Lady Dove says...
THE EVIL THAT MEN DO LIVE AFTER THEM

Lady Dove Says

Sections

Links

Gam Sports

Bookmark and Share

‘I’ve lost count of the number of times I’ve been arrested and locked up’

Badara_SoweA blazing smile rarely leaves the face of Alieu Badara Sowe. He is immensely cheerful and full of the joys of early spring.
But that beaming grin hides a grim secret – years of terror and heartache.
By day Alieu is a security guard. You can often find him working at Portsmouth Crown Court.
The irony is not lost on him. ‘I’ve lost count of the number of times I’ve been arrested and locked up,’ he said. ‘So to be working at the court is quite funny in a way.’Badara_Sowe
Alieu – ‘please, just call me Ali’ – is a Gambian abroad. He is also a journalist. In exile.
We chat in his Southsea flat to a permanent background of rolling news on his television.
Ali has an ear on it throughout as the crisis in Libya escalates. Close by is Nelson Mandela’s autobiography. The man is his hero.
As pictures of the rebels on the streets flash up, he whispers ‘yeees’ under his breath.
‘What I want more than anything is for what’s happening in Libya and what has happened in Egypt and Tunisia to spread south to my country.
‘The people of The Gambia are watching all this and I just hope and pray that something similar happens there.’
Ali, 43, holds dual nationality as a Gambian and British citizen and fled to Britain 10 years ago after, he says, being persecuted by state police and security services for writing anti-government articles.
A military coup in 1994 deposed the government of President Dawda Jawara, It was led by Lieutenant Yahya AJJ Jammeh who became head of state and banned opposition political activity.
Ali added: ‘I love living in Portsmouth and there’s quite a few Gambians living here.
‘But I feel I can achieve much more here by writing articles for the internet highlighting what’s going on in The Gambia. I’d never be able to do that at home.’
Ali, who won the Investigative Journalist of the Year Award in 1999 in The Gambia, has seen one of his editors murdered and another colleague vanish.
And he has just returned from his first trip back home since he left the west African state.
‘I was nervous before I went back but I didn’t have any real problems. I went to the magistrates’ court, the supreme court and met most of the political leaders, but I’m pretty sure all my movements were monitored.
‘My mobile phone was stolen in my first week there I had a gut feeling it was taken by somebody from within the system who wanted to find out who I had been contacting.’
Ali, who was brought up by his grandparents, has a son back in The Gambia who is completing his education, as well as other family members. ‘I have to be careful about what I write and you always have a fear for them in the back of your mind.’
Ali is sad the political situation in The Gambia is not widely known in Britain.
‘The Gambia is a former British colony and the vast majority of tourists pouring into the country each are British.
‘Yet Britain has done very little towards holding to account the government regarding its gross violation of human rights and the complete negation of democracy.
‘Sadly also the brutal and repressive measures applied by President Jammeh towards silencing journalists, opposition politicians, human rights activists and anyone perceived to be in opposition to the government goes largely unreported in the British media.’
Before he left for the UK, Ali had worked for 10 years as a journalists for The Point, New Citizen and Daily Observer newspapers.
He was also news editor of the Gambian-based Senegalese radio station Sud FM.
When he left the country he was assistant secretary general of The Gambia Press Union. And while in the Britain he served as the secretary general of the UK branch of The Gambia Press Union.
Ali added: ‘One of the first pronouncements of President Jammeh when he assumed power through a military coup in July 1994 came at a public rally at the Independence stadium on the outskirts of the capital Banjul.
‘He described the country’s journalists as ‘the illegitimate sons of Africa’ and urged his supporters to ‘get rid of them’.
Ali has campaigned to discover who shot one of his former editors, Deyda Hydara in 2004. The president insists the state had no hand in it.
Hydara was a co-founder and editor of The Point, a major independent Gambian newspaper. He was also a correspondent for AFP News Agency and Reporters Without Borders for more than 30 years and critical of the regime.
Ali said: ‘He was shot in his car when he was taking colleagues home from the office one evening. He was gunned down yards from a police barracks.
‘And despite resounding international condemnation, the president waited years before he publicly, on national television, asked the press and ‘those interested’ in Deyda’s death to go and ask the dead man himself ‘who killed him’.
‘How insensitive is that, especially to his family?’
He added: ‘When The Gambia Press Union issued a statement referring to his comments as insensitive, which they were, the entire executive committee of the union was rounded up and then locked up in the country’s most notorious prisons.
‘The president of the union, Ndey Tapha Sosseh has since been forced to live in exile in neighbouring Mali.
‘No credible investigation has ever been launched to give everyone closure. This is just one of the atrocities against journalists – the list is a long one.’
Gambia
The Republic of the Gambia in West Africa is commonly known as The Gambia
It is the smallest country on mainland Africa, bordered to the north, east, and south by Senegal, with just a short coastline on the Atlantic. It has an estimated population of 1.7 million.
The country is based around the Gambia River, from which the nation takes its name. It flows through the middle of the country and empties into the Atlantic.
The Gambia was granted independence from the United Kingdom on February 18, 1965 and joined the Commonwealth.
Banjul is the capital, but the largest conurbation is Serekunda.
The Gambia shares historical roots with many other west African nations in the slave trade, which was key to the maintenance of a colony on the Gambia river, first by the Portuguese and later by the British.
According to the current president Yahya Jammeh, The Gambia ‘is one of the oldest and biggest countries in Africa that was reduced to a small snake by the British government who sold all our lands to the French’.
During the Second World Gambian troops fought with the Allies in Burma and Banjul served as an air stopover point for the US Army Air Corps and a port of call for Allied naval convoys.
US President Franklin Roosevelt stopped overnight in Banjul en route to and from the Casablanca Conference in 1943, marking the first visit to the African continent by a sitting American president.
In April 1970, the Gambia became a republic within the Commonwealth with prime minister Sir Dawda Kairaba Jawara, as head of state.
He went on to be re-elected five times until he was deposed in 1994.
Written by Chris Owen
Source: http://www.portsmouth.co.uk

Comments  

 
0 #16 2011-03-06 17:01
Kaal, i apologize for attacking you like that. I got the wrong person. That message was mend for Ussu. God bless you kaal. And please don't even waste your time on people like Ussu, mostly like is from Cassamas not even a Gambian, so he cannot feel our pain.
Quote
 
 
0 #15 2011-03-06 15:51
Quoting Live.Free.or.Die:
Kaal you just said that we are all Gambians and we need to respect our leader. Yes we indeed we do need to respect him given that he respect us. .........

Live.Free.or.Die,
check my comment again; I am not the one who said what you are accusing me; in fact I am trying to get the one who said it explain his reason. Please do read my coment again.
Quote
 
 
+2 #14 2011-03-06 14:30
Quoting ndey:
we need peace in our land president jammeh did nothing to us ....am advicing all gambians to maitain d peace an stability we have in our belove motherland..Long life jammeh,long life Gambian people....no demonstration no strike....we have peace an we shall surely maintain it...


I talk to some friends in Government and they said the same thing apart from long live Jammeh, but they acknowledged the degrading of Gambia in the international community and as Usual Mamie YALLA NEL LAWOOD (god is not sleeping).

If you are aware of Gambia, then you must definitely know that there is no peace in Gambia, even in your own house....but in English we call it incommunicado society (without the means or right to politically communicates) is what you misunderstood with peace and stability. There is peace and stability for yahya Jammeh, but not for the Gambians and its neighbours. Maybe you say he will kill them if they rally for change.
Quote
 
 
0 #13 2011-03-06 14:08
Ndey you need to short the fuck up, we are trying to save our country and you are playing politics. The only reason you put your name out here is so that you can be recognize by Jammeh. We are sick and tired of people like yourself. Greedy Gambians like you make Jammeh to play games with us. All you care about is yourself.
Quote
 
 
+2 #12 2011-03-06 12:33
Kaal you just said that we are all Gambians and we need to respect our leader. Yes we indeed we do need to respect him given that he respect us. All what we are saying is that we The Gambians deserve better. We are not animals that he controls as he wishes, tortures and kills whenever he chooses or chase us away whenever he feels threatens by our presence.
Kaal if you think we are one family then what do you think of Koro Ceesay or Ebrima Manneh or Daba Mareneh or so many other Gambians. Would you still be saying these things if your father, brother or sister was killed by this administration? I don't think so. If you wanna call yourself a Gambian, you have to be able to think of these people as your own. My brother those days are over, we do not need to worship anybody, Yaya Jammeh is supposed to be working for us, we put him in office for that, nothing else. He got to do what we what him to do or be out. He is a mare human being just like you and I.
Quote
 
 
0 #11 2011-03-06 11:06
march 26 mad thing we gonna com youths we are leaders of tomoroow no progress in jameh regime
Quote
 
 
0 #10 2011-03-06 10:59
long live jollofnews through you jammeh will learn lesson am sure jammeh is trying to find solutions about march 28 we coming on 28 mad thing gambians are tired let me say for brufut he took all of ourland i sold it to socalled tafholding company he tell us lies that he is going to make the roads thats still no progress he lie to gambians there is oil no progress ministers are fired every six month womanization is the order of the week killing is the order of the game this man should have respect no we will succed coming at you march 26 mad banjulians come out my people we are all agree nothing can stop us some youths are politically unaware
Quote
 
 
+5 #9 2011-03-06 03:47
JAMMEH Doesn't deserve any respect in fact his parent are a disgrace for giving birth to this monster.he will never enjoy his life again.sir dawda jawara our former president is living happily in the gambia if he has murder and torture Gambian he wont be able to live peacefully in the Gambia,the same cannot be say about JAMMEH once we remove him from power he wont even dream of living in the Gambia,if he decide to live in the Gambia we will put him on tried for crime against Gambia people and he will spend the rest of his life behind bars with hard labour. He wil live comfortably in the Gambia as long as he is a president but anytime we remove him from power everything will be over for them,dictator dont usually died in there country.he cant head to uk usa france they dont allow former dictator to live in there country.where will he head to when we remove him from power not senegal not libya because his friend mentor ghadafi days are number,where will he go?
Quote
 
 
-3 #8 2011-03-06 00:42
" Do the job, do what ever it takes even if it takes your lives and overthrow the government then we will come and enjoy with you" this is like what some of us are saying to our brothers and sisters Gambia, let's not forget their are lives at stakes to what we calling, am not supporter of any political leader but I am a suppter of my fellow Gambian brothers and sisters not many peep have the chance to leav the country like some of us do. Don't think the west will come to our request when things go bad, we got no oil. We don't want our smiling coast to turn to a coast of tears and bloodshed. May Allah guide The Gambia and her people, Ameen.
Quote
 
 
+1 #7 2011-03-05 23:59
Quoting ussu:
... we Gambians are the same family and if such thing like what have happend to others countries happen to our land, it will be more worst. ... Jammeh is our leader and he need at least little respect. ... So let´s try to simplify our words towards our leaders and this will be good to all of us especial to the comming generation.

Ussu,
I appreciate your civility in the way you put across your point; I really do. But i have one question for you. How do you expect Gambians, for instance, to respond to Jammeh's remarks like..."whether you vote for me or not, I will"... and also, "if you want development in your area you have to support me"...
What do you say about this?
I expect you to respond, Ussu.
Quote
 

Add comment

Dear reader,
Opinions expressed here are those of the writers and do not reflect those of Jollof News.
Jollof News accepts no legal responsibility or otherwise for their accuracy of content. This forum is not supposed to be a channel for the promotion of hate, tribalism or any other kind of personal grievances.
We therefore urge you to keep your posts relevant to the topic to ensure keeping the forum conducive for a healthy debate.
Jollof News reserve the right to delete or edit a post that violates these guidelines.
Thank you.


Security code
Refresh