Back in 2009 at the launching of the Q-Cell head office
on Kairaba, sitting in the audience I can still clearly recall getting angry
and barely being able to contain that anger when I heard Yaya say something
along these line;
“When I say that the sky is the limit for the
Gambians, I mean it. I must add that if you get to within a few meters of the
sky, wait for me to get there first since I am your president.”
“This is a beautiful building; I challenge Muhammed
Jah to build a similar one in Medina (Niumi). Come to Kanilai next year, there
will be an even taller building.” These statements of course are paraphrased,
meaning the words did not flow in that exact sequence but the meaning has not
been lost even after all these years.
I was not at the launch of Q-City but I bet similar
sentiments were not expressed in that the president did not see himself as
being in competition with industrious citizens whose entrepreneurial skills
have paid off.
Why am I making this frame of reference? Having seen
very recent pictures and videos on social media presenting Banjul and the sorry
state it is in; another aspect of Yaya’s vengeful nature is exposed yet again. Yaya
is typifies the classic egomaniac, but more than that he has been consumed by
hate and jealousy for most if not all of his life. Here was a man whose
ultimate goal for seizing power was to unleash misery and suffering on innocent
people because he blamed society at large for his humble beginnings and the
misfortunes that such a life wrought. Remember his attitude towards former
officials of the PPP government; the continuous reference to their “flamboyant
lifestyle” and how they beat their chest accompanied by “do you know who I am”
scenarios he referenced? That was the hate in him speaking and henceforth his
mission was; I go show them peppeh! Sadly,
“them” became every Gambian he viewed
as a threat to his primitive mode of consumption. “When they were practicing
their dirimo-cracy you benefitted and now you want to challenge ME?” That right
there embodies Yaya’s whole outlook on opposition and dissent. To the
Banjulians he said “now it is time for you to taste what the rest of us have
been enduring our entire lives.”
This attitude also, in part explains the neglect of
Banjul. You see, Yaya may be primitive, but he is shrewd. Yaya knew very well
that Banjul, or at least Banjulians benefitted the most under Sir Dawda;
remember he was close to that seat of power and was very abreast with the
comings and goings within the corridors of power. He will sweet talk the
capital into aligning with him but in his mind he was plotting to take
everything away from them, unless some direct benefit was in it for him. We dare
even go a little further and claim that the roads he built were partly a
political bait but partly because he needed to travel on them. That may be a
stretch but by now we have wizened up to know that we should never put anything
past him as being incapable of. Look at the Arch, a monument he dedicated to
himself and only he drove under it for the longest time.
An egotist like Yaya
likes to bask in his own perceived grandeur; just take a closer look at his
lifestyle and choices of material objects. I bet he drives on those roads, have
those street lights shone on him and thinks to himself, "wow I definitely made
it." Those items all served as reminders to him, who he was before July 22, 1994
and who he became. “Dekka bi maako morm” sums it all up for us. When he
inaugurated those street lights he claimed them to be his and categorically
stated that any driver who accidentally veers into one of them will pay for it. Even
his investments in Kanilai were just for him, he enjoyed having people grovel
at this feet and having the power to either give them or turn them away. Yaya’s
whole attitude was to thump his chest and say “I am the guy.” And since no one
else can claim such or be seen to be of similar status as him, his colleague
council members had to be eliminated, humiliated, or rendered irrelevant, all hail
Yaya the mighty Babilimansa!
So those claiming that “this is how Yaya started and
became a dictator”; in reference to President Barrow, take a closer look and
you will see that from the get go, Yaya was never well meaning or well
intent. Yaya was a vengeful egomaniacal tyrant. Ask those who knew him
from childhood and through his adult life and you’ll see a man full of himself.
Even in the Gendarmerie, his mates will tell you he took pleasure in “punishing”
arrestees which included beatings; the man likes to exert authority and likes being
on top.
Seeing folks trying to paint a saintly picture of
benevolence go to show how misunderstood Yaya the man was, he is a case study for
psychologists. Or are such attempts at drawing similitudes with President
Barrow out of insincerity and selfishness? I am not saying President Barrow is
perfect, incorruptible or beyond reproach, but going so far as saying there is
no difference between him and Yaya is a manifestation of ignorance as to who
Yaya really was, or that one does know who Yaya was but out of some personal
motive tries to make comparisons where none exists.
With an independent city council about to emerge, the Mayoress will have all of the tax money collected in Banjul used to give a face lift to the city and hopefully with a generous augmentation from the central government.
This was just a simple reminder, a dedication lest
we forget! We will NEVER forget.
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