Jabhad

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  1. By Shaacir Mataan October 22, 2006 Xayaabkii cir da'ayeey, daruur shalka xayddaay Xulad geenyo ugubeey, darmaan xoosh u dhalataay Xil-dhibaanka nabaddaay, xajkii Geeska Bariyeey Cadceeddoo xab-bururtaay, marna xabag barsheedkii Nafta xiisa gelisaay! Xiddigtii bahdeediyo, xubnaheeda kala maqan U ahayd xusuustee, sumaddooda xaynkiyo Shanta gees u xidhataay! Xudduntii dhulkaygaay, xaruntii dadkaygaay Xamareey ma nabad baa? - Poet leaureate Hadraawi! Like most of Somalis in the Diaspora, it has become a daily routine for me to daily surf and check Somali sites for news back home. Mostly such news is not that pleasant and promising. News back home usually encompasses doom and despair. Most of the Somali sites report biased half-truths of senseless wars, of clan conflict, of pessimistic rhetoric, of feuding factional leaders, etc. But this Monday morning, my daily cyber-surfing had a different feel of joy and ecstasy. For beginners, it is Eid and I am on festive mood. But wait, it will get better when, by my virtual surfing of few of my favorite Somali sites, I come across of colorful images, of festive manners, of merry faces, of Mogadishu masses congregating and praying in the majestically beautiful Mosque of white marbles that embodies the unity of the Ummah. A glimpse of some awe-inspiring images of large Mogadishu crowds praying at Isbaheysiga Umadda Masjid is without doubt priceless. Like Muslims all over the world, more than million and half of Mogadishu residents are celebrating Eid-ul-Fitr to conclude the month-long fasting of Ramadan for the first time in sixteen years with peace and tranquility. This is their first Eid without the merciless warlords, without the marauding ******** militias, without the taxing roadblocks and above all without the sound of the crashing mortars. Indeed, this is a miraculous feat in the making that deserves to be rejoiced. Mogadishu residents were deprived of such spiritual and peaceful gatherings for many years. All praises are due to Allah for this great blessing and for awakening up among Mogadishu’s many daughters and sons such heroic and revolutionary forces of the Islamic courts that made it possible for the city to experience this momentous peace. The Union of Islamic courts have indeed rescued the city from an infernal abyss and from the shackles of warlord banditry. Those appalling warlords made Mogadishu one of the most violent capitals in the world. But that evil era is history. Mogadishu is back and will soon be a model city of peace and progress. Mogadishu deserves to gain back its magnificent past and its cosmopolitan makeup. It was once dubbed as the jewel of the Indian Ocean for its colonial and arabesque architecture and used to be one of the safest capitals in the world where unaccompanied women were able to peacefully walk city’s downtown promenades without being harassed let alone violated. But now Mogadishu is hopeful and things seem to be working at favorable good turn. Mogadishu’s international airport, though in dismal shambles and in need of repair, has been re-opened and is at least serviceably working. Flights from Nairobi and beyond carrying of extraordinary people who had forsaken the city in its worst times, because of instability, are for the first time coming back. And with this homecoming, they intend to stay for good this time around. Flights from Dubai and beyond carrying of enterprising business men and women who want to invest capital and labor into the city, because of its sudden return to peace and stability, are landing day in day out at Mogadishu Airport. The Mogadishu seaport, though not fully functional and in need of intensive rehab, is open for business. Ships and boats importing rice, tea, sugar, clothes and furniture, fuel and construction materials are in queue along the oceanic horizon to dock and unload goods and merchandise. No more are needed the ad-hoc warlord ports that used to trade and ship contraband goods, coal, drugs and weapons. Instead Mogadishu business men and women are now exporting shark fins, lobsters, leather and livestock. Mogadishu had long suffered unthinkable misery at the hands of warlord criminals with no mercy and no faith. Thank God and thanks to the hard work of the forces loyal to the heroic Islamic courts, the bloody warlords are no where near Mogadishu. They have been chased out of the city and their return is far-flung mirage. The disgraceful warlords, though defeated, are not fully out of the picture. Some of the stubborn and violent ones like Qaybdiid seem to be resurfacing as they were given asylum, arsenal and aid by the enemies of peaceful and stable Somalia. Warlords like Qaybdiid, and other disliked minion warlords, with Ethiopian patronage and other unruly local actors have been spotted in Central Somalia. Warlord Hiiraale, like his buddies of warlord-cum-ministers in our Ethiopian backed transitional federal government, is waging futile reprisal to recapture his vanished powerbase and fiefdom in Lower Juba. News has it that he is now wreaking havoc in Bu’aale irritating the forces of Islamic courts. All of these warlord pest and belligerence is meant to fan the flames of clannish rivalry and overwhelm the Islamic courts. It is further intended to thwart the newly found peace and stability in Mogadishu and environs. Unfortunately the weak and corrupt TFG is on board with the warlords and is in cahoots with the Tigre junta. The ineffectual TFG is working against Mogadishu to spoil and reverse the emerging peace there and in much of southern Somalia. The current arrest of Ethiopian undercover secret agents in Mogadishu is an indication how desperately Addis Ababa is trying to hold Mogadishu back to its lawless past. As a result of all seditious exploits from the enemies of peace, the heroic soldiers and noble leaders of the Islamic Courts need to be on guard and cautious to not let the enemies of Somalia and their unfaithful puppets impede the miraculous and momentous revolution of peace and stability. The Islamic Courts challenge is to let Mogadishu be what it used to be: a very liberal and tolerant city with cultural mores, tolerant milieu and urbane mutation. There is no need to impose alien, strict and imported way of life on the blasé Mogadishu populace. There is no need to ban music, movies and sports. Mogadishu residents are known to value and enjoy culture and entertainment. Mogadishu used to be and still is a city of sports fanatics. People used to fill soccer stadiums in teeming numbers. Beach going on Friday mornings was a well-cherished and popular Mogadishu pastime. It’s off-putting to hear reports of extremist charlatans, masquerading as pious men, preventing families to have seaside picnics. Banning people to enjoy the freedom to stroll on the sandy beach of Lido, Jaziira and Sambusi beaches is not comforting and gives a negative picture of the Islamic courts hitherto immaculate enterprise. Implementing a strict interpretation of our beautiful and tolerant Islamic religion taints all admirable deeds of the courts. To look good and to win more hearts and minds, the courts must not only tolerate but embrace people of Mogadishu’s many pastime predilections. The Islamic courts, instead of busying themselves regulating with inconsequential societal leisure and fad, need to embark on projects such as the renewal of basic infrastructure like power, water and sewage. So far the garbage collection and sanitary campaigns going on in some districts of the capital highlights the courts’ plan to overhaul Mogadishu’s rubbish-ridden neighborhoods and streets. That is commendable and should include services to revamp Mogadishu’s infrastructure and to give a face-lift to the many destroyed buildings. Parts of the city, specially the old Arab quarters in ex- downtown Mogadishu have been reduced to rubble by the decade long of bomb shelling and fighting. This part of the capital needs some kind of restoration. Societal regeneration and rebirth depends on granting individual freedom and space but not imposing strict lifestyle that people of Mogadishu are not accustomed to. Mogadishu needs urban planning not zealous policing. I hope many joyous Eids to come for Mogadishu’s residents so that they can rejoice and celebrate life, its beauty and blessings in peace and prosperity. Hopefully, with the will of ALLAH, the great city of Mogadishu will rise from the ashes and shine like a real cosmopolitan city with culture and life. Happy Eid Mubarak, Mogadishu ! Shaacir Mataan E-Mail:abaadir2002@yahoo.com
  2. World’s biggest prize launched to reward African good governance (AFP) 26 October 2006 LONDON - A top African businessman launched the world’s biggest prize here on Thursday to reward good governance by departing African statesmen, with a host of world leaders backing his landmark initiative. The Mo Ibrahim Foundation, funded by the Sudanese mobile phone tycoon, has been established as an African-based project to recognise good leaders among 48 sub-Saharan African countries -- and name and shame the shoddy regimes. The Mo Ibrahim Prize for Achievement in African Leadership will each year land a former head of state or government with a five-million-dollar (four-million-euro) prize over 10 years with a 200,000-dollar annual life pension to follow. The award, which will be first granted in 2007, far exceeds the 1.3 million dollars given to recipients of the Nobel Peace Prize. Meanwhile, the annual Ibrahim Index for African Governance will rank the countries according to governance quality, with the idea of showing African citizens how their rulers match up. The foundation is backed by former South African president Nelson Mandela, the Ghanaian United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan, former US president Bill Clinton, British Prime Minister Tony Blair, World Bank President Paul Wolfowitz and African Union Chairperson Alpha Oumar Konare among others. “Nothing, simply nothing is more important to African development than good governance,” Ibrahim said. “I am launching a foundation which aims to challenge fundamentally the choices faced by African leaders, and as a result recast the terms of the governance debate. “I’m ashamed that we always have to look to the rest of the world for assistance. It impacts on our dignity and our self-respect. “We want to celebrate the guy who managed to take his people out of poverty. That deserves the largest prize in the world. “Billions of dollars are thrown at African countries. Five million dollars to reward good leaders is peanuts when it comes to matters of life and death.” The winner will be chosen by a team of 18 academics in conjunction with the UN and other bodies such as the World Bank. They will be informed by the Ibrahim Index, which assesses national progress on sustainable economic development, health and education programmes, transparency and empowerment of civil society, democracy and human rights, security and the rule of law. The index has been drawn up by experts at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University in the United States. “There are no excuses for anyone to criticise. This is not mixing business with politics: I am a concerned African citizen and this is my private money,” Celtel International founder Ibrahim told AFP. “Good governance is the biggest block to African development and this will start a debate about it. We will absolutely name and shame in the index, but we will also celebrate good leaders. “For once, we want Africa to do something for itself. I have no better way of spending my money.” And he warned Africa’s corrupt rulers: “Watch out: we are coming after you.” Foundation board member Mary Robinson, the former president of Ireland and UN high commissioner for human rights, said the award would have all the more impact because it was an African initiative rather than merely a Western handout. “It’s greatly significant that this is an African businessman who has invested in 14 countries, made big profits and done it cleanly and has now decided to put it back in to his own people,” she told AFP. “I’m prepared to hazard a bet that other regions will look to this model and establish similar awards in their own continents.”
  3. How long are you gonna wait the IGAD "saviours".?
  4. Very true. Clearly, the Hargeisawis are enjoying the fruits of their labour.
  5. ^^^^^loool. Some people are under the mercy of Dirty Weyans. Alloow hana ceebeeyn.
  6. Qoom qabiil ku qufulan yahay, wax walba kafilo.
  7. "To get the job done one can make a deal with the devil." ^Cajiib. Keep your friendship with the devil and let us keep our friendship with Allah.
  8. Adeer qarowga maalinta cad waalaga fiican yahay. The old man(YEEY) submited to the dirty Weyans(Melez clan) and Weyans have the right to protect their subjects(Yeey and his supporters). But to expect majority of Somalis to do the same is just not gonna happen sxb.
  9. Duke hooskaaga ayaad ka carareeysaa awoowe. Sorry we are not interested dowlad beeleedka adeerkaa. qasab miyaa!! Take it to Garoowe if Baydhabo is getting too risk for the old man .
  10. Far away from Darfur's agony, Khartoum is booming By Jeffrey Gettleman Published: October 23, 2006 KHARTOUM, Sudan To understand Sudan's standoffishness toward the world, especially the Western world, consider the Ozone café. Here young, rich Sudanese, wearing ripped jeans and fancy gym shoes, sit outside with scoops of ice cream as an outdoor air-conditioning system sprays a cooling veil of mist. Around the corner is a new BMW dealership unloading $165,000 cars. "Tell people you only live this life once," said Nada Gerais, a saleswoman. While one of the world's worst humanitarian crises continues in Darfur, all across Khartoum bridges are being built, office towers are popping up, supermarkets are opening and flatbed trucks are hauling plasma screen televisions through thickening traffic. Despite the image of Sudan as a land of cracked earth and starving people, the economy is booming, with little help from the West. Oil has turned Sudan's economy into one of the fastest growing in Africa - if not the world - emboldening the nation's already belligerent government and giving it the wherewithal to resist Western demands to end the conflict in Darfur. American sanctions have kept many companies from Europe and the United States out of Sudan, but companies from China, Malaysia, India, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates are racing in. Foreign direct investment has shot up from $128 million in 2000 to $2.3 billion this year - despite an American trade embargo. "Khartoum is hot - in all ways," said Hashim Wahir, chairman of Petronas Sudan, a Malaysian oil company. As long as Asian countries are eager to trade with Sudan, despite its human rights record, the American embargo seems to have minimal effect. The Sudanese president, Omar Hassan al- Bashir, continues to demonstrate his disdain for the West by refusing to allow UN peacekeepers into Darfur, despite continued bloodshed and intensifying pressure from the United States. [The chief UN envoy, Jan Pronk, left Khartoum on Monday after Bashir's government, intensifying diplomatic hostilities, called him an enemy of Sudan and ordered him to leave, Reuters reported.] "The government knows it doesn't need America," said Abda Yahia El- Mahdi, a former finance minister who is now a private consultant. "The only people who are being hurt by the sanctions are the Americans, who are missing out on this huge boom." The wealth is hardly evenly shared, and much of Sudan, like Darfur, remains desperately poor. But overall the country's gross domestic product grew 8 percent in 2005, according to the International Monetary Fund, and is predicted to increase by 12 percent this year, largely because Sudan has substantially increased its crude oil production to 512,000 barrels a day - a drop compared with Saudi Arabia or Iran, but enough to bring billions of dollars to a country that until recently was one of the poorest on earth. The boom is also strengthening the government's hand at home. Bashir has been on an infrastructure binge, pouring hundreds of millions of dollars into roads, bridges, power plants, hospitals and schools, projects that tend to boost any government's popularity. (Bashir seems to need it, with many people across the country, not just in Darfur, openly rebelling against his rule). Bashir, an army general, seized power in 1989 through a military coup, and one of the biggest beneficiaries of these boom times has been his troops. El-Mahdi said that more than 70 percent of the government's share of oil profits is spent on defense. A government priority is to manufacture guns and ammunition domestically, in case an arms embargo is ever imposed. Despite the new materialism, Sudan still marches to a martial tune. Army officers enjoy special status, foreign visitors must register with the police and school children are required to wear camouflage uniforms to class. But the boom is changing society, from the careers people pursue, to the music they listen to, even to what they eat. The traditional meal of ful, a bean stew eaten for breakfast and lunch, is giving way to kebabs, yogurt, hamburgers and hot dogs. "We even have Pringles," said Mohammed Abdelwahab Salih, a 26-year- old entrepreneur who recently started a business designing Web sites. Salih remembers the days, not so long ago, when he used to have to wait in line for hours for a single loaf of bread. "And it wasn't even good bread," he said. "When we got home, we'd had to pick out the flies." For years, the Sudanese economy was beset with triple-digit inflation, moribund industries and war. Ever since independence in 1956, Christian and animist tribes in the south have rebelled against Muslim rulers in the north. Though oil was discovered by Chevron in the 1970s, the oil fields straddled the north-south divide and were essentially unworkable while fighting continued. The American government imposed a trade embargo in 1997, freezing Sudanese government assets in the United States and cutting off its exports to and imports from Sudan, with a few exceptions. The reason: human rights abuses connected to the north-south war and Sudan's links to terrorists. Osama bin Laden lived in Khartoum in the 1990s. But by 1999, when the first trickle of oil began to flow out of Port Sudan, on the Red Sea, Sudan's economy was turning around. A small cadre of Western- educated technocrats had followed the IMF's reform programs to the letter - cutting spending, privatizing state- owned businesses, lowering inflation and pushing infrastructure. "It was classic, conservative economic policies," said Safwat Fanous, chairman of the political science department at the University of Khartoum. "And it worked." Even World Bank economists have been impressed. "These are very good people managing the economy and would rate among the best anywhere in Africa," said Asif Faiz, country manager for the World Bank in Sudan. But, Faiz added, they need to do more to spread the wealth to rural areas and focus on the poor. Sudanese living abroad began to drift back, drawn by new opportunities - and other realities. "If you want to open a bank account in America these days, it's not difficult, it's impossible," said Ahmed Amin Abdellatif, a 33-year-old Cambridge educated tycoon who drives a Porsche SUV through the dusty streets of Khartoum and runs an empire of electronic shops. He said that anti-terrorism laws in the West had made it very difficult for him as a Sudanese citizen to do business. "Why go through the headache?" he added. "Why not put your money somewhere where it's welcome?" In 2002, Sudanese investors opened a Coca-Cola factory, with Coke syrup legally exported to Sudan under an amendment that exempts food and medicine. The $140 million plant churns out 100,000 bottles of Coke, Sprite and Fanta per hour, and factory owners have even adopted liberal employment policies, giving jobs to deaf women along the assembly line. New investments like this are transforming Khartoum's skyline. Four years ago, the Libyan government began building a 24-story, five-star hotel on the banks of the Nile. The hotel is nearly finished and boasts a level of luxury unknown in Sudan until now - it has an indoor pool, squash courts, an espresso bar and spa. In 2004, the first mall arrived in Khartoum, brought by a Turkish company, complete with a megastore called the Hypermarket. In 2005, many people here hoped the American sanctions would be lifted and the economy further pick up speed after Sudan's leaders, coaxed by American mediators, made peace with southern rebels. But by that point the conflict in Darfur was raging, and relations with United States only cooled. "We felt like the Americans betrayed us," said the Sudanese foreign minister, Lam Akol. Still, Sudan had already learned to rely on the East, and because of oil exports, the economy had gained a stable momentum of its own. Inflation is now 6 percent; investment and development are reaching beyond downtown Khartoum to Sudan's central agricultural belt, an area rich in wheat and cotton that has traditionally been the engine of the national economy, and to Juba, the main city in the south. But Sudan is a huge country, Africa's largest, at nearly 1 million square miles, or about 2.6 million square kilometers. Enormous swaths of territory in every direction are neglected, and growing class differences could sow further unrest. Rebel groups in Darfur and other areas, eager for a share in oil profits and power, pose another problem. Business leaders say the biggest danger would be if the United States succeeded in persuading Sudan's Asian and Middle Eastern trading partners to join the boycott. "The Americans are not a threat but if the international community lines up against us, that is a different issue," said Osama Daoud Abdellatif, chairman of the DAL Group, a conglomerate that owns the Coke factory, the Ozone café and other businesses. "Everything has been going so well, but Darfur could spoil the party." KHARTOUM, Sudan To understand Sudan's standoffishness toward the world, especially the Western world, consider the Ozone café. Here young, rich Sudanese, wearing ripped jeans and fancy gym shoes, sit outside with scoops of ice cream as an outdoor air-conditioning system sprays a cooling veil of mist. Around the corner is a new BMW dealership unloading $165,000 cars. "Tell people you only live this life once," said Nada Gerais, a saleswoman. While one of the world's worst humanitarian crises continues in Darfur, all across Khartoum bridges are being built, office towers are popping up, supermarkets are opening and flatbed trucks are hauling plasma screen televisions through thickening traffic. Despite the image of Sudan as a land of cracked earth and starving people, the economy is booming, with little help from the West. Oil has turned Sudan's economy into one of the fastest growing in Africa - if not the world - emboldening the nation's already belligerent government and giving it the wherewithal to resist Western demands to end the conflict in Darfur. American sanctions have kept many companies from Europe and the United States out of Sudan, but companies from China, Malaysia, India, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates are racing in. Foreign direct investment has shot up from $128 million in 2000 to $2.3 billion this year - despite an American trade embargo. "Khartoum is hot - in all ways," said Hashim Wahir, chairman of Petronas Sudan, a Malaysian oil company. As long as Asian countries are eager to trade with Sudan, despite its human rights record, the American embargo seems to have minimal effect. The Sudanese president, Omar Hassan al- Bashir, continues to demonstrate his disdain for the West by refusing to allow UN peacekeepers into Darfur, despite continued bloodshed and intensifying pressure from the United States. [The chief UN envoy, Jan Pronk, left Khartoum on Monday after Bashir's government, intensifying diplomatic hostilities, called him an enemy of Sudan and ordered him to leave, Reuters reported.] "The government knows it doesn't need America," said Abda Yahia El- Mahdi, a former finance minister who is now a private consultant. "The only people who are being hurt by the sanctions are the Americans, who are missing out on this huge boom." The wealth is hardly evenly shared, and much of Sudan, like Darfur, remains desperately poor. But overall the country's gross domestic product grew 8 percent in 2005, according to the International Monetary Fund, and is predicted to increase by 12 percent this year, largely because Sudan has substantially increased its crude oil production to 512,000 barrels a day - a drop compared with Saudi Arabia or Iran, but enough to bring billions of dollars to a country that until recently was one of the poorest on earth. The boom is also strengthening the government's hand at home. Bashir has been on an infrastructure binge, pouring hundreds of millions of dollars into roads, bridges, power plants, hospitals and schools, projects that tend to boost any government's popularity. (Bashir seems to need it, with many people across the country, not just in Darfur, openly rebelling against his rule). Bashir, an army general, seized power in 1989 through a military coup, and one of the biggest beneficiaries of these boom times has been his troops. El-Mahdi said that more than 70 percent of the government's share of oil profits is spent on defense. A government priority is to manufacture guns and ammunition domestically, in case an arms embargo is ever imposed. Despite the new materialism, Sudan still marches to a martial tune. Army officers enjoy special status, foreign visitors must register with the police and school children are required to wear camouflage uniforms to class. But the boom is changing society, from the careers people pursue, to the music they listen to, even to what they eat. The traditional meal of ful, a bean stew eaten for breakfast and lunch, is giving way to kebabs, yogurt, hamburgers and hot dogs. "We even have Pringles," said Mohammed Abdelwahab Salih, a 26-year- old entrepreneur who recently started a business designing Web sites. Salih remembers the days, not so long ago, when he used to have to wait in line for hours for a single loaf of bread. "And it wasn't even good bread," he said. "When we got home, we'd had to pick out the flies." For years, the Sudanese economy was beset with triple-digit inflation, moribund industries and war. Ever since independence in 1956, Christian and animist tribes in the south have rebelled against Muslim rulers in the north. Though oil was discovered by Chevron in the 1970s, the oil fields straddled the north-south divide and were essentially unworkable while fighting continued. The American government imposed a trade embargo in 1997, freezing Sudanese government assets in the United States and cutting off its exports to and imports from Sudan, with a few exceptions. The reason: human rights abuses connected to the north-south war and Sudan's links to terrorists. Osama bin Laden lived in Khartoum in the 1990s. But by 1999, when the first trickle of oil began to flow out of Port Sudan, on the Red Sea, Sudan's economy was turning around. A small cadre of Western- educated technocrats had followed the IMF's reform programs to the letter - cutting spending, privatizing state- owned businesses, lowering inflation and pushing infrastructure. "It was classic, conservative economic policies," said Safwat Fanous, chairman of the political science department at the University of Khartoum. "And it worked." Even World Bank economists have been impressed. "These are very good people managing the economy and would rate among the best anywhere in Africa," said Asif Faiz, country manager for the World Bank in Sudan. But, Faiz added, they need to do more to spread the wealth to rural areas and focus on the poor. Sudanese living abroad began to drift back, drawn by new opportunities - and other realities. "If you want to open a bank account in America these days, it's not difficult, it's impossible," said Ahmed Amin Abdellatif, a 33-year-old Cambridge educated tycoon who drives a Porsche SUV through the dusty streets of Khartoum and runs an empire of electronic shops. He said that anti-terrorism laws in the West had made it very difficult for him as a Sudanese citizen to do business. "Why go through the headache?" he added. "Why not put your money somewhere where it's welcome?" In 2002, Sudanese investors opened a Coca-Cola factory, with Coke syrup legally exported to Sudan under an amendment that exempts food and medicine. The $140 million plant churns out 100,000 bottles of Coke, Sprite and Fanta per hour, and factory owners have even adopted liberal employment policies, giving jobs to deaf women along the assembly line. New investments like this are transforming Khartoum's skyline. Four years ago, the Libyan government began building a 24-story, five-star hotel on the banks of the Nile. The hotel is nearly finished and boasts a level of luxury unknown in Sudan until now - it has an indoor pool, squash courts, an espresso bar and spa. In 2004, the first mall arrived in Khartoum, brought by a Turkish company, complete with a megastore called the Hypermarket. In 2005, many people here hoped the American sanctions would be lifted and the economy further pick up speed after Sudan's leaders, coaxed by American mediators, made peace with southern rebels. But by that point the conflict in Darfur was raging, and relations with United States only cooled. "We felt like the Americans betrayed us," said the Sudanese foreign minister, Lam Akol. Still, Sudan had already learned to rely on the East, and because of oil exports, the economy had gained a stable momentum of its own. Inflation is now 6 percent; investment and development are reaching beyond downtown Khartoum to Sudan's central agricultural belt, an area rich in wheat and cotton that has traditionally been the engine of the national economy, and to Juba, the main city in the south. But Sudan is a huge country, Africa's largest, at nearly 1 million square miles, or about 2.6 million square kilometers. Enormous swaths of territory in every direction are neglected, and growing class differences could sow further unrest. Rebel groups in Darfur and other areas, eager for a share in oil profits and power, pose another problem. Business leaders say the biggest danger would be if the United States succeeded in persuading Sudan's Asian and Middle Eastern trading partners to join the boycott. "The Americans are not a threat but if the international community lines up against us, that is a different issue," said Osama Daoud Abdellatif, chairman of the DAL Group, a conglomerate that owns the Coke factory, the Ozone café and other businesses. "Everything has been going so well, but Darfur could spoil the party." KHARTOUM, Sudan To understand Sudan's standoffishness toward the world, especially the Western world, consider the Ozone café. Here young, rich Sudanese, wearing ripped jeans and fancy gym shoes, sit outside with scoops of ice cream as an outdoor air-conditioning system sprays a cooling veil of mist. Around the corner is a new BMW dealership unloading $165,000 cars. "Tell people you only live this life once," said Nada Gerais, a saleswoman. While one of the world's worst humanitarian crises continues in Darfur, all across Khartoum bridges are being built, office towers are popping up, supermarkets are opening and flatbed trucks are hauling plasma screen televisions through thickening traffic. Despite the image of Sudan as a land of cracked earth and starving people, the economy is booming, with little help from the West. Oil has turned Sudan's economy into one of the fastest growing in Africa - if not the world - emboldening the nation's already belligerent government and giving it the wherewithal to resist Western demands to end the conflict in Darfur. American sanctions have kept many companies from Europe and the United States out of Sudan, but companies from China, Malaysia, India, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates are racing in. Foreign direct investment has shot up from $128 million in 2000 to $2.3 billion this year - despite an American trade embargo. "Khartoum is hot - in all ways," said Hashim Wahir, chairman of Petronas Sudan, a Malaysian oil company. As long as Asian countries are eager to trade with Sudan, despite its human rights record, the American embargo seems to have minimal effect. The Sudanese president, Omar Hassan al- Bashir, continues to demonstrate his disdain for the West by refusing to allow UN peacekeepers into Darfur, despite continued bloodshed and intensifying pressure from the United States. [The chief UN envoy, Jan Pronk, left Khartoum on Monday after Bashir's government, intensifying diplomatic hostilities, called him an enemy of Sudan and ordered him to leave, Reuters reported.] "The government knows it doesn't need America," said Abda Yahia El- Mahdi, a former finance minister who is now a private consultant. "The only people who are being hurt by the sanctions are the Americans, who are missing out on this huge boom." The wealth is hardly evenly shared, and much of Sudan, like Darfur, remains desperately poor. But overall the country's gross domestic product grew 8 percent in 2005, according to the International Monetary Fund, and is predicted to increase by 12 percent this year, largely because Sudan has substantially increased its crude oil production to 512,000 barrels a day - a drop compared with Saudi Arabia or Iran, but enough to bring billions of dollars to a country that until recently was one of the poorest on earth. The boom is also strengthening the government's hand at home. Bashir has been on an infrastructure binge, pouring hundreds of millions of dollars into roads, bridges, power plants, hospitals and schools, projects that tend to boost any government's popularity. (Bashir seems to need it, with many people across the country, not just in Darfur, openly rebelling against his rule). Bashir, an army general, seized power in 1989 through a military coup, and one of the biggest beneficiaries of these boom times has been his troops. El-Mahdi said that more than 70 percent of the government's share of oil profits is spent on defense. A government priority is to manufacture guns and ammunition domestically, in case an arms embargo is ever imposed. Despite the new materialism, Sudan still marches to a martial tune. Army officers enjoy special status, foreign visitors must register with the police and school children are required to wear camouflage uniforms to class. But the boom is changing society, from the careers people pursue, to the music they listen to, even to what they eat. The traditional meal of ful, a bean stew eaten for breakfast and lunch, is giving way to kebabs, yogurt, hamburgers and hot dogs. "We even have Pringles," said Mohammed Abdelwahab Salih, a 26-year- old entrepreneur who recently started a business designing Web sites. Salih remembers the days, not so long ago, when he used to have to wait in line for hours for a single loaf of bread. "And it wasn't even good bread," he said. "When we got home, we'd had to pick out the flies." For years, the Sudanese economy was beset with triple-digit inflation, moribund industries and war. Ever since independence in 1956, Christian and animist tribes in the south have rebelled against Muslim rulers in the north. Though oil was discovered by Chevron in the 1970s, the oil fields straddled the north-south divide and were essentially unworkable while fighting continued. The American government imposed a trade embargo in 1997, freezing Sudanese government assets in the United States and cutting off its exports to and imports from Sudan, with a few exceptions. The reason: human rights abuses connected to the north-south war and Sudan's links to terrorists. Osama bin Laden lived in Khartoum in the 1990s. But by 1999, when the first trickle of oil began to flow out of Port Sudan, on the Red Sea, Sudan's economy was turning around. A small cadre of Western- educated technocrats had followed the IMF's reform programs to the letter - cutting spending, privatizing state- owned businesses, lowering inflation and pushing infrastructure. "It was classic, conservative economic policies," said Safwat Fanous, chairman of the political science department at the University of Khartoum. "And it worked." Even World Bank economists have been impressed. "These are very good people managing the economy and would rate among the best anywhere in Africa," said Asif Faiz, country manager for the World Bank in Sudan. But, Faiz added, they need to do more to spread the wealth to rural areas and focus on the poor. Sudanese living abroad began to drift back, drawn by new opportunities - and other realities. "If you want to open a bank account in America these days, it's not difficult, it's impossible," said Ahmed Amin Abdellatif, a 33-year-old Cambridge educated tycoon who drives a Porsche SUV through the dusty streets of Khartoum and runs an empire of electronic shops. He said that anti-terrorism laws in the West had made it very difficult for him as a Sudanese citizen to do business. "Why go through the headache?" he added. "Why not put your money somewhere where it's welcome?" In 2002, Sudanese investors opened a Coca-Cola factory, with Coke syrup legally exported to Sudan under an amendment that exempts food and medicine. The $140 million plant churns out 100,000 bottles of Coke, Sprite and Fanta per hour, and factory owners have even adopted liberal employment policies, giving jobs to deaf women along the assembly line. New investments like this are transforming Khartoum's skyline. Four years ago, the Libyan government began building a 24-story, five-star hotel on the banks of the Nile. The hotel is nearly finished and boasts a level of luxury unknown in Sudan until now - it has an indoor pool, squash courts, an espresso bar and spa. In 2004, the first mall arrived in Khartoum, brought by a Turkish company, complete with a megastore called the Hypermarket. In 2005, many people here hoped the American sanctions would be lifted and the economy further pick up speed after Sudan's leaders, coaxed by American mediators, made peace with southern rebels. But by that point the conflict in Darfur was raging, and relations with United States only cooled. "We felt like the Americans betrayed us," said the Sudanese foreign minister, Lam Akol. Still, Sudan had already learned to rely on the East, and because of oil exports, the economy had gained a stable momentum of its own. Inflation is now 6 percent; investment and development are reaching beyond downtown Khartoum to Sudan's central agricultural belt, an area rich in wheat and cotton that has traditionally been the engine of the national economy, and to Juba, the main city in the south. But Sudan is a huge country, Africa's largest, at nearly 1 million square miles, or about 2.6 million square kilometers. Enormous swaths of territory in every direction are neglected, and growing class differences could sow further unrest. Rebel groups in Darfur and other areas, eager for a share in oil profits and power, pose another problem. Business leaders say the biggest danger would be if the United States succeeded in persuading Sudan's Asian and Middle Eastern trading partners to join the boycott. "The Americans are not a threat but if the international community lines up against us, that is a different issue," said Osama Daoud Abdellatif, chairman of the DAL Group, a conglomerate that owns the Coke factory, the Ozone café and other businesses. "Everything has been going so well, but Darfur could spoil the party." KHARTOUM, Sudan To understand Sudan's standoffishness toward the world, especially the Western world, consider the Ozone café. Here young, rich Sudanese, wearing ripped jeans and fancy gym shoes, sit outside with scoops of ice cream as an outdoor air-conditioning system sprays a cooling veil of mist. Around the corner is a new BMW dealership unloading $165,000 cars. "Tell people you only live this life once," said Nada Gerais, a saleswoman. While one of the world's worst humanitarian crises continues in Darfur, all across Khartoum bridges are being built, office towers are popping up, supermarkets are opening and flatbed trucks are hauling plasma screen televisions through thickening traffic. Despite the image of Sudan as a land of cracked earth and starving people, the economy is booming, with little help from the West. Oil has turned Sudan's economy into one of the fastest growing in Africa - if not the world - emboldening the nation's already belligerent government and giving it the wherewithal to resist Western demands to end the conflict in Darfur. American sanctions have kept many companies from Europe and the United States out of Sudan, but companies from China, Malaysia, India, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates are racing in. Foreign direct investment has shot up from $128 million in 2000 to $2.3 billion this year - despite an American trade embargo. "Khartoum is hot - in all ways," said Hashim Wahir, chairman of Petronas Sudan, a Malaysian oil company. As long as Asian countries are eager to trade with Sudan, despite its human rights record, the American embargo seems to have minimal effect. The Sudanese president, Omar Hassan al- Bashir, continues to demonstrate his disdain for the West by refusing to allow UN peacekeepers into Darfur, despite continued bloodshed and intensifying pressure from the United States. [The chief UN envoy, Jan Pronk, left Khartoum on Monday after Bashir's government, intensifying diplomatic hostilities, called him an enemy of Sudan and ordered him to leave, Reuters reported.] "The government knows it doesn't need America," said Abda Yahia El- Mahdi, a former finance minister who is now a private consultant. "The only people who are being hurt by the sanctions are the Americans, who are missing out on this huge boom." The wealth is hardly evenly shared, and much of Sudan, like Darfur, remains desperately poor. But overall the country's gross domestic product grew 8 percent in 2005, according to the International Monetary Fund, and is predicted to increase by 12 percent this year, largely because Sudan has substantially increased its crude oil production to 512,000 barrels a day - a drop compared with Saudi Arabia or Iran, but enough to bring billions of dollars to a country that until recently was one of the poorest on earth. The boom is also strengthening the government's hand at home. Bashir has been on an infrastructure binge, pouring hundreds of millions of dollars into roads, bridges, power plants, hospitals and schools, projects that tend to boost any government's popularity. (Bashir seems to need it, with many people across the country, not just in Darfur, openly rebelling against his rule). Bashir, an army general, seized power in 1989 through a military coup, and one of the biggest beneficiaries of these boom times has been his troops. El-Mahdi said that more than 70 percent of the government's share of oil profits is spent on defense. A government priority is to manufacture guns and ammunition domestically, in case an arms embargo is ever imposed. Despite the new materialism, Sudan still marches to a martial tune. Army officers enjoy special status, foreign visitors must register with the police and school children are required to wear camouflage uniforms to class. But the boom is changing society, from the careers people pursue, to the music they listen to, even to what they eat. The traditional meal of ful, a bean stew eaten for breakfast and lunch, is giving way to kebabs, yogurt, hamburgers and hot dogs. "We even have Pringles," said Mohammed Abdelwahab Salih, a 26-year- old entrepreneur who recently started a business designing Web sites. Salih remembers the days, not so long ago, when he used to have to wait in line for hours for a single loaf of bread. "And it wasn't even good bread," he said. "When we got home, we'd had to pick out the flies." For years, the Sudanese economy was beset with triple-digit inflation, moribund industries and war. Ever since independence in 1956, Christian and animist tribes in the south have rebelled against Muslim rulers in the north. Though oil was discovered by Chevron in the 1970s, the oil fields straddled the north-south divide and were essentially unworkable while fighting continued. The American government imposed a trade embargo in 1997, freezing Sudanese government assets in the United States and cutting off its exports to and imports from Sudan, with a few exceptions. The reason: human rights abuses connected to the north-south war and Sudan's links to terrorists. Osama bin Laden lived in Khartoum in the 1990s. But by 1999, when the first trickle of oil began to flow out of Port Sudan, on the Red Sea, Sudan's economy was turning around. A small cadre of Western- educated technocrats had followed the IMF's reform programs to the letter - cutting spending, privatizing state- owned businesses, lowering inflation and pushing infrastructure. "It was classic, conservative economic policies," said Safwat Fanous, chairman of the political science department at the University of Khartoum. "And it worked." Even World Bank economists have been impressed. "These are very good people managing the economy and would rate among the best anywhere in Africa," said Asif Faiz, country manager for the World Bank in Sudan. But, Faiz added, they need to do more to spread the wealth to rural areas and focus on the poor. Sudanese living abroad began to drift back, drawn by new opportunities - and other realities. "If you want to open a bank account in America these days, it's not difficult, it's impossible," said Ahmed Amin Abdellatif, a 33-year-old Cambridge educated tycoon who drives a Porsche SUV through the dusty streets of Khartoum and runs an empire of electronic shops. He said that anti-terrorism laws in the West had made it very difficult for him as a Sudanese citizen to do business. "Why go through the headache?" he added. "Why not put your money somewhere where it's welcome?" In 2002, Sudanese investors opened a Coca-Cola factory, with Coke syrup legally exported to Sudan under an amendment that exempts food and medicine. The $140 million plant churns out 100,000 bottles of Coke, Sprite and Fanta per hour, and factory owners have even adopted liberal employment policies, giving jobs to deaf women along the assembly line. New investments like this are transforming Khartoum's skyline. Four years ago, the Libyan government began building a 24-story, five-star hotel on the banks of the Nile. The hotel is nearly finished and boasts a level of luxury unknown in Sudan until now - it has an indoor pool, squash courts, an espresso bar and spa. In 2004, the first mall arrived in Khartoum, brought by a Turkish company, complete with a megastore called the Hypermarket. In 2005, many people here hoped the American sanctions would be lifted and the economy further pick up speed after Sudan's leaders, coaxed by American mediators, made peace with southern rebels. But by that point the conflict in Darfur was raging, and relations with United States only cooled. "We felt like the Americans betrayed us," said the Sudanese foreign minister, Lam Akol. Still, Sudan had already learned to rely on the East, and because of oil exports, the economy had gained a stable momentum of its own. Inflation is now 6 percent; investment and development are reaching beyond downtown Khartoum to Sudan's central agricultural belt, an area rich in wheat and cotton that has traditionally been the engine of the national economy, and to Juba, the main city in the south. But Sudan is a huge country, Africa's largest, at nearly 1 million square miles, or about 2.6 million square kilometers. Enormous swaths of territory in every direction are neglected, and growing class differences could sow further unrest. Rebel groups in Darfur and other areas, eager for a share in oil profits and power, pose another problem. Business leaders say the biggest danger would be if the United States succeeded in persuading Sudan's Asian and Middle Eastern trading partners to join the boycott. "The Americans are not a threat but if the international community lines up against us, that is a different issue," said Osama Daoud Abdellatif, chairman of the DAL Group, a conglomerate that owns the Coke factory, the Ozone café and other businesses. "Everything has been going so well, but Darfur could spoil the party."
  11. ^Very true. Both Christian and the Muslim Eritreans I met are equally patriotic. You can call it the product of 30 years of struggle for independence.
  12. People behind the horrors of the civil war such as warlord/criminal Qeybdiid and Qanyare are in Baydhabo, the "peacefull city", the temporary seat, hosted by our "good president Yusuf and our equally good prime minister Geedi.
  13. Yeey supporters confused!!Mouthpiece websites changing stories every minute. From Barre victory to Barre defeat again and again......... Barre Aaden Shire Hiiraale oo isagu ah Wasiirka Gaashaandhigga Dowladda Soomaaliya ayaa Khasaare aan marnaba la filanayn kasoo gaaray Dagalkii uu Duleedka Buu’aale kula galay Midowga Maxaakiimta Islaamigaa iyadoo uu jiray Qorshe uu ku xisaabtamayey Wasiirku oo ka fashilmay. Alwasiir Barre Hiiraale ayaa malaynayey inay Maxkamadaha Islaamka saarantahay Culays aad u ballaaran kaddib markii ay Ciidammo Itoobiyaan iyo kuwa Dowladdu wada qabsadeen Magaalada Buurxakaba iyadoo sidoo kalena ay Abbaanduulaha ama Taliya Ciidanka Puntland Xiif Cali taar iyo Ina Qayb diid oo ay weheliyaan Saraakiil itoobiyaan ahi soo gaareen Magaalada Caabduwaaq, Intaas waxaa sii dheerayd iyadoo ay Deegaanka Bandiiradlay ee koonfurta Gaalkacyo joogeeen Ciidammada Qalabka sida ee Puntland. Arrimahaas oodhan ayaa Barre Hiiraale ku dhaliyey inuu Weerar Dagdag ah ku qaado Gobollada Jubbooyinka isagoo ka faa’iidaysanaya Culayska iyo Isweerka ba’an ee lagah ayo Maxkamadaha Islaamka. Si kastaba ha ahaatee Waxaa Dagaalkii Buu’aale Kornaylka ka raacay khasaare aad u ballaaran iyadoo ay is baddashay guud ahaan Fikirkii hore ee uu Wasiirku qabay. Warar hoose oo la xariira Midowga Maxaakimta Islaamigaa ee Soomaaliya ayaa xaqiijinaya inay Maxkamaduhu haystaan in ka badan 15 kun oo Mutadawic ama Mujaahid waa sida ay hadalka u dhigayaane kuwaasoo u jidbaysan Dagaalka lala galayo Itoobiyaanka iyo Taageerayashooda waa sida ay Madaxda Maxkamaduhu sheegeene. Warar Qarsoodi ah oo laga soo wariyey Madaxda Maxkamadaha ayaa sheegaya inay san Maxkamaduhu haatan Shacabka Soomaaliyeed uga baahnayn Ciidan dheeraada iyagoo intaas ku daray inay haatan haystaan Ciidan aysan dammaanad qaadi Karin Hubkooda iyo Saanadooda Millatari. Dadka siyaasadda indho indheeya ayaa sheegaya inay Maxkamaduhu awood u leeyihiin inay qabsadaan Guud ahaan Gobollada soomaaliya iyadoo tiro ahaan marka la eego Ciidanka Maxkamadaha iyo Mabda’a ay ku dagaalamayaan darteed aysan u babac dhigi Karin Ciidamada kale ee kasoo horjeeda. Fartuun Max’uud Dalmar Nairobi Kenya. ibnatudalmar@hotmail.com http://www.allmudug.com/23-October-06%20News4.html
  14. "Masuul ka tirsan DFKMS oo diiday in magaciisa la shaaciyo oo u warramayay wargeyska asharqal awstay ayaa waxaa uu sheegay in -- dalalka Etoobiya iyo Kenya ay si rasmi ah ugu balan qaadeen madaxweyne C/lahi Yusuf Axmed in ay siiyaan taakulayn ciidan waqti kasta oo magaalada Baydhabo ay soo weeraraan ciidamada maxaakimta " :cool: Waxaa masuulkani sheegay in ilaa 5000 oo askari oo ka tirsan ciidamada DFKMS ay diyaar u yihiin in ay difaacan magaalada kuwaas oo ay xoojinayaan maleeshiyo beeledyo lagu qiyaasay ilaa 3000 oo dagaalyahan :confused:
  15. Eid Al-Fetir colorfully celebrated nationwide By Staff Oct 23, 2006, 17:38 Asmara, 23 October 2006 - Eid AL-Fetir was today celebrated across the nation in a colorful manner. The celebrations here in the capital took place at Bahti Meskerem Square. The faithful conducted prayer service headed by the Sheik Salim Ibrahim from the office of the Eritrean Mufti. In a speech he delivered on the occasion, Sheik Salim outlined the message the religious event conveys, including extending timely support to needy fellow nationals. He further underlined the responsibility of citizens to support families of martyrs. Subsequently, the Eritrean Mufti, Sheik Al-Amin Osman Al-Amin, outlined the historical development of the event and conveyed a religious message. As the nation observes Eid Al-Fetir, he cited the recent peace agreement concluded between Sudanese brothers following the relentless efforts exerted by the Eritrean government. Sheik Al-Amin Osman Al-Amin said that this development is a source of pride to all Eritreans, and wished that such a move for peace and reconciliation reign all over the Horn of Africa. Sheik Al-Amin wished success to those safeguarding the nation’s sovereignty as well as participants of the Warsay Yikaalo Development Campaign. In addition, he conveyed a message of peace and prosperity to the country. Ministers, other Government and Front officials, diplomats and invited guests, as well as tens of thousands of the faithful attended the celebrations Meanwhile, Eid Al-Fetir was celebrated in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia through the joint cooperation of the Eritrean Ministry of Information and the Eritrean Consulate General in the city. The event was broadcast on TV worldwide via satellite. Speaking on the occasion, the Eritrean Ambassador to Saudi Arabia, Mr. Mahmoud Ali Hiruy, wished all the Eritrean people Happy Eid Al-Fetir. Expressing congratulations on behalf of the Eritrean Embassy and nationals residing in Saudi Arabia, in connection with the recently signed Sudanese peace agreement, the Ambassador said that this development is a victory not only to Eritrea and Sudan but also to the Horn region and the entire continent. Similarly, the branch Chairman of the National Holidays Coordinating Committee, Mr. Saleh Mahmoud Sabe, said that the celebration in the Saudi city symbolizes the unity of the Eritrean people. The participation of popular artistes from the Homeland added color to the event that was attended by Ambassadors, members of the Eritrean Community from Jeddah and its environs, as well as invited guests and friends of Eritrea. http://www.shabait.com/staging/index.html
  16. Masuul ka tirsan DFKMS oo sheegay in ciidamada Kenya iyo Etoobiya ay galayaan Baydhabo hadii Maxaakimtu ay soo weeraraan Last Updated::2006-10-23 17:20:30 Masuul ka tirsan DFKMS oo diiday in magaciisa la shaaciyo oo u warramayay wargeyska asharqal awstay ayaa waxaa uu sheegay in -- dalalka Etoobiya iyo Kenya ay si rasmi ah ugu balan qaadeen madaxweyne C/lahi Yusuf Axmed in ay siiyaan taakulayn ciidan waqti kasta oo magaalada Baydhabo ay soo weeraraan ciidamada maxaakimta . Waxaa masuulkani intaa ku daray in ciidamada dalalka Etoobiya iyo Kenya ay galayaan magaalada Baydhabo iyaga oo ka hortagaya isku day kasta oo maxaakimta ay ku doonayaan in ay ku qabsadaan magaalada Baydhabo ,waxana uu intaa ku daray in maxaakimta ay talaabo noocan oo kale ah kala kulmi doonaan khasaare aad u fool xun Waxaa masuulkani sheegay in ilaa 5000 oo askari oo ka tirsan ciidamada DFKMS ay diyaar u yihiin in ay difaacan magaalada kuwaas oo ay xoojinayaan maleeshiyo beeledyo lagu qiyaasay ilaa 3000 oo dagaalyahan Waxaana uu intaa raaciyay in DFKMS ay kalsooni wayn ku qabto in ciidamadeedu ay ka soo baxayaan waajibka kaga aadan ka difaacida magaalada maxaakimta Islaamig ah . Waxaana uu masuulkani gaashanka u daruuray in ciidamo Etoobiyan ah ayku sugan yihiin magaalada Baydhabo laakin waxaa uu xusay in ciidamada Etoobiya aysan hakanayn hadii maxaakimtu ay weerar ku soo qaadan magaalada Baydhabo. HorseedNet.com
  17. What happen to the news of Geedi visiting the "new liberated city" of Buurhakaba.?
  18. Mogadishu 23, Oct.06 ( Sh.M.Network) Ciidamadii dowladda KMG ah ee Somalia ayaa isaga baxay magaalada Buur-hakaba, iyagoo sheegay in halkaasi ay uga baxeen, ka dib markii ay ku wareejiyeeen dhinaca nabadgalyada Maleeshiyooyinka deegaanka. Maleeshiyooyinka deegaanka Buur-hakaba Ciidamada dowladda KMG ah ee Somalia oo oo ay wehliyeen kuwo Ethiopian ah oo 21 kii bishaan la wareegay magaalada Buur-hakaba ee gobolka Baay, ayaa xalay saqdii dhexe baneeyay magaalada Buur-hakaba, iyadoo warar si khilaafsana ay ka soo baxayaan sababihii keenay ka bixitaankooda. Wararka qaar ayaa waxa ay sheegayaan in ka bixtaankooda uu salka ku hayo khilaaf ba'an oo soo kala dhex galay horjoogayaasha ciidamada dowladda halka warar kalena ay tilmaamayaan in ka bixitaankooda ay saameyn ku yeelatay dagaalkii shalay looga itaal roonaaday ciidamada wasiirka G/dhigga. Gudoomiyaha maxkamadda islaamiga ee Albayaan Max'ed Ibraahim Bilaal ayaa shabelle u sheegay in qeybtii ugu horeysay ee maleeshiyada deegaanka oo ay wehliyaan ciidamo ka tirsan maxkamada Albayaan ay saakay galeen degmada Buur-hakaba oo gacanta ay ku hayaan. Wariyaha Shabelle ee gobolka Baay, aya soo sheegaya in indhihiisa uu ku soo arkay ciidamada dowladda oo ka sii baxaya buur-hakaba kuwaasi oo dib ugu laabtay duleedka magaalada Baydhabo. Ka bixitaanka ciidamada dowladda ee magaalada Buur-hakaba ayaa ku soo beegmatay xilli maanta la filayay in Ra'isulwasaare Geedi uu gaaro halkaasi. Sidoo kale waxa ay ku soo beegmeysaa arinkaan xilli shalay ciidamada Maxkamadaha islaamka iyo kuwa Wasiirka G/dhigga dowladda Somalia uu dagaal qaraar ku dhex maray magaalada Bu'aale. Dhinaca kale wararka naga soo gaaray degaano ka tirsan gobolada Jubbooyinka ayaa waxa ay sheegayaan in ay ka jirto xiisado dagaal. Xiisadahaan dagaal ayaa waxaa laga soo sheegayaa deegaanadii shalay ciidamada maxkamadaha iyo kuwa Barre Hiiraale dagaalka uu ku dhex maray gaar ahaan degmooyinka Saakow iyo Bu'aale.
  19. Ciidamada Maxakiimta oo dib u qabsaday Bur Hakaba 22 Oct 22, 2006, 23:50 Ciidamada deegaanka Burhakaba oo gacan ka helaya Malishiyadka Maxakiimta Islaamiga ayaa dib u qabsaday degmada Buur-Hakaba ee gobolka Bay halkaasoo labadii maalmood ee lasoo dhaafay ay ku sugnaayeen ciidamada Dowladda KMG ah. Ciidamada dowladda KMG ah ayaa xalay isaga baxay magaalada Buur-Hakaba halkaasoo ay kala wareegeen maliishiyo deegaanka iyo kuwo Maxkamaddaha waxaana lagu soo waramayaa in xaalada magaalada ay iminka degan tahay. Xoogaga Maxkamaddaha Islaamiga iyo kuwa dowladda ayaa ku loolamaya gacan ku heynta degmada Buur-hakaba, iyadoo deegaanka ay ku wada sugan yihiin ciidamo kala taabacsan Maxkamaddaha Islaamiga iyo dowladda KMG ah. Ciidamada DF ah oo dib uga soo baxay Buurhakaba Wararka laga helayo magaalada Baydhabo ayaa sheegaya in xalay ciidamda DFKMG ah ay dib uga soo guureen magaalada Buurahakabo. Lama oga ilaa hada sababta dhabta ah oo keentay ka soo bixitanka Burhakaba balse warar ka soo baxaya qaar ka mid ah dad wargal ah oo diiday in magacooda la shaaciyo ayaa sheegaya in ay timid kadib markii culeys ciidan oo aad u balaaran uu kaga yimid Malishiyaadka Maxaakiimta. Midowga Maxaakiimta ayaa labdii maalmood ee la soo dhaafey keeney Malishiyaad aad u fara badan agagaarka Buurhakaba gaar ahaan degaanka la yiraahdo Qardho. Midowga Maxaakiimta ayaa maalintii shaley aheyd sheegtay in ay guulo Milatari ka gaareen dagaalo ka dhacey magaalada Bu'aalo kuwaas oo ay isaga horyimaadeen Malishiyaad uu horkacayo Barre Hirraale iyo kuwa midowga Maxaakiimta halka sarkaal u hadley ciidamada Barre Hiraale uu beeniyay sheegashada Maxaakiimta. Garowe Online, Garowe
  20. Govt withdrawal Breaking news reaching the Garowe Online news desk from Baidoa, the Somali government capital, say that government troops who captured Buurhakaba town Saturday have withdrawn. The official reasons for the government’s withdrawal from Buurhakaba are as-of-yet unknown, but military sources who declined to be named in print informed Garowe Online that the government’s sudden pullout came after a heavy military buildup of Islamic Courts militia in neighboring regions. The Mogadishu-based Islamist militia have been deploying hundreds of militiamen and heavy weaponry in the outskirts of Buurhakaba for the past 2 days, using bases in the Islamist stronghold of Lower Shabelle region to reinforce militias in Bay region. Buurhakaba is a town in Bay region, where the government is based, and is only 60 KM from Baidoa. Keep with Garowe Online for the latest on this developing story.
  21. Jimcihii Shalay Iyo Masaajida Burco. Somalilandfuture Online — Burao, Somaliland — 22 October, 2006 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Shalay waxa ay ahayd maalin Jimce ah, dhinaca shacaa’irta diiniga ah waa maalin si weyn loogu oogo oo loogu cibaadaysto, waxay shalay dheereed jimacayaasha caadiga ah, waa tobankii ugu danbeeyey bisha barakaysan ee Ramadaan. Waxaa dadweynaha cibaadada jecel ay goor hore sii fadhiisteen masaajidada safafka hore. Sidoo kale waxaa safafka hore ee masaajidada sii qabsaday culimada gobolka Togdheer oo cibaadada ka sokow aad uga xanaaqsan dhawaaqyo ay xukuumada Somaliland samaysay oo ka soo horjeeda shariicada Islaamka. Togdheer sideedaba waa goob nasiib u heshay diinta ku dhaqankeeda, sidoo kale waxay dheertahay magaalooyin badan oo dadka afka Somaliga ku hadla ay ku nool yihiin, adiga oo markiiba dareemaya dhalinyarada u kala dab qaadaysa madaariska diiniga ah iyo masaajida duruusta, dhaqanka toosan iyo axkaamta shariicada lagu barto. Sidaas awgeed dhawaaqyada xukuumada Somaliland ee ka soo horjeeda diinta ama tusaya astaan colaytan diineed ah, waxaad markiiba arkaysaa iyada oo ay jidhka iyo qalbigaba ka diidan yihiin dadka reer Togdheer. Todobaadkan Wasiirka Arrimaha Dibada iyo socdaalkiisii ayaa ahaa kuwo si gaara ay dadweynaha Somaliland u danaynayeen, gaar ahaan kuwa ku nool Togdheer. Waxaana markiiba ka soo baxay dhawaaqyo dhan ka noqon kara diinta suuban iyo dhaqanka Islaamka, wuxuu BBC-Da afka Somaliga ka sheegay in fiditaanka maxaakiimta iyo nidaamka ku dhisan diinta ee geeska Afrika aanu raali ka ahayn. Wuxuu sheegay in ay halis ku tahay Somaliland iyo dawladaha deriska ah, kuwaas oo ay Itoobiya ka mid tahay. Waxaa loo akhristay in aanu difaacayn Somaliland ee ay tahay difaac ay ku qasbayso Itoobiya oo ka duulaysa danaheda gaarka ah iyo colaadeeda diinta islaamka. Waxaa sidoo kale reer Togdheer u arkeen in uu colaad diineed oo dhaqankiisa iyo diintiisaba ka dhan ah lagu qasbay oo uu qaatay. Dareenka labaad ee ay aad uga cadhoodeen culimada iyo shacbiga Togdheer waxaa weeye, labada guuto ee ciidamada Somaliland ah ee lagu soo furay xerada taliska guud ee qaybta Togdheer, kuwaas oo ay tibaaxo ka soo baxay sheegeen in ay ka hawlgelayaan culimada joogta Togdheer ee ku haysa halista dalka Somaliland, waxaase lays waydiinayaa waa kuwee culimadaasi. Labadaas guudo illa intii aanu soo bixin warka tilmaamaya in ay ka dagaal gelayaan sidii culimada loo cabushin lahaa reer Togdheer, waxaa dadweynaha Togdheer iska dhaadhiciyey in ay u jeedaan jiida hore oo difaacayaan dalka maqan ee ay cadawgu gacanta ku hayo, marnabase qorshaha kuma darsan in ay Togdheer u soo kicitimeen. Dhacdada intaasba isku fuuqsatay waa 5/10/06 oo Madaxweynaha Somaliland amar ku bixiyey isaga oo helay warar sheegaya in Shiikh Cali Warsame ka soo degayo Berbara in la soo xidho. Halkaas ayuu laba tikniko ah u diray, nasiib wanaagse Shiikha ayaa dib u dhacay, illa hadda ma cadda go,aanka u meelyaal Madaxweynaha iyo xukuumada ee xadhiga Shiikh Cali Warsame, waxaase la garan la,yahay sababta Shiikha uu madaxweynaha iyo xukuumada Somaliland ay sharaftiisa iyo karaamadiisa iyo cirdigiisa ay ugu tumaynayso. Intaas iyo dareeno kale oo badani markii ay soo baxeen ayaa Jimcihii shalay waxaa masaajidada ka Khudbadeeyey oo ka jeediyey hadalo dhaadheer oo kulkulul culimada gobolka Togdheer, waxayna sheegeen maadaama ay xukuumadii sharafta iyo karaamada ummada iyo diinta ummada la donayey in ay difaacdo oo illaaliso ay ku soo duushay, waxaa waajib nagu ah maalinta naloogu yimaado diintayada in aanu is difaacno, waxaanuse ka codsanaynaa xukuumada in aanay xaalada nabadgelyo iyo dhaqankeena diinta ku dhisan aanay kala daadin, culimada Somaliland aanay ka dhigin kuwo ka soo horjeeda qaranimadooda. Waxaa isna taageeray hadalo khudbado ah ka soo jeediyey masaajida qaarkood salaadiinta qaar ka mid ah. Sida Suldaan Maxamuud Xaaji Xuseen oo uga digay xukuumada in aanay nabadgelyada khalkhalgelin iyo in aanay ummada culimadeeda iyo karaamadeeda ku tuman. Suldaanka oo u digaya Madaxweynaha ayaa yidhi: “ Qolyaha halkan ( Masaajidka) fadhiya ee u basaasa xukuumada wax, waxaan leeyahay u geeya haddeer oo waxaad tidhaahdaan Suldaan Maxamuud ayaa sidaa lahaa. Waxaanu uga digaynaa xukuumada in aanay ummada diinteeda dagaalka ay kula jirto sii wadin ee joojiyaan, in aanay nabadgelyada iyo xasiloonida dalka wax u dhimin. Haddii xukuumada iyo madaxweyne Daahir Rayaale arrinkaas diidaan, waanu difaacaynaa diintayadaâ€. Isku soo duuboo xukuumada Somaliland gobolkii Togdheer waxay ka abuurtay xaalad keenaysa nabadgelyo daro, xasilooni la,aan iyo dagaal weerar ah oo aan cid uu ku jihaysan yahay lagaranayn. Xukkumada waxaa loo sheegayaa ayay leeyihiin reer Togdheer in aanay Togdheer Muqdisho ahaynee ay tahay Caasimadii Labaad ee Somaliland, maxaakiimtuna xukumin ee ay iyagu xukumaan oo gobolky Somaliland yahay, sidaas awgeed ay dagaalka ay wadaan tahay surmo seegto iyo itijaah qaldan. Weiyaha Cabdilaahi Maxamuud Cali Burco Somalilandfuture Online sgiriig@yahoo.com
  22. Xukuumada Oo Burco Ka Wadda Qorshe Lagu Qabanayo Suldaan Maxamuud Xaaji Xuseen Somaliland.Today — Burao, Somaliland — 22 October, 2006 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Burco, October 21, 2006 (Somaliland Today)- Xukuumada Somaliland ayaa ka wada magaalada Burco qorshayaal ay ku damacsantahay inay ku qabato Suldaan Maxamuud Xaaji Xuseen oo ka mid ah Madax-dhaqameedyada Somaliland gaar ahaan gobolka Togdheeg iyo dad kale oo masuuliyiin ah. Sida wararka ka imaanaya magaalada Burco ee xarunta gobolka Togdheer ay sheegayaan in xubno wasiiro ah oo shalay jimcihii gaadhay magaaladaa ay kulamo la yeesheen koox odayaal ah oo ka tirsan beesha uu ka soo jeedo Suldaan Maxamuud Xaaji Xuseen isla markaana ku war geliyeen inay soo gacan geliyaan Suldaanka. inkasta oo aan warkaasi si rasmi ah daboolka looga qaadin balse waxay warar xogogaal ahi tibaaxayaan in kulankaasi oo ka dhacay Hotel City Plaza ee magaalada Burco lagaga wada hadlay qorshe xukuumadu ku doonayso in loogu soo gacan geliyo Suldaanka isla markaana beeshiisu kala noqoto kalsoonida. Waxayna wararku intaa ku darayaan in qorshaha xukuumadu ka dambeeyay ka dib markii dhawaan Suldaanku ka hadlay masaajido kana waramay xaaladaha taagan wakhtigan oo uu ku tilmaamay mid xukuumadu ku doonayso inay ku cabudhiso reer Burco,waxaanu Suldaanku carabka ku dhuftay ciidamo xoogan oo la keenay magaalada Burco kuwaas oo dib looga soo raray fadhiisimaha ciidamada Somaliland ee Aaga Adhi Cadeeye. Waxa kale oo Suldaanku ka hadlay cadaalad darada, musuq maasuq badan oo ka jirta dalka iyo in loo baahan yahay in la isku xukumo diinta islaamka,isagoo sheegay in aanu la soconin maxkamadaha islaamiga ah ee ka jira muqdisho isla mar ahaantaana aanu ka soo horjeedin qaranimada Somaliland balse uu isaga iyo beeshiisuba taageersan yihiin madax banaanida iyo qaranimada Somaliland. Dhianaca kale waxay wararka ka imaanaya magaalada Burco sheegayaan in ciidamo xoogan la keenay magaaladaasi kuwaas oo laga soo raray dhawrkii maalmood ee u dambeeyay fadhiisimaha ciimada ee aaga hore ee Adhi Cadeeye. Waxayna wararku intaa ku darayaan inuu jiro qorshayaal kale oo xukuumadu ku doonayso inay ku qabato Sheekh Cali Warsame oo la filayo inuu maalmaha soo socda soo gaadho magaalada Burco isagoo ka soo jeeda dhinaca magaalada Muqdisho halkaas oo uu ku gaadhay reer u jooga. Liibaan Maaweel Shire Somaliland Today Burco, Somaliland
  23. Ammaanka Magaalada Burco Oo Aad Loo Adkeeyey Caawa Iyo Dadweynaha Oo Diidey Qorshe Xukuumaddu Ugu Talagashay Tukashada Salaadda Ciidda Somaliland.Org — Burao, Somaliland — 22 October, 2006 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Burco (Somaliland.org) – Magaalada Burco ayaa ammaanka si weyn loo adkeeyey caawa, iyada oo loo diyaar garoobayo salaadda Ciidul-fidriga oo berrito loo dareerayo, kadib markii maanta la soo gebagebeeyey soonka bisha barakaysan ee Rammadaan. Dhawr gaadhi oo ay saaran yihiin ciidamo milateri ah ayaa ku wareegaya magaalada, kuwaas oo aan hore loogu arag magaalada. Waxaana la sheegay in ciidankaasi ka tirsan yahay Ciidanka Qaranka, Guuto lagu magacaabo “Guutada wareegta†oo dib looga soo celiyey Jiidda Adhi-caddeeye, isla markaana Khamiistii la soo dejiyey magaalada Burco. Ciidankan oo tiradoodu gaadhayso 700 oo askari iyo dhawr gaadhi oo tikniko ah ayaa la sheegay in loogu talagalay in lagaga hortago kacdoono iyo dhaqdhaqaaqyo ay xukuumaddu ka cabsi qabto inay ka bilaabmaan magaalada Burco, halkaas oo la sheegay in wadaadadu ay xoog ku leeyihiin. Dhinaca kalena, wefti ka socda xukuumadda iyo maamulka Gobolka Togdheer ayaa iyaguna maanta soo saaray go’aan ah in aan lagu tukan karin Garoonka weyn ee Kubadda Cagta ee magaalada Burco oo lagu tukan jirey Salaadaha Ciidda, isla markaana cayintay goobaha lagu tukanayo Salaadda Ciidda. Weftiga xukuumadda iyo maamulka Gobolku waxay go’aankan ku sababeeyeen in garoonka ay fadhiyaan biyo ka mid ah daadadkii dhowaan ku soo rogmadey magaalada, sidaa darteed aan lagu tukan karin salaadda. Waxayna u cayimeen in lagu tukado Salaadda Ciidda laba goobood oo kala ah Sayladda oo ah dhinaca Galbeed iyo Xerada Gaaska oo ah dhinaca bariga. Hase yeeshee, dadweynaha iyo waxgaradka magaalada Burco ayaa fashiliyey go’aankaas xukuumadda iyo maamulka, isla markaana isu xilqaamay inay diyaariyaan garoonka si loogu tukado, iyaga oo isla caawa ku soo daabulay lawdhadh ciid qalalan ah oo ay ku as-gogleen garoonka meelihii biyuhu fadhiisteen. Go’aankan ku saabsan goobaha lagu tukanayo salaadda ciidda ayaa dadweynaha reer Burco u arkeen mid lagu kala qaybinayo dadweynaha magaalada, ujeeddo siyaasadeedna ay dowladdu ka leedahay. Magaalada Burco ayaa dareen xasaasi ahi ka taagnaa tan iyo Khamiistii markii ciidamada Qaranka ee laga soo celiyey Jiidda Adhicaddeeye ay soo gaadheen, waxaana ilaa shalay soo baxayey warar sheegaya in xukuumaddu doonayso inay qabqabato Madaxdhaqameedyo sarsare iyo qaar ka mid ah culimada waaweyn ee reer Burco. C/risaaq M. Dubbad, Hargeysa.
  24. Maybe Gedonet.com will benefit from your "sources in Africa". This is what the mouthpiece of warlord Barre had to say about the situation in Bu'ale. http://www.gedonet.com/index.php?news=522