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South Sudan celebrates a sweet separation The world's newest republic enjoyed its independence day, but bitterness over the long struggle for freedom lingers on Xan Rice in Juba The Observer, Sunday 10 July 2011 Article history A man with his face painted in the colours of the South Sudan flag at the Independence Day ceremony in Juba. Photograph: Goran Tomasevic/REUTERS David Morbe had paint on his jeans, his shirt, his hands and the frames of his black-rimmed glasses. Beads of sweat clung to his forehead and ran down his back, past the inch-long shrapnel scar. Chisel in hand, he walked slowly around the base of his giant sculpture, carefully inspecting the detail on the eagle crest in front, and the name inscribed on the back – John Garang de Mabior. Morbe knew that nothing he created would ever be as important as the four-metre tall statue of South Sudan's liberation hero that he and his two fellow sculptors had conceived and built. It was Friday evening in Juba, the southern capital. In a matter of hours, tens of thousands of people, virtually all of whom had suffered in some way during nearly 40 years of conflict since the end of colonial rule, would surround the statue on this dirt field to celebrate the birth of their nation, after a tragic false start 55 years ago. "The independence of Sudan back then was the beginning of slavery in South Sudan," said Morbe, 35, as the sun began to set. "This is going to be the real independence for our people." The moment arrived shortly after noon in sweltering heat on Saturday. Watched by dozens of heads of state, including Sudan's Omar al-Bashir, the south's wartime enemy, southern president Salva Kiir – black suit, black tie, black cowboy hat – unveiled Morbe's statue to huge cheers. Christian and Muslim leaders said prayers, and Sudan's national anthem played. "That's the last one [that we sing], the end!" shouted a government official gleefully in the VIP stands. A man dressed as the Statue of Liberty held a sign that read: "Free at last. Republic of South Sudan." Soldiers and traditional dance troupes paraded by before the Speaker of the southern parliament read the independence proclamation. The Sudanese flag was lowered, and the flag of South Sudan raised. Kiir took the oath of office. The north-south, Arab-non-Muslim divide that has always existed in Sudan was made official; the country split in two. "We congratulate our brothers in the south for the establishment of their new state," said Bashir, taking to the podium. "The will of the people of the south has to be respected." Congratulations flooded in from afar. David Cameron, who was represented by Britain's foreign secretary, William Hague, said it was "an historic day, for South Sudan and the whole of Africa". "Reaching this moment has required leadership and statesmanship from all sides. The actions of the government in Khartoum in recognising South Sudan's independence have been significant, and I hope that today marks the beginning of a new and peaceful chapter in relations between north and south." The US president, Barack Obama, granted South Sudan immediate recognition as an independent state. "Today is a reminder that, after the darkness of war, the light of a new dawn is possible," he said. In the huge crowd, where boys held up paper flags and women ululated, emotions were barely contained. "This is very great actually," said Taifa Kuer, a finance ministry official who, at the age of seven, became one of Sudan's famous "Lost Boys", marching for a month to Ethiopia before returning to fight for the rebel cause when he was just 14. "We have prepared for the next generation so they won't suffer like we had to." Like many elated southerners, Kuer seemed stunned that the day had in fact arrived, which was perhaps unsurprising, given the mistrust that has existed between the north and south. Indeed, when Bashir and the then rebel leader Garang signed a peace deal to end the second, 21-year-long civil war in 2005, many doubted it would last. The agreement allowed for a six-year interim period where the south would govern itself, and have an equal share with the north of the revenues from the oil produced from beneath its own soil. The prize at the end of the transition was a vote for southerners on unity or secession. Garang advocated unity – the southern struggle was a struggle for marginalised people all over Sudan, he argued – but when he was killed in a helicopter crash just a few months after the peace deal the notion of unity died with him. In the referendum in January, 99% of voters chose secession. The results spoke less of southern unity – there are dozens of ethnic groups in the south, and no real collective identity – than a desperate desire to rid themselves of the decades-long oppression and marginalisation by the northern government. When it achieved independence from Britain in 1956, Sudan was two distinct regions and peoples joined into one: a dry, Arab-dominated north, and a more lush, ethnically African south. The tension and suspicions were already rife; indeed, southern rebels had already taken up arms the year before, fearing, correctly, that the Arab leaders in Khartoum would exploit and abuse them. Charity Yuyada, 68, who watched the ceremony on television in Juba because she was "too old" to attend in person, remembered being forced to take school classes in Arabic rather than English. "That made us hate that language and the [Arab] people," she said. That first war lasted 17 years, and claimed hundreds of thousands of lives. Yuyada spent two and half years living in the bush. Peace lasted from 1972 to 1983, before Garang launched a new rebellion led by his Sudan People's Liberation Army (SPLA). So heavy was the fighting in the countryside that Yuyada was forced to move to Juba, which was held by northern forces. When the SPLA launched attacks on the city in 1990, Yuyada moved to Khartoum for safety. She stayed there, a second-class citizen separated from her extended family, until this January, when she returned to Juba a day before the referendum. "In that 21 years of war we had lost hope of freedom," she said. "I'm so happy we are separating." But her excitement could not hide her lingering bitterness, which was also plain to see in the town centre. Among the many banners offering positive messages for the new country's future, there was this poem, printed on a banner sponsored by the Ministry of Energy and Mining: Our independence south is our separate house That embrace all the southerners To live freely in the bush Africans with our own traditions Herders after cows Farmers in the fields Fisherman along the Nile Hunters in the jungle Illiterate with the goat leathers Backwards with the bird feathers Much better than to be scholars, Under the Arabs' domination" Morbe, the sculptor, had in fact been a scholar under Arab domination. He was born and raised in Juba, suffering the shrapnel wound during the SPLA offensive on the city in the early 1990s. "It was a terrible time here during the war, not possible to describe," he said. "But we bore it." He was desperate to join the rebels, but it proved extremely difficult, since nobody was allowed to leave Juba without the permission of the northern government. So he concentrated on his studies, and in 2002 he won at place in the fine arts programme at Sudan University of Science and Technology, in Khartoum. On graduation, he wanted to take up a teaching post, but was denied "because I am a southern and I am not Muslim", he said. Instead, he returned to the south, finding work as a teaching assistant at Juba University's arts faculty. Last year, together with two other southern fine arts graduates, Anthony Gordon and Emmanuel Mateayo, he came up with the idea of a giant sculpture to commemorate the new nation. After presenting the proposal to the government's council of ministers, they received the go-ahead and a budget – and the news that the statue would be the centrepiece of the independence celebrations. "I am so proud to have been part of this moment," Morbe said. "This day that we have wished for."
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Written by NYTimes Jul 09, 2011 at 12:05 PM Tyler Hicks/The New York Times President Salva Kiir gathered with leaders from around the world to celebrate South Sudans independence. A new nation was being born in what used to be a forlorn, war-racked patch of Africa and to many, it seemed nothing short of miraculous. After more than five decades of an underdog, guerilla struggle and two million lives lost, the Republic of South Sudan, Africa’s 54th state, was about to declare its independence in front of a who’s who of Africa, including the president of the country letting it go: Omar Hassan al-Bashir of Sudan, a war crimes suspect. Many of those who turned out to celebrate, overcome with emotion, spoke of their fathers, mothers, sons and daughters killed in the long struggle to break free from the Arab-dominated north. “My whole body feels happy,” said George Garang, an English teacher who lost his father, grandfather and 11 brothers in the war. By sunrise, the crowds were surging through the streets of Juba, the capital, to the government quarter, where the declaration of independence would be read aloud. Thousands of commandos lined the freshly painted curbs, tiger patches on their arms, assault rifles in their hands. This nation is being built on a guerilla army — the Sudan People’s Liberation Army, whose field commanders are now South Sudan’s political leaders — and the amount of firepower here is unnerving. By 9 a.m., the sun was dangerous. The faces, necks and arms of the people packed thousands deep around a parade stand built for the occasion were glazed with sweat. A woman abruptly slumped to the dirt and was whisked away. “She fainted because she’s happy,” said a man in the crowd. “There will be many others today.” In a column of black polished steel, one brand new Mercedes after another, came the African leaders: Robert Mugabe, Zimbabwe’s president; Jacob Zuma, South Africa’s; Meles Zenawi, prime minister of Ethiopia; Teodoro Obiang, Equatorial Guinea’s president and chairman of the African Union; Mwai Kibaki, Kenya’s president; and Yoweri Museveni, president of Uganda, among others. But, almost inexplicably, it was Mr. Bashir, who for years prosecuted a vicious war to keep the south from splitting off and to prevent this very day from happening, who drew the loudest burst of applause when his motorcade rolled in. “It is not happiness,” explained Daniel Atem, dressed in suit and tie for the occasion, a mini-flag flying from his lapel. “If you are talking to your enemy, you cannot say you are bad.” But, he added, “you know what is in your heart.” From the mid-1950s, even before Sudan shook off its colonial yoke in 1956, the southern Sudanese were chafing for more rights. Sudan had an unusually clear fault line, reinforced by British colonizers, with the southern third mostly animist and Christian and the northern part majority Muslim and long dominated by Arabs. The southern struggle blew up into a full-fledged rebellion in the 1960s and then again in the 1980s, and the Sudanese government responded brutally, bombing villages and unleashing Arab militias that massacred civilians and enslaved southern Sudanese children. Many of the same scorched earth tactics associated with the crisis in Darfur, in Sudan’s west, in the mid-2000s, were tried and tested long before that here in southern Sudan. (The International Criminal Court has indicted Mr. Bashir on genocide charges for the Darfur massacres.) The central government also sowed divisions among the southerners, turning ethnic groups against each other. Some of the most unspeakable violence, like the Bor massacre in 1991 when toddlers were impaled on fence posts, was internecine. Christian groups had been championing the southern Sudanese since the 19th century. And their advocacy efforts paid off in 2000 when George W. Bush was elected president of the United States. He elevated Sudan to the top of his foreign policy agenda and in 2005, the American government pushed the southern rebels and the central government to sign a comprehensive peace agreement, which guaranteed the southerners the right to secede. On Saturday, one man held up a sign that said Thank You George Bush. The American-backed treaty set the stage for a referendum this January in which southerners voted by 98.8 percent for independence. At 1:20 p.m. on Saturday, the southerners officially proclaimed their freedom. “Recalling the long and heroic struggle of our people,” began the assembly Speaker, James Wani Igga. A few minutes later, the flag of Sudan was lowered and the new South Sudan flag (actually quite similar, plus a star) was raised. The masses exploded in one loud roar. “Mabrook Janoob Sudan!” they yelled. “Congratulations South Sudan!” South Sudan’s president, Salva Kiir, wearing his signature black cowboy hat given to him by President Bush, signed the interim constitution. Then the speeches began. This is a beautiful day for Africa,” said Joseph Deiss, president of the United Nations’ general assembly. “This is a remarkable achievement, a longstanding conflict has been stopped.” Perhaps. But South Sudan — Texas-sized and with around 8 million people — is already plagued by ethnic tensions and rebellions. More than a half dozen renegade groups are already battling the government, some with thousands of fighters. And relations with the north, its former nemesis, are still dicey. Negotiators have yet to agree on a formula to split the revenue from the south’s oilfields, which have kept the economies of both south and north Sudan afloat. And Mr. Bashir’s army has been pounding southern-allied rebels who have refusing to disarm just north of the border in the Nuba Mountains, which some analysts worry could drag the whole region back into a full-scale war. This is why Mr. Bashir’s presence here was such a curiosity. He did sign the peace agreement in 2005 and many southerners, however mixed their feelings are, are grateful to him for that. He seemed in a magnanimous mood on Saturday. “This moment came through peace,” Mr. Bashir said. “We must respect it.” He even thanked the United Nations for its hard work and said he wanted to bring peace in Darfur, though he did slip in, “Sudan’s unity would have been better,” but “I convinced myself that unity shouldn’t be through war.” Mr. Kiir then shared a few words. “We have waited for more than 56 years for this,” he said. “It is a dream that has come true.” “This land has seen untold suffering and death,” he added, somberly. “We have been bombed enslaved and treated worse than a refugee in our own country. We have to forgive, though we will not forget.” The independence ceremony then wrapped up much in the way the struggle began: with a barrage of very loud cannon shots. The crowd pumped their fists in the air and hollered, “South Sudan, oh yay!”
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Marykanka oo sheegay in Duqayn ay ka geysteen Qandal oo Ka tirsan jubada Hoose ku dileen Ibraahim Afgaani Xukumada Washington ayaa baahisay inay duqeymo maalmahan ay ka waday gudaha dalka Soomaaliya inay dhibaato xoogan ku soo gaarsiisay Xarakada Alshabab ee ku kacsan dawlada kmg ah & Ciidamada Amisom ee dalka soomaaliya ku sugan,waxaana mareykanku sheegey in duqeymihii dhawaan ahayeen kuwo lagu bartilmaameedsadeen xarumaha shabaabka. Sida lagu qoray wargeyska lagu magacaabo The Long War Journal ayaa lagu xusay in dawlada mareykanku weeraradii cirka ee gobolada Jubooyinka ay guul muhiim ah ka gaareen isla markaasna ay dileen sarkaal sare oo ka tirsan Xarakada Alshabab,waxaana ay sheegeen in Sarkaalkaasi uu ku dhintey degaanka Qandal ee gobolka Jubadda hoose. Waxaa wargeyskaas lagu qoray inay dileen diyaaradaha mareykankuy sarkaal lagu magacaabi jirey Shiikh Ibraahim Afgaani Ama Ibrahim Hajj Jama and Abubakar al-Seyli’i,waxaana dawlada mareykanku sheegtey inuu ahaa sarkaal sare oo ka mid ahaa sarakisha ugu cad cad hogaaminta Xarakada Alshabaab ee ka soo horjeeda dawlada kmg ah ee soomaaliya. Sidoo kale waxa saraakisha dalka mareykanku sheegeen inuu Shiikh Ibraahim Afgaani uu ka mid ahaa ragga ku jiray liiska Al-Qaacida ee ah JTF-GTMO ee dawlada mareykanku sida weyn u raadiso,waxaana saraakisha mareykanku sheegeen inuu tababaro muhiim ah ku soo qaatey wadanka Afganistaan ee uu ururka Alqaacida ku xoog badan yahay. Dhanka kale waxaa Saraakisha dawlada mareykanku sheegeen in ay weerarkaas isna ku dhaawacmeen sarkaal sar oo ka tirsan ururka Alqaacida isla markaasna ahaa ku xigeenkii madixii Al-qaacida ee bariga Afrika kaasi oo lagu magacaabo Bilal Al-Barjaawi oo u dhasha wadanka Britain,waxaana dawladu mareykanku shaacisay inay ku dileen weeraro cirka ah oo ay dhawaan ka fuliyeen degaanka Qandal ee jubadda hoose. Saraakisha dawlada mareykanku waxay *****lka ka qaadeen in Shiikh Ibraahiim Afgani & Shiikh Aadan Xashi Cayrow ay muddo ka soo dagaalameen wadanka Afgaanistaan,waxaana ay sheegeen inay nimankaasi ahayeen nimanka ugu khatarsan ururadda Alshabaab & Alqaacida ee wadanka soomaaliya ka dagaalama, Ceyrow waxaa isaga lagu dilay weerar ciidamada mareykanku ku qaadeen magaalada dhusamareeb ee gobolka galgaduud sanadkii 2008-dii. Si kastey ahaataba waxa Sarakiisah dawlada mareykanku sheegeen inay aad uga shaki qabaan inay Shiikh Afgaani ku dileen weerarkii ay dhawaan ku qaadeen Degaanka Qandal ee duleedka magaalada Kismaayo,waxaa kale oo ay sheegeen inay qaar kale oo ka tirsanaa ilaaladiisu la geeriyoodeen markii duqeynta ay diyaaradaha dagaalku u geysteen. Axmed Kulan
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Magaalada Hargeisa Oo Laga Dhawaaqay Urur Cusub Oo Ay Ku Bahoobeen Ardayda Jamaacadaha Dhigata Ee ka soo Jeeda Gobolka Sanaag. http://oodweynenews.com/news/87808-magaalda-hargeysa-oo-laga-dhawaaqay-urur-cusub-oo-ay-ku-bohoobeen-ardayda-jaamacadaha-dhigata-ee-ka-soo-jeeda-gobolka-sanaag-sawiro-2.html
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$15 each? Reer Hargeysa should watch out who they are giving their money to. For all we know that could be financed for SSC rebels.
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There is alot of Khaliij women who are undercover sexually frustrated freaks nothing new.
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Somaliland President Ahmed Silanyo met with British Foreign Secretary William Hague Somaliland President Ahmed Mohamed Mohamoud Silanyo and British Foreign Secretary William Hague in Addis ababa, Ethiopia 8th July 2011. Addis Ababa-Somaliland President Ahmed Silanyo met with British Foreign Secretary William Hague in Addis ababa, Ethiopia 8th July 2011 on his way to South Sudan to attend the Declaration of Independence of the Republic of South Sudan on the 9th of July, 2011. Somaliland President Ahmed Siilaanyo received an official invitation from the president of South Sudan Salva Kiir to attend the Declaration of Independence of the Republic of South Sudan on the 9th of July, 2011. South Sudan is set to become the 54th nation in the African continent after long fought civil against Northern Sudan’s rule that saw thousands of lives lost and millions displaced. http://somaliland247.wordpress.com/2011/07/08/somaliland-president-ahmed-silanyo-met-with-british-foreign-secretary-william-hague/
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A_Khadar;732514 wrote: Axmed Biif ayaa la filan karaa in xabsigiisu uu ku aadan yahay heeso uu kal hore oo uu u qaatay gobolada sool sanaag iyo cayan (SSC). Source SBC www.allSBC.com Interesting.
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=39g0wuemCVA" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen>
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Somaliland Military convoy visits shimbiraale (eastern sanaag)
Saalax replied to Xaaji Xunjuf's topic in Politics
Xaaji Xunjuf is right Shimbiraale(Eastern Sanaag) is located in South East of Erigavo. -
Madaxwaynaha Somaliland Oo Rasmi Ahaan U Aqbalay Inuu Ka Qayb-gallo Munaasibada Loogu Wanqalayo Dalka Koonfurta Suudaan. Hargeysa (Ramaas) July 2,2011 – Madaxwaynaha Somaliland Md Axmed Maxamed Maxamuud (Siilaanyo) ayaa aqbalay marti-qaad rasmi ah oo uu ka helay Madaxwaynaha Koonfurta Suudaan. Madaxwaynaha dalka dhawaanta goonida uga go’ay dal-waynaha Suudaan Mr Salva Kiir, ayaa Sabtidii shalay Madaxwaynaha Somaliland u soo diray casuumad rasmi ah oo nuxurkeedu yahay inuu Madaxwaynaha Somaliland ka qayb-gallo xafladda loogu wanqalayo dalka Koonfurta Suudaan. Afhayeenka Madaxtooyadda Somaliland Md Cabdilaahi Maxamed Daahir (Cukuse) ayaa sheegay in Madaxwayne Axmed Maxamed Maxamuud (Siilaanyo) uu si rasmi ah u aqbalay marti-qaadkaasi isla-markaana uu ka qayb-gali doono xafladaasi. Munaasibada loogu wanqalayo dalka cusub ee Koonfurta Suudaan oo dhawaan gooni uga go’ay dal-waynaha Suudaan ka dib markii cod laga qaaday shacabka Koonfurta ayaa si rasmi ah loogu wanqali doonaa 9-ka bishan July. Ramaasnews Desk Hargeisa
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The Zack Ethiopia is the neighbour of Djibouti, Somaliland, Kenya, South Sudan, Sudan, Eritrea, Somalia. It's rapid population growth will have somekind of effect on neighbouring states.
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"Cadowgayagu Waa Qurbo-joogta, Cadowga Labaadna Waa Qofka Aan Nolosha Kuu Ogalayn, Waxaanan Aamin-sanahay in Haweenaydaas....." Fu´aad Aadan Cadde (Hadhwanaagnews) Saturday, July 02, 2011 Hargaysa (HWN):-Guddoomiyihii Ururka Haweenka qaranka Somaliland ee gobolka Sool, Nadiifo Maxamed Col-u-joog, oo habeen hore magaalada Laascaanood ay Dabley hubaysani dhaawac halis ah ugu geysteen ayaa la soo gaadhsiiyey Cusbitaalka guud ee magaalada Hargaysa, ayaa maanta mar labaad loo qaaday magaalada Addis ababa si halkaas loogu soo daaweeyo. La taliyaha Madaxweynaha ee arrimaha gobollada bariga Somaliland Fu´aad Aadan Cadde Hargaysa (HWN):-Guddoomiyihii Ururka Haweenka qaranka Somaliland ee gobolka Sool, Nadiifo Maxamed Col-u-joog, oo habeen hore magaalada Laascaanood ay Dabley hubaysani dhaawac halis ah ugu geysteen ayaa la soo gaadhsiiyey Cusbitaalka guud ee magaalada Hargaysa, ayaa maanta mar labaad loo qaaday magaalada Addis ababa si halkaas loogu soo daaweeyo. Xukuumadda Somaliland ayaa ka hadashay maanta Isku-daygaas la doonayey in lagu dilo, Nadiifo Mahamed Col-U joog, oo horayna loogu dilay isla magaalada laascaanood ninkeedii oo ahaa taliyihii ciidamada sirdoonka somaliland ee gobolka sool. La taliyaha Madaxweynaha Somaliland ee arrimaha gobollada bariga, Fu´aad Aadan cadde, ayaa ka tafaasiil ka bixiyey qaabkii uu Dilkaasi u dhacay, waxaanu weerarka Gabadhaas ku micneeyey in lagu aamusiinaayey, kadib baadhitaan badan oo ay ku samaysay cidii Ninkii dishay, waxaana hadalladiisii ka mid ahaa "Nadiifo iyadoo hor fadhida Gurigeeda ayaa Dabley hubaysani ay soo daba istaageen, dabadeedna Qadaadka ay Xabad kaga dhufteen, tii labaad markay soo eegtay ayey Wajiga kaga dhufteen markaa Dhaawac halis ah ayaa soo gaadhay, markaa dawladda somaliland ayaa gurbad balaadhan ka gashay arrintaas oo Guddidii Laascaanood, Wasiirka Duulista iyo Hawada iyo Badhasaabka ayaa dhammaan hawshaa waa loo kacay oo waxa la soo gaadhsiiyey Cusbitaalka guud ee magaalada Hargaysa, haddana waxa loo balamay in loo qaado magaalada Addis ababa oo waxa loo soo dirayaa Diyaar khaasa." ayuu yidhi La taliyaha Madaxweynaha Somaliland ee arrimaha gobollada bariga Somaliland Fu´aad Aadan Cade. Isagoo hadalkiisa sii watana waxa uu yidhi "Nadiifo marka u horeysa waxa ahayd Guddoomiyaha Ururka Haweenka Qaranka Now ee Gobolka Sool, waana Qof nabada u olaleysa oo Somaliland u olalaysa wax weyn ayey ka tahay dhismaha Somaliland, waxaanad ogayd inay Jaraa´idka dalka oo dhan ku qortay Qurbo-joogta *********** rasaasta iyo qoriga ay noo soo dirayaan ha noogu badalaan Buug iyo Qalin, markaa waxay ahayd Shaqsiyad wanaaga jecel." Ayuu yidhi Fu´aad Aadan Cade "Gabadhaasi waxay ahayd gabadh karti badan horena waxa magaalada Laascaanood loogu Dilay Ninkeedii oo ahaa Taliyaha Ciidanka Sirdoonka ee gobolka Sool, markaa baadi-doon badan ayey ku jirtay si ay u hesho cidii Ninkeedii Dishay, markaa waxan aaminsanahay in arrinkaas la aamusiinaayey si aan waxba loo ogaan. Cadowgu waa qofka aan Nolosha kuu ogalayn weeye, waxaanan aaminsanahay in cadowgayagu yahay Qurbo-joogta oo kuwaasoo ka kacaay iyo wax Dila na yidhaahda, cadowga labaad waxa weeye Ninka Madax-dhaqmeedka sheegta ee aan dadkii la joogin haddana marka walba ku taliya Balaayo iyo Dagaal, waxa ka saddexaad ah Ninka dadka dilaya."
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Xaaji Xunjuf;731892 wrote: Well done president Siilaanyo. Indeed.
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http://oodweynenews.com/news/85819-madaxtooyada-somaliland-oo-aqbalay-martiqaad-uu-ka-helay-dhigiisa-koonfurta-sudan-isla-markaana-ka-qayb-galidoona-munaasibada-laga-dhawaaqayo-dawlada-cusub-ee-dalkaasi.html
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Shirkado Laydh Casri ah laga Hirgaliyey Ceerigaabo.
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First of july the day that changed Somaliland for good.
Saalax replied to Xaaji Xunjuf's topic in Politics
July 1, 2010. -
Xaaji Xunjuf;731829 wrote: Interesting timing there Mr Museveni. Indeed.
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General Duke;731831 wrote: ^^^Its becoming like Liberia and Siera Leon. That is not a good thing. ‘Nigerian soldiers fathered 250,000 kids in Liberia’ http://www.nairaland.com/nigeria/topic-483340.0.html
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Kumaakun oo ciidamo ah oo maanta soo gaaray magaaladda Muqdisho iyo hanjabaado ka soo yeeray “Daawo Sawirada” Ciidamo xoog leh oo ka socda wadanka Uganda ayaa waxay maanta soo gaareen caasimadda Soomaaliya ee Muqdisho, iyadoo ciidamadaan lagu wado inay dagaalo xoog leh kala hortagaan Xoogaga Xarakada Al Shabaab. Seddex kun oo ciidamo ah oo ka socda wadanka Uganda ayaa waxay galabta ay soo caga-dhigteen magaaladda Muqdisho, waxayna ciidamadaan ay qeyb ka yihiin dagaalada xoogga leh ee ay Ciidamadda Amisom kala horjeedaan Xarakada Al Shabaab. Ciidamadaan ayaa waxay kaloo kaabi doonaan sagaal kun oo ciidamo ah oo horey u joogay magaaladda Muqdisho, kuwaa oo ka soo kala shiraacday wadamada Uganda iyo Burundi, waxayna tirada Amisom ee Soomaaliya joogto ay ciidamadani ka dhigayaan 12 kun oo ciidamo ah. Taliyaha Guud ee Ciidamadda Midowga Afrika Amisom General Fred Mugisha oo dhawaan lagu badalay taliyihii guud ee Ciidamadda Amisom Major Mugisha Nathan, ayaa wuxuu daaha uu ka qaaday in ciidamadaan ay u caaboon yihiin dagaalo xoog leh oo ay la-gallaan waxa uu ugu yeeray kooxda Xagjirka ah ee Shabaab. General Fred Mugisha ayaa wuxuu tibaaxay in Dowladda Uganda ay ka go’an tahay sidii ay meesha uga saari laheyd Xarakada Al Shabaab, oo uu qeexay inay tahay koox dhibaateen baahsan ku heysa guud ahaan shacabka Soomaaliyeed, waa sida uu hadalka u dhigay’e. Sidoo kale wuxuu xusay in Dowladaha Uganda iyo Burundi ay doonayaan sidii ay nabad ugu soo dabaali lahaayeen dalka Soomaaliya, isagoo intaasi ku daray in Amisom ay diyaar u tahay dagaalo xoog leh oo ay la-gasho buu yiri kooxda Al Qaacida, isagoo Shabaab ku sifeeyay urur hoos tagga Al Qaacida. Dhanka kale Taliyaha Guud ee Ciidamadda Midowga Afrika Amisom General Fred Mugisha ayaa wuxuu ka dhawaajiyay in Amisom laga badalay nabad ilaalin, loona badalay kuwo nabad dhaliya-yaal ah, si dalka Soomaaliya loogu soo dabaalo buu yiri nabad iyo kala dambeen. Khamiistii ayay ahayd, kadib markii Madaxweynaha Xukuumadda Uganda Yuweri Musevani uu ku hanjabay in si deg deg ah ay Shabaab uga saari doonaan dalka Soomaaliya oo dhan, isla-markaana wuxuu sheegay in Uganda ay dooneyso in Soomaaliya ay noqoto dal xasilan. http://dhacdo.com/main/news.php?readmore=6092
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Census Update: What the World Will Look like in 2050. http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,2080404,00.html