donc comme je le disais recemment sur ce site je suis un eleve ayant reusssi son bfem. donc je viens sur c site pour poser certaine questions (concernant mes etudes mon avenir en general) afin d y trouver des reponses favorables.
donc l anne prochainne ICHALLAH JE SERAI EN SECONDE (L)
-DONC d ANS L AVENIR JE VOUDRAI ETRE UN PROFF D INFORMATIQUE ( avec un diplome international
)
*donc est il possible avec la serie que j ai choisie*
*pourrai je des lors faire ma formation informatique ou devrai-je attendre apres le BAC*
NB*TOUT EN CHASSANT QUE JE SUIS NUL EN DACTYLO POURRAIT IL ETRE UN INCOVENIA* CEPENDANT JE ne suis pas mal au clavier! je suis un peu rapide on me le dit tres souvent bref..
**y a t il des ecoles de formation? ou exactement?
(je tiens aussi pour cette occasion a remercier *AVIS* dont ces informations m ont ete d une grande itulite)
allez travaillez et arreter vos conneries. Avant de protester, vous devrez savoir ce que ces victimes ont fait pour merity la peine de mort. Au senegal on tue les gens sans etre inquiete.Cela ne peut pas se produire chez yaya diame.
Pour sauver la tête de Saliou Niang dont son exécution est imminent en Gambie, faites parvenir à sa famille de lui réciter 1000 fois par jour et 1000 fois nuit Basmallah c'est à dire Bismilahi Rahmani Rahimi tout court sans rajouter la Fatiha.
il se passe toujours des excecutions aux Etats Unis sans que personnes en parlent.En Arabie Saoudite des senegalais sont en attente d etre excecuter sans l intervention de personnes au Senegal.Pourquoi indexer Jammeh? Reflechissez bien sur les raisons.Que leur ame repose en paix.
En General les senegalais Son bete... Sarkoji a tue des freres lib... Et khadafi a c... De son proper intere un africain be pas manifeste comme ce yaya. Vs bavarde..
le gars en haut la ,tu nou parle darmer ki von aller capturer yaya en gambie ,,notre armee national casamance rek teu nalene guamay wakh gambie issshhhh ,
Johannesburg — In the little West African state of Gambia, prisoners on death row have run out of time. Gambia's president wants them all killed, and quickly, to show other would-be criminals that he is serious about crime despite carrying out no official executions for 25 years. The opposition and the international community suspect the president's motives might not be so noble. Yahya Jammeh, however, won't heed anyone else's counsel.
Eid al-Fitr, the festival that marks the end of month of Ramadan, is one of the most important days in the Islamic calendar. In spirit, it is a celebration of forgiveness and reconciliation. Families break bread, communities come together and presidents of Islamic countries deliver long-winded addresses on state television calling for national unity and peace and all that good stuff
Not Gambia's President Yahya Jammeh this year. "Many people were glued to their radios and televisions expecting to hear announcement (sic) of general amnesty in order to reduce anxiety and cultivate the spirit of reconciliation," wrote an editorial in the local Foroyaa newspaper.
Resplendent in full military fatigues, the autocratic leader of this tiny West African country (little more on the map than a splinter in Senegal's side) took a more punishing approach.
"By the middle of next month, all the death sentences would have been carried out to the letter," the president said last Sunday. "All those guilty of serious crimes and (who) are condemned will face the full force of the law. All punishments prescribed by law will be maintained in the country to ensure that criminals get what they deserve."
The death penalty has not been officially carried out in Gambia since 1985, though reports of secret killings abound. Amnesty International had gone so far as to classify the country as "abolitionist in practice", meaning that while the death penalty remained on the statute books it had stopped being used. There are 47 people on death row, and if Jammeh gets his way (he usually does), they'll all be executed by the end of September. Of these, an estimated 11 people are political prisoners, while others are thought to be mentally handicapped. Given the state of Gambia's judicial system, none of the death row inmates will have had access to a fair trial or appeal.
In his speech, Jammeh, who has ruled Gambia since seizing power in a military coup in 1994, explained his sudden decision as a reaction against an increase in violent crime. "It is going too far and I am going to put a stop to it and I don't want any religious leader to come and beg for clemency. Where are we heading to? It is unacceptable. I will carry the rule of law to the letter. Brutal killings will not be tolerated here, enough is enough, the killing is on the increase here I will set an example on all those who have been condemned."
The international community was quick to respond. Britain and France issued strongly-worded condemnations, while Amnesty International described the decision as a "giant leap backwards".
For once, the African community was just as quick to respond, and just as outraged. Nigeria's President Goodluck Jonathan said Jammeh's policy could spiral into a Rwanda-like genocide. The African Union, meanwhile, was uncharacteristically blunt in explicitly calling for Jammeh not to carry out his decision.
Not that it made much difference. In his comments on the issue, Jammeh didn't give himself much room for a change of heart, telling religious leaders that if he didn't go through with his threat he would start eating pork and drinking alcohol (both of which are strictly forbidden in Islam). He's not known for taking criticism well, having once told the BBC that his critics could "go to hell" because he feared "only Allah".
Sure enough, by last Friday Amnesty International had already received credible reports that nine people, including one woman, had been removed at night from their cells in the notorious Mile Two prison and executed.
Although the government has denied these reports, it seems unlikely that Jammeh will be tucking into bacon and beer any time soon.
According to his political opposition, Jammeh's sudden hard line stance on executions is less to do with the crime rate and more to do with maintaining his own power. "It frightens people," said Halifah Sallah, long-time opposition leader, to The New York Times. "It makes people be careful. People live in a state of uncertainty. Everybody gets worried."
Judging by the furor his new policy has caused, Jammeh has already achieved that much.
YAYA JAMMEH se croit intouchable en pratiquant des actes de barbaries sur les familles d ' autrui , ne sait pas qu ' il va payer , ainsi que sa propre famille vont en subir des conséquences de ses mauvais actes .
yahyah well done . the quran said if kill somebody u have to be kill tooooooooooooooooooooooooo. how do u guys feel if somebody kill one of your family ..
Yaya yaw dèfal li ngay def tè nopi le senegal ne pese rien sur le plan international partout au monde les tueurs sont tuès .Tamara on dis qu elle a verser de lhuile sur son mari si c est vrai elle le merite donc prions pour le repos de son ame
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22 Commentaires
Moi Meme
En Août, 2012 (13:13 PM)Door
En Août, 2012 (13:13 PM)Binta
En Août, 2012 (13:14 PM)Question
En Août, 2012 (13:16 PM)Eleve
En Août, 2012 (13:17 PM)bonjour me voici a nouveau sur ce site
donc comme je le disais recemment sur ce site je suis un eleve ayant reusssi son bfem. donc je viens sur c site pour poser certaine questions (concernant mes etudes mon avenir en general) afin d y trouver des reponses favorables.
donc l anne prochainne ICHALLAH JE SERAI EN SECONDE (L)
-DONC d ANS L AVENIR JE VOUDRAI ETRE UN PROFF D INFORMATIQUE ( avec un diplome international
)
*donc est il possible avec la serie que j ai choisie*
*pourrai je des lors faire ma formation informatique ou devrai-je attendre apres le BAC*
NB*TOUT EN CHASSANT QUE JE SUIS NUL EN DACTYLO POURRAIT IL ETRE UN INCOVENIA* CEPENDANT JE ne suis pas mal au clavier! je suis un peu rapide on me le dit tres souvent bref..
**y a t il des ecoles de formation? ou exactement?
(je tiens aussi pour cette occasion a remercier *AVIS* dont ces informations m ont ete d une grande itulite)
MERCI DE ME REPONDRE
Love Senegal
En Août, 2012 (13:17 PM)Hors Sujet
En Août, 2012 (13:18 PM)Kermel
En Août, 2012 (13:21 PM)Karamba1
En Août, 2012 (13:24 PM)Love Senegal
En Août, 2012 (13:26 PM)Zabata
En Août, 2012 (13:30 PM)il faut liberer les gambiens de ce tyran
c'est un fou capable de tout !!!!!!!!!!!
Urgent
En Août, 2012 (13:38 PM)Pour sauver la tête de Saliou Niang dont son exécution est imminent en Gambie, faites parvenir à sa famille de lui réciter 1000 fois par jour et 1000 fois nuit Basmallah c'est à dire Bismilahi Rahmani Rahimi tout court sans rajouter la Fatiha.
Inch'Allah savie sera épargné !
A partager
Alla Athiou
En Août, 2012 (13:39 PM)Ficastro
En Août, 2012 (15:09 PM)Afro
En Août, 2012 (15:33 PM)Jerom
En Août, 2012 (15:48 PM)Anonyme
En Août, 2012 (16:19 PM)You
En Août, 2012 (17:02 PM)Eid al-Fitr, the festival that marks the end of month of Ramadan, is one of the most important days in the Islamic calendar. In spirit, it is a celebration of forgiveness and reconciliation. Families break bread, communities come together and presidents of Islamic countries deliver long-winded addresses on state television calling for national unity and peace and all that good stuff
Not Gambia's President Yahya Jammeh this year. "Many people were glued to their radios and televisions expecting to hear announcement (sic) of general amnesty in order to reduce anxiety and cultivate the spirit of reconciliation," wrote an editorial in the local Foroyaa newspaper.
Resplendent in full military fatigues, the autocratic leader of this tiny West African country (little more on the map than a splinter in Senegal's side) took a more punishing approach.
"By the middle of next month, all the death sentences would have been carried out to the letter," the president said last Sunday. "All those guilty of serious crimes and (who) are condemned will face the full force of the law. All punishments prescribed by law will be maintained in the country to ensure that criminals get what they deserve."
The death penalty has not been officially carried out in Gambia since 1985, though reports of secret killings abound. Amnesty International had gone so far as to classify the country as "abolitionist in practice", meaning that while the death penalty remained on the statute books it had stopped being used. There are 47 people on death row, and if Jammeh gets his way (he usually does), they'll all be executed by the end of September. Of these, an estimated 11 people are political prisoners, while others are thought to be mentally handicapped. Given the state of Gambia's judicial system, none of the death row inmates will have had access to a fair trial or appeal.
In his speech, Jammeh, who has ruled Gambia since seizing power in a military coup in 1994, explained his sudden decision as a reaction against an increase in violent crime. "It is going too far and I am going to put a stop to it and I don't want any religious leader to come and beg for clemency. Where are we heading to? It is unacceptable. I will carry the rule of law to the letter. Brutal killings will not be tolerated here, enough is enough, the killing is on the increase here I will set an example on all those who have been condemned."
The international community was quick to respond. Britain and France issued strongly-worded condemnations, while Amnesty International described the decision as a "giant leap backwards".
For once, the African community was just as quick to respond, and just as outraged. Nigeria's President Goodluck Jonathan said Jammeh's policy could spiral into a Rwanda-like genocide. The African Union, meanwhile, was uncharacteristically blunt in explicitly calling for Jammeh not to carry out his decision.
Not that it made much difference. In his comments on the issue, Jammeh didn't give himself much room for a change of heart, telling religious leaders that if he didn't go through with his threat he would start eating pork and drinking alcohol (both of which are strictly forbidden in Islam). He's not known for taking criticism well, having once told the BBC that his critics could "go to hell" because he feared "only Allah".
Sure enough, by last Friday Amnesty International had already received credible reports that nine people, including one woman, had been removed at night from their cells in the notorious Mile Two prison and executed.
Although the government has denied these reports, it seems unlikely that Jammeh will be tucking into bacon and beer any time soon.
According to his political opposition, Jammeh's sudden hard line stance on executions is less to do with the crime rate and more to do with maintaining his own power. "It frightens people," said Halifah Sallah, long-time opposition leader, to The New York Times. "It makes people be careful. People live in a state of uncertainty. Everybody gets worried."
Judging by the furor his new policy has caused, Jammeh has already achieved that much.
Gambian Gal
En Août, 2012 (19:19 PM)Diop
En Août, 2012 (22:29 PM)Ce YAYA JAMMEH et con et pour la vie !!!!
Pyp
En Août, 2012 (02:52 AM)Gi
En Août, 2012 (06:21 AM)Participer à la Discussion