Factchecking Kerr Fatou Interview with My Former Boss Dr. M. Tangara—Sam Sarr

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After watching a recent Kerr Fatou Network interview with my former boss at the United Nations and current foreign minister of the Gambia, Dr. Mamadou Tangara, I found it compelling to factcheck or dissect some of the critical quintessences that, to me, had not been satisfactorily answered.

ON THE GAMBIA 2016 ELECTORAL IMPASSE: It was the first subject where Dr. Tangara was quizzed over the role he had played at the UN as Gambia’s Permanent Representation (PR), or Ambassador during that history-altering phenomenon. He explained the overwhelmingly celebrated moment by his peers in the first week following President Jammeh’s acceptance of the first election results declared by the Gambia Independent Electoral Commission (IEC)  on December 2nd, 2016. That they showered him and all Gambians with all sorts of accolades for the remarkable achievement; he added that by the end of that week he attended a UN-organized ceremony in New York where the late Babatunde Osotimehin, then Under-Secretary General and Executive Director of the UNPF delivered a speech applauding the Gambians for conducting an election where the president who had been in power for 22 years accepted losing to his opponents. 

He was identified in his quiet corner among the crowd and once again congratulated. However, he went on to say that with all the euphoria, he kept on warning his peers not to be hasty in celebrating too soon “considering the kind of person President Jammeh was”.

“Why?” asked Fatou Touray, the interviewer.

He attributed it to something instinctive rather than anything tangibly explainable. 

I was expecting Madam Touray to further ask him whether that was before or after the IEC came up with the second controversial set of results on December 5th 2016 that prompted the subsequent chaos, but I guess she is perhaps one of those Gambians still trivializing that major  issue responsible for Senegal’s involvement or takeover. 

That said, most Gambians following the TRRC drama were aware of the testimony of Chief of Protocol (COP) Alhagie Ceesay who at the time was in Maryland together with former First Lady Zainab Jammeh where he had explained how days before he had leant from her that President Jammeh had decided to challenge the results after already conceding. Naturally, Ceesay was never asked at the TRRC whether the former first lady disclosed why her husband had a change of mind or when exactly she had told him that. But again, that would have probably enlightened the world about the truth still being avoided on how the second results declared by the IEC three days after triggered the mess. 

What was crystal clear however, was Alhagie Ceesay’s disclosure at the TRRC that he immediately consulted the Senegalese Ambassador to Washington DC Mr. Babacar Diagne to report the secret message from Lady Zainab. Ambassador Diagne, posted from the Gambia to America in 2014, around the time Shiekh Omar Faye was assigned there as Gambia’s Charge-d’affairs used to claim being a good friend of President Jammeh and was definitely very close to Omar Faye throughout the two years they spent together in Washington DC. 

So essentially, the idea of Senegal’s involvement in our election business-an internal affairs-started well before Jammeh even came out publicly to annul the election results, thanks to Alagie Ceesay, Omar Faye, Dr. Mamadou Tangara and all the other ambassadors convinced along the way to join the unconscionable mother of all treacheries. 

Therefore factoring the COP’s revelation at the TRRC whom I have always considered another Judas in the diplomatic team, PR Dr. Tangara at the time telling Madam Touray that he had relied purely on his instincts that Jammeh would eventually change his mind stinks high to heavens.  Anything other than confessing how as Gambia’s ambassadors they had clandestinely worked together to mortgage our country’s sovereignty to Senegal in order to preserve their jobs was outright dishonesty.

Knowing what they knew about Jammeh’s plans to dispute the election results from December 5th the day the IEC came up with their controversial numbers to December 9th, the day he annulled the results, a leader of goodwill would have acted differently from the way Mackey Sall did by simply calling Jammeh to find out what was going on. And if possible talked him out of his intention as ECOWAS chairman if he had believed that it could create a greater problem or even result into war. Or still send Babacar Diagne his friend to him to negotiate a peaceful settlement.

But that would have allowed the nation’s transition to continue smoothly and denied Senegal and France the opportunity to put their knees on Gambia’s neck. It is also obvious that the coalition party given all their hatred of President Jammeh and his “enablers” would have never been keen in retaining any of these treacherous ambassadors whom otherwise would have gone jobless like in the cases of Pierre Minteh, protocol officer to Ambassador Omar Faye and I, Samsudeen Sarr deputy ambassador to Dr. Mamadou Tangara, the two of us who refused to betraying our country. 

After all the years they had devotedly served Jammeh’s “evil government” that most of them openly denounce now, people should wonder what if it was not for their jobs why they betrayed their government. Other than being judases capable of destroying any government or leader, it will be fair to define their characters as nonbelievers of anything whatsoever who would turn against President Barrow whenever the dynamics changed against their personal interests.  

So while Senegal and France had finally found the right opportunity they were for so long looking for to takeover the political and future economic destiny of the Gambia, our Judases simply realized that their job survival depended on rallying unconditionally behind Senegal to force Jammeh out even if it had necessitated waging war to destroy their country. So the whole dirty plan was hatched waiting for Jammeh to just annul the elections. Zainab didn’t know anything about the snitch COP Alhagie Ceesay she had trusted so much.

No wonder, Jammeh annulled the results on December 9th and the next morning December 10th, Senegal got the resolution passed at the Security Council demanding that he respected the constitutional will of the Gambian voters. Obviously, the whole document was already drafted waiting for submission. 

I heard Dr. Tangara telling Madam Touray that as a diplomat at the UN, he was not working for anybody but the Gambian people. Really?  

Like ministerial appointments, it is apparent that all ambassadorial appointments are political and as such, appointees are expected to be loyal to the head of state who offered them the job. Madam Fatou Touray may not know that and couldn’t therefore exhaust that argument. 

It was in fact all their fawning cooperation that Senegal needed to justify their illegal action of interfering in what was certainly an internal affairs.  

Anyway while on it, Madam Touray inadvertently exposed a lot about the minister’s confusion over international policies. When asked what he had felt about the recent coup in Mali he spontaneously condemned the junta for their action and demanded their immediate handing over of the government they unconstitutionally seized to a civilian leadership. Reiterating the same stale message from France over how the Jihadists, up north, could takeover Mali if the soldiers were not mindful. We are now aware of how radical groups including so-called Muslim extremists or jihadists are mere bandits and mercenaries funded, armed or equipped by western-nation-stock holders through their governments to render the mineral-rich nations of Africa volatile resulting in the need to have their troops on the ground but to only continue protecting and exploiting our natural resources. There are over seven major European gold-mining companies in Mali lifting billions of dollars worth of pure gold nuggets with all contracts signed through France. Familiar with the Hummingbird Gold miners, Barrick Gold, Resolute Mining, Cora Gold, to name a few in Mali? Hey, let’s not be foolish, the 5000 plus French troops in Mali are not there to protect any Malian from Jihadists like Dr. Tangara has been indoctrinated to market the deceptive concept all over the world for his French masters but for the gold reserve in the country, the fourth largest in the entire African continent. 

Ironically, when Madam Touray asked his opinion about the unconstitutionality of Presidents Alasan Ouattara and Alpha Conde of Ivory Coast and Guinea Conakry respectively now contesting for third terms in office using force because their constitutional tenures limited them to two, he declined to comment on the excuse that those were internal affairs to be handled by individual nations affected. What’s the difference between the Malian or Gambian situation and those other two countries where the leaders are blatantly violating their national constitutions and killing their opponents with impunity? Yeah, Gambia is easier to bully than any of those neocolonial countries relying on France.

FOREIGN POLICY: After explaining the foreign policy of the Gambia as rooted on non-alignment, neutrality and good international relationship with all neighboring countries in particular, the same rhetoric we had echoed about the position of the APRC government at the UN, Madam Touray wanted serious answers about why Senegal now dominates us in virtually every engagement and transaction between our two countries. She listed the discrepancies in our trade, fisheries, security, energy and transportation deals where Senegal appears to benefit far more than the Gambia.

Typical of my former boss, he baffled the woman with a story, first underscoring the relationship of our two countries, hinged on the notion of “one nation in two states”. He then continued on what he said was a great agreement newly realized between Senegal and the Gambia and awaiting ratification but stalled by the COVID-19 pandemic of which he had seemed willing to elaborate on.

But he neither cataloged nor elaborated on any agreement-the Shiekh Omar Faye style-and instead took the woman on a rollercoaster ride on his days as a PhD student in France when he once represented the APRC government to a colloquium in Dakar Senegal to discuss the subject of Senegal and the Gambia co-owning the Yellitenda-Bambatenda Bridge. President Wade was then Senegal’s head of state.

At the Dakar session,  the minister narrated how he had passionately condemned such an idea of Senegal coming to the Gambia to co-own any facility with us, let alone our bridge. That he had argued until the matter was taken before President Wade for arbitration who used to call him “my son”. Wondered the relevance of that in the discussion other than to promote his credentials.

But Wade, he said, emphatically supported his position sighting international law and spoke from his legal and not political portfolio as president.

He had impressed President Wade so much that, the Senegalese leader wanted to immediately hire him to work for his government. But he declined telling him how his PhD course in France was more of a priority to him at the time than any career. In the end it was all about his tough negotiating skills acquired well before even graduating as a Doctor. I believe he effectively in the process disoriented Madam Touray from her initial probes. 

She appeared not to remember her question again about the dominance of Senegal over the Gambia in literally every aspect of our current political, economic, transportation, fisheries and security engagements. With the way he ultimately portrayed his tough negotiating skills, if Fatou had not lost her original bearing, I again had expected her to remind him that the bridge issue was about then, and that she was asking for answers over what is now going on. Or to catch him in his parochial game, she could have ask the minister what had happened to his earlier assertion of Senegal’s relationship with the Gambia he earlier defined as “one nation in two states” but strongly went against  the bridge co-ownership in President Wade’s era. She could have still asked the Doctor how they arrived at naming the Trans-Gambia Highway Bridge the Senegambia Bridge that many Gambians believe Senegal benefits there more than the Gambia. An agreement probably worst than in a co-ownership deal! 

SECURITY: To the Doctor, ECOMIG’s presence in the country is primarily to allow the new government time to finish the four-year old Security-Sector Reform (SSR) which to me is impossible to achieve. 

They are in the process of downsizing the armed forces but cannot still know what to do with the “undesirables” to be weeded. They will all turn into crime, he said.

He nonetheless thinks that the security forces under the Jammeh government that he had loyally worked for for over a decade were abused and lacked the desired professionalism associated with contemporary forces governed by international standards. That almost all ranks carried by officers didn’t meet international benchmarks. Of course he had never realized that before in the decades he had served the APRC government during which he had on numerous occasions in my presence praised our armed forces for their exemplary performances in both their internal and external duties. Together with his fellow Judas ambassadors he had referred to the GAF as warriors who had kicked the butts of the “the terrorists” who had attacked the Gambia on December 30, 2014 to overthrow the APRC government he had sincerely adored then.

But the million dollar question is, who are those officers in the armed forces to replace the current senior officers in charge, starting from the Chief of Defense Staff General Yankuba Drammeh and his deputy General Mamat Cham down to all of the rest of them carrying ranks deemed undeserving by “international standards”?

The Foreign minister talked about how they are all “laughing stocks in the international community”, insinuating that their promotions could only have been possible in an APRC government. 

I wonder how he rates Mamat Cham, the deputy CDS, appointed by President Barrow after being fired from the army as captain for twenty-two years but reinstated and promoted to General? Is he another counterfeit General and a laughing stock in the international community? Or is the minister waiting for the next government to succeed Barrow’s to condemned Barrow for his misguided action of reinstating and promoting Cham? That may be it.

But the APRC officers could at least be credited for their proven work in keeping the nation safe over the years and deserved to be promoted and decorated like wartime heroes showing outstanding performance and courage in field missions, that at times even exceeds that of better education soldiers. 

Nobody ever questioned the competence of the late Guinea Bissau General, Ansumana Mane in the field that earned him that special rank, despite never attending any military or formal education school.

During the APRC days I have seen Gambian soldiers handling their work with excellence and professionalism that deservedly earned them promotions and medals. We promoted and decorated soldiers who stopped the rebel attacks at Farafenni and Kartong Barracks in 1996 and 1997 respectively because they did it the exact way it is taught in the best military academies. 

Anyway, like stated above, I don’t expect a meaningful and fair SSR to ever happen in the Gambia. The Senegalese will be here supported by the French with the connivance of Gambia’s worst Judases until the good sons and daughters of the Gambia wake up one day and demand their unconditional expulsion. 

SAMSUDEEN SARR

BANJUL, THE GAMBIA. 

 

 

 

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