nuune

Nomads
  • Content Count

    12,988
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by nuune

  1. lool the poll questions Soo dhaaf sxb, canjeera amxaar ayaan ku quraacanayaa hadaan jab hawada kuu soo marinayo ii sheeg, anyway waan kuu soo niyoodey ee dhab dheh. Abaal raaga rag baa leh, mid baaqdana haween baa leh, mid soo dhakhsadana xoolaa leh. illeyn naagey abaal ma lihid waa tee tan sidan kuu garaacdey sxb, garaac ma xumee ma jiiro aangalo ayey kugu saqiir juujisey
  2. I did sxb, clearly when one says we don't interfere other sovereign states but it seems they control this little TFG and can shake it up and down, all of course with money, 65% of Xildhibaanada lacagtooda comes from EU, so I guess they have a point!
  3. EU baa tiri FUNDINGKA ayaan idin ka jaraneynaa darraato, money is important than achieving peace!
  4. Originally posted by Libaahe*: nuune. Wa news article maha. ma ahan news waxan, adba waad ogtahay
  5. ^^ Qofka qorey articlekan waa qof wareersan oo xamaasad ka buuxda, bal ila fiiri waxan ayaa lagu leeyahay waa war: hase ahaatee Waxa uu sheegay Faarax Macalin inaanu Marnaba La Kulmeynin Ergada PL. Hase yeeshee Madaxaynaha PL ayaa diiday in Faarax Macalin Cag soo dhigo Garoowe, isagoo adeegsaday maleeshiyo isaga ku heyb ah oo cago jugleyn iyo dareen cabsi abuuray.
  6. Originally posted by Sultan Dheere: The human behaviour is fascinating, and sad. Historically the most oppressed humans are today the most discriminated and looked down upon as if they were the biggest villains in history - by everyone, Whites, Arabs, south Asians, far east Asians etc. Perhaps its because we are the poorest continent in the world and its full of AIDS-infested, uneducated, starving people, hence nobody respects us. Even in places like India, Masr, and other South American nations the darker skined people are discriminated against by the lighter skinned people. What have black people done to the world that has made them the most pitied, vilified and hated people all over the globe? You are promoting racism but the sad thing is that you don't know, which in fact, is a series problem to look at!
  7. Originally posted by ilhan00: Hi Everyone, •What issues do you face with amily members or friends who suffer from either of the two? They look differen, walk different & talk different, and I take them to the mosque if I see them in that situation •Do you get any support from any organisation? No organisation can heal depression, tell the person to pray to Allah, and read as much Quran as possible •How do you cope? Tell them to read the Quraan and pray Salaat •Do you think the medication they are put under is a solution or is it just making it worse? No medication, only medication is for the person to pray Salaat and read Quraan, it will make their mind and body relax, and forget world affairs, they will remember that Allah is there for them, all the time •Some people take the person back home to Somalia do you think that is a good idea don’t you think they would be better off here where they can get better medication? No that is not good idea, but it is good idea if where the person lives right now has no Muslim connections, then back home will be better so the person can forget all the troubles and stress in the West •How about those back home do you think it is right for them to be tied up? No it is not right, but Jinn exist and Quraan is the solution •Do you agree that they are possessed by the devil? Devil is the enemy of every person, so you can fight and wrestle the devil, read the Quran •Since we are Muslim what is you thought about them seeing a psychologist Seeing any doctor won't harm, but they won't be able to heal stress and depression, multi-billion are spent each month to cure depression and find it for medication, so far, nothing is found, the only solution lies to fear Allah and become better Muslim, read the Quraan
  8. ^^ Adiga horta cudur afuufoow la dhahaa qabtaa soo ma ogid, marna dheh Liverpool League J aa fiican inee gasho, marna top 4, now you know Liverpool can surprise many
  9. The Telegraph By Heidi Blake 8:28AM GMT 24 Nov 2010 A photograph taken in the Berlin suburb of Wilmersdorf shows a woman lying in the street after apparently giving birth while a kneeling man cradles a newborn baby. A second woman is shown crouching to support the head of the new mother, who appears to be lying on a towel. A car is haphazardly parked next to them in the road with its door open. The image, taken on Hubertusallee Street, has created a buzz on technology blogs, but some users have speculated that it may be a prank. A German reader wrote on the Gizmodo website: "There is a hospital across the street and they have no knowledge of a birth right in front of their door. "In the house is also an advertising agency that has no knowledge of a birth in front of their house." No-one has yet claimed responsibility for the image, which Google has replaced with a new photograph of the street. It is the latest in a series of bizarre events to be captured on Street View. Earlier this week, a naked man was spotted climbing into the boot of his car on the driveway of a house in Mannheim, south-west Germany. In August a photograph emerged of what appeared to show a dead schoolgirl lying on the side of the road in Worcester. It later turned out to be ten-year-old Azura Beebeejaun who was lying down playing dead with her friends. Google was forced to remove several graphic images after its Brazilian Street View service captured a string of images of dead bodies days after going live in the South American country.
  10. Alfoos, whereabout in Hargeisa are you, myself and old time friends are arranging to have a KHAT session this weekend, so hola back, take your bottle, and no, we won't be in a hotel or similar, rather xaafad ayaa nagala casuumey, so join us waryee, don't worry, will get you Dhajjis type of Khat to make sure all that London dirty gash out
  11. Lifeline Africa, the emergency traffic Ambulance Service in Somalia Statement: Lifeline Africa activities in the year of 2009 The total wounded people we carried were 6753 and herebelow is in detail: Wounded: * Children 1553 * Women 2027 * Men 3173 Death toll is 2089 Other Casualties including labor women, bleeding women, knife wounds and children’s wounds were 1632. Lifeline Africa activities in the year of 2010 From January to October 2010, the total wounded people we carried were 5814 and herebelow is in detail: Wounded: * Children 1146 * Women 2903 * Men 1765 Death toll is 2171 Other Casualties including labor women, bleeding women, knife wounds and children’s wounds were 1023.
  12. Boqolkiiba 80% Dadka lagu dilay Muqdisho oo lagu eedeeyey AMISOM iyo DFKMG Ambulance service: 4,200 Somalis killed in 2 years By MOHAMED SHEIK NOR and JASON STRAZIUSO The Associated Press Wednesday, November 24, 2010; 11:23 AM MOGADISHU, Somalia -- The only ambulance service in war-torn Mogadishu said Wednesday that more than 4,200 bystanders have died in warfare the last two years, and a U.S. group that works to prevent civilian deaths said Somalia is more dangerous for civilians than Afghanistan or Iraq. The seaside capital sees frequent barrages of mortars, rockets and artillery shells fired between Islamist insurgents like al-Shabab and pro-government forces who protect the sliver of land controlled by the U.N.- and U.S.-backed Somali government. The head of the city's ambulance service, Ali Muse, said that pro-government forces from the African Union and Somali troops are to blame for the majority of the civilian deaths - about 80 percent. "All of those victims are civilians killed either by stray bullets or hit by mortars or by artillery shells," said Muse, who is the head of the Lifeline Africa Ambulance Service. "About 80 percent of them died at Bakara market, which is the main target of the African Union peacekeepers." ad_icon Maj. Barigye Bahoku, the spokesman for the 7,000-strong African Union force in Mogadishu, said he could not comment on the ambulance service report because he had not read it. Human rights groups and Mogadishu residents have repeatedly accused the African Union of indiscriminately targeting populated areas of the city with artillery fire after insurgents fire mortars toward AU troops. Bakara is the most popular market. The executive director of CIVIC, the U.S.-based Campaign for Innocent Victims in Conflict, said civilians bear the brunt of war in Somalia, Iraq and Afghanistan. But she said Somalia may be the most dangerous because neither side abides by obligations under international law to avoid civilian casualties, as U.S. and international forces in Iraq and Afghanistan are required to. "Al-Shabab hides out in civilian markets, blasts the government or AMISOM (African Union) bases and then runs, so by the time AMISOM fires back, they're already gone," Sarah Holewinski said. "When AMISOM does fire back, they do so indiscriminately and often kill civilians. This despite rhetoric from AMISOM that they abide by international laws and never want to kill civilians." Holewinski said insurgents in Somalia, Iraq and Afghanistan all put civilians in harm's way. The African Union, in a rare admission of civilian casualties, apologized for the deaths of two Somalis after a convoy of AU troops opened fire on civilians Tuesday. Seven people were wounded. The mayor of Mogadishu, Mohamed Nur, asked the AU for compensation for the shooting. "We do not know exactly why disciplined forces like AMISOM are committing this gross violation on the lives of innocent civilians. It is deliberate attack against innocents," Nur said. The AU commander, Gen. Nathan Mugisha, apologized for the shooting and said the soldiers involved were arrested. Mugisha called the incident sad and regrettable but also isolated. He said the African Union force, which is primarily comprised of troops from Uganda and Burundi, is in Mogadishu to protect civilians and make the capital safer. "We came here to help the Somali people to restore the peace and stability, but we did not come here to kill or wound any Somali," Mugisha said. Holewinski said AMISOM appears to be taking seriously the threat to civilians but has not yet made the necessary practical changes to their operations. Muse's ambulance service said 2,171 civilians were killed between January and the end of October this year, and that 5,814 were wounded. Among the wounded were 2,903 women and 1,146 children. The group said that 2,089 civilians were killed in the capital in 2009. Civilian deaths in war zones are difficult to track and often end up being estimates, though Muse's count is based on the number of bodies his ambulance drivers have seen. The 4,260 civilian deaths over the last 22 months means that Somalia sees a high ratio of civilian deaths compared with the 7,000 African Union troops in Mogadishu. The Iraq Body Count, a private British-based group that has tracked civilian deaths in Iraq since March 2003, estimates that 107,000 civilians have been killed in that war. The United States had about 140,000 troops in Iraq through much of the height of the war. The Afghanistan Rights Monitor reported 1,074 civilian deaths during the first half of 2010. The group called this year the worst for security since shortly after the demise of the Taliban regime. There are currently about 130,000 NATO troops in Afghanistan, the vast majority of which are American. Holewinski said that civilian deaths "far outweigh" combatant deaths in all three wars. Somalia has not had a functioning government since clan-based warlords toppled dictator Mohamed Siad Barre in 1991 and then turned on each other, sinking the Horn of Africa nation into chaos. Hassan Elmi Yahye, a prominent clan elder Mogadishu, said he counted 84 artillery shells fired toward Bakara market on Monday night. He said whenever insurgents carry out attack against AMISOM positions or fire mortars toward them, AMISOM troops start firing toward Bakara market, irrespective of the source of the fire. "Anyone who is killed by an artillery shell is killed by AMISOM," he said. "But anyone killed by small bullets and mortars are mainly killed by insurgents. That is the reality on the ground." --- Associated Press reporter Jason Straziuso and Malkhadir M. Muhumed contributed to this report from Nairobi, Kenya. Source
  13. Ibti, I was not laughing at your spelling, in fact I understood, rather the word "biiqi" Ps: Your Somali writing is perfect
  14. Originally posted by *Ibtisam: Plus anigba dadku iga biiqi-
  15. That did not materialized sxb, wax fahan, I KNOW for sure no flights land at night at Hargeisa airport or any Somali airport. PS: It was a trial flight to test, so far it didnt work
  16. Goormaa kuugu danbeesay airportka Hargeisa ood ka soo dagto ama aad ka duusho, war it was announced that night flights will commence last year, they never materialized, sxb anaa kaa og, no flights land at night or depart, the closest is the early morning one's around 7am which is when first flights land
  17. lool@earthshaking experience, NGONGE sxbkaa JB danbigaa intuu ka tira batey ayaa dadkii magaaladaa la cadaabi danbiguu asaga galey
  18. Originally posted by Jacaylbaro: and they land here at 10:30am which is the best time everyone can get u from the airport. As if planes land at night at Hargeisa airport naga daa waryee
  19. In 1982, I was watching LIVE World Cup(recorded a day earlier ), my team, the Soviet Union beat Belgium by one goal in Neu Camp, Barcelona
  20. Happy ending yeah waxaan xasuustey nin Soomaali ah oo iska soo gamey(tuurey) bridge weyn oo ku taala Swizerland markii loo diidey sharci laguna yiri waa lagu celin, buundada waxey ku taaley buur dhakadeed, ma aqaano waxa halkaa loo geeyey buundada balse aad bey u dheereeyd oo qofkii iska soo tuuraa uu waqti fara badan dhaxda ku soo jirayo, ninkii Soomaaliga ahaabaa dhulka ku soo dhacey asagoo kala maroora, wajigiisa dhanka dhabarkuu aadey, lugihiina dhanka kale ayey u jeedsadeen, even his butt came to the front, was dead and taken to hospital. I was in Bern markaa, and group of Somalis heard and we rushed to him to see.
  21. missed da dhul gariir don't worry there would be a smiliar one early in the morning tmro, expected to be 4.3 magnitude
  22. ^^ What counts is the niyo(dhaqanku waa waxa kala saaro qawmiyadaha, and frankly, dhaqan suubanoo wacan waan leenahay ee anagaa dayacney), so xariga adkeyso, awrkana dabarka la ogow
  23. The dhul gariir took place just off the coast between yemen and djibouti, magnitude 4.9, powerfull enough that it reached some parts of Borama.