Sports minister Alieu Jammeh |
Sports minister Alieu Jammeh yesterday urged the GNOC
leadership and its feuding partner, the opposition camp, to quit running or
having any interest in running the National Olympic Committee, since both sides
have demonstrated that they cannot work in unity and are derailing the massive
financial and human resource investment government and President Yahya Jammeh,
in particular, have been doing to uplift sports in the country.
‘Since 2008 to date, a colossal D100 million has been spent
by the president and his government in sport,’ Jammeh told journalists at a
press conference, adding that the current bickering and negative developments
such as the GNOC saga are not helping the nation.
‘For far too long we have been asking for common sense in the GNOC matter. Government has been very patient, engaging and seeking unity of purpose in sports throughout the country, but the response had not been positive.
‘The past weeks have shown there is no sign of that unity in
the GNOC saga, and time has come for us to hold the bull by the horns. I’m
calling on all those concerned, all the actors, to voluntarily retire to enable
others take over in the interest of the athlete, the youth and the nation.’
The minister further made it clear that Government would not
be found wanting in its responsibility, as there is a lot of work to be done in
Gambian sports to uplift it to the level that we all desire.
‘Fighting, bickering and rancor is not taking us anywhere,’
the minster said.
He repeated that his ministry is not and will not take sides
with any group in this saga, but will protect the interest of the athlete. He
said the decision to put aside the recommendations of the Sports tribunal
report was done in the spirit of oneness which led to a six-point agreement it
its place.
‘But while the rest of the six-point agreement has been
effectively implemented, the last clause which calls for the warring parties to
prepare to hand over to a younger generations, has not been honoured. We did
not put a timeframe to it because we know succession is a tedious process and
so we leave it to the goodwill of the parties to work on some agreement. If
they were genuine, they could have started working on that a long time ago,’ he
said.
Mr Jammeh further said the parties could have worked on
sharing positions; elect a president here, a vice president from there, as a
way of compromise, but nothing has happened; and now that the court has been
involved, and we may end up arguing for the next three years on who becomes the
president of the GNOC.
‘Where is that going to get us in our sport?’ he asked.
‘So our position now is for them to leave peacefully and
quietly, because government at some stage must take its rightful position. I do
not want to speculate on that, but government in consideration of all dynamics,
internal and external must take its rightful position in any matter that is
going out of control. Our message at this stage is that since they have
demonstrated that they cannot work together, let them leave as a first move,’
he emphatically stated.
Asked specifically which people he is calling on to go, Mr
Jammeh said he meant the GNOC leadership and its opposition camp.
“I have gone out of my way to personally engage people one
to one to seek a common purpose in this saga, but to no avail. As a government,
when you delegate responsibilities and felt they are not been carried out
properly, you take your right position and that is what we are doing now,’ he
concluded.
The press conference took place at the Independence Stadium,
and there was also an appeal to the media to help disseminate positive and
accurate information.
Author: Lamin Cham of ThePoint Newspaper
Source: Picture: Sports minister
Alieu Jammeh
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