#Toufah Jallow
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Toufah Jallow, 27 ans, accuse l'ex-dictateur gambien, aujourd'hui exilé en Guinée équatoriale, d'avoir abusé d'elle en 2015.
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International Women's Day, 2023
International Women’s Day 2023 – in honor, and respect, of strong women, around the world. Portrait of rape survivor, human rights activist, and author, Gambian, Fatou ‘Toufah’ Jallow. Image ©Jason Florio/Helen Jones-Florio ‘Gambia – victims, and resisters’ Instagram Instagram Instagram Instagram Twitter Facebook Facebook For assignment queries, photography prints, and image licensing –…
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#Gambia#International Womens&039; Days#IWD#NeverAgainGambia#Portraits4PositiveChange#victims of Jammeh#West Africa#women empowerment
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Gambian Toufah Jallow tells of surviving rape by dictator - MyNorthwest.com
Toufah Jallow’s name resonates deeply in Gambia as one of the few women who has taken a public stand against sexual assault in the small West African state.
She gained fame at the age of 18 when she won a university scholarship in a national talent competition for young women. But in 2015 she fled Gambia, fearing for her life, after dictator Yahya Jammeh allegedly drugged and raped her, angry that she had turned down his marriage proposal.
She lived quietly in Canada, worried that Jammeh would persecute family members in Gambia. After Jammeh fell from power she later found the strength to go public with her story, despite Gambia’s culture of silence over sexual assault, she told The Associated Press.
The nation was riveted when she held a press conference to share her account via social media and in a human rights report in June 2019. She also testified months later to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.
Now, Jallow is telling her story in detail in a newly released memoir: “Toufah: The Woman Who Inspired an African #MeToo Movement.”
“In June 2015, Yahya Jammeh, then the president of The Gambia, raped me. He has never been charged. Never convicted … He thought he would get away with it, tried to erase me. I thought I would never speak of it, that I would remain invisible. We were both wrong, because I am here, shining like the sunrise of the melanated coast,” she writes. “I am Toufah Jallow. This is my story.”
In the book, co-written with journalist Kim Pattaway, Jallow describes her journey from the daughter and granddaughter of women who in their own way pushed against the country’s patriarchy to the evening of her alleged rape and her tense escape and the resulting traumas and challenges.
Jallow said she wants to be a role model for others who have experienced sexual assault and to help them deal with it.
“I wanted to make my life as relatable to young girls as possible so (they see) that what I did is achievable (and) is not seen as a miracle,” she said. “It takes an ordinary girl who grew up in a village somewhere in The Gambia with a mother and with 20 siblings in a polygamous home.”
Coming from a humble background, Jallow was swept into a high-profile role because of her scholarship, attending many public events with then-president Jammeh. After receiving gifts from Jammeh, who was already married, and rejecting his proposal to become one of his wives, Jallow was lured to the president’s private quarters, where she says he drugged and raped her.
Jammeh hasn’t reacted, but his party has denied everything.
Jallow didn’t tell a soul in Gambia, fearing the worst for herself and her family. She knew there were hundreds of people who had been arrested for daring to question Jammeh.
Terrified, Jallow fled Gambia. She hid her identity by wearing a niqab (head-to-toe veil) so that state agents wouldn’t recognize her. She went to Senegal and with the help of trusted allies made it to Canada where she now lives.
For years, no one in Gambia knew what had happened to Jallow. She lived as a refugee in Canada, working odd jobs to support her classes.
“For the longest time … I would always shove it aside,” she said of her trauma. But seeing statistics for sexual assault with so few being held accountable bothered her. “I have never felt more invisible,” she said of that period.
Speaking about sex and sexuality, “it’s just not done,” in Gambia, she said. There is not even a word for rape in her native Fula language, she explained to AP. Instead people use phrases like “Somebody fell on me.”
Jammeh lost elections and fled the country in 2017. Gambia then opened a Truth and Reconciliation Commission to investigate the reports of abuses and killings during his 22-year rule.
When Jallow came forward in 2019 about her assault, it unleashed a movement. More than 50,000 people were glued to social media when she first spoke. Women then marched holding banners saying “#IAmToufah” and there was an outpouring of others’ stories of rape.
Jallow speaking out was a “wind of change” in Gambia, said Marion Volkmann-Brandau, a women’s rights activist who helped guide Jallow and led the human rights investigation into sexual assault in Gambia that saw her come forward.
“There was this moment of support … women coming out generally about rape and having a story to share showed they weren’t invisible anymore,” she said. “Gambians realized too how widespread the issue was.”
That hope, however, has unfortunately dwindled, Volkmann-Brandau said, as the legal system must be reformed in order to take sexual assault seriously.
But the groundwork has been laid and Jallow has started the Toufah Foundation, set up to help support of survivors of sexual assault in Gambia. Her goal is to have Gambia’s first fully functioning women’s shelter.
Her name is now used to discuss rape in communities once unable to talk about it.
She travels to Gambia often, while studying in Canada to be a counselor for women and children victims, and is also working on a documentary that follows survivors of sexual violence.
And if Jammeh returns to Gambia, Jallow says she will fly there to confront him.
“I feel like I am too visible to be invisible anymore,” she said. “I have faced the worst fear … I have survived him physically.”
#Toufah Jallow#Gambia rape victims#“Toufah: The Woman Who Inspired an African#MeToo Movement.#Truth and Reconciliation Commission#rape#reporting rape#speaking out about rape#IAmToufah
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[TASK 184: THE GAMBIA]
In celebration of February being Black History Month and in celebration of February 18th being Gambian Independence Day, here’s a masterlist below compiled of over 310+ Gambian faceclaims categorised by gender with their occupation and ethnicity denoted if there was a reliable source. If you want an extra challenge use random.org to pick a random number! Of course everything listed below are just suggestions and you can pick whichever faceclaim or whichever project you desire.
Any questions can be sent here and all tutorials have been linked below the cut for ease of access! REMEMBER to tag your resources with #TASKSWEEKLY and we will reblog them onto the main! This task can be tagged with whatever you want but if you want us to see it please be sure that our tag is the first five tags, @ mention us or send us a messaging linking us to your post!
THE TASK - scroll down for FC’s!
STEP 1: Decide on a FC you wish to create resources for! You can always do more than one but who are you starting with? There are links to masterlists you can use in order to find them and if you want help, just send us a message and we can pick one for you at random!
STEP 2: Pick what you want to create! You can obviously do more than one thing, but what do you want to start off with? Screencaps, RP icons, GIF packs, masterlists, PNG’s, fancasts, alternative FC’s - LITERALLY anything you desire!
STEP 3: Look back on tasks that we have created previously for tutorials on the thing you are creating unless you have whatever it is you are doing mastered - then of course feel free to just get on and do it. :)
STEP 4: Upload and tag with #TASKSWEEKLY! If you didn’t use your own screencaps/images make sure to credit where you got them from as we will not reblog packs which do not credit caps or original gifs from the original maker.
THINGS YOU CAN MAKE FOR THIS TASK - examples are linked!
Stumped for ideas? Maybe make a masterlist or graphic of your favourite faceclaims. A masterlist of names. Plot ideas or screencaps from a music video preformed by an artist. Masterlist of quotes and lyrics that can be used for starters, thread titles or tags. Guides on culture and customs.
Screencaps
RP icons [of all sizes]
Gif Pack [maybe gif icons if you wish]
PNG packs
Manips
Dash Icons
Character Aesthetics
PSD’s
XCF’s
Graphic Templates - can be chara header, promo, border or background PSD’s!
FC Masterlists - underused, with resources, without resources!
FC Help - could be related, family templates, alternatives.
Written Guides.
and whatever else you can think of / make!
MASTERLIST!
F:
Hella Joof (1962) Serer Gambian / Danish - actress and director.
Adjoa Andoh (1963) Gambian / Ghanian - actress.
Aïssa Maïga (1975) Gambian, Senegalese / Malian - actress.
Ida Corr (1977) Gambian / Danish - singer-songwriter and producer.
Haddy N’jie (1979) Gambian / Norwegian - singer-songwriter, writer, and journalist.
Nabiha Bensouda (1980) Gambian, Malian, Moroccan / Danish - singer-songwriter.
Awa Manneh (1982) Gambian - singer.
Sona Jobarteh (1983) Gambian, Malian - singer-songwriter, guitarist, cellist, and kora player.
Elisabeth Carew (1985) Gambian / Norwegian - singer-songwriter.
Haddy Jallow (1985) Gambian - actress.
Aino Jawo (1986) Gambian / Finnish - singer and DJ.
Ida Molloy (1988) Gambian - youtuber (Joe and Ida).
Sabina Karlsson (1988) Gambian / Swedish - model.
Awa Cham (1988 or 1989) Gambian - model.
Elizabeth Lejonhjärta (1990) Gambian, Senegalese, Sierra Leonean / Sami, Tornedalian, Swedish - model.
Princess Shyngle (1990) Gambian / Ghanaian - actress and model.
Seinabo Sey (1990) Gambian / Swedish - singer-songwriter.
Victoria Lejonhjärta (1990) Gambian, Senegalese, Sierra Leonean / Sami, Tornedalian, Swedish - model.
Ajie Amie Gaye (1990 or 1991) Gambian - model.
Binta Dibba (1991) Gambian - model.
Joanna Jarjue (1993) Gambian - tv personality.
Ramatoulie Choi (1993 or 1994) Gambian - model.
Fatou Jobe (1994) Gambian - model.
Elizabeth Queeny Gomez (1994 or 1995) Gambian - model.
Amira McCarthy (1996) Gambian / Afro-Jamaican, Irish - singer.
Jainaba Sonko (1996) Gambian - model.
Emma Jeng (?) Gambian / English - actress.
Luana Kiara (?) Gambian, Swedish - singer.
Haddy Lowe (?) Gambian - model.
Isis Ashton (?) Gambian / Unspecified White - singer-songwriter.
Jariatou Touray (?) Gambian - model.
Hadijatou Glorious Njie (?) Gambian - model.
Maina BlackSkin (?) Gambian - model.
Juju (?) Gambian - instagrammer (jujuzaina).
Yanyima Konteh (?) Gambian - instagrammer and designer.
Bee Melvnin (?) Gambian - model.
Oumie Jammeh (?) Gambian - model.
Fatou "Toufah" Jallow (?) Gambian - model.
Maria Sawaneh (?) Gambian - model and Miss West Africa International.
Fafa (?) Gambian - singer (Abou & Fafa).
Sohpia (?) Gambian - singer.
Diha (?) Gambian - singer.
F - Athletes:
Beatrice Allen (1950) Gambian - baseball player.
Georgiana Freeman (1956) Gambian - sprinter.
Amie N’Dow (1958) Gambian - sprinter.
Jabou Jawo (1962) Gambian - sprinter.
Adama Njie (1978) Gambian - middle-distance runner.
Josephine Touray (1979) Gambian - handball player.
Fatou Tiyana (1987) Gambian - sprinter.
Saruba Colley (1989) Gambian - sprinter.
Mimosa Jallow (1994) Gambian / Finnish - swimmer.
Gina Bass (1995) Gambian - sprinter.
Isatou Jallow (1997) Gambian - footballer.
Penda Bah (1998) Gambian - footballer.
Victoria Decka (?) Gambian - sprinter.
M:
Louis Mahoney (1938) Gambian - actor.
Papa Susso (1947) Gambian - kora player and director.
Foday Musa Suso (1950) Mandinka Gambian - musician and composer.
Mulie Jarju (1957) Gambian - actor.
Jaliba Kuyateh (1957) Mandinka Gambian - musician.
Musa M'Boob (1963) Gambian - musician.
Tata Dindin / Ebraima Jobarteh (1965) Gambian - kora player.
Juldeh Camara (1966) Gambian - singer.
Tamsier Joof Aviance (1973) Serer Gambian / Serer Senegalese - actor, model, radio presenter, dancer, choreographer, and author.
David Jassy (1974) Gambian / Estonian - rapper-songwriter, singer, guitarist, pianist, percussionist, and producer.
Babou Ceesay (1979) Gambian - actor.
John Carew (1979) Gambian / Norwegian - actor and footballer.
Näääk / Matar Henrikki Samba (1983) Gambian / Finnish - rapper-songwriter and singer.
Adam Tensta (1983) Gambian / Finnish - rapper.
Maxim Bady (1992) Gambian - youtuber (MaximBady).
Ousman Sowe (1992 or 1993) Gambian - model.
Franz Drameh (1993) Gambian - actor.
Babou / Babou Nicolai Nelson Lowe (1994) Gambian / Danish - singer.
Saint / Mohammed Sillah (1997) Gambian - rapper-songwriter, singer, and producer.
Amie T Camara (1998 or 1999) Gambian - model.
Cameron N’Jie (1999) Gambian, Italian, Russian, English - model.
Victor Winston Whenzle (1999 or 2000) Gambian - model.
Muhamad Faal (2000) Gambian - actor, rapper, and filmmaker.
Dawda Jobarteh (?) Gambian - singer and kora player.
Yusupha Ngum (?) Gambian - singer-songwriter.
DR Olugander Abukpapa (?) Gambian - singer.
Lamin Saho (?) Gambian - singer and kora player.
Daniel Laemouahuma Jatta (?) Jola Gambian - musician.
Jalex Akuntu (?) Gambian - singer.
Muhammed bah (?) Gambian - model (instagram: muhamedbahmodel).
Mustapha Sey (?) Gambian - model.
Bai Babu (?) Gambian - rapper.
Abou (?) Gambian - singer (Abou & Fafa).
Manding Morry (?) Gambian - singer.
Jali Madi Kanuteh (?) Gambian - singer.
Killa Ace (?) Gambian - singer.
Jizzle (?) Gambian - singer.
Gee / Gibou Bala Gaye (?) Gambian - singer.
Dr. Olugander Abukpapa (?) Gambian - singer.
Jally Kebba Susso (?) Gambian - kora player.
Deejay Limbo (?) Gambian - singer.
ST (?) Gambian - singer.
T Smallz (?) Gambian - singer.
ENC (?) Gambian - singer.
Mighty Joe (?) Gambian - singer.
Vypa (?) Gambian - singer.
Jarck Boy (?) Gambian - singer.
M - Athletes:
Biri Biri / Alhaji Momodo Njie (1948) Gambian - footballer.
Bakary Jarjue (1949) Gambian - sprinter.
Matarr Jarju (1957) Gambian - wrestler.
Adama Damballey (1957) Gambian - wrestler.
Peter Ceesay (1959) Gambian - middle-distance runner.
Bakary Sanneh (1959) Gambian - wrestler.
Momodou Sarr (1959) Gambian - sprinter.
Paul Ceesay (1959) Gambian - middle-distance runner.
Mark Bright (1962) Aku Gambian / English - footballer.
Modou Sowe (1963) Gambian - footballer.
Abdurahman Jallow (1966) Gambian - sprinter.
Dawda Jallow (1966) Gambian - sprinter.
Ousman Sallah (1968) Gambian - long jumper.
Momodou Bello N'Jie (1969) Gambian - middle-distance runner.
Abdulieh Janneh (1970) Gambian - sprinter.
Lamin Marikong (1970) Gambian - sprinter.
Timo Uster (1974) Gambian - footballer.
Jatto Ceesay (1974) Gambian - footballer.
Samuel Kargbo (1974) Gambian - footballer.
Ousman Nyan (1975) Gambian - footballer.
Momar Njie (1975) Gambian - footballer.
Pa Mamadou Gai (1977) Gambian - sprinter.
Simon Barjie (1978) Gambian - footballer.
Assan John (1978) Gambian - sprinter.
Lamin Drammeh (1978) Gambian - sprinter.
Alpha Nyan (1978) Gambian - footballer.
Cherno Sowe (1978) Gambian - sprinter.
Momodou Drammeh (1978) Gambian - sprinter.
Bakary Gassama (1979) Gambian - footballer.
Njogu Demba-Nyrén (1979) Gambian - footballer.
Pierre Jallow (1979) Gambian - basketball player.
Edrissa Sonko (1980) Gambian - footballer.
Pa-Modou Kah (1980) Gambian - footballer.
Mattar M'Boge (1980) Gambian - footballer.
Ebrima Ebou Sillah (1980) Gambian - footballer.
Seyfo Soley (1980) Gambian - footballer.
Pa Dembo Touray (1980) Gambian - footballer.
Antouman Jallow (1981) Gambian - footballer.
Omar Jawo (1981) Gambian - footballer.
Alhaji Jeng (1981) Gambian - pole vaulter.
Lamin Conateh (1981) Gambian - footballer.
Mustapha Kamal N'Daw (1981) Gambian - footballer.
Abdoulie Corr (1982) Gambian - footballer.
James Ogoo (1982) Gambian - footballer.
Mamadou Danso (1983) Gambian - footballer.
Dawda Bah (1983) Gambian - footballer.
Modou Jagne (1983) Gambian - footballer.
Badou Jack (1983) Gambian / Swedish - boxer.
Matthew Mendy (1983) Gambian - footballer.
Amadou Jawo (1984) Gambian - footballer.
Pa Ousman Sonko (1984) Gambian - footballer.
Arthur Gómez (1984) Gambian - footballer.
Robert Badjie (1984) Gambian - footballer.
Yankuba Ceesay (1984) Gambian - footballer.
Assan Jatta (1984) Gambian - footballer.
Ismaila Jagne (1984) Gambian - footballer.
Aziz Corr Nyang (1984) Gambian - footballer.
Pa Amadou Gai (1984) Gambian - footballer.
Jaysuma Saidy Ndure (1984) Gambian - sprinter.
Jonathan Richter (1985) Gambian / Danish - footballer.
Cherno Samba (1985) Gambian - footballer.
Simon Richter (1985) Gambian / Danish - footballer.
Dawda Leigh (1986) Gambian - footballer.
Abdou Jammeh (1986) Gambian - footballer.
Mustapha Jarju (1986) Gambian - footballer.
Saihou Jagne (1986) Gambian - footballer.
Ebrahima Sawaneh (1986) Gambian - footballer.
Charlie Davies (1986) Gambian / Unspecified - footballer.
Alagie Sosseh (1986) Gambian - footballer.
Pa Saikou Kujabi (1986) Gambian - footballer.
Simon Sjödin (1986) Gambian - swimmer.
Kebba Ceesay (1987) Gambian - footballer.
Joseph Gómez (1987) Gambian - footballer.
Pa Dibba (1987) Gambian - footballer.
Ansumana Samateh (1987) Gambian - footballer.
Ebrima Jatta (1987) Gambian - footballer.
Ken Jammeh (1987) Gambian - footballer.
Momodou Ceesay (1988) Gambian - footballer.
Tijan Jaiteh (1988) Gambian - footballer.
Modou Jobe (1988) Gambian - footballer.
Demba Savage (1988) Gambian - footballer.
Ebrima Sohna (1988) Gambian - footballer.
Ousman Krubally (1988) Gambian - basketball player.
Bacari / Bubacar Njie Kambi (1988) Gambian - footballer.
Mustapha Carayol (1988) Gambian / Senegalese - footballer.
Ousman Koli (1988) Gambian - footballer.
Glenn Roberts (1988) Gambian - footballer.
Ousman Jallow (1988) Gambian - footballer.
Sanna Nyassi (1989) Gambian - footballer.
Abdoulie Mansally (1989) Gambian - footballer.
Mohammed Mbye (1989) Gambian - footballer.
Sainey Nyassi (1989) Gambian - footballer.
Karamba Janneh (1989) Gambian - footballer.
Omar Koroma (1989) Gambian - footballer.
Joe Sise (1989) Gambian - footballer.
Kuku / Mamadou Kanteh Danjo (1989) Gambian - footballer.
Pa Modou Jagne (1989) Gambian - footballer.
Omar Jatta (1989) Gambian - footballer.
Suwaibou Sanneh (1990) Gambian - sprinter.
Elhadji Bandeh (1990) Gambian - footballer.
Sainey Touray (1990) Gambian - footballer.
Kristian Brix (1990) Gambian / Norwegian - footballer.
Muhamed Keita (1990) Gambian - footballer.
Patrick Mendy (1990) Gambian - boxer.
Emmanuel Gómez (1990) Gambian - footballer.
Dawda Ngum (1990) Gambian - footballer.
Abdou Darboe (1990) Gambian - footballer.
Isaac Jones (1990) Gambian - sprinter.
Mathias Jørgensen (1990) Gambian / Danish - footballer.
Amando Aust (1990) Gambian - footballer.
Karamo Jawara (1990) Gambian - basketball player.
Moussa Bandeh (1991) Gambian - footballer.
Alagie Nyabally (1991) Gambian - footballer.
Paul Jatta (1991) Gambian - footballer.
Amadou Sanyang (1991) Gambian - footballer.
Haruna Jammeh (1991) Gambian - footballer.
Abdou Rahman Dampha (1991) Gambian - footballer.
Kabba-Modou Cham (1992) Gambian / Greek - footballer.
Seejou King (1992) Gambian - footballer.
Modou Barrow (1992) Gambian - footballer.
Ali Ceesay (1992) Gambian - footballer.
Lamin Samateh (1992) Gambian - footballer.
Omar Jagne (1992) Gambian - footballer.
Joshua King (1992) Gambian / Norwegian - footballer.
Seedy Bah (1992) Gambian - footballer.
Omar Colley (1992) Gambian - footballer.
Alieu Darbo (1992) Gambian - footballer.
Omar Jasseh (1992) Gambian - footballer.
Moses Mbye (1993) Gambian / Unspecified - rugby player.
Dawda Ceesay (1993) Gambian - footballer.
Nuha Barrow (1993) Gambian - footballer.
Adama Jammeh (1993) Gambian - sprinter.
Lamin Sarjo Samateh (1993) Gambian - footballer.
Mamut Saine (1993) Gambian - footballer.
Dennis Schröder (1993) Gambian / German - basketball player.
Nuha Marong (1993) Gambian - footballer.
Saihou Gassama (1993) Gambian - footballer.
Faye Njie (1993) Gambian / Finnish - judoka.
Sal Jobarteh (1993) Gambian - footballer.
Mouhammadou Jaiteh (1994) Gambian / Senegalese - basketball player.
Kekuta Manneh (1994) Gambian - footballer.
Aboubakary Kanté (1994) Gambian - footballer.
Modou Jadama (1994) Gambian - footballer.
Emil Sambou (1994) Gambian - footballer.
Assan Ceesay (1994) Gambian - footballer.
Bubacarr Sanneh (1994) Gambian - footballer.
Gregory Sambou (1994) Gambian - footballer.
Khaddi Sagnia (1994) Gambian - long jumper.
Hassane Kamara (1994) Gambian - footballer.
Jibril Bojang (1994) Gambian - footballer.
Pa Konate (1994) Gambian / Guinean - footballer.
Ismaila Jome (1994) Gambian - footballer.
Bubacarr Jobe (1994) Gambian - footballer.
Musa Yaffa (1994) Gambian - footballer.
Lamin Jallow (1994) Gambian - footballer.
Yusupha Njie (1994) Gambian - footballer.
Ibou Touray (1994) Gambian / English - footballer.
Bubacarr Trawally (1994) Gambian - footballer.
Ali Sowe (1994) Gambian - footballer.
Mohamadou Sumareh (1994) Gambian - footballer.
Hamza Barry (1994) Gambian - footballer.
Lamin Jawo (1995) Gambian - footballer.
Saidy Janko (1995) Gambian / Italian, Swiss - footballer.
Moussa Njie (1995) Gambian - footballer.
Dadi Gaye (1995) Gambian - footballer.
Bully Drammeh (1995) Gambian - footballer.
Mass Manga (1995) Gambian - footballer.
Saloum Faal (1995) Gambian - footballer.
Marian Sarr (1995) Gambian / Slovenian - footballer.
Alieu Jatta (1995) Gambian - footballer.
Ebou Kanteh (1995) Gambian - footballer.
Momodou Bah (1995) Gambian - footballer.
Ebrima Camara (1996) Gambian - sprinter.
Kaba Sambou (1996) Gambian - footballer.
Ebou Adams (1996) Gambian - footballer.
Leon Guwara (1996) Gambian / German - footballer.
Yusupha Bobb (1996) Gambian - footballer.
Sulayman Marreh (1996) Gambian - footballer.
Mustapha Njie (1996) Gambian - footballer.
Raymond Mendy (1996) Gambian - footballer.
Lamin Charty (1996) Gambian - footballer.
Noah Sonko Sundberg (1996) Gambian / Swedish - footballer.
Yankuba Jarju (1996) Gambian - footballer.
Sheriff Sinyan (1996) Gambian - footballer.
Muhammed Conteh (1996) Gambian - footballer.
Wilfried Sarr (1996) Gambian / Slovenian - footballer.
Sulayman Jallow (1996) Gambian - footballer.
Pap Jonga (1997) Gambian - swimmer.
Joe Gomez (1997) Gambian / English - footballer.
Mousa Balla Sowe (1997) Gambian - footballer.
Hamidou Bojang (1997) Gambian - footballer.
Folarin Ogunsola (1997) Gambian - swimmer.
Modou Badjie (1997) Gambian - footballer.
Ousman Manneh (1997) Gambian - footballer.
Sulayman Bojang (1997) Gambian - footballer.
Karim Jallow (1997) Gambian / German - basketball player.
Muhammed Badamosi (1998) Gambian - footballer.
Baboucarr Gaye (1998) Gambian - footballer.
Musa Barrow (1998) Gambian - footballer.
Alasana Manneh (1998) Gambian - footballer.
Pa Omar Babou (1998) Gambian - footballer.
Bakery Jatta (1998) Gambian - footballer.
Kalifa Manneh (1998) Gambian - footballer.
Ablie Jallow (1998) Gambian - footballer.
Bilal Njie (1998) Gambian - footballer.
Momodou Touray (1999) Gambian - footballer.
Alfusainey Jatta (1999) Gambian - footballer.
Ousman Marong (1999) Gambian - footballer.
Moussa Kamara (1999) Gambian - footballer.
Abdoulie Sanyang (1999) Gambian - footballer.
Ebrima Colley (2000) Gambian - footballer.
Modou Ndow (2000) Gambian - footballer.
Omar Sowe (2000) Gambian - footballer.
Adama Jammeh (2000) Gambian - footballer.
Musa Juwara (2001) Gambian - footballer.
Sang Ndong (?) Gambian - footballer.
Problematic:
J Hus / Momodou Lamin Jallow (1996) Fula Gambian - rapper-songwriter, singer, and model. - Convicted of attacking people with a knife.
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Youth Standing Up for Human Rights.
This year, we wish to dedicate Human Rights Day 2019 to the critical role of youth in social movements and celebrate youth standing up for human rights.
1. Introductory remarks by Assistant Secretary-General Andrew Gilmour
2. Remarks by the UN Secretary-General António Guterres
3. Kahoot! Game -- a knowledge-building mobile phone-enabled quiz testing the audience's knowledge of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and human rights in general
4. Video Message from the High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet
5. Panel discussion. Panelists:
- Feliciana Herrera Ceto from Ixil Region in Guatemala, a youth indigenous leader
- Fatou "Toufah" Jallow from the Gambia, activist against sexual violence
- Alexus Lawrence from New York, CUNY (City University New York) freshman engaged in activism for youth and children
- Carl Smith from the indigenous Yupiaq tribe in Alaska, USA
- Moderator: Jessica Stern, Executive Director of OutRight Action International
#Panel discussion#Universal Declaration of Human Rights#young people#Stand4humanrights#human rights day#10 december#human rights
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How to Humanize and Accept Survivor Stories
How to Humanize and Accept Survivor Stories
TOUFAH JALLOW: Hello is the camera on my good side?My name is Toufah Jallow, I am a [auto?] and an anti-rape activist. Um, I’m going to start with a prologue first in my book as a way of introducing who I am. It starts; “It’s December 2020. I’m sitting in front of a computer screen with my friend and colleague Marian Volkman Brando watching the rough edit of a short documentary we’re producing…
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"Memoirs of Womanhood by Emily Ratajkowski, Toufah Jallow and N. West Moss" by BY MELISSA FEBOS via NYT Books https://ift.tt/3mNs1fT
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Gambian Toufah Jallow tells of surviving rape by dictator
Gambian Toufah Jallow tells of surviving rape by dictator
DAKAR, Senegal (AP) — Toufah Jallow’s name resonates deeply in Gambia as one of the few women who has taken a public stand against sexual assault in the small West African state. She gained fame at the age of 18 when she won a university scholarship in a national talent competition for young women. But in 2015 she fled Gambia, fearing for her life, after dictator Yahya Jammeh allegedly drugged…
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International Women's Day 2021
International Women’s Day 2021
International Women’s Day 2021 – in honor, and respect, of strong women, around the world. Released today, on #IWD2021 ‘Who Do You Think You Are?’. In this 25-minute documentary, The Toufah Foundation offers an analysis of the Gambian Truth Commission’s (TRRC) proceedings in regard to sexual and gender-based violence. Using footage from the hearings, Toufah Jallow questions the predominant…
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#Gambia#IAMTOUFAH#Jammeh2Justice#Portraits4PositiveChange#survivors#Toufah Jallow#victims of Jammeh#West Africa
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The New Humanitarian | The Gambia’s ‘MeToo’ year breaks silence on rape
‘The culture of silence comes from family honour being more important than the survivor.’
The Gambia is beginning to confront a culture of silence around sexual violence, led by a group of women breaking taboos by revealing the alleged abuse they endured at the hands of some of the country’s once most powerful men.
The catalyst for change came in June last year when 23-year-old Toufah Jallow accused former president Yahya Jammeh of rape – a bombshell additional charge to a 22-year reign known for its extrajudicial executions, torture, and disappearances.
She was quickly embraced as the figurehead of The Gambia’s “MeToo” movement. Young activists created an #IamToufah hashtag and peacefully marched on the streets of the capital, Banjul, calling for an end to the silence on speaking out against rape.
“When Toufah Jallow came out, we saw more people share their stories of sexual abuse publicly,” said Sirra Ndow, who set up an online platform supporting survivors of sexual and gender-based violence. “The Toufah movement has given survivors courage.”
Jallow’s allegation was part of an investigation by the NGOs Human Rights Watch and Trial International. She went on to testify in October at The Gambia’s Truth, Reconciliation and Reparations Commission (TRRC), investigating human rights violations under Jammeh, who was overthrown in 2017.
Barriers and stigma
Rape is universally under-reported, but it is especially difficult for survivors to speak out in The Gambia’s close-knit and patriarchal society, where victim and perpetrator are often connected.
“The culture of silence comes from family honour being more important than the survivor,” said Haddy Mboge Barrow, a community nurse pioneering the development of the country’s response to sexual and gender-based violence.
“They think they are helping the survivor by not talking about it,” Barrow, coordinator of the Network Against Gender-Based Violence (NGBV), told The New Humanitarian.
“It’s a culture that really protects the perpetrator,” said Ndow. “Some of us in Gambia are in denial of the extent to which sexual violence happens.”
“I was saying to myself, ‘this is the most powerful man in Gambia, who am I for anybody to listen to’.”
But witness accounts at the TRRC of alleged sexual assault by former government officials and members of the security forces have exposed how sexual violence thrived under Jammeh – who is living in exile in Equatorial Guinea after losing the December 2016 presidential elections and being toppled by a regional military intervention a month later.
Jallow, who lives in Toronto, Canada, returned to The Gambia to give her eagerly awaited testimony to the TRRC on 31 October.
In her five-hour public hearing, she described in detail her accusation that the ex-president raped her at State House during a Ramadan festival, as punishment for not accepting his proposal that she become his second wife.
Jallow had allegedly caught his eye after winning a beauty pageant in 2014 when she was an 18-year-old college student.
“It was the longest night of my life, and I was saying to myself, ‘this is the most powerful man in Gambia, who am I for anybody to listen to’, and believe this; and where do I say this, and, when I say this, what am I expecting is going to happen?” she told the commission.
A system of impunity
Jallow’s feelings of powerlessness after the incident were echoed by other witnesses who spoke before her, as a picture emerged of a system that enabled men in positions of authority to sexually abuse women with impunity.
"He was taking advantage of how vulnerable girls were; he used that to abuse women,” said a former protocol officer, who spoke as an unidentified witness via a Skype audio link and explained how she had been enticed to work for Jammeh with the promise of a scholarship – as Jallow had been.
“He would give protocol officers some attention and gifts, sometimes a house or a car, but then treated them like his own property,” she said.
“It was an oppressive regime, clearly ruled by powerful men in an atmosphere of impunity, and Jammeh was showing the way,” Marion Volkmann-Brandau, a human rights consultant, told TNH. She led an 18-month investigation into sexual violence on behalf of Human Rights Watch and Trial International – a probe that informed the TRRC’s own inquries.
Even before meeting Jammeh, the former protocol officer said she had encountered attempted sexual assaults by a religious leader when she was aged 12, sexual harassment by a former government minister, and another attempted assault by a government official – who is still serving today.
“Poverty put us at high risk of abuse,” she told the commission.
“Most people don’t understand the psychological and emotional impacts, and sometimes the physical consequences of being raped.”
In December, the TRRC concluded its first year of publicly televised hearings. Its deliberate focus on sexual violence is all the more important because the culture that enabled the abuse did not disappear with Jammeh’s exile.
“These were crimes committed using the power and the resources of the state, but it also shines a light onto the wider societal problems [in The Gambia] that rape goes under-reported,” said Reed Brody, legal counsel for Human Rights Watch, which is part of the Jammeh2Justice Coalition, campaigning to bring Jammeh to trial.
Witnesses spoke of their sense of isolation after the incidents and how this had affected their mental health. “I’ve had overdoses; I cut myself; I wanted to get rid of myself,” the former protocol officer told the commission when asked how she had been impacted by her experiences.
“There’s not the appreciation of the gravity of sexual violence,” said Ndow, whose online platform supports survivors of sexual violence. “Most people don’t understand the psychological and emotional impacts, and sometimes the physical consequences of being raped.”
Backlash
Challenges remain in how victims who speak out are treated by the public, as they face the real risk of re-victimisation. The TRRC had to issue a warning that it would use the law to clamp down on those who discredit witnesses after a politically motivated backlash against witness Bintou Nyabally, who alleged she was raped by two Junglers – Jammeh’s notorious death squad – while in detention.
Jallow has also faced scorn from people trying to discredit her allegation. She is constantly attacked on social media, and told TNH that her family in The Gambia have been threatened.
She suspects Jammeh loyalists are behind the intimidation. At a rally in November, a spokesman for Jammeh’s APRC party, Ousman Rambo Jatta, appeared to directly threaten Jallow. "We are waiting for the recommendations of the TRRC. That's when we shall decide what path to take with you,” he reportedly said.
Speaking before her hearing, Jallow had said she was bracing for this reaction. But she felt compelled to testify, not just for herself, but to “address this epidemic [of sexual violence] that is so prevalent yet very discreet within [our] society”.
With the nation glued to their TVs and smartphones watching her testimony, Jallow seized the moment to challenge the culture of silence on rape.
“I had to redefine myself and tell my story in this culture and in this space, and to take whatever backlash comes with it, so that the next person will be getting lesser and lesser of a backlash,” she said in her concluding statement.
#Toufah Jallow#Yahya Jammeh#IamToufah#Truth#Reconciliation and Reparations Commission#rape#rape in Gambia#Gambia rape victims#victim blaming#rape culture
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Gambian Toufah Jallow tells of surviving rape by dictator
Gambian Toufah Jallow tells of surviving rape by dictator
DAKAR, Senegal (AP) — Toufah Jallow’s name resonates deeply in Gambia as one of the few women who has taken a public stand against sexual assault in the small West African state. She gained fame at the age of 18 when she won a university scholarship in a national talent competition for young women. But in 2015 she fled Gambia, fearing for her life, after dictator Yahya Jammeh allegedly drugged…
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'Former President raped me after I rejected his marriage proposal'
‘Former President raped me after I rejected his marriage proposal’
SITTING beside a banner with the words “The truth shall set you free”, Fatou Jallow, known as Toufah, recounted details of her alleged rape by Yahya Jammeh, the Gambia’s former president.
Her family listened in the hearing room of the Gambia’s Truth, Reconciliation and Reparations Commission.
“I know a lot of people will find it difficult to believe what I’ve said when you live in a culture…
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FORMER GAMBIAN BEAUTY QUEEN FATOU JALLOW CLAIMS FORMER PRESIDENT YAYHA JAMMEH RAPED HER
Former Gambian beauty queen Fatou ‘Toufah’ Jallow has publicly accused former president Yahya Jammeh of rape a few months ago. Back in 2013, the 23-year-old claimed that Jammeh raped her following her refusal of his marriage proposal. The Gambian government has established the “Truth, Reconciliation and Reparations Commission”(TRRC). Which is now investigating human rights violations under…
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Fatou 'Toufah' Jallow of the #IamToufah movement, The Gambia
Fatou 'Toufah' Jallow of the #IamToufah movement, The Gambia
Fatou ‘Toufah’ Jallow – the first woman to speak publically, without hiding her identity, about her rape ordeal with former Gambian president, Yahya Jammeh, at her parents’ home in The Gambia. Portrait ©Jason Florio / Helen Jones-Florio #Portraits4PositiveChange
Fatou ‘Toufah’ Jallow – “If there’s no seat at the table of power – let’s build our own! Our activism makes people uncomfortable…
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#Amnesty International#Gambia Has Decided#Human Rights#New Gambia#people#portraits#President Adama Barrow#West Africa#YOUTUBE. TRRC
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Beauty queen 'raped by Gambia's ex-President Jammeh' - BBC News
Beauty queen ‘raped by Gambia’s ex-President Jammeh’ – BBC News
A 23-year-old former beauty queen in The Gambia, Fatou “Toufah” Jallow, has said she was raped by ex-President Yahya Jammeh when he was in office.
Her testimony is part of a Human Rights Watch and Trial International report that details another alleged rape and sexual assault by Mr Jammeh.
The BBC tried to contact Mr Jammeh, who now lives in exile in Equatorial Guinea, about the allegations.
A…
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