Thursday, 12 November 2015

The Gambia to replace English with Fula as official language in 2020

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The government has finally confirmed that they are dropping English as the official language of The Gambia.

In a chat with What’s On-Gambia, Information Minister Sheriff Bojang said they have reached a unanimous decision to drop English for Fula. According to him, the change would take effect latest January 2020.“The Fulas are becoming the country’s biggest ethnic group and as you know their language is widely spoken in West Africa,” said the Brikama-born minister.
He added: “The change doesn’t mean that English would be completely abandoned. The government will continue to provide services in English for non-Fula speakers. It is the same in many countries were the colonial language was ditched.”
Opposition leaders, Omar Jallow (PPP) and Amat Bah (NRP) have both written to the president to thank him. According to them, it is a significant development in the country’s history that deserves celebration.
Amat Bah told What’s On-Gambia: “I have just collected an APRC membership form to join the party. This is all I wanted, Fulas to be recognized in this country. Jammeh Jilanka is a true Pan Africanist and on behalf of all the Fulas in Guinea and The Gambia, I want to thank him for recognizing us.”
The NRP leader said they are planning to have a concert at July 22 Square as celebration for the government’s bold decision. Some top Guinean musicians are expected to grace the stage.
However, sadly, not everyone was happy about Fula becoming the country’s official language. A group of Fana Fana elders from Niamina has requested an audience with the president. They want the government to either reverse the decision or make Fana Fana Wollof as the second official language.
Photo courtesy of Fulbe Africa
Source of What's on Gambia

Saturday, 7 November 2015

Thierno Diallo tells his migrant course in a book

"In my career, I have learned that life is a struggle," said a soft voice Thierno Diallo, a young Guinean who fired a book tests crossings between the flight of his country only 15 years old and obtaining a residence permit in France.

Six years after his arrival in Strasbourg, Thierno is a young man of 21 who still has the appearance of a frail teenager, combined with the maturity of an adult. This is the Malraux multimedia library, one of his marks in the Alsatian capital, he made an appointment to talk about his book. "Like all kids my age, I have many dreams: maybe one day I can share all that I experienced with those who remained in Guinea," he says, weighing although every word.


Her mother disappears

For Thierno, the great and terrible adventure of migration begins in a stadium in Conakry, September 28, 2009. Security forces are killing at least 157 people, opponents of the military regime gathered to demand that Camara will be present not in the presidential election. Hidden under a bench, Thierno see men and women get slaughtered. Her mother disappears. There is still no news of her today.

His life is threatened

After a stint in the jails of the junta, the youth is released thanks to the intervention of a family friend, but more matter of staying in Guinea, where his life is at risk: towards Greece, as a stowaway on a cargo ship. From Athens, he won Paris and Strasbourg is abandoned, without money or papers, the migrant with whom he traveled to Germany.

"I, smuggled 15 years"
A stranger met at the station leads to the door of a protective association of children's rights. "If someone tries to talk to you on the street, tell yourself that by offering him a few minutes of listening, you can change the course of his life," Thierno wrote in his book "I, smuggled 15 years ".

Culture shock
Placed Oberholz home Bouxwiller where live unaccompanied foreign minors and young French people under judicial protection of youth, Thierno is gradually adapt to life in France, a country whose language seduces. With self-deprecating, he tells in his book Culture Shock and against-induced sense that, like when making braces for teens jewelry.

Yet, all is far from rosy during this period. The teenager describes every turn of the administrative maze he must go, facing officials who doubt his presence in the stadium in Conakry.

"The release of the book, it's a dream come true"
This is also to put away the successive disappointments he starts telling them in a book. "The release of the book, it's a dream come true," he says today. "I realized that everything I was writing could help better understand what drives someone from home."

For Michel Bonnefon, department head at Oberholz home, "he owes this recognition we know is good to us educators who are fighting for decades with young people who are out of school, excluded 'incasables".

A residence permit
The story ends happily for Thierno: he obtained a residence permit and landed his tray. Today ends a BTS graphic arts. "It is important to show how these young people are courageous, daring and valiant," emphasizes Gaëlle Le Guern, deputy director of the home, which followed Thierno. "They almost all come to a situation of professional and social integration when they come out of the tracking device."

The human side
Despite his own success, Thierno do not forget the other migrants, of which he became a spokesman for the time of a hearing before a committee of the Council of Europe.

"We often hear politicians talk about immigration with complicated words and numbers. I, sharing my feelings, I can bring out the human side. The day we give more space to the human cause, we all solve our problems, same economic ", he concludes.

"I, smuggled 15 years" Thierno Diallo, publishing The Blue Swarm, 2015.

http://www.rtl.be

Baaba Maal received by Macky Sall at the Palace



The singer Baaba Maal was  received in audience on Thursday by President Sall to whom he expressed the upcoming celebration of thirty years of the orchestra which he is the leader.

Monday, 2 November 2015

Bah Oury Meet-Alpha Condé in Paris: A wind of hope reborn into the family of Lady Fatou Badiar .

CONAKRY-The meeting in Paris between President Alpha Condé and exiled opponent, Bah Oury, revived a wind of hope in some families of detainees in the case of the attack on July 19, 2011. The family of Mrs. Fatou Badiar (sentenced to 15 years' imprisonment), hope that this meeting can serve as a trigger for clemency to all political prisoners.

  "They have suffered enough in prison. If the president went to meet Bah Oury, it makes us really happy. After everything that happened, we see that there is cohesion now. There were elections and President Alpha Condé won by the grace of God. And since its prerogatives in it the possibility of amnesty for political prisoners (...), it really would make me happy because my mom is among them, "said Mamadou Diallo, during an interview with our reporter.

Diallo then explain the suffering that is going through his mother after five years of incarceration at home central Conakry. According to him, it is often currently sick and family visits are limited.
"She is always sick. She suffers from gastric. Before we left when we wanted, but lately they have pushed me twice. If today President Alpha Condé amnestied that my mom would be happy, since the last five years she was still in hospital. It's really sad, "has he lamented.

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Sunday, 1 November 2015

Femi Fani-Kayode On Rabiu Kwankwaso And His Fulani Commentary

Editor’s note: Rabiu Kwankwaso’s  on Fulani activities in Nigeria’s Southwest have prompted a polylogue between the concerned parties. , Nigeria’s former aviation minister and influential opinion-maker, makes his stance on the matter public.


Rabiu Kwankwaso
I am saddened that the former governor of Kano state, Senator Rabiu Kwankwaso, a man whom I have always considered a friend and one whom I have always respected, could insult our reverred Yoruba elders. Yesterday, during a function in Ibadan, it was widely reported in the media that he asserted that the recent demand by the Yoruba elders that all Fulani herdsmen ought to be banned from the Southwest as a consequence of the hideous atrocities that they have been committing against our people is somehow inappropiate and misguided.
Instead of stopping there, he went further by attempting to give us an unsolicited lecture about his Fulani heritage and pedigree and about the benefits of having a good education: imagine that coming from one of them. He concluded by telling the Yoruba elders to just “shut up”. Such impudence is rarely seen and this final insult may represent a defining moment in the history of the relationship between the Yoruba and the Fulani in our country.
Worse still, this comes barely a few weeks after Chief Olu Falae, a much-loved 77 year old Yoruba elder, was abducted, incarcerated, stripped naked, beaten, cut with machetes, maimed, frog-marched, humiliated by a group of Fulani herdsmen. Unlike many others, Chief Falae was lucky to escape with his life because both before and since his abduction many other victims of the Fulani cattle-rearers did not.
These aliens are herdsmen and cattle-rearers by day, and terrorists, murderers, vagabonds and rapists by night. They have become a terror and an affliction to our people. That is what we have to live within the Southwest and many other parts of southern Nigeria today. The Yoruba are still hurting from the abductions, murders, raids and consistent violence being meted out to them by these creatures from hell, yet, no-one seems to care.
Many Yoruba farmers are still living in trepidation of being attacked and butchered by the vagabonds and many have had to sit by helplessly as the heartless beasts raped and slaughtered their wives and daughters before their very eyes. Instead of attempting to calm our nerves and allay our fears by reaching out to us with an olive branch and condemning the criminal actions of his Fulani kith and kin, Rabiu Kwankwaso has instead indulged in his provocative and dangerous diatribe.
It is a manifestation of the crass arrogance that some Fulani leaders have cultivated over the years that they feel that they can insult us in this way and get away with it. Worse still, they seek to defend, rationalise and condone the activities of their barbaric and murderous herdsmen who have murdered, raped and pillaged thousands of our people and forcefully taken our lands and crops over the last few years.
I will leave it to Afenifere, the Yoruba Council of Elders, the OPC and others to respond to Kwankwaso and those he represents because these are the groups and people that speak for the Yoruba nation.
The only thing that I will say is that Kwankwaso’s thesis and theory about education being the answer to the menace and criminal activities of the Fulani herdsmen in the Southwest does not make sense. It has no basis in logic, rationality or reason.
In any case, if the herdsmen are not properly educated and do not know how to behave in a lawful and civilised manner when they are in the territory of others, whose fault is that? Is it not the fault of Kwankwaso and the other Fulani leaders who have refused to enlighten and educate their people over the last 50 years? That is the bitter truth.
You cannot stop those herdsmen that have chosen to be murderers, vagabonds and rapists by simply educating them because what they do is inherent within them. Those that have chosen the path of criminality and violence are suffering from a sociopathic and psychotic disposition. Simply put, they have an insatiable bloodlust and an irresistible desire to hurt others and to steal, maim, rape and kill.
When I say this, I am not referring to all Fulanis but only to those Fulani herdsmen who insist on indulging in violent and deviant behavior in our land.
The only thing you can do to stop such people is to make them face the full wrath of the law for the crimes they have consistently committed and ban them from entering our territory. It has nothing to do with education. We do not want these herdsmen amongst us anymore because they are like a plague. All they do is kill, steal and destroy. They have done it throughout the Middle Belt for the last 50 years and now they are doing it in the south and particularly in Yorubaland.
Do Kwankwaso and the other Fulani leaders expect us to keep quiet whilst their people are terrorising, slaughtering and robbing ours? If so, they are in for a big shock. We will not only not keep quiet but we will also continue to insist that they must get out of our land. And if the government refuses to protect us from them, we shall take strong measures to protect and defend ourselves and our people. There is no crime in self-defense.
The days of talking down to us, treating us with contempt and treating us like slaves are long over. Kwankwaso and those he represents should not test our will or underestimate our resolve. We want peace but it cannot be at the expense of our lives and the liberty and safety of our people. The Yoruba cannot be butchered at will or treated like sacrificial lambs to the slaughter by anyone or any group of people. Senator Kwankwaso’s insult on the Yoruba elders will not go unanswered. Education is not the solution to the problem of the murderous Fulani herdsmen. Expulsion is.

This article expresses the author’s opinion only. The views and opinions expressed here do not necessarily represent those of Naij.com or its editors.








Fulani Herdsmen: Afenifere Replies Kwankwaso

 Pan-Yoruba socio-political organisation, Afenifere, has faulted remarks made by former governor of Kano State, Senator Rabiu Kwakwanso, who allegedly justified the activities of Fulani herdsmen in the South West.
Kwakwanso had said over the weekend that “the issue of conflict between the farmers and Fulani herdsmen is not common to the South west alone. It is not even common to Nigeria. It is all over the sub region”.
But in a statement, Afenifere’s publicity secretary, Mr. Yinka Odumakin, faulted Kwankwaso on the grounds that his comment did not address the issue of the herdsmen attacks and the abduction of the former Secretary to the Government of the Federation (SGF), Chief Olu Falae.
He said, “Kwankwaso’s grouse with Yoruba leaders was our call for an end to the criminal activities of Fulani herdsmen in the region at the recent summit in Ibadan and that the Yoruba nation may reconsider its place in a union that could not protect us and would not allow us to protect ourselves if we did not see any sign to restructure Nigeria into a proper federation.
“Kwakwanso did not condemn the abduction of Chief Olu Falae, the killing of innocent farmers, raping of women and destruction of crops and farmlands in the course of the grazing activities of Fulani herdsmen. He only tacitly justified their activities by offering excuses for their criminal conducts.”
“The issue that we are talking about, education is very important. If all Fulani are given opportunity to go to school, I don’t think they will risk their lives and their animals going into the bush, where there are reptiles. I think the key thing is education.
“Kwakwanso wants Yoruba “understanding of the situation” while his kinsmen continue to draw their blood, violating their women and destroying their farmlands until Mallam decides to give them education may be when we celebrate another centenary.
“The double speak of Kwakwanso is galling as he was a few months ago celebrating the hordes of Almajiris in the north as a positive development that provides a demography that could easily be herded for electoral process.
“Rabiu Kwakwanso in an interview he granted Vanguard Newspaper on April 26,2015, lambasted the wife of former President of Nigeria for “insulting” the north over the menace of Almajiri children which he considered a thing of ‘pride,’ saying, “Look at what the wife of the President said about us-northerners. She was just castigating the North almost at every opportunity. You cannot insult us and think that you can get away with it. This democracy is a game of numbers, and that is why we went back and put almajiris together to get about two million votes.
“The issue of almajiris have been opened to abuse in this country and turned into insults for us. Almajiri here is a positive word but the way they see it is that we are beggars, that we produce so many children that we cannot take care of, and that is what the First Lady was saying and we kept quiet because we had our own way of answering her and we did exactly that on the 28th of March.”
“Kwankwanso further said that the Fulani should be given the opportunity to go to school as if the Yoruba were the ones who denied them such opportunity in almost 40 years that the north has held power since independence.
“With the uncouth, rude and insensitive remarks of Kwankwaso and his ilk in the North which are like pouring salt on injury, it is coming clear to us that there may be a grand agenda with the activities of the Fulani herdsmen either as an advance party of Boko Haram into our territory or an expansionist project.
“The Yoruba leaders therefore stand by every word in the Ibadan declaration,” said Odumakin.