Gambi In The West Africa-South America Drug Network Part One
Aug 8, 2008, 11:46
Banjul, The Gambia Journal
United Nations estimates that at least 50 tons of cocaine is shipped through various states in West African region every year. South American drug traffickers are now known to be using select West African countries as transit points for onward smuggling of cocaine for distribution in Europe of. An arrest of five suspects - three Venezuelans and two Bissau nationals - was made after at least a plane believed to have arrived from South America was seized last month carrying 500 kilograms of cocaine. Also last month, July 13th to be precise, a Cessna plane made an unauthorized landing at Lungi Airport, near Freetown in Sierra Leone loaded with 600 kilos of cocaine. Armed men later forced themselves through the airport and escaped with both the drugs and the crew. A group of men, including nine foreigners, many of them South Americans are said to be helping the police in the investigations

Govrnment Turn Down Offer Of Soft Ware Tool
Aug 4, 2008, 00:23
Banjul, The Gambia Journal
Last month the Gambia Journal ran a series of article on the stated intention of the Central Bahenk of the Gambia to fight money laundering. Speaking at a Banking and Finance Exposition held at Paradise Suit Hotel last month, the Deputy Governor of the bank Mr. Basiru Njie revealed that the bank was setting up a Financial Intelligence Unit, FIU, charged with the responsibility of collecting, analyzing and disseminating information on suspicious transactions. At he time, we noted that, “ It is not certain when and why the bank suddenly appeared to have waken up to what has been bandied about by commentators and many in the genera public for about a year now.” The widely held public belief is that money laundering was responsible for the mysterious appreciation of the dalasi from the he middle of last year. The most widely held belief is that a feigned transaction involving the sale of half the shares of two public owned telecommunications companies Gamtel and Gamcel, allowed lots of dubiously acquired funds to be transferred into the country. We wrote then that . “There it will be laundered clean and returned back to the owners.” We also wrote, the, that , “ So many Gambians in principle support any effort by the authorities to combat money-laundering. The problem is that few believe that the authorities are genuinely interested in fighting it.”
In that article we also noted that. “It was not until after the mission of the IMF staff of May 2008 that the authorities started talking of money laundering.” We also wrote that, “Many who know what money laundering is firmly believe that it has been going on with the knowledge and complicity of President Jammeh and some of his closest cronies.”
Well recently The Gambia Journal has learnt that the Gambian government has recently turned down an offer from the UNODC, United Nations Office on Drug and Crime, to have the Central Bank of The Gambia, to install an anti money-laundering software to be abreast with latest tracking technology against organized global crime. The installation, would have made the country join others in acquiring benefits of goAML software which processes financial intelligence information, analyze large volumes of data and report suspicious money transactions.
The software was developed by UNODC’s Information Technology Service (ITS) which specializes in the development, deployment and support of software applications for use by Member States in the fight against illicit drugs and crime. The goAML software, as well as other products in this family, are part of UNODC's strategic response to crime, particularly serious and organized crime. In today’s global economy, a financial correspondent told The Gambia Journal, terrorist financing and money-laundering have attracted much international attention and all governments have to be seen taking active part in the struggle against them. He added that money-laundering and the financing of terrorism are global problems that threaten the security and stability of financial institutions and also lead to undermining economic prosperity. A lot is being done in order to combat money laundering at the global level.

Jammeh Says He Will Not Distabilise Senegal
Jul 28, 2008, 21:30
Banjul, The Gambia JournaI
In an audience he gave last week to Senegalese Prime Minister, Cheikh Hadjibou Soumaré, who was in Banjul to grace the commemoration of the 14th anniversary of the July 22nd coup that brought him into power, President Yahya Jammeh expressed his government’s determination to maintain friendly relationship with the government neighboring Senegal . According to reports monitored on GRTS news in Banjul , Mr. Jammeh told the Senegalese Premier that The Gambia and Senegal enjoy a rare opportunity to serve as an example, as they can form the building block for possible regional, and then continental unification. He also affirmed his position as a “pan-Africanist” who wants Africa to be united and not divided.

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