Somalina
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One more safar to report. Wasiirka Wafaafinta, boostada iyo isgaarsiinta DKMG ah oo safar ugu ambabaxay dalalka Kenya iyo Cummaan Arbaco, 12 Janaayo, 2011 (HOL) − Wasiirka wafaafinta, boostada iyo isgaarsiinta xukuumadda Soomaaliya C/kariin Xasan Jaamac, ayaa maanta ka dhoofay garoonka diyaaradaha ee Muqdisho, isagoo kusii jeeda dalalka Kenya iyo Cummaan oo uu shirar kaga qaybgalayo. "Safarkeygu, wuuxu ku wajahan yahay dalalka Kenya iyo Cummaan, waxaanse ku hormarayaa magaalada Nairobi ee xarunta Kenya, oo aan kulammo kula yeelanayo maalinta Jimcaha ah hay'adaha Qarammada Midobay," ayuu yiri Mr. Jaamac. Wasiirku wuxuu sheegay, inaysan cidna ku wehlin safarka uu kaga dhoofayo magaalada Muqdisho, balse uu magaalada Nairobi kaga biirayo xoghayihii joogtada ahaa wasaaradda warfaafinta. "Hay'adaha Qarammada Midoobay, waxaan kala hadli doonaan sidii loo gargaari lahaa dadka ku dhibaateysan Soomaaliya iyo sidii howlaha dowladda loo dardagelin lahaa," ayuu yiri wasiirka wafaafinta oo la hadlay saxaafadda intii uusan ka dhoofin garoonka diyaaradaha Muqdisho. Dhanka kale, wasiirku wuxuu sheegay in 17 illaa 18-ka bishan, uu kaga qaybgeli doono dalka Cummaan shir looga hadlayo tiknolojiyada warbaahinta iyo isgaarsiinta dalalka Carabta, isagoo sheegay inay kasoo qaybgeli doonaan dalalka carabta, laguna soo bandhigto doono isbadalka tiknolojiyada. Safarka wasiirka wafaafinta, ayaa kusoo beegmaya iyadoo shalay ay Muqdisho ka ambabaxeen laba wafdi oo ay kala hoggaaminayaan ra'iisul wasaaraha Soomaaliya Maxamed C/llaahi Farmaajo iyo ra'iisul wasaare ku xigeenka aha wasiirka arrimaha dibadda, kuwaasoo shirar looga hadlayo arrimaha Soomaaliya uga qaybgalaya dalalka Mareykanka iyo Norway. Maxamed Xaaji Xuseen, Hiiraan Online maxuseen@hiiraan.com Muqdisho, Soomaaliya
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Wednesday, January 12, 2011 The Somali guerilla group, the ****** National Liberation Front (ONLF), this week vowed that it will keep up its attacks against the Ethiopian military and government. The ONLF, a group of ethnic Somali nationalists based in eastern Ethiopia, takes up the banner of past groups seeking self-governance for ethnic Somalis throughout the region, according to the Council on Foreign Relations. Founded in 1984 by members of a variety of ethnic Somali liberation groups, it is often described by Western governments as a separatist rebel group fighting to make Ethiopia's ****** region an independent Somali state. According to military advisors at CFR, ONLF's main tactics include countering government influence in the region and using violent force, including kidnappings and bombings. The ONLF is believed to be responsible for the deaths of thousands of government forces. On Sunday, during a live radio interview, Hussein Mohammed Nur, ONLF’s information director, told the interviewer that the ONLF held a meeting to "discuss the successes of the rebel group." Nur stated that his group wished to increase attacks to commandeer the mainly ethnic Somali region in eastern Ethiopia. Nur told the show's listening audience that his group had killed more than 3,000 Ethiopian soldiers in 2010 battles. Ethiopia has designated the ONLF as a terrorist group, saying it has links with Eritrea. However, it is not on the U.S. State Department's or European Union terrorist groups list. Ironically, members of the ONLF and their families fled the terrorists and warlords of Somalia, only to settle in Ethiopia and begin their own terrorism campaign against the citizens of Ethiopia. The ONLF split into two factions after some of its members signed a pact with Ethiopia last month. The government said it hoped the pact would end more than 20 years of warfare between ONLF's guerilla wing and the Ethiopian government. Source: Examnier
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Qandalawi;686825 wrote: Come August 2011 and after the expiration of the TFG... Faroole and Siilaanyo should unite and declare themselves the republic of Somalia. That's the idea I am promoting for the sake of the Somalinimo, please register to support it or if not please raise you opinion in a civilised manner. The idea of Somalia or of a Somali republic should be beyond regions, clans or territory, it should be about the people, the Somali people. Somalinimo kulahaa...looooool
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The Football Premiers Still Partying Hard In Mogadishu. PICS
Somalina replied to Abdirazak_PTL's topic in Politics
Showqi, party-gan waad ka maqnayd ee see camal? -
Midowga Afrika oo tababar Kenya ugu bilaabay saraakiil ka tirsan DKMG Nairobi: (Sh. M. Network) Ururka Midowga Afrika ayaa sheegay in ciidamada AMISOM ay bilaabeen in qorsho lagu tababarayo ciidamada booliska dowladda KMG Soomaaliya kaasi oo ka dhacaya wadanka Kenya. Sida lagu sheegay war qoraal ah oo kasoo baxay Ururka Midowga Afrika, 192- sargaal oo isugu jira heerka hoose iyo heerka dhexe oo ka tirsan ciidamada dowladda KMG Soomaaliya ayaa waxaa tabar ay gacan ka gaysanayso AMISOM uu ugu bilowday xero tababar oo lagu magacaabo Wildlife Training Iskuul oo ku taala deegaanka Manyani ee dalka Kenya. Bayaanka ayaa waxaa uu intaasi ku daray in dowladda Kenya ay ku deeqday in qaar ka mid ah saraakiisha ciidamda dowladda KMG Soomaaliya lagu tababaro xeradaasi, kuwaasi oo la dagaalami doono Xarakada Al Shabaab ee ka dagaalanta wadanka Soomaaliya. Ergayga gaarka ah ee Midowga Afrika u qaabilsan Soomaaliya Boubacar Diarra, ayaa waxaa uu sheegay in wax shaki uusan ku qabin tabaarayaasha dhinaca booliska ah ee ka socda xerada Kenya inay yihiin dad qibrad sare u leh howlaha tababaridda. Baoubacar Diarra waxaa uu intaasi ku daray in saraakiisha dowladda ee lagu tabarayo xero ku taala dalka Kenya in la siin doono casharo la xiriira, howlaha booliska, ilaalinta xuquuqda aadanaha, loojistakada iyo maareynta dhibaatooyinka ka jira dalka Soomaaliya. Sida ku cad waa jibaadka ciidamda AMISOM, AMISOM waxaa loo xilsaaray tababaridda ciidamda dowladda KMG Soomaaliya iyo ilaalinta ilaha muhiimka oo ay dowladda KMG leedahay.
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South Sudan's referendum vote reaches 60%, says SPLM South Sudan has reached the 60% turnout needed to pass the referendum on secession from the north, the south's ruling party and ex-rebel group says. South Sudan has reached the 60% turnout needed to pass the referendum on secession from the north, the south's ruling party and ex-rebel group says. "The 60% threshold has been achieved but we are asking for a 100% (turnout)," the SPLM's Anne Itto said. She did not give exact figures, but said it was based on polling centre reports for the first three days of the week-long vote which began on Sunday. The poll was agreed as part of the 2005 deal to end the two-decade civil war. The Sudan Peoples' Liberation Movement have been running the region since that peace agreement. Official turnout figures - which along with the preliminary result, are not expected until the beginning of February - are the responsibility of the South Sudan Referendum Commission. Nearly all of those registered to vote - almost four million people - live in the south. Ms Itto said people have stopped asking each other "how are you?" as a greeting and instead are asking "have you voted?", AP news agency reported. Sabit Alley, a member of the referendum commission, told the BBC they do not have exact statistics for the south because of communication problems. But from information collected so far, 46% of people had cast their ballot in the south in the first two days. "In the north 25% have voted - Khartoum state is quite high, over 50%," he said. The vote, in which only southerners are taking part, is widely expected to approve secession. Meanwhile the US state department has indicated it could remove Sudan from its list of state sponsors of terrorism if the north recognises the outcome of the poll. "It is a process that takes some time, but by beginning the process in the wake of the referendum, the hope is if they meet all the conditions, it can be done by July," US diplomat Princeton Lyman told AFP news agency. Southern Sudan would become Africa's 54th nation on 9 July 2011 if the referendum is passed. North and south Sudan have suffered decades of conflicts driven by religious and ethnic divides, with an estimated 1.5 million people killed in the civil war. -------- Sudan's Historic Vote Voting: 9-15 January - To pass, there must be a 60% turnout, plus a straightforward majority in favour - Vote is a condition of the 2005 deal to end the two-decade north-south conflict - Most northerners are Arabic-speaking Muslims - Most southerners are Christian or follow traditional religions - Oil-rich Abyei area to hold separate vote on whether to join north or south - Referendum could divide Africa's largest country - Final result due 6 February or 14 February if there are appeals - South would become continent's newest nation on 9 July 2011 - National anthem and flag chosen, but not new country's name http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-12170235
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Saalax;687083 wrote: People of Mogadishu have every right to support Somaliland's direction since it hosts hundreds of thousands of mogadishu natives and welcomed them with open hands in their time of need. People from Hargeysa (thousands) waa lagu soo dhaweeyey Mogadishu markey soo qaxeen. What was your point again?
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Lebanon's government collapsed on Wednesday as members of the opposition Hezbollah party and its allies announced they were resigning from the Cabinet. Eleven members of the 30-member Cabinet quit in protest over the U.N.-backed tribunal investigation into the 2005 assassination of the country's former prime minister, Rafiq Hariri. The resignations took place as Hariri's son, Lebanese Prime Minister Saad Hariri, discussed the crisis with U.S. President Barack Obama in Washington. Media have reported that the U.N. indictments will likely target Hezbollah members. Hezbollah denies involvement in the killing of Rafiq Hariri and has been pushing the government to renounce the probe. Hezbollah holds 10 of the cabinet's 30 posts. In a Wednesday news conference, opposition lawmaker Gebran Bassil denounced the the U.N. investigation as an "Israeli project." Earlier, Hezbollah and its allies called for Saad Hariri to hold a Cabinet meeting to discuss the U.N. tribunal. The Associated Press quoted an aide to Mr. Hariri as saying the prime minister was not opposed to a meeting but had commitments outside of Lebanon. Mr. Hariri has been in the United States since Friday, discussing the stalemate with global leaders and U.N. officials. A senior U.S. government official says Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has spoken to officials in Egypt, Saudi Arabia and France about the formation of a global consensus backing Lebanon and the U.N. tribunal. The official said Clinton also planned to raise the issue Wednesday during talks with Gulf Arab leaders in Qatar. On Tuesday, Syria and Saudi Arabia failed to broker an agreement among Beirut's rival political factions. The negotiations had been touted by Lebanese and Arab leaders as one of the best hopes to defuse the crisis. Some information for this report was provided by AP, AFP and Reuters.
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Kulmiye;687075 wrote: If i could nominate someone for this "great somali" award- I do say the first nominees are the somali mothers who work tireless hours both inside and outside to maintain a stable homes and build a better future for their children, I nominate the Somali women with little shops across Africa and elsewhere to make sure no child of theirs sleeps hungry at night, I nominate the women in Europe, in America, in Asia who keeps their family together with resilience and determination while their husbands banded them to other circumstances. I want to nominate the fathers who are the rocks in their community and in their children lives, I want to nominate the men in taxi, in factories, in buses, in business, in schools who work like horses to provide for everyone in their family.... I Nominate those who bring Health, and Education services to Somalis back home and anyone else who works toward a better future for all Somalis:) I nominate you for this award! great speech!
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AUN marxuumka. ---------------------------- Abdi Kusow, Associate Professor of Sociology at Iowa State University is listed in the 2010 Marquis Who’sWho in America. Marquis Who’sWho is the American publisher of directories and short biographies of influential persons. Marquis states in its Preface that Who’sWho in America, “endeavors to profile the leaders of American society,” those men and women who are influencing their nation’s development. Professor Kusow is a noted sociologist in transnational migration and racial formation among African immigrants in North America. His work in this area has been cited in a wide range of academic disciplines including health education, cross cultural heath, demography, fertility and mortality, race and ethnicity, international migration and diaspora, psychiatry, and qualitative methodology and field research. Some of his articles have been adopted as part of the reading list for graduate courses in social psychology, qualitative methodology, and transnational anthropology. One of his articles, “Contesting Stigma: On Goffman’s Assumptions of Normative Order.” Symbolic Interaction 27: 179-197, has ranked in the Top 20 Most Read Papers in Symbolic Interaction from 2004 to 2009. This article is one of few articles that directly re-examine one of the key propositions of one of America’s leading social theorists, Erving Goffman, by showing that rather than being passive bearers of social stigma, contemporary immigrant minorities create counter social and moral positions, thereby changing the question from who is stigmatized to who stigmatizes whom? Over the past several years, Professor Kusow’s research has been cited in nearly 130 scholarly articles, books, book chapters, and public policy reports. Professor Kusow is also an internationally recognized scholar on political conflict and the crisis of the nation-state in the Horn of Africa. Over the past few years, he participated in the creation of the Greater Horn of Africa Initiative Forum, an international organization designed to encourage universities and research institution in the region to built analytical capacities that can contribute to the formulation of proactive policies that can respond to challenges facing the region. The conference was sponsored and organized by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization. He also participated in several international academic and policy forums sponsored by the United Nations Development Program, Italian NGOs, Aalborg University, Denmark, and Ottawa University, Canada. He is the Vice Chair of the Somali Studies International Congress, and founding board member of the University of Southern Somalia, Baidoa. Professor Kusow received bachelor’s degree in sociology from Michigan State University, and holds an M.U.P. (Masters of Urban Planning) from the University of Michigan, and a Ph.D. in sociology from Wayne State University.
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Wednesday, January 12, 2011 KISMAYO, Somalia (UPI) -- Al-Shabaab, the Somali insurgent group with ties to al-Qaida, banned women Tuesday from holding jobs in Kismayo, a woman affected by the order said. Shabelle Media Network said the woman, who did not want her name used, got in touch to report jobs had been closed to women, including working at the port, in cafeterias and selling khat in the market. She said some women in the town went to the al-Shabaab judge and asked him, apparently without success, to make the rules less restrictive. Many Somali families are dependent on women's earnings given the longtime political and economic chaos in the country. Kismayo, a seaport near the mouth of the Jubba River, is Somalia's third-largest city with a population of about 70,000 people. Source: UPI
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lol@poster... What a waste of energy... Somali women this, Somali women that! when will it end? sheesh!
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Hawa Adam Mohamed, the founder and executive director of the Galkayo Education Centre for Peace and Development (GECPD), an organisation committed to eradicating FGM and strengthening women's political influence through human rights and literacy campaigns that have reached more than 7,600 women since 1999. The Somali women's rights movement started in the late 1970s, but was impeded by the civil war in 1991. "It was set back 40 years in time," maintains Hawa, who fled the war to Canada, where she continued lobbying for women in Somalia before returning and founding the GECPD in 1996. By then there were no longer signs of public debate and awareness of women's rights in a country troubled by killings and the power politics of local warlords. Civil war still plagues parts of Somalia, making it very hard to travel around. Although the women's rights movement has spread beyond Puntland, it is difficult to coordinate the struggle on a national scale. Religious justification of female circumcision is common in Somalia, but Hawa argues that the practice of circumcision is not found in the Koran, but in the nation's culture and tradition. She continues to educate religious teachers about the dangers of FGM and has managed to establish dialogue with a few. "In the beginning, the work at GECPD was very difficult. FGM was taboo. People did not want to talk and threw rocks at us and the buildings we worked in. Today, at least, we are able to create some debate about Somali traditions." Last year, the GECPD launched a more visible and confrontational women's rights movement in Somalia. With Hawa Mohammed as one of the key figures, the GECPD managed to organise and coordinate the unprecedented "Zero Tolerance For FGM" demonstration on International Women's Day, Mar. 8. "We were scared. But we had no choice. We'd discussed women's rights for years. Activists were asking, what next? We'd exhausted the talking," says Hawa about the demonstration, which drew more than 20,000 people -- including the Puntland vice president and five cabinet ministers. The demonstration passed peacefully and raised awareness about the dangers of FGM among the people of Puntland. "The demonstration created debate, a debate which is still going on today. And dialogue at least brings new questions," says Hawa. More than 98 percent of Somali women have suffered genital mutilation, according to Equality Now, the New York-based women's rights group that nominated Mohamed for the Ginetta Sagan Award. By educating young people, the GECPD hopes to promote a more open debate about FGM and women's rights in Somalia. "We must use education as the vehicle, to bring young people on board to take over, and we must promote the good traditions as well. Somali culture has very good values, such as respect, sharing and support. But it is unacceptable to continue female genital mutilation. And to say no, that needs courage, commitment, and principally belief," she emphasised. Hawa Aden Mohamed collects the 11th Ginetta Sagan Award Friday at Amnesty International's annual general meeting in Austin, Texas. Sagan was a founder of Amnesty International USA. As a member of the Italian Resistance, she was imprisoned and tortured during World War II. March 2007
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New York Times Says Somaliland Has the Strongest Case to be Recognized
Somalina replied to Jacaylbaro's topic in Politics
Jacaylbaro;686933 wrote: SL adigaa awalba odhan jiray xabashi bay la socotaa iyo Soomaalininiday diidan yihiine ,,, yaa yidhi kii lahaa Soomalinimadaa igu dheer oon u dhimanayaa baa xabashi u yeedhay oo dadkiisii ku laayay ??? ,,,,,,,,,,,,, Aar naga daa deee Iskuulka casharkii la rabo ayaa la qaataa dee, maadan garan intaa! Xabashidii la soo dhaweystey waa la ilaabey, apparently that course ardey badan meysan register-gareyn oo waa la cancel gareyey... -
Juxa;686999 wrote: they want something they have not earned. they deserve absolutely nothing :D:D yes and yes... Also, I agree with GD.
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New York Times Says Somaliland Has the Strongest Case to be Recognized
Somalina replied to Jacaylbaro's topic in Politics
Qandalawi;686906 wrote: Looooooooooooooool @ Somalina, walahi si daacad ah baan uqoslay, thanks for the laugh Aboowe. Laakiin daacad uhadal, anaga at least wax Somalinimo layirahdo waan ogalnahay, hada eeg Burcad-badeenimada unukaa leh ma oran, waa nalala qaybsadaa Somali oo dhan baa kujirta si gacmo furanna baan ugu soo dhawaynay, a year ago a group of Somalilanders ayaa training lasiiyay xataa... Garowe -na waa meel nabad ah Calanka Buluuga ahna uu cirka babanaayo, marka you are welcome anytime, anyday... lol...Abaayo fiiri. qof aad far ku fiiqi kartaan maanta ayaa iska yar. Intaas soo garo marka hore. Soomaliya dhibaatadeeda waa wax Soomali ay sababtey, cid gaar ah oo la dhihi karo"it is their fault only" ma jirto. Football ayaan host gareyney ayaad ku celcelinaysaa (forgetting to give credit to SFF) like inaad xabad joojin ku sameyseen Soomaliya oo dhan... Waxba ma aha laakiin, keep up your fadhi kudirir hadal haddii uu wax taraayo ama lagaa dhageysanaayo...good luck abaayo...lol -
:D:D Kuwa cusub waa boring dee!
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What Do You Know About Puntland Financial Capital?
Somalina replied to Abdirazak_PTL's topic in Politics
oba hiloowlow;686979 wrote: Lol isn't Muqdisho xarunta Ganacsiga ee Soomalia ( Suuqa Bakaaro/Xamarweyne) LOL! iska daa, Garacad ayaa laga heesooyaa! -
Xidigo*;408823 wrote: Somaliland is an integral part of Somalia. Always has been and always will be. Unfortunately, the violence in the South seems to be catching up with it. In what seems a bit ironic, some Somalilanders wished the fire in the South would continue, at least until they receive their coveted recognition. Alas, wishing on a fire to rage in your neighbor's house while yours remains safe is spitting into the wind. Oodweyne, it's time you went for your own Jihaad. Put that British passport to good use and go defend the homeland. Talow xagey martey?
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hmm..
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Pastoralist children and elders pass time in the Diif area near Wajir, in northern Kenya, after mobile schools serving the community were closed in the face of worsening drought. ALERTNET/Abjata Khalif Wednesday, January 12, 2011 WAJIR, Kenya (AlertNet) – A prolonged drought ravaging the northern Kenyan towns of Garissa and Wajir has interrupted a unique education system that was enabling the children of nomadic herders to learn while on the move with their livestock. Until June last year, while the region had enough pasture and water, pastoralist children from northern Kenya’s Somali community were enrolled in mobile schools that followed their families from one grazing area to another. Two teachers, with a bag of books and a small blackboard, were loaded onto camels and would move with the nomadic herding families through the region’s arid, dusty plains. The mobile school accommodated the traditions and customs of the pastoralists while ensuring children did not grow up illiterate. Since June, however, extended periods of drought in Kenya’s northern grazing areas, brought on by the effects of climate change, have forced many pastoralist children to miss school. In September, mobile schools operating in areas with shallow wells and dams had to close due to a lack of water and pasture and by November, all mobile schools were closed down as the drought intensified, drying up boreholes and forcing pastoralists to move across the border to Somalia in search of pasture. “We put on a brave face after some of our livestock left for Somalia and others perished here right in front of us,” said Hassan Guhad, a community elder for a pastoralist group in Meri, a remote settlement in Wajir. “The school continued through July and August but we finally decided to close it down as community members fled to urban areas while others moved with their livestock to Somalia. This severe drought has put a stop to the school and the teachers have left the area too,” Guhad added. The region’s communities are accustomed to the regular droughts that occur in the region between June and August, before the rains come from September to December. They traditionally prepare for the drought during the rainy season but the latest dry spell extended through the 2010 rainy season and has yet to break. The drought and extreme heat experienced in the day has dried out vegetation and dried up water wells. EDUCATION IS KEY The mobile school system began in 2008 after Frontier Indigenous Network, a community based organisation in Wajir, convinced community leaders that secular education was vital for their children and a key to prosperity and ambition. In northern Kenya’s Somali community - where each nomadic group comprises seven households with one leader who directs the group’s affairs - it is traditional for children to herd goats and donkey. Leaders had always been reluctant to send their children to school in the region’s main towns, meaning young people grew up illiterate with few prospects and young girls were traditionally married off to elders in exchange for a dowry of 10 camels and several goats and sheep. While this practice still happens, education is beginning to change the community’s attitudes to women. Thanks to mobile schools, many pastoralist children have completed primary education and gone on to secondary school in the towns of northern Kenya. In the mobile schools, local teachers, who understand English and the local Somali language, use various traditional teaching aids in the remote grazing areas to help the children grasp their lessons. “We use wild fruits when teaching them mathematics so that they can understand mathematical terms like minus, plus and numbers,” said Ali Abdi, a mobile school teacher in the remote town of Sarif, in Wajir district. If no wild fruits are available, the children will count cattle and camels to understand mathematics. “During my first teaching session, I spoke in the local Somali language but the children took time to understand me. But when I used wild fruits they understood the lesson a lot quicker, so since then I’ve used wild fruits in my lessons,” Abdi added. RESPECTING LOCAL CUSTOMS To fit in with the rhythm of the nomadic communities, mobile schools start teaching in the early hours of the morning. The children then tend to their goats and donkeys and classes resume in the evening. “The two learning sessions were meant to respect the community tradition of children participating in herding goats and sheep,” said Asha Mulki, coordinator of the mobile school programme at the Frontier Indigenous Network. “Also, we have understood that the space between the two sessions gives the children time to reflect and discuss the lessons while out in the grazing areas,” she added. The disruption of the mobile school means pastoralist children have not had lessons since November 2010. Mulki said she hoped the mobile schools would be back up and running again this year, weather permitting, although rains are not expected until March. “Community members will come back to grazing areas and resume their pastoral lives if we get good pasture and rainfall. But if the situation continues like this we don’t know when the school will resume. It all depends on the weather and rain,” Mulki said. Mulki blames the disruption of the innovative education system on climatic change. Children will now be behind the school schedule in terms of sitting examinations and graduating to the next class, while others may never return as their families may have lost everything to drought, he said. Abjata Khalif is a freelance journalist, based in Wajir, Kenya, with an interest in climate change issues.
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New York Times Says Somaliland Has the Strongest Case to be Recognized
Somalina replied to Jacaylbaro's topic in Politics
Qandalawi;686802 wrote: Nimanyahow horta anigu waxaan kayaabanahay qoladan the D-block ah ee uu AT&T kadhashay, ayaan darrada haysata, ileen waxay kuleeyihiin waxbaan xoraynayana, Somalinimo ayaan udhimanaynaa dowladnimo ayaan raadinayanaa, waxaana loo dhaxaysiisay laba qolo oo midna marqaanki kaga go'ay iyadoo leh 'KAW WAAR DE WA NALA AQOONSANAYAA MAR DHOW' iyo kuwo sidee isugu rifaayeen magaalada madaxdi isku hilmaamay 'ARYAA MUQDISHO UNUKAA ISKA LEH' Alshabaab baase waxoo dhan aamus yiri, shaqada utaala AT&T waynin badanaa, ilaahay hadilin isagoo waajibkiisa gudan, Aamiin, waar de Aamiin dhahaya idinkuna. "Garowe unukaa leh" iyo "Museveni, meeqa rag ayaad ka rabtaa jabhada?" or my fav "Welcome to burcadbadeed.com, GUARANTEED to HIJACK your markab for ransom" lol... ayaad ka iloowdey liiskaada... Atleast story-rigaada si fiican u soo qor. Dad ayaa wax laga sheegaa ayaad ka danbeysaa, haddana si fiican uma dhameystirin maansadaadii...what a shame! -
Talaado, January 11, 2011(HOL): Shir weyne ay soo uu soo qaban-qaabiyey Ururka Hirda Foundation ee ka shaqeeya waxbarashada dalka Somalia,laakiin fadhigiisu uu yahay dalka Holland ayaa waxa uu ka dhacay Magaallada Amsterdam,kaasi oo warbixin dhinaca waxbarashada Somaliya ku saabsan looga dhageysanayey Guddoomiyaha Jaamacadda Muqdisho Dr, Ali Sheikh Ahmed . Waxaa shirkaasi ugu horeyn furtay Fadumo Maxamed Farax oo ah Agaasimaha Hay'ada Hirda,waxaana ay sharaxaad ka bixisay ujeedada shirkan loo soo qabanqaabiyey iyo waxa laga filan karo inay kasoo baxaan,iyaddoo muujisay inay ku faraxsan yihiin kusoo dhaweynta Wadanka Holland ay kusoo dhaweeyeen Guddoomiye Dr,Ali Sheikh. Shirka ayey Fadumo ku sheegtay inay uga hadlayaan waxbarashada Dalka Somalia ka jirta iyo waxyaabaha ka horyimaada marka loo eego dhinaca dib u dhacyada,waxayna intaasi ku dartay inay Hirda ahaan ka shaqeeyaan horumarinta Waxbarashada Somalia,iyaddoo la ogtahay in ururka Hirda uu iskuulo badan ka dhisay Dalka Somalia,ilaa hadana uu gacanta ku hayo. Dhinaca kale waaa isna Shirkaasi ka hadlay Cali Abdi Awaare oo ka mid ah aqoonyahanada Somaliyeed ee Holland isla markaana ka mid ah Mas'uuliyiinta Jaaliyada Somalida ee Amsterdam,waxaa uu Ali shirkaasi uga hadlay xaalka guud ee somalida holland,isagoona sheegay inay dadka Somaliyeed u qeybsan yihiin kuwa la jaanqaaday horumarka ka socda dalkan iyo kuwa dib uga dhacay la jaanqaadida dalkan. Intasi kadib,waxaa Hadalka qaatay Guddoomiyaha Jaamacada Muqdisho Dr,Ali Sheikh kaasi oo ku dheeraaday ka hadlida xaalka waxbarashada Dalka Somalia,isagoona sheegay in xaalka waxbarashada uu iska yahay mid calowsan,laakiin waxa uu taasi barbar dhigay in dadka somaliyeed aysan marna ka niyad jabin warbashada sidii loo sii wadi lahaa. Dr,Ali Sheikh ayaa waxa uu sheegay in Jaamacada Muqdisho ay si rasmi ah u fureen sanadkii 1997,xiligasi oo uu sheegay inaysan dadka badi ku wada jirin inay waxbartaan,iyaddoo dhinaca amaanka dalkana uu ah aad u xun,laakiin ay u bareereen inay waxbarashada gaarsiiyaan ardayda somaliyeed ee aan nasiibka u helin inay dibada usoo baxaan. Guddomiyaha Jaamacada Muqdisho Dr,Ali Sheikh waxa uu sheegay inay sanadkiiba arday ka badan 1000 ay ka qalin jabiyaan Jaamacada Muqdisho,waxaana uu sheegay in Shahaadada ay bixiso Jaamacada Muqdisho inay tahay mid la aqoonsan yahay,waxaana uu si gaar ah carabka ugu dhigtay inay Wadamada Maleesiya iyo Suudan Jaamacado ku yaala ay imtixaanka ardayda ka qaadaan,kadibna ay siiyaan shahaado dunida kale aqoonsan tahay. Hadalka Guddoomiyaha oo ahaa mid dhinacyo badan taabanaya ayaa ugu danbeyntii,waxa uu Somalida shirka fadhisay ku booriyey inay ka qeyb qaataan waxbarashada Dalka Somalia,isla markaana ay dib ula soo noqdaan wixii ay dalalka ay joogaan ka faa'ideen,taasi oo ay dhici karto inuu dalka Somalia u baahan yahay. Waxa uu meesha kusoo bandhigay Guddoomiye Dr,Ali Sheikh Video ka hadlayey Jaamacada Muqdisho iyo sida ay ku bilaabatay iyo hada meesha ay soo gaartay,waxaana uu sheegay in Jaamacada Muqdisho ay ku bilaaben awal guryo ay dowladii Somaliya laheyd iyo guri kiro ahaa,laakiin ay hada dhisteen dhismayaal qaadi kara Arday dan 10,000 ' Toban Kun " kuwaasi oo ku kala yalaa Muqdisho iyo Boosaaso oo laga furay farac Jaamacadaka tirsan sanadkii 2009. Dhinaca kale shirka waxaa ka hadlay Guddoomiyihii hore ee Jaamacadii Umadda Somaliyeed Prof,Abdi Farax iyo Prof,Omar Shire oo isaga ka mid ahaa Macalimiintii iyo Madax waaxeedkii Jaamacadii Umadda Somaliyeed xiligii Dowladii dhexe ee Somalia,kuwaasi oo si wada jir ah ugu hambalyeeyey Dr,Ali Sheikh dadaalkiisa ku aadan ka shaqeynta dal aysan ka jirin nidaam dowladeed,isla markaana uu uga dhex wado waxbarashadii. Waxaana ay si wada jir ah u qireen inaysan sahlaneyn in laga shaqeeyo waxbarashada hada ee Somalia,waxayna ay is barbar dhig ku sameeyeen xiligii ay iyaga Hogaaminayeen Jaamacaddii Umadda Somaliyeed iyo mida Hada ee Jaamacada Muqdisho,iyagoona sheegay inay tahay laba kala dheer,maadaama aysan jirin dowladii caawin laheyd waxbarashada ay gacanta ku hayaan Dr,Ali Sheikh. Dhinaca qurba joogta Somalida Holland iyo UK,waxaa shirkaasi uga hadlay Haweeneyda Shamso Xasan iyo Abdishakur Tarax,kuwaasi oo tilmaamay kaalinta qurba joogta ee ku aadan ka qeyb qaadashada waxbarashada Somalia,waxaana Shamso Xasan ay walaac ka muujisay kaalinta gabdhaha somaliyeed ee waxbarashada,iyaddoo sheegtay in gabadhaha laga hor istaago waxbarashada kadib markii niman loo guuriyo iyagoo aad u da'yar. Abdishakuur Tarax oo isaga ah lataliye dhinaca waxbarashada ah ayaa sheegay inuu Jaamacada muqdisho laga shaqeyn doono arino badan oo uu ka caawiyey wadamo kale oo geeska africa ka jira,taasi oo ay si weyn usoo dhaweeyeen somalidii kale ee halkaasi joogtay. Dadweynihii halkaasi joogay ayaa su'aalo weydiiyey Guddoomiyaha Jaamacada Muqdisho Dr,Ali Sheikh,kuwaasi oo dhamaantood uu uga jawaabay,waxaana intaasi kadib uu isagana ka dalbaday Guddoomiyihii hore ee Jaamacadii Umadda Somaliyeed Prof,Abdi Farax iyo Prof,Omar Shire inay ka qeyb qaataan waxbarashada Dalka ka socota isla markaana waqtigooda ay qeyb siiyaan inay waxbaraan ardayda dhigata Jaamacadda Muqdisho,taasi oo ay si weyn usoo dhaweeyeen. Dr,Ali Sheikh waxa uu dalka Somalia kusoo laabtay sanadkii 1992 xiligaasi oo uu Jaamacad ka dhigayey Wadanka Sacuudi carabiga,taasi oo uu ka doorbiday inuu dalka somalia dib ugu soo noqdo si uu uga qeyb qaato waxbarashada Dadkiisa oo xiligaasi dagaal sokeeye lugaha kula jiray,waxaana dareemi kartaa in xiligaasi oo ay dadka badi ka qaxayeen somalia qof usoo laabtay dalkiisa inuu yahay wadani ay somali wada xusi doonto. Shirkan oo ay soo qaban qaabisay Hay'ada HIRDA ayaa waxaa soo afmeertay Agaasimaha Hay'adaasi Fadumo Maxamed Farah,taasi oo sheegtay inuu shirkan kusoo dhamaaday sidii la rabay,waxaana dhinaca kale ay mahadcelin u jeedisay Guddoomiyaha Jaamacada Muqdisho Dr,Ali Sheikh oo safar dheer usoo galay,sidii uu dadka Somalida Holland arimaha waxbarashada ugala hadli lahaa,waxaana si taasi la mid ah ay ugu mahadcelisay intii kale ee kasoo qeybgashay shirka. http://www.hiiraan.com/news/2011/jan/images/sawirwadaji%20ah1.jpg
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Investors expect big deals after Sudan vote By KENNETH KWAMA Tuesday, January 11, 2011 The smooth start to Southern Sudan's referendum on cessation has raised hope of a positive outcome and better prospects for companies that are either seeking fresh entry or expansion in that economy. Most companies in the region have been staring lusciously at business prospects offered by a politically stable south. Currently, the investors are awaiting the outcome of the vote, which kicked off last Sunday and whose final outcome — a vote for independence, is expected well after Lovers’ Day on February 14. "If that happens, then the outlook should be positive and the investment climate more predictable and you will see a much higher level of sovereign investment coming into southern Sudan," Kenya Commercial Bank (KCB’s) Managing Director Martin Oduor-Otieno told the media in an interview. Experts say a positive conclusion to the referendum will have far reaching beneficial impacts on the Kenyan economy. "Being more developed than its neighbouring countries, providers of goods and services from Kenya with ability to mobilise fast and efficiently will certainly benefit from this opening up of the market," says Ken Kariuki, MD Khweza Consulting. KCB, which is the largest bank in the country by assets, was amongst the first foreign companies to set base in the South at a time faith was optimal. The bank has kept the faith and today, it is projecting it will have around 30 branches across the semi-autonomous region by 2015 and 100,000 customers in the next three years, up from around 10,000 currently. Jetlink Express MD Elly Aluvale contends there will be more business and greater returns for the regional airliner if the process goes well. "As businesspeople, we want to be positive and hope that the process ends well. The southerners are likely to secede and Jetlink want to be there to help with their transportation needs. "We want to make a bigger impact in the south by providing a reliable air transport network between Juba and the other cities," says Aluvale. A source close to Equity bank hinted that the establishment was happy with progress so far and would issue a statement during the week. INTERNATIONAL INVESTORS "There have been several enquiries and we know for a fact that Equity’s MD will issue a positive statement within the week," said our source who requested not to be named. The smooth start to the referendum is likely to go down well with international investors most of who had began doubting the outcome of the process, which had been billed as a potential trigger for another round of conflict in the region. Recently, Frontier Economics released a report that looks at the economic cost of renewed conflict in Sudan. The report titled The cost of future conflict in Sudan concludes that if the referendum sparks conflict, and if it runs for ten years its neighbours could lose over $25-billion in Gross Domestic Product. Source: Standard
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