Friday, 20 March 2015

Banka Freed On Self Bail

Banka Manneh freed on bail
Banka Manneh freed on bail
By Yero Jallow
In a dramatic twist on Thursday March 19th, Minnesota Federal Magistrate, Becky R. Thorson of St. Paul, granted conditional bail to a Gambian activist who had earlier surrendered to the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).
Mr. Banka Manneh has been on the FBI investigation list since some Gambian dissident abroad attempted to force out President Yahya Jammeh from power on December 30th. The event followed loss of lives and trial of alleged conspirators both in the U.S and The Gambia. In the US, the accused persons have been charged with violating the U.S Neutrality Act, a law that forbids using the U.S territory to forcefully dislodge a friendly foreign government.
Texas businessman Cherno Njie, Minnesota Air Force U.S veteran Papa Faal, and the Tennessee U.S Military veteran Alhagie Saidy Barrow have all neen charged with violating the Neutrality Act of 1896.
After months of investigation, the FBI finally raided Banka’s home late last week, and summoned him to appear in court, to answer to pending charges against him. In a layman’s language, Banka is charged with “aiding and abetting” the December 30th alleged coup. But Banka is an activist, a sincere Gambian comrade whose simplicity and companionship is celebrated in all corners. Banka is loaded with a spirit to help oppressed Gambians and lift the nation from dictatorship to democracy.
Magistrate Thorson found Banka legible for both self-bail and public defendant (lawyer), after reviewing his alleged involvement and financial earning. The Federal Prosecution pressed on having Banka restricted on access to the internet and computer. At that point, a defiant Banka Manneh told the court he needed the computer to do his job. After a careful consideration, the magistrate allowed Banka to use the computer for work related activities.
Banka’s next hearing is slated for Thursday March 26th 2015 when he is expected to enter his plea. Within the time, Banka has been advised to surrender his passport, to not do any international travels, and appear in court as and when needed.
What many activists are furious about is where the FBI are heading with their investigations. What do they really want? What are they looking for? What interest do they have in this case that it is giving them sleepless nights? People understand about the U.S neutrality law, but agreeably, any investigations, and bringing of alleged conspirators to court needs to be done respectively according to the stipulated law. In the case of Banka, the U.S government and the FBI hav been greatly criticized in many Gambian quarters in the manner and nature they raided his home. Banka is a family man and raiding his home with two dozen FBI agents at around 5am, may not necessarily be against the law, but poses serious questions over its motive. An organization like the FBI is expected to maintain its respect and relationship to have cooperation from communities. The U.S and FBI are well equipped with all resources, therefore a case like this, needs to be investigated from the root cause and the very element provoking citizens to try act in the way allegedly acted on December 30th 2014. The U.S and FBI do not want to go down in history as having to sympathize, aid, and abet a tyrannical regime as destructive as that of The Gambia’s current dictatorship, under the worst of world rulers, Yaya Jammeh. Yes, the FBI has a job to do and no one is saying they don’t, but Gambians too have a job to do, to liberate themselves and their citizens from the clutches of tyranny. The Obama administration must not be taught history, when our pioneer fathers liberated the United States from its colonial master, Great Britain, under treasonable conditions. A law must be reflective of time and current events. A law must represent the interest of those it is written for. A law is unfavorable if it victimizes citizens rather than uplifting them. It is really a shame for a nation as powerful as America to position itself in such a funny situation.
Regardless of the daunting frustration of having to deal with the nagging trials, it was clearly a victory today for believers of justice. It was important to see Banka go home to his family and to be able to continue work. The judge didn’t make any mistake as it is the right thing to do.
To those that believe in freedom, equality, and justice, everything that happens is an inspiration. The Minnesota Civil Society group extends its appreciation for the sincere solidarity from Gambians and their friends the world over.
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The Woman Who Confronts Child Abuse

aminata mina mannehThe woman who exposed the mistreatment of a 10-year-old girl has become news herself. Aminata Manneh, a third year university gender activist student and intern at an intern at the American Corner in Banjul, disappeared after she posted the video of a traffic police man beating the helpless young girl went viral last night. The video invited so many comments on the social media – home and abroad. Among those expressing concern about the disturbing video was Jeffrey Smith of Robert F Kennedy Center for Justice and Human Rights in New York who twitted thus: “Just saw a highly disturbing video of a Gambia police officer beating a young school girl in broad daylight. Sadly not an uncommon episode.’’
Aminata soon started to get anonymous calls and Facebook messages, with all of them demanding to meet her urgently.  Aminata’s family could neither locate her, nor  reach her on the phone, despite repeated calls.
The case of the gender activist is not a rare coincidence in a country where security officers have been known for kidnapping, arbitrary arrest and detention, especially the government’s perceived enemies. It is against this background that accusing fingers have been pointed at the National Intelligence Agents.
It all started while Aminata was on her way to work on Monday, when she saw the police officer repeatedly canning a young girl. Her conscience would not allow her to leave without taking video of the horrible incident. She then shared it with her close to 5,000 followers. Aminata shared the video with a comment asking since when does a traffic police officer have a right to lay a hand on a young schoolgirl? What has become of our authorities?”
Aminata is admired for her steadfastness in defending the rights of people. Her family is appealing to Gambian authorities to help them establish Aminata’s whereabouts.
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source.www.kaironews.com

Mina’s Video Exposes Police Brutality

Women’s right activist Aminata [Mina] Manneh
A University student was arrested after she was accused of spreading police brutality video. Aminata Manneh is still in detention. A colleague human rights activist with Tango, Madi Jobarteh, stood up with the woman affectionately called Mina.
I Stand Up With Mina
“What crime has she committed other than to have helped the police to better themselves by addressing the excesses of this officer beating a child on the street?
Have the police not created a Complaints Unit? And a Human Rights Unit? And a Child Welfare Unit? And a Community Policing unit? Is Minah’s video not enough and an urgent matter for these units to get very busy to ensure that professionalism and civility characterize all the men and women of theforce?
Let them please release Minah and address the issue in the video, and avoid more international attention being focused on our Beloved Little Gambia for nothing.
Minah deserves an award for standing up for a Good Gambia. Who should be against that? The police should join her and commend her.
Minah is an angel. Decent. Peaceful. Beautiful. Patriotic. Pious. Easygoing.”
Madi Jobarteh
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Wednesday, 18 March 2015

Banka Manneh Former CORDEG member Surrenders to FBI

Banka Manneh

Banka Manneh a Gambian civil society and political activist surrendered himself to the FBI earlier today in connection to the ongoing 30 December foiled coup investigations. Banka Manneh is an Executive member of CSAG and STGDP and also a former executive member of CORDEG. Mr Manneh is a media personality and a vocal member of the Gambian dissident movement in Diaspora, attending several conferences in furtherance of the struggle to restore democracy and rule of in the Gambia.
According to reliable sources, Banka Manneh was briefly detained by agents of the FBI after an early morning raid on his house in Atlanta on the 12 of March 2015.
The FBI agents equipped with a search warrants took several items from Mr Manneh’s house including, computers, documents and cell phones. It was after the raid that Mr Manneh took the decision in consultation with his lawyer to hand himself in to the Minnesota intelligent agents. Banka Manneh is expected to appear in court on Thursday morning the 19th of March 2015.
The arrest of Mr Manneh brings the number of Gambian American citizens and residence to four that are alleged to be involved in the failed 30 December 2014 attacked on the Presidential palace of the Gambian President.
It could be recall that after the 30 December 2014 assault in the Gambia, The U.S authorities are prosecuting suspected individuals of violating ‘the Neutrality Act’ between the the United States and a friendly nation. Kairo News will follow developments of Mr Manneh’s plight

DR Congo: Mass Arrests of Activists


Crackdown on Free Expression Raises Election Concerns


The Congolese government’s detention of pro-democracy activists is the latest alarming sign of a crackdown on peaceful protest ahead of next year’s presidential elections. Congolese authorities should immediately release those detained if they haven’t been charged with a credible offense and ensure access to their lawyers and families.
Ida Sawyer, senior Africa researcher
(Kinshasa) – The arrest of at least 26 activists and others in Kinshasa on March 15, 2015, raises serious concerns of a broader crackdown on free expression before the 2016 Democratic Republic of Congopresidential elections, Human Rights Watch said today.

The arrests, including of foreign journalists and a United States diplomat, followed a news conference by the pro-democracy youth movement Filimbi, organized with support from the US embassy in Kinshasa.

On March 17, 2015, the authorities arrested and roughed up at least 10 Congolese activists in the eastern city of Goma during a peaceful protest outside the office of Congo’s National Intelligence Agency (Agence Nationale de Renseignements, ANR), calling for the release of those arrested in Kinshasa. ANR agents beat a Belgian woman bystander who was later hospitalized, and briefly detained a Belgian journalist.

“The Congolese government’s detention of pro-democracy activists is the latest alarming sign of a crackdown on peaceful protest ahead of next year’s presidential elections,” said Ida Sawyer, senior Africa researcher at Human Rights Watch. “Congolese authorities should immediately release those detained if they haven’t been charged with a credible offense and ensure access to their lawyers and families.”

Human Rights Watch called on United Nations Security Council members, who are due to discuss the situation in Congo on March 19, to publicly press Congolese authorities to immediately release all those detained for their peaceful activities and speech.

Among those arrested on March 15 were Congolese activists, musicians, journalists, technicians, and bystanders; youth leaders and activists from Senegal and Burkina Faso; a US diplomat; two French journalists; and the French director of a production company. The US and French citizens and two Congolese were released after several hours. The others remain detained, possibly by the intelligence agency. They have not been brought before a judge, officially charged with offenses, or had access to their lawyers or families, raising concerns for their safety.

Following the news conference at the Eloko Makasi music studio, men in military police uniform arrived at about 4 p.m. and began arresting people. Witnesses said that the officers at first targeted foreigners. They then began arresting Congolese as well, including those who were preparing the concert stage, and bystanders. The security forces were very rough with several Congolese and West Africans, witnesses said, banging the head of a Senegalese activist against the door of a pickup truck and beating others.

The security forces also took computers and other documents and materials from the hall and destroyed banners.

The military police drove those arrested away in at least three unmarked, white pickup trucks. The US and French citizens were taken to the headquarters of the ANR in Kinshasa, where they were interrogated by senior intelligence officials, then released after several hours. It is not known where the Congolese, Senegalese, and Burkinabe citizens are being detained.

Communications Minister Lambert Mende told journalists that the activists from Senegal and Burkina Faso were “promoting violence through a form of training … coaching of certain youth groups close to a certain opposition to use violent means against other groups or against the institutions of the republic.”

Several Congolese pro-democracy organizations had organized a workshop to introduce Filimbi (“whistle” in Swahili), a new Congolese youth movement. The workshop’s objectives were to promote civic engagement and youth mobilization, and to discuss how Congolese youth can organize in a peaceful and responsible manner to fulfill their duties as citizens.

Youth leaders and activists from Senegal and Burkina Faso came to Kinshasa for the workshop to share their experiences. The Senegalese were members of Y’en a Marre, a group involved in protests against former President Abdoulaye Wade’s controversial bid for a third term in 2012. Those from Burkina Faso were part of Balai Citoyen, a group that participated in protests against former President Blaise Compaoré’s attempt to change the constitution to extend his 27-year term.

“Y’en a Marre and Balai Citoyen are well respected organizations that have worked to promote responsible, civic engagement by youth in West Africa,” Sawyer said. “They came to Kinshasa to share their experiences with Congolese youth, including the importance of peaceful means for youth to engage in the political process.”

Filimbi worked in partnership with Eloko Makasi, a socially conscious music and video production company based in Kinshasa’s Masina neighborhood. Musicians who participated in the workshop went to the Eloko Makasi studio on March 14, 2015, to create a song based on what was discussed at the workshop to encourage Congolese youth to be involved in the democratic process and to promote a free, transparent, and peaceful electoral process.

In a March 16 statement, the US embassy in Kinshasa said the Filimbi workshop was one of many activities the US government supports that involve youth and civil society. “These well-known, well-regarded, non-partisan youth groups as well as the organizers of the weekend’s events intended to promote Congolese youth participation in the political process and encourage young people to express their views about issues of concern to them,” the statement said. “DRC government officials and ruling coalition parties were invited to and some were present during the event.”

Under Congo’s constitution, presidents may serve only two consecutive terms. President Joseph Kabila’s second term ends in 2016. While presidential elections are not scheduled until November 2016, political tensions have been rising across the country. In January 2015, at least 40 people were killed when security forces brutally repressed demonstrations in Kinshasa and other cities to protest proposed changes to Congo’s electoral law that would have delayed elections and enabled Kabila to prolong his term. Numerous political party and civil society leaders have been arrested after speaking out against proposed changes to the constitution or Congo’s electoral system.

“These latest arrests signal a worrying clampdown on freedom of expression and assembly in Congo – fundamental elements of a free, transparent, and peaceful electoral process,” Sawyer said. “Youth leaders, musicians, and activists should be able to meet, discuss, and learn without fear of arrest.
ource.www.hrw.com

Tuesday, 17 March 2015

UAE: New Cases of Disappearances


Reveal Fate of Missing Dissidents
MARCH 12, 2015
We are starting to see a troubling pattern of enforced disappearance in the UAE. The methods used by the UAE’s state security apparatus pose a far greater threat to the country’s international reputation than critical voices inside the country.
Joe Stork, deputy Middle East and North Africa director.
(Beirut) – United Arab Emirates (UAE) authorities have forcibly disappeared or detained incommunicado six people since mid-2014, Human Rights Watch said today. With the latest cases, Human Rights Watch has now documented at least eight instances in which individuals were forcibly disappeared after being in custody of state authorities and identified 12 further cases of incommunicado detention.

The authorities should reveal the names and whereabouts of all individuals whom they have forcibly disappeared or are holding in incommunicado detention.

Those whose whereabouts are unknown after they were detained include the son of an adviser to the formerEgyptian President Mohammed Morsy, two Qatari nationals, and three Emirati sisters whose families have not had contact with them since February 15, 2015, when they obeyed an official summons to report to an Abu Dhabi police station after they posted comments critical of the government on social media. Both enforced disappearances and incommunicado detention put detainees at serious risk of torture.

“We are starting to see a troubling pattern of enforced disappearance in the UAE,” said Joe Stork, deputy Middle East and North Africa director. “The methods used by the UAE’s state security apparatus pose a far greater threat to the country’s international reputation than critical voices inside the country.”

Since 2011, UAE authorities have arbitrarily detained scores of people who have either criticized the authorities or who have links to domestic or foreign Islamist groups. The UAE government should reveal the names and whereabouts of everyone forcibly disappeared or held in incommunicado detention, Human Rights Watch said.

Asma, Mariam, and Al Yazzyah al-Suweidi were last seen on February 15, 2015, after authorities called them to a police station in Abu Dhabi. A reliable third party told Human Rights Watch that their mother subsequently received a telephone call from an Emirati official indicating they were in detention, which indicates they may have been subject to enforced disappearance. The three had posted comments criticizing the UAE authorities’ unlawful imprisonment of Emirati dissidents, including their brother, Dr. Issa al-Suweidi.

The day before her detention, Asma al-Suweidi posted a picture on her Twitter account of some of the 69 Emiratis convicted in June 2013 of attempting to overthrow the government after an unfair trial dogged by credible allegations that some of the defendants were tortured while held incommunicado in pretrial detention. Dr. Suweidi was among those convicted and is serving a 10-year sentence in Al Razan jail in Abu Dhabi. On February 5, 2015, Asma al-Suweidi tweeted (in Arabic): “I searched and I did not read in my brother’s case any reasonable argument leading to his isolation and imprisonment that is depriving him of life for 10 years.”

Al Yazzyah al-Suweidi also regularly expressed her support for the detainees and her brother on her Twitter account. On January 30 she wrote (in Arabic): “They dismantled our brother … return him to us #Issa_Al_Suweidi #UAE_detainees #innocent_people_behind_bars.” Mariam al-Suweidi appears to have been less active on social media than her sisters, but also used the hashtag #UAE_detainees in tweets referring to her brother’s detention.

On January 7, Ahmed Abd el Aziz, an Egyptian, posted a video to YouTube in which he called on the UAE authorities to release his 26-year-old son Mosaab who, he alleges, was “kidnapped by United Arab Emirates’ security forces” on October 21, 2014, after being called to a police station in Sharjah. In the video he attributes his son’s arrest and incommunicado detention by UAE authorities to his own erstwhile position as a member of Morsy’s staff before he was ousted as Egyptian president in July 2013. Human Rights Watch has been unable to corroborate Aziz’s account.

In August 2014, UAE authorities detained 10 Libyan nationals. At least two of them were forcibly disappeared: Mohamed and Salim Elaradi, both brothers of Abdulrazaq Elaradi, a member of the Muslim Brotherhood-affiliated Justice and Construction Party in Libya. Authorities released Mohamed Elaradi and three others in late December but they have yet to disclose where Salim Elaradi and the others are being held or allow them access to lawyers or their families.

On February 13, 2015, UAE authorities released Dr. Amer al-Shawa, a Turkish citizen and acquaintance of the Elaradi brothers who was detained on October 2, 2014, at Dubai International Airport. He was only allowed to contact his family for the first time 12 days later with a brief phone call. The Interior Ministry, the Abu Dhabi police, and the Criminal Investigations Department in Abu Dhabi initially denied knowledge of his whereabouts and obstructed his wife’s efforts to file a complaint. His wife only learned of his release when he called her from Istanbul using a taxi driver’s mobile phone following his release and departure from the UAE.

On June 27, UAE immigration officials arrested two Qatari nationals, Yousif al-Mullah and Hamad al-Hamadi, when they entered the country by road from Saudi Arabia. More than eight months later, their families have been unable to find out why UAE authorities arrested them, where they are detained, and in what conditions. In a letter to Human Rights Watch, the families said the Emirati authorities have not responded to the families’ requests for information on the men’s whereabouts.

UAE authorities have curtailed international rights groups’ ability to do research in the country and taken action against individuals who have spoken out about abuses, making it difficult to determine the full extent of enforced disappearances and incommunicado detentions. In January 2014, the UAE authorities denied a Human Rights Watch staff member entry into the country and placed two other Human Rights Watch staff on a blacklist as they left the country in the immediate aftermath of the release of the Human Rights Watch World Report 2014, which included information about UAE abuses.

On November 25, the Federal Supreme Court sentenced Osama al-Najer, an Emirati, to three years in jail on charges that included “damaging the reputation of UAE institutions” and “communicating with external organizations to provide misleading information.” On September 14, 2012, Al-Najer was quoted in a Human Rights Watch news release that contained credible allegations that detainees had been tortured during interrogations.

Article 27 of the UAE’s criminal law of procedure states that detainees should be brought before the public prosecutor within two days. The UAE’s 2003 State Security Apparatus Law, however, gives state security officers wide powers to hold detainees for lengthy periods without any judicial scrutiny. Article 28 of the state security apparatus law, read in conjunction with article 14, allows the head of the state security apparatus to detain a person for 106 days “if he has sufficient reasonable causes to make him believe” that the person is involved in, among other things, “activities that undermine the state … or jeopardize national unity,” “activities deemed harmful to the economy,” or anything that “could undermine, weaken the position of, stir animosity against or undermine trust in the State.”

The state security apparatus law inherently violates article 14(6) of the Arab Charter on Human Rights, which states that “anyone arrested or detained on a criminal charge shall be brought promptly before a judge or other officer authorized by law to exercise judicial power and shall be entitled to trial within a reasonable time or to release.”

The law also places individuals at risk of enforced disappearance. An enforced disappearance occurs when someone is deprived of their liberty by agents of the state or those acting with its acquiescence, followed by a refusal to acknowledge the deprivation of liberty or by concealment of the fate or whereabouts of the disappeared person. The nexus between torture and enforced disappearance is well established in international law.

Article 5 of the 2006 International Convention on the Protection of All Persons Against Enforced Disappearances states that: “The widespread or systematic practice of enforced disappearance constitutes a crime against humanity as defined in applicable international law and shall attract the consequences provided for under such applicable international law.” The UAE has yet to sign or ratify the convention.

“UAE authorities should stop using enforced disappearance and incommunicado detention to harass and cow their critics,” Stork said. “The UAE authorities should immediately reveal the whereabouts of anyone they are holding.”
source.www.hrw.org

UN Report Damns Gambia’s Human Rights

Mendez and Jammeh
Gambian officials denied Juan Mendez access to Gambia’s maximum security wing in November!
A United Nations Special Rapporteur on Torture has issued a damning report that provides evidence of gross violations of human rights in The Gambia.
Juan Mendez’s report comes at a time European Union leaders are contemplating on whether to approve 150 million euros of aid to the West African country. The bloc last year denied some 13 million euros in aid to The Gambia, citing the Jammeh government’s poor human rights credentials.
Mr. Mendez was in November last year denied access to maximum security wing of Mile 2 Central Prison where death row prisoners are held in solitary confinement. But The Gambia government’s denial did not stop Mendez to make his findings known to the public. He cited a high risk of torture, arbitrary detention and enforced disappearance. The report also lampooned the lack of accountability of the country’s law enforcement and security forces.
In a report dated March 2nd, the UN noted that “the special rapporteur observed a layer of fear that was visible on the faces and in the voices of many he met from civil society.” Forty-three people who have been on death row are denied visits by lawyers and families, the report stated.
“The restrictions imposed on the special rapporteur by the government during the course of this visit are unprecedented since the establishment of the mandate 30 years ago,” the report concurred, alleging serious violations of international standards in the prison system. This included overcrowding, inadequate nutrition, insufficient access to medical care and poor sanitation.
The report said “these sub-standard conditions constitute cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment or punishment.”
The UN report also documented testimony of detention without trial for months and torture by the National Intelligence Agency.
The authors of the report would not understand why a country whose economy has been ravaged by a significant drop in tourist arrivals mainly because of the Ebola outbreak refused to improve its human rights record in exchange for foreign aid.
The report also touched on the failed December 30th coup, with the Special Rapporteur citing the unconfirmed arrest and attention of at least 50 people. The detainees included families of the alleged coup plotters held by the NIA.
The Gambia government is yet to react to the report.
Kairo News will try to make stories from the main parts of the more than 13,000 word report.
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Source. www.kaironews.com