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OJ Compares Jawara And Jammeh’s Regime

OJ (JollofNews) – I am one Gambian who has lived my life in politics. I have been active in politics since I was given the mandate by the people of Serrekunda East to represent their affairs in Parliament in 1977.

I started my political career as a parliamentary secretary from 1977 to 1981 when I was given the responsibility to establish the Ministry of Water Resources and the Environment, which I headed for eight years before being moved to the Ministry of Agriculture in 1989 where I was until the military coup in July 1994.

And I think it will be good for me to highlight the differences between former President Sir Dawda Jawara and his successor, President Yahya Jammeh. I have observed both leaders in their actions and deeds and the way they treat the Gambian people.

The People’s Progressive Party (PPP) was a mass party that belonged to the people. Sir Dawda was never part of the formation of the PPP. He was invited to lead the party which was formed by the Gambian people especially those who lived in the rural areas who wanted to establish a political organisation to address their grievances.

These people went in search of a leader and the first man they contacted was Dr Marenah of the Agriculture Department who directed them to Sir Dawda, who was then the head of the Veterinary Department. The two men had known each other while studying in the UK and Dr Marenah knew that Sir Dawda once served as the president of the African Student’s Union in the UK and was interested in politics.

Sir Dawda took up the responsibility of leading the PPP and has never lost sight of the people’s ownership of the party. All the organs of the party were functioning effectively and the decisions of these organs were respected by Sir Dawda.OJ

During the PPP regime, everybody knows that all opposition leaders and opposition parties in the country were respected. The laws were respected, nobody was held in contempt by the authorities that be, the press was free and every Gambian was respected as a human being, his human rights were respected, the rule of law was prevalent and of course protected. Also, all institutions of laws like the police, the military, NSS which is now the NIA and the civil service were never politicised.  

The civil service was apolitical and it was why during the PPP regime, all state institutions were never ever accepted to participate in party politics activities as they are institutions of the state that outlives governments.  

Sir Dawda has been the most open and tolerant leader Africa has ever had. The Gambia has been one of the countries that has multi-party democracy and held national elections every five years since independence while many African countries at the time were led by dictators and soldiers and held no regular elections.

It was because of his beliefs in democracy, respect for the rule of law, respect for human rights and the sanctity of life which made him to propose the establishment of the Human Rights Commission and the People and Human Rights Commission.

We enjoyed freedom under him in cabinet and all cabinet ministers went to cabinet meetings on Tuesday with an open mind to say whatever we want to say about any issue that we were discussing. Sir Dawda has never ever agreed to concentrate power and resources on his hands alone. As a democrat, he knew that it would lead to the creation of a dictatorship, which would be detrimental to the progress of the country.

Sir Dawda was not only a leader who listens. He was a leader who believes in dialogue and consultations among his ministers and peers. He respects the opinions of other people and has never enforced his opinion on his cabinet and the Gambian people even though he was the president.

During one cabinet meeting, Sir Dawda had a disagreement with Sheriff Sisay, who was the then minister for Finance. The debate was so tense that he requested for an independent opinion of someone who was not in cabinet. The then cabinet secretary Abdoulie Sallah, was requested to invite Amie Bensouda from the Ministry of Justice to cabinet. When Amie Bensuouda arrived, Sir Dawda not wanting to be seen as being unfair gave Assan Jallow who was Minister of Justice the responsibility of explaining to her the different views of the two men. At the end Amie Bensouda gave her opinion on the matter which Sir Dawda accepted there and then.

I  once challenged him as Agriculture minister when it came to the attention of the cabinet that three plots of land  that were on the Bosta extension in Fajara were given to the Gambia’s consul general in Switzerland, Mr Gould, Tariq Musa of TK Motors and Sara Janha. I told Sir Dawda that allocating the said plots of land for residential purposes on an area which was reserved for tourism developing was a violation of the laws that were passed by our government. I argued with him as the then minister for Local Government for over two hours before he accepted by position and rescinded the decision.

President Yahya Jammeh on the other hand, is leading an APRC party were all the powers and resources are totally concentrated in his hands

Since he came to power in 1994, the arrest and detention of people beyond the constitutional 72 hours has become the order of the day. I am one of those hundreds of Gambians who were arrested and detained well beyond the 72 hours without being told the reasons for my arrest or charge with any criminal offence and 100s of Gambians have suffered just like me.  

There is impunity and of course as you can see, many Gambians are now in detention for six, seven years without charge. This is highlighted every three or four months by the Foroyaa newspaper.

Many civil servants have been sacked to an extent that the country’s civil servants don’t even think of retirement now. You are either terminated or sacked. The civil service is so cannibalised that there is no system existing now. Virtually the Public Service Commission (PSC) is not functional and is only there by name as there is no security of tenure.

Important state institutions like the police, army and the NIA are very politicised which undermines not only the dignity, respect and performances of civil servants, but it erase the confidence that the public have in these institutions.

Today the Gambia which was shoulders high in Africa in terms of human rights and the rule of law is not moving forward when it comes to enhancing the rule of law now.  Everything is going backwards and this is reflected in the number of amendments of sections of the constitution in parliament which empowers the rights and freedoms of the people.

For example, during the PPP, the selection and election of village heads and district chiefs were left in the hands of the villagers and village heads of the district. They were traditionally and historically a local democratic function for people to elect their local leaders. Today that has been taken away from the people and entrusted in the hands of the minister for Local Government and the President.

The demarcation of parliamentary constituencies has been gerrymandered by APRC. For example the Fonis which has less than 100,000 votes, has five MPs, while constituencies like Kombo North and Fulladu East with over 100, 000 votes have one member of parliament. In effect the IEC has lost credibility and respect the moment they accepted constituencies with less than 30, 000 votes to have one MP while large constituencies with more than 60,000 votes to  also have one MP. They are disenfranchising thousands of Gambians from their legitimate role to participate in political decision making process of the country.

So these two systems are completely different.

In the PPP it was the organs that dictated the leader of the party. In the APRC, power and resources are totally concentrated in the hands of one man.

The PPP after 29 years had only six vehicles, but in the last election the APRC had over 30 vehicles. And after the elections, the President who is leader of the party was seen dishing out these vehicles of the APRC to the various state institutions like the police and armed forces as a gift. It’s beyond my imagination that a political party can be richer than the state in a short span of 18 years.

Yahya Jammeh came to power with promises of accountability, transparency and probity. We were accused of rampant corruption and nepotism and they established a lot commission of inquiries.  All PPP ministers including Sir Dawda appeared before one of these commissions and Decree No. 11 which established that commission explicitly said it would sit in public and the report would be made public.

Decree No. 25 said the draft report of the commission before it is published should be given to anyone who appeared before it to enable them to raise queries or objections to the recommendations. Not one of these requirements from Decree No. 11 and 25 were met and no Gambian apart from the four soldiers and the then Attorney General Fafa Mbai have seen the report. It has never been made public neither was I given a copy.

It was all accusations and there was no truth in the accusations made against the PPP. I’m not saying that the PPP were angels. We were not perfect and have made mistakes, but it was not at the level we were accused of by Yahya Jammeh and his men when they took power.

After 30 years of leadership, Sir Dawda at the time of being overthrown never had millions in any of his accounts. Today we have seen Yahya Jammeh, who after just being in power for 18 years giving out millions of Dalasis and vehicles to people.

Where did he get all that money from? I want to know the source of that wealth because I have a legitimate right to know as a Gambian. Not only that, I was accused of being corrupt and went through a commission of inquiry that has never found me wanting despite heading two of the biggest ministries in the country with the biggest projects. That is why I think that Gambians should start questioning their own leaders.
Omar Amadou Jallow was speaking to JollofNews’s PK Jarju in Birmingham, UK

Comments  

 
+4 #303 2013-02-13 22:11
Pa Pierre...I think I would agree with most of what you say and think.

What is "normal"? For Gambia?

I have no difficulty with President jammeh and his promotions of peace with honour for Islam.

I have no difficulty if HE..wishes to renounce his participation with "western/UN" human rights.

But clearly, if HE wants to "plough his own furrow"

Then we need a clear statement on his view of what Gambian citizens rights are to be?

..and I don't mean entirely within Islamic teachings. There has to be a citizens charter of rights enshrined in Law...for public reference.

It is against a background of a long and undisputable catalogue of deaths, disapearances and torture...accompanied by allegations of impunity...where HE has to begin national recovery..in Gambian/African and International eyes.

Opinion.
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+5 #302 2013-02-13 07:27
This long n winding debate focusing on 4-work day wk, seem to take us away from the important points raised in the story

Both Jammen n Jawara have their pros n cons

But what Jammeh brought to the table has a more chilling effect on our society..

We have become more impatient, more aggressive n less rational..Action b4 thought

Jawara was patient, has a heart n relies on a thought oriented process..Sadly, Jawara's legacy will have no impact on us

We have been introduced to battery n blood..I sometimes doubt my own belief that once Jammeh is gone, we will stop killings n be normal again..
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+4 #301 2013-02-13 07:01
Quote:
..Jammeh's remarks about Islam in the Observer are definatley on the right side of wisdom and peace.

..It therefore becomes ..confusing as to why Imam Baba Leigh..should be held in communicado...as he would appear to be in concert with Yahya...over the true spirit of Islam.


U are not alone. Jammeh baffles everyone..From Commander Tamba, IGP 13 Badjie, indespensible Yanks Touray n FJC, Bombardier, Uncle Ben, Mighty Baba Jobe n many others..

They were everything any good leader could ever wanted..Sadly too, they could get any filty errand done 4 a bad leader

But as u may have known, he did not only part ways with them, he made sure some of them dont live to tell
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+4 #300 2013-02-11 14:36
Credit where credit is due.

President Jammeh's remarks about Islam in the Observer are definatley on the right side of wisdom and peace.

Some years ago...when the Islamic conference was held in Dakar...I remarked the his speach was the finest of any Islamic leader since Anwar Sedat.

It therefore becomes evenmore confusing as to why Imam Baba Leigh..should be held in communicado...as he would appear to be in concert with Yahya...over the true spirit of Islam.
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+4 #299 2013-02-11 13:35
Quoting Gambiano:
this is what Gambians are all about! Forgiving and friendly.
This is why i sometimes think that dictator jammeh and his bandits are not part of us.Dictator jammeh`s behaviour is not Gambian,it was imported and helped by you educated fools to impose it on Gambians.Dictator jammeh and his bandits behave so heartlessly on their own people as if they(vampires) are invaders,not part of us.
If you believe that the Gambians are forgiving and friendly, where are your those characters or where are those characters from dictator jammeh and his bandits to their victims??
The more you comment on the West/AFRICOM and the same attach the critics of dictator jammeh, the more you expose your hypocrisy or expose yourself as an educated fool.
Deception is an insult to once intelligence,yo u are insulting your own intelligence or ours for trying to deceive yourself here.
Learn to change and grow like human-beings,is better for you and your people.
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-7 #298 2013-02-11 03:31
Modou,

Woooow!! Those are very heart-touching words! I'm humbled! Let's pray for Jollofnews. Perhaps, this is the beginning of a great, peaceful, friendly, and inspiring dialogue to The Gambian conundrum!
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-3 #297 2013-02-11 03:24
GAMBIANO,

I could not put my computer down. I have to admit that it was the best debate, I have never come across a debate as such in this Forum. I have learned so much. It motivated me to further my education. See you never know what impact you can have to a reader, just by being who you are.

Thank you again.
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-2 #296 2013-02-11 03:07
Ous,

Hahahahahahahah a! Funny! But yeah, it's been great. It even cancelled my soccer practice even though we had a nice warmer weather here today, sunny like Gambia.

Again, this is what Gambians are all about! Forgiving and friendly. Jollofnews is a pioneer for opinion pluarism in The Gambian online media.
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-5 #295 2013-02-11 02:53
Ah, what can I say? It was a great forum and educational, but I am still going to arrest Bax, Assan, Malick and B4Africa. All jokes aside, thank you for the peaceful and productive forum this weekend.
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-5 #294 2013-02-11 02:41
Kebba,

This is what Gambianess is all about. Yes, we fight sometimes. But even the teeth sometimes bite the tongue. That doesn't mean they hate each other.

Malick, go ahead and get me a donkey cart. I told you I used to be a donkey driver in The Gambia.
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0 #293 2013-02-11 02:33
Kebaba,

I was so schooled as well. Lol. It is a testament that Gambia has very talented intellectuals. It was incredible!!!! What an educative forum!!!
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0 #292 2013-02-11 02:23
Wow, school is finally over!!!!! Koto's, what I leaned this weekend about African economies, I did not learn in 4 years economy study in college. This is an excellent forum and i wanna thank JOLLOFNEWS for making it possible.

SPECIAL THANKS TO: ASSAN, GAMBIANO, BANNA KORRA, BAX, MALICK and everybody else that commented.

Amazing forum!!! GAMBIANO and RKK my apologies about the remark earlier. You are all inspiration to this forum readers.
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+5 #291 2013-02-11 01:32
Quoting Gambiano:
Brother, You've said it all! How I wish GPTC and other corporations would recur! Think of how many Gambians were put to work.

Ameen ..more prayers from your brother B4africa....it can be if you now start caring if Gambia have a frog or a lizard as ruler. U wont want to see them hopping and climbing trees?
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+4 #290 2013-02-11 01:20
Gambiano...I will get u a donkey+ cart and an ‘African service economics’:lol: . U got your western tool and framework Toyota haice, you will understand manufacturing a basic needle or a wheel, parts of car much less power or power service garage 24/7 ...by using economic theories adapted to do that as CHINA is doing is not being white. A vibrant and modern manufacturing in free society is what stimulates demand for service inputs. Further, rising incomes generate increased demand for social and personal services. ..thus why India is building a service sector to even cater western needs like health, IT and customer service. This requires an upgrade capacity, skills, and existing legal frameworks. I think the PrestineLtd will tell u more of legal frameworks for Gambia service sector...much less the petty trader who cant sells on Friday to civil servants. U people have good ideas...but have rule thief n sickman as ruler..Yaya.Gambia goes nowhere with tick on her coffer.
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+5 #289 2013-02-10 23:59
Quoting Bax:
My take on AFRICOM bro,is that it's just another cunning way of using and exploiting Africa to achieve their delusional desire to dominate the world..

There may be benefits,as always,to certain sections of our societies,but for the majority,it is bad news because it is the export of American militarism to our continent...And you know what that means..For wherever American Military goes,their "twin brother",Alqaeda,is not far away...


Hahahahhaha.. BAX, The "twin brother" analogy is so true, my bro...
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-4 #288 2013-02-10 23:57
Oh God! Bax,

"For wherever American Military goes,their "twin brother",Alqaeda,is not far away.."

Hahahahahaha! How terse, and succinct!
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+4 #287 2013-02-10 23:46
My take on AFRICOM bro,is that it's just another cunning way of using and exploiting Africa to achieve their delusional desire to dominate the world..

There may be benefits,as always,to certain sections of our societies,but for the majority,it is bad news because it is the export of American militarism to our continent...And you know what that means..For wherever American Military goes,their "twin brother",Alqaeda,is not far away...
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-2 #286 2013-02-10 23:43
Bax,

"So our other realistic option to create such businesses,is either through joint Public-Private ventures or Public owned ventures...The GCDB,GPMB,GPTC, LMB were very successful Public Corporations that were creating wealth and employment for thousands,and could have funded the creation of other Public Corporations,if they were not mismanaged...

Private sector led growth,which is the corner stone of today's dominant economic theory,may be suitable for industrialised nations,with their billionaires & multi-millionaires,wh o can build huge industries that provide wealth and employment to many."

Brother, You've said it all! How I wish GPTC and other corporations would recur! Think of how many Gambians were put to work.
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-5 #285 2013-02-10 23:35
Assan,

Bravooooooooooo oooo!!! This is exactly the same thing I perceived of Africom, besides the perpetrators' response to China's expansion in Africa. At the time of the Libyan invasion, there were more than 100 thousand Chinese workers in Libya. These were builders, engineers, economists, etc. The Chinese gov't had to send all of them home.

I'm glad you mentioned the war-mongering blood-suckers. Don't forget Halliburton! I hope Africa's economic experts of your clout push for a re-direction of the continent's fiscal partnership more with Asia. Trust me, the age of the petro-Dollar is at its ebb. Venezuella, Iran, Iraq, Libya, have already sold their oil in other currencies. No wonder, they killed saddam, Ghadaffi, etc.
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+4 #284 2013-02-10 23:34
Dr Assan...

I am learning so much from you and I agree with your take on big businesses...My only worry is that we lack the private sector that could create such big businesses,and our ability to attract investors is hampered by attitudes in government...

So our other realistic option to create such businesses,is either through joint Public-Private ventures or Public owned ventures...The GCDB,GPMB,GPTC, LMB were very successful Public Corporations that were creating wealth and employment for thousands,and could have funded the creation of other Public Corporations,if they were not mismanaged...

Private sector led growth,which is the corner stone of today's dominant economic theory,may be suitable for industrialised nations,with their billionaires & multi-millionaires,wh o can build huge industries that provide wealth and employment to many...

But for us,we have waited for far too long for that non existent private sector..
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+2 #283 2013-02-10 22:58
Correction: I meant to write "a sick republican ideology to maximize profit in backs of Africans security...
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