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Saturday, October 30, 2010

NOTICE OF AMOUD FOUNDATION EVENT IN LONDON

NOTICE OF AMOUD FOUNDATION EVENT IN LONDON
NOTICE OF AMOUD FOUNDATION EVENT IN LONDON
Oct.30 - (alnuur)-Amoud Foundation of Dallas, Texas, USA, is holding a very important event in London.

All Somali residents in London and surrounding areas are invited.

Where: The Resource Centre
356 Holloway Road
London, N7 6PA

When: November 6, 2010

Time: 4:00PM-10:00PM

Contacts: Hassan M. Khalif 07904045422
Mohamoud Omer Hussein (Aw Bash Bash)07949031031
Mohamed Ali (Gabiley) 07539305008
Mohamoud Abdillahi (Dhagafiiq) 07983412173
Ruqiya Abdi Khalif 02088458412

Speakers: Mohamoud Farah Egal, Founding President
Yussuf Aden Kalib, Vice President and cofounder

Human suffering does not discriminate and knows no clan or kin. Amoud Foundation has been fighting it in many fronts for the past twelve years- from Borama, Hargeisa, Burao, Bacaadwayne, Afgoye, and beyond. Much has been accomplished and yet there are miles to go because the need is so great and pervasive. Please join us to learn and lend a hand.

Sunday, October 24, 2010

TLC Executive holds first meeting with Tol Sultans

TLC Executive holds first meeting with Tol Sultans

MINNEAPOLIS/BORAMA, OCTOBER 22, 2010–The Executive Committee of the Tol Leadership Council (TLC) and the Tol Sultans in Borama agreed on the need for a strong, united and innovative leadership that could effectively meet the current and future challenges facing the Tol community.

Attending the meeting held through telephone conference on October 13, 2010 were TLC Chairman Prof. Ahmed Ismail Samatar, and the two Vice Chairs, Mr. Abdiwahid Sh. Osman and Yussuf Adan Kalib; while Sultan Abdirahman Jama Dhawal, Sultan Ibrahim Jama Samatar, and Sultan Baade Hassan Hadi were present on the Sultans side.

The TLC leadership briefed the Sultans on the TLC’s long term vision and mission and the Sultans conveyed their insights about the condition of the TOL and the hardships facing the community, especially in the area of the improvement of the infrastructure such as roads and the development of   local maritime facilities. 

Both sides agreed that without strong unity and very competent and innovative leadership, none of the challenges could be met effectively. 

“The TLC leadership and the Sultans had a substantive discussion in which they listened to each other with high attentiveness, solicitous fraternal spirit, and palpable eagerness to break the ground for genuine civic solidarity,” said Prof. Samatar, commenting on the atmosphere in which the meeting was held.

TLC leadership and the Sultans had agreed on the need to:

  1. Drill deep into our people the principle distinction between tribalism or clanism and tolnimo –one that is simultaneously essential for the cohesion of the Gadabursi Tol and brings enormous concrete benefits to them as well as to the Somali communities near and far.

  2. Aim to build our region’s material, intellectual, and political capacity

  3. Contribute to the legitimate welfare (i.e. justice, peace, and prosperity) of Somaliland

  4.   Keep a wakeful eye on the overall condition of the Somali people.

Both sides recognized and underscored the need for close and ongoing cooperation between TLC and the TOL traditional leadership. They also agreed that the TLC should formulate protocols for future mutual consultations between the two sides.

Saturday, October 23, 2010

WikiLeaks: At Least 109,000 Killed During Iraq War



The whistle-blowing website WikiLeaks today released a trove of classified reports that it said documented at least 109,000 deaths in the Iraq war, more than the United States previously has acknowledged, as well as what it described as cases of torture and other abuses by Iraqi and coalition forces. 

The reports detail 109,032 deaths in Iraq, comprised of 66,081 'civilians'; 23,984 'enemy' (those labeled as insurgents); 15,196 'host nation' (Iraqi government forces) and 3,771 'friendly' (coalition forces)," WikiLeaks said in a statement regarding the documents' release. "The majority of the deaths (66,000, over 60 percent) of these are civilian deaths. That is 31 civilians dying every day during the six-year period."
The new documents covered 2004 through 2009, WikiLeaks said, with the exception of May 2004 and March 2009.
A review of the documents by Iraq Body Count, an advocacy group that long has monitored civilian casualties in the war, found 15,000 previously unknown civilian deaths, according to WikiLeaks -- a detail first reported in The Guardian newspaper, one of a handful of international news organizations that got an advance look at the documents.
The U.S. military long has maintained that it does not keep an official death tally, but earlier this month following a Freedom of Information Act request, the Pentagon said some 77,000 Iraqis had been killed from 2004 to mid-2008 -- a shorter period than that covered by WikiLeaks.
Besides the different time periods, the New York Times, which also saw the WikiLeaks documents early, noted that "some deaths are reported more than once, and some reports have inconsistent casualty figures."
Al Jazeera, which also got an advance look at the documents, reported a total of 285,000 war casualties on its Arabic-language website, a number that included both dead and wounded. It also reported that the documents said 681 Iraqi civilians were killed at U.S. checkpoints, 180,000 Iraqis were arrested during the war and 15,000 Iraqis were buried without being identified.
The massive leak of 391,832 documents at 5 p.m. ET today, which WikiLeaks billed as "the largest classified military leak in history," followed WikiLeaks' similar but smaller release on the war in Afghanistan.
The new release was anticipated by the Pentagon, which has warned that publicizing the information could endanger U.S. troops.

Friday, October 22, 2010

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

West turns to Somaliland while rest of Somalia crumbles (Feature) By Michael Logan Oct 19, 2010, 3:06 GMT

Hargeisa, Somalia - In the centre of Hargeisa, the capital of the self-proclaimed state of Somaliland, a Soviet-era MiG jet sits atop a brightly painted plinth.
Its squat, deadly body is a reminder of the destruction dictator Mohamed Siad Barre ordered visited upon the city as Somaliland fought for independence from Somalia in the 1980s.
But beyond the memento of the bloody past, the scaffold-bristling skeleton of a multi-storey building rises into clear blue skies that once rained bombs.
The building - the new headquarters of Dahabshiil, a booming money-transfer company handling hundreds of millions of dollars in remittances from the diaspora - symbolizes a brighter future and shows why the international community is taking increasing notice of Somaliland's efforts.
Somaliland declared independence in 1991 when Barre was ousted. Since then, it has rebuilt Hargeisa and recast itself as a bastion of stability and democracy.
It is a stark contrast to the rest of Somalia, where Islamist insurgents lay siege to the latest ineffective government in the south and pirates based in the breakaway region of Puntland terrorize international shipping in the Gulf of Aden.
Just a few months ago, Somaliland held a presidential poll international observers deemed credible - a feat regional states such as Rwanda and Ethiopia couldn't pull off.
Ahmed Mohamed Silanyo, the new president, slashed his cabinet and filled key posts with Western-educated technocrats. In response, dozens of representatives from the United Nations, European Union and the World Bank trundled through Hargeisa in a dusty convoy last week to discuss development with the new administration.
The UN estimates Somaliland receives close to 100 million dollars each year in aid - almost a third of what goes into Somalia and twice the budget of the Somaliland government.
Marc Bowden, the UN's Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator for Somalia, believes this could double next year.
'As people see the capacity and opportunity, I'm sure funding will increase,' he said.
The United States, which recently announced it will work more closely with Somaliland and Puntland, put 7 million dollars into Somaliland in 2009 through its aid wing USAID. By the end of this year that figure will have almost quadrupled.
Washington, concerned about the Islamist terrorism threat, has focused its support for Somalia on the Transitional Federal Government in the war-wracked capital Mogadishu.
The conflict, which has killed over 21,000 people and displaced over a million people since early 2007, has only intensified. The al- Qaeda-linked group al-Shabaab and its allies now control much of south and central Somalia.
Somaliland insists that, if supported, it can serve as a buttress against radical Islamism and fight piracy. Minister of Mining, Energy and Water Resources Hussein Abdi Dualeh, a Somali-American, believes the new US approach shows the message is getting across.
'The US has for some time been wasting money on ... Mogadishu,' he said. 'I think they realized ... aid we get here will not be torn up by shrapnel.'
Washington may be impressed by Somaliland's efforts, but al- Shabaab is not.
It killed around two dozen people in suicide bomb attacks in Hargeisa in October 2008. Today, concrete barriers shield hotels and government offices from car bombs and dozens of police toting automatic weapons protected the visiting delegation.
Although donors are upping their funding, there is a limit to what they can do while Somaliland remains unrecognized.
Much of the World Bank's funding mechanisms are out of reach due to Somalia's massive debt, bilateral relations are not possible and getting insurance and guarantees for exports is an uphill battle.
'The main problem is the recognition,' said Guelleh Osman Guelleh, who runs a business exporting Frankincense and Myrrh to France. 'It`s a big disadvantage being placed in the same bracket as the rest of Somalia.'
Somalilanders believe they should be recognized given the former British protectorate was briefly independent in 1960, before joining with Italian Somaliland to form Somalia - a decision they still regret.
'That other African states would then declare independence is used as an excuse, but Somaliland has been a nation state before,' said Foreign Minister Mohamed Abdullahi Omar.
Somaliland`s economy is dominated by livestock - the port of Berbera exports the largest number of livestock through a single port in the world - and diversification is seen as crucial.
Aid officials say developing the Berbera transport corridor to Ethiopia would boost the economy, while the private sector - thriving =in telecommunications and money transfer - has significant promise. = According to Dualeh, huge deposits of oil, gas and minerals are waiting to be exploited once issues of concessions handed out to foreign companies under the Barre regime are resolved.
Despite this promise, there is a long way to go.
In Hargeisa, mansions built by returning diaspora sit cheek-by-jowl with makeshift huts housing displaced people. Rubbish litters the side of roads that are little more than compacted sand. Somaliland faces huge unemployment, poverty, cyclical drought and a widespread debilitating addiction to the narcotic Khat leaf.
Yet many believe that given the right backing, the self-proclaimed state of 3.5 million people could disprove the notion that Somalia - which routinely tops the list of the world`s failed states - is beyond help.

Friday, October 15, 2010

Misfar misfortune: 900 children abandoned in Egypt by Saudi fathers

Misfar misfortune: 900 children abandoned in Egypt by Saudi fathers

By FATIMA SIDIYA | ARAB NEWS
JEDDAH: About 900 children born to Egyptian women and Saudi men in what is commonly known as “misfar” or “tourist” marriages are abandoned by their fathers, said an Egyptian activist at a recent forum on human trafficking.
Speaking at the conference in Egypt, Aiman Abu Akeel, chairman of the board of trustees of the Maat Foundation for Peace and Development, said that the majority of men who visit Egypt looking for misfar marriages tend to be Saudi, followed by Iraqis, and that the women they marry are predominantly younger than them.
“Misfar” marriage refers to a union contracted so that a woman may join her “husband” for the period of time he travels in a foreign country.
The women in such unions are divorced after a short time ranging from a week to a month, the Egyptian newspaper Al-Yaum Al-Sabi reported.
Speaking at the same forum, Azza Al-Jazaar, the general organizer of the Anti-Trafficking of Egyptian Girls program, said that these young women do not know they are being treated like commodities.
Their fathers receive up to 4,000 Egyptian pounds from these men for trading off their girls, she said, adding that most of these girls are below 16 years of age.
Statistics show that some SR100 million are spent on misfar marriages, which last for not more than a month, with 90 percent of Saudi fathers leaving behind children born out of such relationships.
However, Najeeb Al-Zamil, founder of the Back to the Roots Foundation, a nongovernmental organization that helps Saudi children abroad, said that although there are many such children in Arab countries, their suffering is less than that experienced by children born in non-Arab countries.
He added that these men abandon their families and children, as they fear what their relatives in the Kingdom will think.
He also said that while some children live in miserable conditions and turn to drugs and illegal activities, there are others who have become models and actors. He added that some of these children are smart and get educated, but they feel lost because of unrecognized parenthood.
“I met one Saudi-Filipino girl who said she has everything but feels she has nothing because her father doesn’t recognize her, while another said she feels like a puzzle with a missing piece. She said she wants her father to feel proud of her,” he said.
Al-Zamil, a member of the Shoura Council, said he has called for DNA tests to be recognized as a legitimate means of determining kinship, something that would force a father to admit parenthood. He also said that many of these children are not in need of financial aid nor do they want to come to the Kingdom but are desperate to be recognized.
There are 47 Saudi-Filipino children registered with the Saudi Embassy in Manila, but Al-Zamil believes their actual number is much higher with more people contacting them daily.
Saudi lawyer Ibrahim Al-Zamzami criticized women who do not bother registering their marriages, adding that this is what complicates matters. “If a woman has a marriage contract and witnesses, and if the child’s birth certificate states that the child is born after a legitimate relationship, authorities can force the father to accept the child as his,” he said.
“Even though the father violated the law that prevents him from marrying a non-Saudi without approval, this does not mean that any children from such a marriage will not be registered at the Ministry of Interior,” Al-Zamzami said.
He added that Saudi embassies have been advised to register children and issue temporary travel documents that allow fathers to bring their children to the Kingdom and arrange passports and ID cards for them.
Al-Zamzami said that fathers, however, could be punished for violating the law and that this could be in the form of a travel ban or a prison sentence.
Sheikh Abdul Aziz Al-Asheikh, grand mufti of Saudi Arabia, has warned against misfar marriages saying they are not different from “mutaa” marriages, which are conducted to fulfill desires unlawfully.
Al-Asheikh said traveling abroad to marry with the intention of divorcing upon return is not permitted in Shariah, and said such acts would have detrimental effects on society, women and children from such unions.

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

The journey of Ismael

His name is Ismael Khalif Abdulle. He's 18 years old. And his story...is both harrowing and inspiring. Michelle Shephard reports.
Date: October 09, 2010 - 12:01 AM
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Dr.Abdusalan H.Omer iyo VOA Somali

Minn. Muslims condemn extreme views of local imam


Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Watch Chile miner rescue live

Macdan qodayaasha Chili

Watch Chile miner rescue live

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/southamerica/chile/8059674/Watch-Chile-miner-rescue-live.html

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Should the U.S. Help Break Up Somalia?

Should the U.S. Help Break Up Somalia?

741752702.jpgLast month, the United States announced a new policy toward Somalia. In a September 24 press briefing in New York City, Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs Johnnie Carson said that the U.S. would "work to engage more actively with the governments of Puntland and Somaliland," two autonomous regions within Somalia. This ends the U.S. policy of relating exclusively to Somalia's transitional federal government (TFG), which can be described as the country's central government only if "central" is understood to mean controlling several blocks of the capital with the help of 7,000 foreign soldiers. The change was driven by escalating violence in Somalia's south from the al-Qaeda-aligned militant outfit al-Shabaab, the TFG's clear ineffectiveness, and the relative security that both Somaliland and Puntland have enjoyed. Though this new policy falls far short of recognizing Somaliland's long-sought independence, thus creating a new African state and fundamentally reshaping the Horn of Africa, some observers believe the U.S. should now give independence a closer look.

The U.S.'s hope is that by engaging Somaliland and Puntland, those regions will be better equipped to contain the spread of violence. Carson made this clear, saying that both regions are expected to "be a bulwark against extremism and radicalism that might emerge from the South." He continued, "We hope to be able to have more American diplomats and aid workers going into those countries on an ad hoc basis to meet with government officials to see how we can help them improve their capacity to provide services."

Though Somaliland declared its independence on May 18, 1991, it is not internationally recognized; Puntland declared itself an autonomous state in 1998, but has not sought outright independence. Carson, by referencing these regions as countries, drew questions from reporters on whether the U.S. was contemplating diplomatic recognition of them as independent states. He replied that the U.S. "still recognized only a single Somali state." But Somaliland's representatives believe the U.S.'s policy shift does not go far enough.

I spoke with Saad Noor, the North American representative of the Republic of Somaliland, who believes that as long as its independence is not recognized Somaliland's relative stability will be in jeopardy. He noted that, at present, Somaliland cannot engage with international institutions such as the World Bank, IMF, or even the Universal Postal Union. Noor also pointed to businesses' hesitancy to engage in the region because Somaliland's status as an unofficial country makes it difficult to insure their investments. Without recognition, Noor claimed, "our people's hopes and adherence to the state will erode day to day. If you cannot employ and educate the young men and young women, if you cannot build roads, if you cannot bring businesses that provide jobs, everything will be in a state of continuous deterioration."

Noor is also unhappy that the U.S. is explicitly linking its Somaliland and Puntland policies. "Puntland never left the union," he said. "Puntland still flies the flag of Somalia and uses the same currency. They say that they would like to have a federal republic of Somalia."

Most of the scholarship to date regarding Somaliland's independence supports U.S. recognition. Peter J. Schraeder made the case in a piece he wrote for the Center for Strategic and International Studies, and Matt Bryden proclamed that Somaliland "looks like a state, smells like a state and tastes like a state." (Honestly, it makes more sense in context.) To be fair, ideas that are far from being implemented frequently have more public advocates than adversaries, and only garner more opposition once they look like they could become a reality.

I spoke to a few opponents of recognizing Somaliland to get a better sense of the debate. Abdulkadir Hashi, Puntland's State Minister for International Cooperation, called me from Puntland and voiced a fundamental philosophical objection. "The world is coming together," he said, pointing to the European Union as one example. "So it doesn't make sense for Somali people to be split up." Puntland thus does not seek independence, and opposes independence for Somaliland.

Another opponent of Somaliland independence is Abdiweli Ali, an associate professor of economics at Niagara University who has advised some of Somalia's political entities. Ali told me that geopolitical concerns include territorial disputes between Puntland and Somaliland, which he believes could make cause conflict. Some of the clans in these regions identify with Puntland rather than Somaliland, for example. In my conversation with Saad Noor, he brushed this concern aside, pointing out that Somaliland declared its independence almost twenty years ago. "Why haven't those bad things happened so far?" he asked.

Another objection that Ali raised is the precedent that Somaliland independence might set. "If you allow Texas to secede, how can you deny Oklahoma?" he asked. Advocates of Somaliland independence point to the fact that it once was an independent country: the former British Somaliland Protectorate gained independence on June 26, 1960, and was recognized by 35 countries before voluntarily forming a union with the former Italian Somalia five days later. Peter Schraeder wrore that Somaliland independence would not "call into question the African mantra of the 'inviolability of frontiers' inherited at independence." Instead, dissolving the union "would constitute a unique case of returning to the boundaries inherited from the colonial era."

While Abdulkadir Hashi acknowledges that Somalia's north has historically been short-changed by the government in the south, he told me: "I don't think that the grievances of the Somaliland people, great as they are, really justify secession." He suggests that there may be intermediate solutions short of independence, such as giving the country's presidency to Somaliland.

Whether or not recognizing Somaliland's independence is the right solution, the U.S. would do well to understand the challenges that the region confronts. As Noor said, "Somaliland is held up as a shining example because of its successful recent elections and security situation. But it could lose its shine. The situation is not sustainable unless the international community invests in it." And it is clear that the U.S.'s engagement with Somaliland and Puntland will only grow increasingly important, since the new U.S. policy is an acknowledgement that the TFG is not up to the challenges that confront it. So the policy is not just about Somaliland and Puntland: it is also about admitting to ourselves that the violence in the South will not end anytime soon, and searching for ways to contain its spread.

Image: Somaliland Minister of Foreign Affairs Abdillahi Mohamed Dualeh speaking at a 2007 press conference in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. By Jose Cendon/AFP/Getty.

Monday, October 4, 2010

Hargeysa( Waaheen) Suldaan Ismaaciil Suldaan C/raxmaan oo shalay Shir jaraa’id ku qabtay Hotelka Xaraf ee Hargeysa ayaa ka jawaabay Hadal uu Suldaan Xasan Suldaan C/laahi ku naqdiyay Hadal kale oo ay Salaadiinta Gobolka Awdal ugu digeen Xukuumadda Somaliland kadib markii ay Dadweynaha Gobolka Awdal ka cadhoodeen sababtii lagu bedelay Taliyihii Ciidamadda Xeebta Galbeed iyo eedo loo soo jeediyay dadka deegankaas oo la sheegay inay ku lug lahaayeen.

Halkan Ka Dhageyso  Maqal

shirkaasi jaraa’id ee uu shalay qabtay suldaan Ismaaciil suldaan C/raxmaan waxa uu ugu horayn faah-faahin kaga bixiyay ujeedada uu shirkaa jaraa’id u qabtay waxaanu yidhi “ waxa aan maanta shirkan jaraa’id u qabtay

  1. in aan raali gelin ka bixiyo,oo aan raali geliyo madax dhaqameedka Gobolka Awdal iyo bulsho waynta ay hogaanka u yihiin.
  2. shacabi-waynaha Beesha Habar Awal ee magacooda laga been abuurtay.


Sunday, October 3, 2010

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