Ibtisam
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Everything posted by Ibtisam
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SalamAlikum ALL Hello my friends; Juxa *big Hug* How are you? Ma fideya? Till next time people, Salamah
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:D :D The bottom line is wixi Saado Xalawdeda use garenayo, go ahead and niicida naal daaf, the door >>>> SSC rights ya ku heesa, its your money- hide it under your carpet for all anyone cares. It is not SL crew defending DS, evidently Duke, Talaeex, Cambaro, Naxar and Adam and few other people on here see DS as a business- THATS the long and short of it. As for doing them same to Burco and Haregisa, 22years too late for that- how else do you think SL birth appeared. I guess now you dont find it so easy to say the past is the past and stop ooyinin. If SSC wants to blame someone- find the leaders and tell them to stop selling you to the highest bidder, hoogan iyo balanbalkanu iidin ma heestiin if you had honest straigh forward leaders THAT care.
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Naxar, the fact of the matter is Dahabshill does not need to answer such allegations because his business is still OPEN and running in SSC despite the conflict, simple because normal people see the difference between a business and someone's clan. Dahabshill is in every Somali city and Some villages and many none-Somali places. Of course there are always people who are going to be upset about who or what you are but it would be silly to expect a company to entertain such sillyness. In any case they would just seem defensive, and you only need to defend yourself if you have a guilt conscious. Shame religion is used in one dimension, fact is NO ONE knows what if anything Dahabshiil has ever given to Somaliland; to drag his name through the mud, backbite and insult was xalal of course but he will be judged for what he supposedly gave to a government who then may have used it in certain way; Caqli waa kaas really. If I go to a hair dresser- she does my hair beautifully and then I go out on the street, she does not get dambi- it is a silly notion. There is nothing new about Dahabshiil or his business;- he has always paid taxes in all countries he operates because it is in the interest of his business and it allows him to function and go on his day to day business. NOR does he need to JUSTIFY why he gave his money to this person or another. So unless someone can say he did this, that or the other; took a gun, trained the military or provided weapons, gave speech supporting military action;- it is just hot air & emotional outbursts. Somaliland like any other country- imaginary or otherwise is financed by taxes from Business and the people who live there; So what? and how is Dahabshiil any different to everyone living there?
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Recycled songs to guubabin the Diaspora collections. I find it funny that people actually have the cheek to say a private company has a duty to answer the content of a song and the foams of maqaxii gossip. Really seriously, do you expect the man himself to show up, hold a press conference and say “We would like to point out to the SSC Diaspora people that they have used our services for a long time [both when there were no other option BUT Dahabshill and now), we have contributed to their areas in a number of ways and we have many sub offices owned and managed by members of the SSC clan. We would kindly request that the troubled few get a life and find something else for Saado Ali to sing about. Using Dahabshill is not compulsory, if you are not happy with the service provided, we will try and address any contractive criticism, however if you are bothered and unhappy about my**** status, then I suggest you take a running jump as this is not subject to change”
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^^^sorry Walalo, adiga maha, waxan ka sareeyo aan sheegi.
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IT should be more like ilaho ceebta kashiif in this case nooh^^ These people need to be shamed and named and bullied and treated like the diseased outcasts they are. All of them. I dont see why it is important to point out SHE is somali though- unless there is a specific policy towards somalis it should be treated like any other nationality witht he same criminal activities.
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Ibtisam I've always been a unionist since the time I was conceived. Newbie or not. IF you become known as a lair no one will believe you later- imika maxad ka ogedey unionist or otherwise untill you was AT the very least maybe 15-20yrs. As I said most people waxba kama yaqaan how a unionist SHOULD behave. Maxad kale qasansa the likes of the guy above you who spends his days searching the forums for porn tapes and even worse insult him at the expense of the so called people you want to unite with you. :eek: I recommend you all spend some time with Adam, Cara or Canno Geel or ailamos to find the sprit of Somalinimo.
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^^Also I am not sure Ina Kahin qualify's as someone famous. Warya JB, I have not looked at the website you posted but ma waxaad na leedehey Prad Pitt iyo Kahin and Silannayo share the same pages as famous people?? Baal ka sheeka adiguba? :D
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Malika ha igu daab lumin inadheer;- I clearly said there is a possibility just highly unlikely to get that MANY people and so easy too! If it is not true it shoots SSC CID/FBI in the foot really, taking away from their cause, so it is probably best to avoid these kind of been abuur, if it is true it is not really suprising, the sentiments are not something new, but it would pose serious questions about how easy people can reach them and I for one will be reaching for my phone to see if I can get through- I only want a little bit of land :D
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I dont think these recordings are true, with all my connections and family links IF I was to call on it, I could not get any of those guys to talk to me on the phone, and just in case it is because I am a women, My brother could not get him on the line. IF it is true I agree with Val, the SSC secrete service should get paid. But I doubt it is true. If it is, nothing new really. I do KNOW Ina Kahiin is alive and kicking though.
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Yes, has JB not told you? Hadyadii buu kala duuntey. just kidding.
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Blessed I always get this sad feeling of yaa so muslimiya so he can be rewarded for his fairness. He is a very just and fair man (in most cases)
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Farah wins New York half marathon in spectacular fashion
Ibtisam replied to Xaaji Xunjuf's topic in General
Yeeeeah second time he beat ther Africans.!- well a few were missing both times but he looks strong. Roll on 2012 with good results for him. -
Somaliland shaqoo aya laka diigtey, every newbie in order to discover himself waan iinu Somaliland horjuumu first miyi. Sheeko Bararely. Well I am 40% Somaliland, 20% my Sub clan, 20% support all Somalis and 10% Bengali, 10% Syrian- go and figure bal adiguba. Like Val said I have to represent my people. :cool: Somaliland this, that the other, here, there and everywhere. Dhee naga daaya, people dont even bother to write arguments or put in any effort, waa cheap.shots.com Also I like the oxymoron it presents, as unionist claim to be against all forms of separatists of Somalis, but their action are in their nature exclusive and confrontational i.e. ma jirtiid, you are this, the other, you are from there, keep away, go to another forum, you will never be, etc. I find it intrigue to say the least that unionist engage in unpleasant and segregating tactics which only work to the advantage or those seek separation who can then turn back and say bal look at this hostility, look at these people, ma naf bey inno hayan halkas aya inugu nabad gelin wayin.
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Breaking News: Libya declares a ceasefire [has Gaddafi bottled it?]
Ibtisam replied to General Duke's topic in General
He is playing a game, they[west] can't attack him if he says he is ceasing fire because the resolution is limited. I always thought he was crazy, if he is there are some smart people around him. -
Sorry to hear that Juxa! May Allah forgive her and give her Jannah!
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I've seen this before but I would like to see the reply to this letter :D
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Japan has raised the alert level at a stricken nuclear plant from four to five on a seven-point international scale for atomic accidents. The move places the crisis at the Fukushima Daiichi site two levels below Ukraine's 1986 Chernobyl disaster. The head of the UN's nuclear watchdog warned in Tokyo meanwhile that the battle to stabilise the plant was a race against the clock. The crisis was triggered by last week's 9.0-magnitude quake and tsunami. The Japanese nuclear agency's decision to raise the alert level to five grades the Fukushima situation as an "accident with wider consequences". It also places the crisis on a par with the Three Mile Island nuclear accident in the US in 1979. Japan's atomic crisis was triggered by last week's natural disaster, which has left more than 16,000 people dead or missing. According to the latest figures, 6,405 people are confirmed as dead and about 10,200 are listed as missing. 'Race against time' Further heavy snowfall overnight in the quake zone has brought more misery to survivors and all but ended hopes of finding anyone else alive in the rubble. On Friday, people across the nation observed a minute's silence at 1446 local time (0546 GMT), exactly a week after the disaster. Relief workers in the disaster zone bowed their heads and elderly survivors in evacuation centres wept as the country paused to remember. The head of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), Yukiya Amano, arrived in Tokyo and said the Fukushima crisis was a "race against the clock". "This is not something that just Japan should deal with, and people of the entire world should co-operate with Japan and the people in the disaster areas," said Mr Amano, a Japanese citizen. He said he would not visit the Fukushima Daiichi site on his current trip to the country. His four-member team of nuclear experts would start by monitoring radiation in the capital, he said, before moving to the vicinity of the quake-hit facility, reports Kyodo news agency.
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JB He aint doing your job till sunday His ears must be burning all this searching
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Everywhere is burning these days, Ivory Coast still struggling; Ibrahim Diabate fled from his home in Ivory Coast's main city, Abidjan, he spotted young men with the guns from the force nicknamed the "Invisible commandos" in plastic sandals and Bermuda shorts. He tried to backtrack, but they had already seen him and motioned him to come towards them. "Don't worry," they shouted. "We mean no harm." They searched him for weapons and then let him go. Mr Diabate is one of the hundreds of thousands of people who have fled the districts of Abobo, Anyama, and now Plateau-Dokui, as soldiers who back disputed President Laurent Gbagbo have increasingly lost control to this shadowy force. The "invisible commandos" say they are a self-defence group that formed to protect supporters of Mr Gbagbo's rival, Alassane Ouattara, from repeated raids by the pro-Gbagbo security forces. In a new report, Human Rights Watch (HRW) accuses the pro-Gbagbo forces of a "three-month campaign of violence", which "gives every indication of amounting to crimes against humanity". It details the use of executions, rape and beatings against West African migrants and Ivorians thought to support Mr Ouattara. HRW also describes violent attacks by pro-Ouattara forces in Abobo, including the burning alive of people accused of siding with Mr Gbagbo. Many fear that the country is sliding inexorably back towards the all-out conflict which the elections were supposed to end, once and for all. Coming to a head? On 28 November 2010, millions of Ivorians voted in an election which most hoped would mark the end of the most difficult decade in a country which once enjoyed the highest living standards in West Africa. Continue reading the main story * 400 killed since disputed election * 450,000 forced from their homes * 9,000 UN peacekeepers to monitor 2003 ceasefire * Election intended to reunite country * World's largest cocoa producer * Previously seen as haven of peace and prosperity in West Africa * Alassane Ouattara recognised as president-elect * International sanctions imposed to force Laurent Gbagbo to go The presence of 9,000 UN peacekeepers, 3,000 international election observers and an independent electoral commission left little doubt about the outcome of the vote - Mr Ouattara was the winner. But Mr Gbagbo and his allies disputed the result, saying pro-Ouattara rebels had rigged the vote in the northern areas they control. Since then, Mr Ouattara, the internationally-recognised president-elect, has been mainly under blockade in a hotel in Abidjan, while his rival clings on to power. International condemnation was followed by a range of sanctions designed to force out Mr Gbagbo. The West African central bank handed over control of the state accounts to Mr Ouattara and closed down their offices in Abidjan, prompting a liquidity crisis which has left private banks closed for the last three weeks. The European Union introduced sanctions against 91 leading Gbagbo supporters, as well as the country's two main ports. A call by Mr Ouattara's government for a boycott on exports of the country's main cash crop, cocoa, has been widely followed, in what is the world's biggest producer. This has all left Mr Gbagbo struggling to pay salaries and pensions, while Abidjan - Africa's sixth largest city, once known as the Paris of Africa - increasingly resembles a war zone divided between rival forces. With the sanctions starting to bite and tension rising on the street, things could be coming to a head in the coming weeks. 'Honourable exit' Civil servants - most importantly the security forces - are due to be paid before the end of the month. People fleeing their homes in Abidjan (13/03/11) Some 370,000 people have their Abidjan homes in recent weeks The Gbagbo regime had technical and financial trouble paying February's salaries and pensions, with many getting reduced amounts, if at all. And the African Union, which has reiterated its backing of Mr Ouattara, says all sides need to meet by 24 March to set out how the handover of power will be implemented. Accepting AU recommendations for him to lead a government of national unity, Mr Ouattara addressed the nation on Wednesday night on his newly-established television station, TVCI. He pledged to "form a government of national union and reconciliation… including the Ivorian Popular Front [Laurent Gbagbo's party] and the civil society, for the recovery of our country". He said he was offering Mr Gbagbo a "last chance for a peaceful and honourable exit". Mr Gbagbo is scheduled to make a declaration on state television on Thursday evening, though on Monday the state television channel was removed from the Canal Plus satellite network, blocking access to the channel in thousands of homes. UN peacekeepers in Ivory Coast UN peacekeepers are patrolling the front lines In the meantime, rumours circulate of army defections, prompted by the lack of any direct communication from the head of the army and other leading generals for a number of days. Whatever the truth and the degree of army loyalty to Mr Gbagbo, the state security forces have struggled to contain the armed fighters who control Abobo. The Abobo forces claim to have risen up spontaneously to defend the population, but there is evidence of ties with the former New Forces (NF) rebels. Since 2002, the NF have controlled the northern 60% of the country and have recently gained control of several towns in the far west on the border with Liberia. But the NF, led by Mr Ouattara's Prime Minister, Guillaume Soro, has generally yet to move south over the 2003 ceasefire line. The pro-Ouattara camp still hope defections and continued international pressure will swing the presidency their way without the need for all-out war. BBC