alioune tine, pourtant ndéné n'a fait qu'intercéder en faveur des sénégalais!Toi par contre, pour te faire voir et mériter l'agent que les toubabs te versent pour ta raddho, tu t'agites et risque d'iriter encore plus djammeh et amener ce dernier à exécuter d'autres sénégalais!Djammeh n'a fait qu'appliquer la loi de son pays.La chine et les etats-unis appliquent leurs lois et exécutent chaque années des dizaines d'individus, sans qu'on ne t'entende!Ou bien crois tu que la peine de mort n'est criminelle que lorsqu'elle est exécutée par un petit pays comme la gambie?Alioune tine, tu n'es pas une référence en matière de droit de l'homme et de démocratie!Depuis combien de temps es -tu à la tête de la raddho sans alternance?Pourquoi, aprés avoir lutté contre la candidature de wade, as-tu voulu être parmi les observateurs de l'élection présidentielle, sans penser que tu avais déjà perdu ta neutralité dans cette affaire?Pourquoi as -tu écris une lettre à macky sall pour demander la liberté provisoire de bethio thioune, alors que l'affaire est pendante en justice?Que voulais tu que macky fasse dans cette affaire, sinon donner l'ordre au juge de libérer béthio thioune?Pourquoi n'as tu rien dit lors de la libération scandaleuse du meurtrier de ndiaga diouf et son investiture dans les listes législative alors qu'il était encore en détention?Alioune tine, s'il te plait, TAIS TOI!
La vraie raison de la venue de Aminata Niane. En effet le mari de Aminata Niane est cousin de Matar DIop Directeur Afrique du FMI/BM .Matar DIop a diplomatiquement fait comprendre au President que la banque mondiale . Le Fonds exigent de travailler avec une personne qu'ils connaissent déjà et que la présence de Aminata faciliterait les décaissements , tout ceci n'est que du toc ,cette femme est juste diplômée de je sais pas quoi et elle a été cree par Wade .MATAR VS AVAIT TRAHI LE CODE D HONNEUR DE LA BM ET DU FOND
Jammeh est entrain de reussir son coup: semer la zizanie dans l'esprit des senegalais. Ne serait-ce que pour ca Ndene ne devait pas aller le voir ! La voie choisie par Macky est la bonne.
j'apprecie la démarche de ndéné, meme si jammeh renonce à sa décision d'execution, cela ne change en rien la position de l'opinion internationale, donc il n'y'a auncune perche qui pourra faire sortir jammeh de cette impasse.
legui nak, toute demarche qui tend à limiter ses dégats serait la bievenue .
Alioune Tine a raison. Quand ces sénégalais étaient en prison, Ndéné était au Pouvoir. Qu ' a t il fait pour régler ces cas? Il cherche à redorer son blason et Jammeh en a profité pour trouver un échappatoire que Ndéné lui a offert. Mais c'est bien la pression internationale qui a faitr reculer Jammeh. Il n'a que faire de Souleymane Ndéné.
Macky sall on ne vous a pas élu pour que vs nous reconduisez les mêmes personnes sinon pourquoi avons nous degage wade? On veut du sang neuf partout.Moi je pense surtout a la caisse de securite sociale. Racine sy a seme le vrai bordel labas. plus d'une vingtaine de Directeurs payes a ne rien faire. Il faut vraiment nous chasser ce racine sy de la css qui se comporte comme un DIEU et son poulain Assane SOUMARE qui lui demande la permission sur tt ce qu'il fait. Apres avoir recrute tous ses parents, mis au frigo de nombreux cadres compétents, RACINE SY a tout fait pr imposer comme DG son poulain ASSANE SOUMARE qu'il a fait venir ds la boite il y' a meme pas 2 ans. Consequences, c'est RACINE SY PCA qui gere la css et meme s'il ne sera plus PCA il va continuer a le gerer par procuration puisque celui qu'il a mis comme DG ne decide de rien sans demander l'autorisation de racine, ce qui est anormal. Mais comme on dit en WOLOF REK KOU EUMB SA SANKHAL EUMB SA SOUTARA
Trop de nihilisme ravive l 'oeuvre , alors basta man en tout il a été plus persuasif que vous agitateurs à la sauvette,et gare à vous ya vous atend au tournant ,il n'est pas Ablaye Wade
Senegalese authorities should really be careful and not take this blood thirsty dictator yahya jammeh serious, he will lia and he cannot be trusted, Senegal should work covertly and overtly to depose him he is a threat to you and your people ! There are a lot of former ministers that have their travel documents seize and or are threaten that if they leave the Gambia, their familys will suffer, Yahya JammeH is the last dictator of africa,.. Here is a BBC REPORT ON Yahya Jammeh- he calls his ministers at two am in the morning to come and meet in Kanilia, he has no regard for them and once you work for him and know his dirty dealings, you can never leave the job....
The darker side of sunny Gambia
By Thomas Fessy BBC News
The carrying out of the death penalty on nine prisoners in The Gambia, the first state executions in almost 30 years, has raised questions about the country’s human rights record, questions the authorities are less than keen to answer.
I was checking out of a lovely lodge-hotel right on the ocean when the two middle-aged British tourists stormed into reception.
They were upset that the fisherman they had booked had not turned up. It had been raining heavily and the fisherman, I thought, had probably assumed that they would rather stay indoors.
While they must have been wondering earlier if they would ever get out in a boat, I had been in my room watching the rain bucketing down while constantly checking my phone.
I was hoping to get a call from the authorities saying I could stay on in The Gambia, but perhaps I was being naive.
I was dealing with the other face of this country – one that most of the 50,000 British tourists who come here each year do not get to see.
I had arrived at the airport less than 48 hours earlier. I had the correct visa to report as a journalist but was held there for more than five hours and was only released after the British High Commission stepped in.
It was told I had to take the next flight back to my base in Senegal, which meant my stay at the lodge was only a brief one.
‘Death row’
I was sent to The Gambia after nine prisoners were executed there.
The President, Yahya Jammeh, had said earlier he was determined to clear up “death row”. Today there are another 38 prisoners there, wondering what their fate will be.
President Jammeh’s government has been criticised by international rights groups for its attitude to civil liberties
These were the first executions in The Gambia since 1985. Amnesty International had described the state as “abolitionist in practice”, but President Jammeh’s reputation of being an unpredictable ruler was once again confirmed.
At the end of last year, in a rare interview with the BBC, he replied to allegations of human-rights violations quite bluntly. A number of local journalists, activists or opposition members had been arrested, mysteriously murdered or had simply disapp..
When my colleague asked him about these cases, the president pointed out that there were people in jail sentenced to death who were still alive so, he said, he was hardly likely to have killed people who had not been condemned under the law.
“Do you think I want to earn a one-way ticket to hell?” he asked.
The death penalty is certainly legal under the constitution of The Gambia but one can argue that proper legal procedures were not observed before or after the executions. And the bodies of the nine were not even handed back to their families.
Nobody understands why Yahya Jammeh suddenly decided to implement the death penalty.
I was hoping I could meet him in person so he could explain.
During the brief period I was in his country, the president – who describes himself as a countryman – was apparently spending time on his village farm.
Did he know I was in the capital Banjul and being expelled?
“Of course he knows,” diplomats and others told me. “He has people everywhere, undercover agents who tell him everything.”
I was warned ahead of my trip that I would probably be spied on while reporting there, but in the end I was prevented from doing any work.
What was the government so worried about, I wondered.
‘Spiritual guidance’
It did eventually confirm the executions had taken place – but only after news of them had begun to leak out. It said the prisoners were killed by firing squad.
If the executions really were carried out according to the rule book, then why were the bodies not handed over to the families?”
President Jammeh – who said he would rule The Gambia for one billion years if Allah said so – is known to be keen on receiving spiritual guidance from his medium.
There are persistent rumours, not discounted by foreign diplomats, that these executions have a lot to do with the president’s belief in the supernatural and in traditional juju practices. And that the prisoners were not in fact shot dead but killed by lethal injection.
Of course, The Gambia is a rumour mill. Many of the rumours are fuelled by the online reports of opposition members in exile but, if the executions really were carried out according to the rule book, then why were the bodies not handed over to the families?
Meanwhile those still on death row, their families and human rights groups have no idea if more executions are to be carried out.
I first saw that British couple the day before their planned fishing trip.
As usual I was hunkered down over my phone, hoping to hear that the authorities had, after all, decided to let me in.
The man and woman were in the hotel bar, happily chatting away over gin and tonics. It did not look like they were discussing the country’s grim human-rights record. But our Gambian experiences were obviously very different.
The constant rain had disrupted their holiday. To me it simply added another detail to the image of a tropical country closed to journalists.
That, I reflected, usually means there are nasty things to hide.
ALIOUNE TINE, SOULEYMANE NDENE NDIAYE n'a pas besoin de ton avis pour se rendre en GAMBIE toi qui avait promis d'aller manifester au pays de YAYA DIAMEYH. As-tu besoin d'être dans les valises de JULES pour te rendre en Gambie? Il faut de temps entemps lire les commentaires pour te situer.
ALIOUNE TINE TU AS RAISON DE NE PAS AIMER LA DÉMARCHE DE JULES NDENE QUI VOUS A COUPE L'HERBE SOUS LES PIEDS EN BAISSANT LA TENSION ENTRE LE SENEGAL ET LA GAMBIE .
LES ASSOCIATIONS DES DROITS DE L'HOMME AU SENEGAL SOUHAITENT TOUJOURS DES TENSIONS DANS LA SOUS RÉGION POUR SOUTIRER DE L'ARGENT AUX BAILLEURS DE FONDS OCCIDENTAUX .
Ecoute Alioune tu n'est qu'un poltron. Je me dmande ce qu'attendent les membres de la RADHO pour te chasser car tu n'es qu'un prostitué politique ou bien coureur d'interet personnelle.
alioune tine tu nous emmerde.wade avait installé une crise institutionnelle dans ce pays pour se maintenir au pouvoir et toutes les forces vives de la nation se sont levées pour le combattre.dans ce combat tu as été héroique.maintenant tout cela est dérriere nous.le peuple a élu un nouveau président les institutions fonctionne normalement alors laisse les hommes politiques faire leur travail et toi va t'occuper de tes affaires.ce que ndéné ndiaye a fait c'est entre lui macky et alioune badara cissé.c pas ton probléme.
oh-là le sieur tine tellement lourd du fait des piéces et autres liasses se croit d'un poids devant lequel ne doit absolument rien se faire sans son onction préalable . si l'on doit son quotidien dans son ensemble à des financiers aux agendats certainement dans l'interêt de nos pays, franchement; humblement l'on doit d'interpeler autrui surtout quand le repére vous circonscrit à un moment les nmos comme les familles fot l'histoire de tout-un chacun.
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31 Commentaires
Kham
En Septembre, 2012 (16:23 PM)Reply_author
En Août, 2023 (11:33 AM)Dippydeupp
En Septembre, 2012 (16:24 PM)Mbatio
En Septembre, 2012 (16:24 PM)Kham
En Septembre, 2012 (16:26 PM)Ertttt
En Septembre, 2012 (16:37 PM)Louma
En Septembre, 2012 (16:41 PM)La vraie raison de la venue de Aminata Niane. En effet le mari de Aminata Niane est cousin de Matar DIop Directeur Afrique du FMI/BM .Matar DIop a diplomatiquement fait comprendre au President que la banque mondiale . Le Fonds exigent de travailler avec une personne qu'ils connaissent déjà et que la présence de Aminata faciliterait les décaissements , tout ceci n'est que du toc ,cette femme est juste diplômée de je sais pas quoi et elle a été cree par Wade .MATAR VS AVAIT TRAHI LE CODE D HONNEUR DE LA BM ET DU FOND
Hhhiiawe
En Septembre, 2012 (16:44 PM)Moulaye
En Septembre, 2012 (16:47 PM)Sow
En Septembre, 2012 (16:49 PM)Ne soit pas jaloux A TINE
Casting
En Septembre, 2012 (17:01 PM)VAS Y DEGAGE ESCLAVE
Heuch
En Septembre, 2012 (17:03 PM)legui nak, toute demarche qui tend à limiter ses dégats serait la bievenue .
Ads
En Septembre, 2012 (17:06 PM)Demain
En Septembre, 2012 (17:23 PM)Eyaidn
En Septembre, 2012 (18:00 PM)Moda
En Septembre, 2012 (19:42 PM)Limomanior
En Septembre, 2012 (20:14 PM)Diogu
En Septembre, 2012 (20:31 PM)Sinistré
En Septembre, 2012 (21:34 PM)V
En Septembre, 2012 (23:37 PM)Honte A Lui
En Septembre, 2012 (00:16 AM)Boysaloum
En Septembre, 2012 (02:06 AM)Gambian
En Septembre, 2012 (03:09 AM)The darker side of sunny Gambia
By Thomas Fessy BBC News
The carrying out of the death penalty on nine prisoners in The Gambia, the first state executions in almost 30 years, has raised questions about the country’s human rights record, questions the authorities are less than keen to answer.
I was checking out of a lovely lodge-hotel right on the ocean when the two middle-aged British tourists stormed into reception.
They were upset that the fisherman they had booked had not turned up. It had been raining heavily and the fisherman, I thought, had probably assumed that they would rather stay indoors.
While they must have been wondering earlier if they would ever get out in a boat, I had been in my room watching the rain bucketing down while constantly checking my phone.
I was hoping to get a call from the authorities saying I could stay on in The Gambia, but perhaps I was being naive.
I was dealing with the other face of this country – one that most of the 50,000 British tourists who come here each year do not get to see.
I had arrived at the airport less than 48 hours earlier. I had the correct visa to report as a journalist but was held there for more than five hours and was only released after the British High Commission stepped in.
It was told I had to take the next flight back to my base in Senegal, which meant my stay at the lodge was only a brief one.
‘Death row’
I was sent to The Gambia after nine prisoners were executed there.
The President, Yahya Jammeh, had said earlier he was determined to clear up “death row”. Today there are another 38 prisoners there, wondering what their fate will be.
President Jammeh’s government has been criticised by international rights groups for its attitude to civil liberties
These were the first executions in The Gambia since 1985. Amnesty International had described the state as “abolitionist in practice”, but President Jammeh’s reputation of being an unpredictable ruler was once again confirmed.
At the end of last year, in a rare interview with the BBC, he replied to allegations of human-rights violations quite bluntly. A number of local journalists, activists or opposition members had been arrested, mysteriously murdered or had simply disapp..
When my colleague asked him about these cases, the president pointed out that there were people in jail sentenced to death who were still alive so, he said, he was hardly likely to have killed people who had not been condemned under the law.
“Do you think I want to earn a one-way ticket to hell?” he asked.
The death penalty is certainly legal under the constitution of The Gambia but one can argue that proper legal procedures were not observed before or after the executions. And the bodies of the nine were not even handed back to their families.
Nobody understands why Yahya Jammeh suddenly decided to implement the death penalty.
I was hoping I could meet him in person so he could explain.
During the brief period I was in his country, the president – who describes himself as a countryman – was apparently spending time on his village farm.
Did he know I was in the capital Banjul and being expelled?
“Of course he knows,” diplomats and others told me. “He has people everywhere, undercover agents who tell him everything.”
I was warned ahead of my trip that I would probably be spied on while reporting there, but in the end I was prevented from doing any work.
What was the government so worried about, I wondered.
‘Spiritual guidance’
It did eventually confirm the executions had taken place – but only after news of them had begun to leak out. It said the prisoners were killed by firing squad.
If the executions really were carried out according to the rule book, then why were the bodies not handed over to the families?”
President Jammeh – who said he would rule The Gambia for one billion years if Allah said so – is known to be keen on receiving spiritual guidance from his medium.
There are persistent rumours, not discounted by foreign diplomats, that these executions have a lot to do with the president’s belief in the supernatural and in traditional juju practices. And that the prisoners were not in fact shot dead but killed by lethal injection.
Of course, The Gambia is a rumour mill. Many of the rumours are fuelled by the online reports of opposition members in exile but, if the executions really were carried out according to the rule book, then why were the bodies not handed over to the families?
Meanwhile those still on death row, their families and human rights groups have no idea if more executions are to be carried out.
I first saw that British couple the day before their planned fishing trip.
As usual I was hunkered down over my phone, hoping to hear that the authorities had, after all, decided to let me in.
The man and woman were in the hotel bar, happily chatting away over gin and tonics. It did not look like they were discussing the country’s grim human-rights record. But our Gambian experiences were obviously very different.
The constant rain had disrupted their holiday. To me it simply added another detail to the image of a tropical country closed to journalists.
That, I reflected, usually means there are nasty things to hide.
Lebou Sarr
En Septembre, 2012 (09:56 AM)Atiom Diatta
En Septembre, 2012 (11:04 AM)Oaid
En Septembre, 2012 (11:11 AM)LES ASSOCIATIONS DES DROITS DE L'HOMME AU SENEGAL SOUHAITENT TOUJOURS DES TENSIONS DANS LA SOUS RÉGION POUR SOUTIRER DE L'ARGENT AUX BAILLEURS DE FONDS OCCIDENTAUX .
Badji Ziguinchor
En Septembre, 2012 (11:34 AM)ce n'est pas parceque tu es president de la radho que tu dois te comporter de la sorte
SOULEYMANE NDENE n'a pas à te demander ton avis s'il doit patir ou non en gambie
tu peux nous dire qui tu es pour qu'on te demande la permision
nous salions ce que ndene à obtenu de banjul merci
pour toi kel à ete ta contribution dans tout ce que tu dis de ce probleme tu n'as rien fait si c'est pas parler
cette femme tue et tu veux qu'on la laisse comme ça si c'estais ton frere kel serai ta reaction
soyons serieux
Tbsow
En Septembre, 2012 (11:45 AM)Tu ne parles que de ce qui interessent les blans.
Sarr
En Septembre, 2012 (13:03 PM)Ngor V
En Septembre, 2012 (13:08 PM)Mahécor
En Septembre, 2012 (13:26 PM)Cheikh Omar
En Septembre, 2012 (13:54 PM)Participer à la Discussion