/archives/gambia-l.html ----------------------------------------------------------------------------