Duufaan

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Everything posted by Duufaan

  1. I think the right word is Back stepping or pro colonial groups. For years they were working Malazawi and been proud of it. Malazawi just made clear his relationship with them. Just because he do not need them right now, somebody else is doing a better job for him. For Somaliland case, they go as far giving their doughther a way Here is Faroole sending letter to International community when he did not complain publicly in somalia http://horufadhi.com/2012/05/10/warbixintii-kooxda-hig-ay-ak-qortay-diiditaanka-faroole-ee-dastuurka-cusub-oo-faroole-cadeeyeywarqad-sir-ah/
  2. Mario B;825467 wrote: ^ PL is against everyone, if it were possible they would be against themselves too. lol That has been the case. puntland with Faroole does not have firends. the proplem is about the Roadmap process, not the conistition as they modified.
  3. Somali first do not be filty and watch your mouth, secondly your opinion or my opinion are not matter.
  4. Trouble with Somalia: Ex-premier’s view on elusive peace process Dr Ali Khalif Galaydh – former Somalia PM. He says he is pessimistic about the effectiveness of the peace talks orchestrated by the West and rushed in order to bring a ‘quick resolution’. For a man who was right in the hurly-burly of Somalia’s first attempt at uniting the country after the warlords’ reign of terror that followed the collapse of the central government in 1991, former prime minister Ali Khalif Galaydh cuts a laid-back if self-effacing figure, with a suaveness no doubt shaped by decades of travel and life in the United States. Having attended close to all national conferences called to chart a way out of the ‘Somali mess’, the erudite Dr Galaydh is under no illusion where the current peace effort, lauded internationally and increasingly seen as viable with an envisaged election later this year –the first in decades –is headed. “It is rushed, and an exercise in futility.” Dr Galaydh says that the international community has failed to wrap its head around the complexities that have for years stalked the elusive search for a functioning government in Somalia. One of the first Somalis to achieve a doctorate in the early 70s, he says the top-down approach that has been applied in Somalia fails to capture why a country rightly or wrongly believed to have few of the tribal or religious divides that haunt other African nations just cannot get its act together. He zeroes in on the fall of the all-powerful Siad Barre as the root cause. “Nobody inherited the mantle [of a national leader] or had any claim of being a nationally oriented opposition group,” he says in an interview, leading to a free-for-all clan-based warfare by warlords, including that of the feared Mohammed Farrah Aidid. Yet, Dr Galaydh adds, the seeds of this discord had already been sown by the imposition by its British and Italian colonial masters of a centralised government on a society that was pastoral and used to solving complex issues through simple institutions such as the powerful Gurti elders system. When the colonial powers, having had only a strategic interest in Somalia withdrew, the resulting vacuum was filled by the army in the absence of key functioning nationalistic institutions such as a civil service. This is the background that Dr Galaydh, who is cagey about his political interest in the run-up to elections, says the international community is missing, having found few sound nationalistic political parties and institutions to use as vehicles in the peace effort. Intervening attempts have largely fallen through with unhappy outcomes, with the collapse of one, the pseudo-government in 2006 led by the Ethiopia-allied warlord Abdullahi Yusuf, leading to the breakaway from the jihadist Islamic Courts of what is now Al-Shabaab, the terror group. “To this day there hasn’t been a decisive effort to bring back the different groups together,” says Dr Galaydh, adding that current roadmap is also doomed to fail because Somalis feel it has been imposed on them. “It is mostly civil servants and junior diplomats who are doing the Somalia stuff. You have one man who represents the UN, and in Nairobi a whole host of embassies that have the resources and capacity to call for national meetings,” he says. “Most of these are taking place outside Somalia while the main players, the Somali people are not engaged.” He particularly criticises the proposed system of picking an assembly to ratify a new constitution as not representative enough, especially in the “absence of strong national institutions”. “The constitution is a wonderful document; it is very well written and has used up millions of dollars. But not even 5,000 Somalis have seen it. There has been no room for discussing critical issues, such as systems of government or representation. “In my judgment, and I am not being harsh or critical or negative, it is an exercise in futility.” He instead proposes what he terms a “bottom-up” devolved approach where, the disparate Somali fiefdoms come up with their own representatives that would then define the relationship between themselves and the national government in Mogadishu, which would be responsible for vital services and international relations. Not unlike the cantons of Switzerland, the regions would be powerful but proscribing to the national government, with elders forming a grouping “not unlike a House of Lords”. This would be in keeping with a growing school of thought that holds that nationhood is being forced on Somalia, when the historical political system on the ground has never supported a centralised state. If Dr Galayadh strikes an acutely contrarian tune to what the world has been singing, including at the London Lancaster House conference in February, some would say it is in keeping with the political forces he has aligned with for decades. He admits he was associated with the motley and fledgling opposition groups formed to oppose Barre—under whom he served as Industry minister before their eventual fallout that led to his flight from the country. Their effort achieved nothing other than to further splinter Somalia into regions largely aligned by the country’s strong and convoluted clan systems. He counters this. “What I was interested in was more of a national alternative to Siad Barre,” he says in his characteristically measured sentences delivered in a clipped tone. Dr Galaydh, according to sources a wealthy man in his own right, strikes one as belonging to the Somali intelligentsia, the upper crust of the country’s sizeable diaspora driven out by the ravages of war and failed government, and as such could ironically fit into the outsider category that he criticises. For a Somali leader of such stature, Dr Galaydh has dabbled in various industries including founding a telco in Dubai that he was managing in the immediate post-Barre period, and also as a consultant for a high-end tourism project fronted by assassinated Lebanese premier Rafic Hariri and which was felled by the global financial crisis. He largely divides opinion in Somalia, where he is generally viewed as an aggressive and ambitious politician, even if “not necessarily popular”, as reliable sources in the country described him. Among the criticisms is his involvement in the last two years in the effort to form yet another regional government in the disputed northern territory of Somalia of Sool, Sanag and Cayn (SSC) dominated by the Darrod clans. He leads the advisory council of the new state – Khaatumo – controversially announced earlier this year at what is now known as the Taleh Conference, referred to as the G9. Recently, Somaliland, which is extremely hostile to Khaatumo as it believes it was formed to sabotage its bid for international recognition and sits on part of its own territory, accused him of backing a militia group in clashes that led to the deaths of scores this year. He denies the allegations: “Not at all. I am not in the least behind the clashes. What I am interested in and have always advocated for is dialogue and a peaceful resolution to the issues between Somaliland and Khaatumo,” he said. His rise to the high-table Somalia politics at the turn of the last decade is notable for its steepness. He helped form the Somalia Business Council which afforded him the platform to attend the 1999 national peace conference at Arta, Djibouti and which led to the formation of the convulsive Transitional National Government (TNG) the year after. Picked as prime minister by the TNG’s first President Abdikassim Salad Hassan, himself a former Barre loyalist, he lasted for only a year until October 2001, falling to a vote of no-confidence in his government after the transitional parliament claimed that he had failed to deliver. While there may be an element of self-interest in his push for greater autonomy for Khaatumo State, which like the breakaway Puntland proposes to remain within the Somalia Federation, it is his assertion that Somalia return to the near-Sisyphean task of a fresh peace effort kick-started by a national meeting this time “inside Somalia” that catches the eye. Isn’t this treading water, at the expense of peace for the ordinary Somali? “We are doing this [rushed peace effort] at our own peril. If it fails it is the Somalis who will be blamed, not the international community; they will say, see, yet again they were given an opportunity for peace and they did not seize it.” “Yet the international community is in a hurry and says ‘we don’t have the time’ to invest in a process where the people feel engaged and have a sense of ownership.” Somalia’s natural political systems suggest that those who back a devolved system have a point. But given the huge resources and time expenditure, and the threat that Somalia poses to its neighbours, many would be forgiven for giving short shrift to the idea of yet another “fresh” start. –AFRICA REVIEW
  5. The issue is not women rights. It is about shariif and others repositioning for coming Aug election. Mahiga already has replacement and do not want see any real challenges for his candidate. so he is offensive, using the T card.
  6. che I agree but it is not going anywhere now. He refused the removal of sheikh shariif saakin and that is why the parlament can not meet. instead talking the real issue he is talking women rights. He need take initiatiave and work some compromise for both groups of parlement to solve that sisue first because he stated nothing can done without parlament meeting.
  7. Does Mahiga got new somali women from different region? he oponion is getting more predicable. Xaaji Xunduf may known it.
  8. Mahiga is part of problem. He allinieted from the process for majority of somali people. selected few warlods and corrupted indiviulas to sign the paper work for him. there are spoilers in his team and he can not talk about spoilers. This what shuold be done let paliment do it is work and review Garoowe principle and corrected it. new fredral and reginal administions should funded Let this 1000 people decide what and how future goverment system will be in future
  9. Mr Aftaag got skills. Nugaal is beautiful, specially rainy season. thanks for sharing with us. My kids liked it.
  10. someone told this man to write this later. if it is Abdiwali Gaas who ordered, we will know soon.
  11. General Duke;800419 wrote: This Duufaan dude was the same person who was arguing the Nugaal well in Western Garowe could not be exploited because of Khatuumo. Hot air is all he can provide. For many years, you pretended to be a nationalist and some one with high moral value. now we see you true color. You did not liked when moqdisho warlords were printing fake money. it is Ok now, if faroole does. you are supporter of federalism and a National government, you OK if Faroole undermine TFG authority. None will take you seriously
  12. Cambuulo iyo bun;800734 wrote: Actually Banaadir State consists of 3 regions, Banaadir,lower shabelle and middle shabelle. So i dont know the legitimate reason why banaadir state shouldn't be a Maamul goboleed I heard shariif is compaining for Ex-Banaadir, that could be right and khaatumo will recognize that region as well Azaina.
  13. The Sage;800705 wrote: It appears that Ali Khalif's project is on increasingly unstable footing with each passing day, It does not build confidence when the TFG claims to support you one day and then not even acknowledge you the next. All the meanwhile Somaliland still controls the capitals of both Sool and Sanag. khaatumo is putting diplomecy first.
  14. burahader Where did you born? OOG is 100 km miles from Laascaanood and Burco. Caynabo is 90 km miles away from burco and Buuhoodle. Gumeys is 87 km miles a way from laascaanood. even with today clan map, Khaatumo is very much the same size as SNM clan map.
  15. Khaatumo has the support of more than one minister. sh shariif is explaining here about khaatumo and what it is about it and role of national goverment http://oodweynenews.com/news/151113-sheekh-shariif-oo-sheegay-inay-wadahadal-dowladda-kmg-somaaliya-la-yeelan-doonto-somaliland.html
  16. what? so people like you are now experts. using color printing and paper imported India. Last time everyone bought machine and was printing and we known what happened. Puntland do not have it is own central Bank, this work is for central bank of somalia.
  17. this is not new money. this is fake money, just continuation of Cade musse project. this puntland mafia is not better than the moqdisho mafia in 90's
  18. tumir do you know what happen if you drill in center of Nugaal Valley? that is why Holhol was chosen last time. This issue was solved 1989 and Garoowe community will get benefit it. African oil does not has rights and will not drill any where in Nugal Valley
  19. this was not easy and was not easy for sheek shariif either. However Khaatumo won this battle and it is important one. Next diplomatic battle will take place in Nariabo and Kampla. Turkey is impotant too and khaatumo diplomacy must reach soon rather later.
  20. Maanshaa alaa. that is a good news for all somalis. finding anything there, more or less will be good because this will start the oil search for the country and bring big oil companies to the country. In addition, it will contribute the stability. This come right time for somali Diaspora, time to go home with the family.
  21. carafaat he was there short time. but you can credit him, building security forces and building moqdisho roads by doing so empoying many people. although he come from Gedo where siyad bare from, he manage to win many hearts.
  22. I welcome Farmaajo candidacy. it is more than breath of fresh air. Farmaajo is problem solver rather maintain the status queue. Somalia needs administration who focus on building institution, fight corruption and putting people work. Farmaajo is proud Somali and believes Somalis can solve their problems. Somalis can learn the success of Malakawi in Iraq, his natiolistics stance and refusal of status queue brought Iraq back. Farmaajo popularity goes beyond, diaspora, he has proud support of politicians and academics, including Mohamed Abdilaahe oomaar from Hargeysa and Xalane south west. In order to win he needs half of seats, it will be very hard to beat.