Holac

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Everything posted by Holac

  1. That flag still intrigues me. What is the story Dabrow? The design gives a hint of socialism/communism. Is it a nod to socialism under Siyaad? I don't know. I am just trying to understand why that particular design, so similar to the Cuban flag, was chosen to inaugurate grassroots movement under Madoobe's Jubaland shadow.
  2. Ghelleh is a legend. He is an effective Somali leader slowly building his country and uplifting his people. I support him all the way to 92 Mahathir age.
  3. I hope she marries a unionist. Beesha unionist inay ka baxdo ma doonayno.
  4. I am not sure why the respected Mahathir aligned himself with the CIA stooge facing the sodomy charges. It is a fall from grace in my opinion. I hope he changes his mind and doesn't seek pardon for Anwar. I don't think the King would approve the pardon anyways, but such is not worth the try.
  5. The real issue in Hargeisa region today is the high birthrate coupled with extreme poverty. I have not seen anyone talk about this. Somaliland's population is increasing exponentially, specially the Hargeisa region, and the gap between the rich and poor is becoming wider. There is a whole generation left behind under poverty and the birthrate is picking up fast among the poor. If things don't change economically soon, Somaliland will collapse under its own weight.
  6. Best project ever. Well done to the NGOs who made the effort to do the obvious.
  7. Dabaroow, nearly all the districts in Gedo are mixed tribally, right? If I am not mistaken, MMA's family populates 50% of Gedo, at least in most recent history. Not sure about today.
  8. Jeesoow doesn't look like a hardworking guy. He was lazy enough not to change the deduction number for different clients. How could 85 different people have the exact same deductions dollars and further 74 had similar deductions. That is statistically not realistic. Subsequent investigation found that of 1,473 people who seemed to have hired Jesow to file their taxes, 85 claimed the exact same amount, $903, in carrying charges and interest in 2012; another 74 were all claiming a slightly higher amount, $1,025. CRA investigator Tetyana Sandford, from the agency's Toronto North office, decided to take a closer look. In the sworn statement filed in court, she says she interviewed 27 of those taxpayers and learned: 25 of them confirmed Jesow had prepared their tax returns. 22 of the 23 whose tax returns claimed deductions for "carrying charges and interest" said they actually had no such expenses. 25 of them filed returns claiming medical expenses, but nine of those people said they incurred no such expenses; a further five taxpayers did have medical expenses but they were "significantly less" than what they'd claimed. 20 returns claimed charitable donations, but five of those people said they had made no donations or didn't have receipts, while another six donated "significantly less" than what was being claimed. 10 of their returns claimed business losses, but five of them said they did not run any business.
  9. After 30 years, toyota opens a dealership in Mogadishu
  10. Madoobe stole the show. If freed, this will look terrible on the guys who sent him to Ethiopian jail. Free Qalbi.
  11. Are you hinting he's got the cash to dispense… from the UAE of course?
  12. Holac

    B-Dog

    MOGADISHU, Somalia — The U.S. military is dramatically expanding its operations at a former Soviet air strip in Somalia, constructing more than 800 beds at the Baledogle base, VICE News has learned. The construction at the secretive base marks the latest example of America’s growing and controversial shadow war in Africa. Baledogle’s expansion is one part of what appears to be a massive U.S. military infrastructure development project in the Horn of Africa country that will see at least six new U.S. outposts built this year, according to multiple defense contractors who spoke to VICE News. The buildup coincides with an aggressive escalation by U.S. forces in their fight against al Qaida-linked al-Shabaab. U.S. Africa Command (known as AFRICOM) now has more than 500 U.S. military personnel in Somalia, according to a spokeswoman, a dramatic increase from 2016, when AFRICOM only acknowledged 50 American troops on the ground. And since January 2017, U.S. forces have conducted at least 48 airstrikes in Somalia, compared to 14 in 2016 and 11 in 2015, according to the Bureau of Investigative Journalism, a London-based watchdog organization. Access to Baledogle is highly restricted, but American contractors and Somali security officials with knowledge of the project told VICE News the construction work began last June, soon after Somalia officially declared war on the insurgency group al-Shabaab. AFRICOM wouldn’t comment on specific base sizes, but it confirmed that Somalia now has the third-largest concentration of U.S. DOD personnel on the continent, after Djibouti and Niger. Baledogle — or “B-dog” as it's colloquially referred to by the Americans in Somalia — has long been a forward operating base on the plains of Southern Somalia, a bumpy, 40-minute propeller plane ride from Mogadishu or a days-long drive through terrain littered with IEDs. Until recently just a few dozen American personnel worked in secrecy there alongside African Union Peacekeepers and Somali National Army Special Forces. Military leaders have kept a tight lid on U.S. activity in Somalia, but the recent flood of American resources into the country suggests a deepening involvement beyond the counterterror mission against al-Shabaab. Increasingly, experts and contractors familiar with military activities say, the U.S. is setting its sights on building up Somalia as another key strategic location for American military activity in Africa and the Middle East. An explosive escalation Somali soldiers patrol on the scene of the explosion of a truck bomb in the center of Mogadishu, on October 15, 2017. (Photo credit should read MOHAMED ABDIWAHAB/AFP/Getty Images) Last year, the Trump administration removed several Obama-era restrictions on airstrikes, including interagency vetting prior to each strike and a requirement that every target must pose a direct threat to American lives. Trump also designated parts of Somalia as “areas of active hostilities,” meaning that U.S. Special Operations Forces now have the authority to go on the offensive to target members of al-Shabaab and ISIS. Gen. Thomas D. Waldhauser, the head of AFRICOM, told lawmakers in March that even though his forces had “turned up the heat in the last few months” in their fight against al-Shabaab, the U.S. was gearing up for a long fight ahead. “It’s going to be slow, there is no doubt about it,” Waldhauser said. “I’ve said on several occasions you measure progress in Somalia by eighths of an inch, not by yardsticks or rulers.” Waldhauser’s mandate grants him relative freedom to achieve those goals. AFRICOM conducts its counterterror operations across the continent under Authorization for Use of Military Force (AUMF), the congressional legislation passed in the wake of 9/11 that grants the military sweeping power in its war on terror. And in Somalia, the U.S. military has been careful to frame its mission under its broad definition of counterterror, claiming that al-Shabaab leaders have strong links to al Qaida as the reason for going after the terror group. But recent al-Shabaab defectors have cast doubts on the extent to which al-Shabaab maintains ties to al Qaida today, and the threat the group poses outside of Somalia. “Al Qaida offered us strategic advice, media advice, and technical approaches, but many of the the al Qaida officials in charge of working with us have been killed in Yemen, so the link is weaker now,” one recent mid-level defector told VICE News. The same post–9/11 authorization has been used to justify the expanding presence of U.S. Special Operations Forces across Africa. In 2006, just 1 percent of all U.S. commandos overseas were deployed to Africa. But by 2017, it jumped to 17 percent, meaning there are more U.S. Special Operators on the continent than anywhere else in the world outside the Middle East. Today these operators are carrying out almost 100 missions at any given time in at least 20 African countries, according to an internal military report uncovered by VICE News last year. “It’s going to be slow, there is no doubt about it.” To support these troops, the U.S. has quietly been building a series of outposts across Africa. AFRICOM has long maintained that its base in Djibouti, Camp Lemmonier, which is home to roughly 4,000 U.S. personnel, is the only permanent forward operating base on the continent, yet in April 2017 it admitted to having 46 U.S. outposts in Africa, 15 of which are designated “enduring locations.” The most well-known outpost in this expansion is the new $110 million American drone base currently being built in Agadez, Niger, though it attracted attention only after the deaths of four U.S. Special Operations in the country last year. Niger Air Base 201 is expected to be up and running by 2019, when it will be home to fighter jets and MQ-9 reaper drones with surveillance and striking capabilities that can reach a number of West and North African countries. Currently 800 U.S. military personnel are deployed to Niger, where they are fighting al Qaida and the Islamic State group. U.S. Air Force officer passes in front of a MQ-9 Reaper drone in Afghanistan. MQ-9 reaper drones, which have surveillance and striking capabilities, are expected to feature heavily in the U.S. military's operations on the African continent. (REUTERS/Omar Sobhani) Total control AFRICOM’s primary mission is to support local forces in their fight against al-Shabaab, Waldhauser said. “The engagements of the operations are conducted primarily by the partner force, with our support in a background role,” Waldhauser told lawmakers recently. But in practice, these forces rely heavily on U.S. Special Operators in conceiving, planning, and carrying out operations, casting doubt on their ability to work without U.S. support. This sort of dynamic has courted controversy for AFRICOM. Last year a Navy SEAL was killed by al-Shabaab while “assisting partner forces,” according to AFRICOM. And months later, four Special Forces soldiers were killed while providing “advice and assistance” to local forces in Niger. “The power relationship is one that favors the Americans.” This is to be expected when working alongside local partners, said Luke Hartig, a former senior director for counterterrorism at the National Security Council during the Obama administration. “Anywhere that we’re engaged in these operations, their sustainability and the ability of partner forces to operate independently is often questioned, and often we don’t have a positive assessment of their ability to do that,” Hartig told VICE News. And when it comes to Somalia, the U.S. is deeply involved with many partner forces. Today, U.S. operators are training the Somali National Army’s special forces known as Danab and the Somali National Intelligence Security (NISA) known as Gaashaan and Waran. The latter two groups, which also receive training from the CIA, have grown significantly in recent years, VICE News has learned, rousing alarm among local officials. Waran has grown to over 300 agents, while Gaashaan now counts roughly 400. That’s a significant increase from 2010, when 40 men and three officers from the Somali National Army were taken to the U.S. to be trained as a quick-reaction force that could respond to al-Shabaab attacks in Mogadishu.
  13. Jeegaan trinity is the proper name for it, I guess. But unlike Somaliland, the Jeegaan in Puntland is based on family kinship rather than political coalition.
  14. Somalia needs to take political stand on Suqadara Island.
  15. We are stuck with this idiot for a while. This country’s future under trump is uncertain.
  16. Haha. That is funny Cadnaan1
  17. Dubai stocks dive to 27-month low on real estate woes Dubai Financial Market Index trades down 1.83% to below the 3,000-point psychological barrier Dubai stocks hit a 27-month low on Thursday on the back of sharp falls in the real estate market and a drop in liquidity levels. The Dubai Financial Market Index ended the day's trading down 1.83 percent on 2,947.99 points breaching the 3,000-point psychological barrier. The Dubai bourse, the most exposed to the global markets in the Gulf region, dropped 3.1 percent by the close of the Muslim trading week. The market has shed 12.5 percent since the start of the year as cash injections dropped sharply, with the main fall coming from the vital real estate sector. "Dubai market has underperformed its (Gulf Cooperation Council) GCC markets losing over 12 percent (YTD) dragged by the sell-off in Real Estate sector," MR Raghu, head of research at Kuwait Financial Center (Markaz) said. Most of the seven Gulf bourses have made good gains in 2018 due to a partial recovery in oil prices, with Saudi stocks rising 12 percent. "Fundamentally, the real estate prices have been falling and the market has been sluggish," Raghu told AFP. Dubai real estate witnessed a 46 percent fall in off-plan sales by value in the first quarter, and a 24 percent decline in previously owned resales, he said. The real estate sector is one of the main pillars for Dubai's highly diversified economy, which is not dependent on oil. The index of the real estate sector on Dubai bourse has shed around 18 percent since the start of the year with property giant and market leader Emaar dropping 22 percent. Damac Properties, a leading real estate developer, was down 26 percent and troubled Drake and Scull International shed 50 percent since January 1. A massive fall in liquidity levels and reports that international investors, an important component in the market, have moved to Saudi Arabia, are other causes for the downturn, analysts said. According to local economic reports, liquidity levels dropped a massive 35 percent in April alone
  18. Mr. Martin getting more legitimate media exposure is not what Somaliland authorities wanted to see. Mr. Martin is milking it while the iron is hot. It is fascinating.
  19. Can we have a decent discussions about infrastructure? I think that was Galbeedi's intention. Oodweyne, what is stopping Somaliland from building a vital bridge like this? We know it is not about the lack of money because in the Somali peninsula, the ruling elite illegally and unceremoniously rakes in millions of public money every year. What is the best way to energize the masses so that the government of Somaliland can take action to put an end to these kind of tragedies?
  20. Oodweyne, is that a new Building for the Defense Ministry? I haven't see this picture before.
  21. Oodweyne, China is a powerful country that any African country (shit-hole as Trump calls them) needs to have on its side. Ghuelleh did that right thing by selling a portion of his business to Ethiopia to lock and guarantee this giant client aka Ethiopia. But the question I have is, what does this mean for the Berbera deal? Why would Ethiopia use undeveloped Berbera, with all its troubles (Somalia's sovereignty, etc), when Djibouti with the right infrastructure (highways, world class ports, train system, closer distance, etc) is right there waiting to supply the massive Ethiopian market? Do you not think Ghuelleh's move is a blow to Berbera port?