Saalax

Nomad
  • Content Count

    10,383
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    24

Everything posted by Saalax

  1. Neef Gawracan Geedo Kama waabto.(SSC-da-guud. Taleex
  2. Originally posted by Xaji_Xunjuf: ^^ he was part of the SNM aad habeen iyo maalin aad ka calaacashid loool. war wiilka cuqdad ha ka galiin Buuba. Soon you will hear Libaan screaming "Buuba" is a SNM criminal instead of his past tone "his a good man" .
  3. No weapons No cash. Haadi kale Shiekh Daxlis & Mr.Cheese wii ka shalayn doonan.
  4. The Zack. I don't think few lost souls without their people's support in koonfuria represent Somaliland.
  5. The Zack. We bring nothing on table for the failed entity of TFG such as man power, aid, weapons so there is no reason to give us a minister especially when we are part of another nation (Somaliland).
  6. I though they were competing for the PM post? did they end up minsterless? where is Xiinfaniin & Nassir when you need them.
  7. lol@ gudi . Anigu waxbana kuma farxiin ee waxan ku iidi Papaya iyo Moos so uma so diiraysiid Togdheer? and Inshallah abaartu wii tagaysa like you said abaartu wax ku cusub maha this region it has been having droughts for over centuries and it survived.The rainy season is around the corner .The government will do everything it can to help the drought victims(mostly nomads,livestock and their villages which are effected at most times) so everything will be fine inshallah.
  8. NinaNC. Are you not going to send some bananas,papayas from your farm in Janalle? for Togdheer.
  9. Aslong as it's low-key rememberance problem ma jirto. Anyhow somaliland anaga iska leh we control who can come to our country and who can't. And we will do whatever we want with our country ciidnana loma joojiinayo.
  10. Originally posted by Xaji_Xunjuf: Nina awoowo odayga yara indhayarta eeh sh dalxiis gacanta tuutjiyey even our Reporters meet him Isn't that Muna?
  11. Sheikh Dalxis wali ma qabsaday 5km? mise 4km bu wali jooga. Unta waxbana uma tarayso it won't save him from the machete of Ina Godane.
  12. November 10, 2010 On October 13, 2010, the president of Somalia’s Internationally–recognized Transitional Federal Government (T.F.G.), Sh. Sharif Sh. Ahmad, announced his selection of Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed (Farmajo) to replace the T.F.G.’s former prime minister, Omar Abdirashid Ali Sharmarke, who had resigned his post on September 21 after he had spent the preceding summer locked in a power struggle with Sh. Sharif. The nomination of Farmajo came as a surprise to politicians and observers. In the weeks succeeding Sharmarke’s resignation, the Somali media reported lists of contenders for the position representing factions within the Somali political class; on none of those lists, among them those published by Garoweonlin. Shabelle Media, and Suna Times, did Farmajo’s name appear. He was not brought up in the reports of the discussions between Sh. Sharif and sub-clan leaders, parliamentary groups, and stakeholders such as Ethiopia, Uganda, the United States, and the United Nations Political Office for Somalia (UNPOS), all of which had their own favorite candidates. Farmajo, indeed, appeared to come out of nowhere. A political unknown, he had worked as a young man at the Somali embassy in Washington between 1985 and 1988 under the regime of dictator Siad Barre, and, after Barre was overthrown, became part of the Somali Diaspora in the United States, pursuing a career as a municipal official in the Buffalo region of New York State. He had no experience with Somali politics on the ground and no base of his own from which to lead. Commentators politely said that he had “no political baggage.” Closed sources in the Horn of Africa region have shed light on the selection of Farmajo and the subsequent conflict over his approval by Somalia’s Transitional Federal Parliament, which was consummated on October 31. The sources’ intelligence reveals a continued evolving fractionalization in the Transitional Federal Institutions that has been exacerbated. The Story Behind the Story According to one source, a member of the transitional parliament confirmed that the nomination of Farmajo had come without any forewarning to the Somali political class; on October 12, Sh. Sharif arrived in Mogadishu from Nairobi with Farmajo – “an individual whom we do not know and whom he wants to name as prime minister.” On further inspection, however, the unknown Farmajo is not entirely innocent of connection to the intrigues of current T.F.G. politics. According to a source, Farmajo was chosen from within the presidential palace by Sh. Sharif’s chief of staff Abdikarin Jama, who according to public reports had grown up with Sh. Sharif in the town of Jowhar in the Middle Shabelle region, had been an associate of his in the Islamic Courts Union, and had been his favorite choice for prime minister (he had been prominent on every list of candidates published by the media). According to the source, Farmajo is related through his mother to Jama, and both are affiliated with the Ahlu Sheikh sect, Sh. Sharif’s religious group. Farmajo, says the source, is a supporter of the Alliance for the Re-Liberation of Somalia (A.R.S.), the organization through which Sh. Sharif entered the T.F.G. in the Djibouti agreement of 2009. Farmajo, then, is a factional candidate, representing a small group within the presidential palace that is, in particular, determined to reduce the power of erstwhile Sh. Sharif ally and A.R.S. associate, transitional parliamentary speaker Sharif Hassan Sh. Adan, who was not consulted in the selection of Farmajo and had his own favored candidate, Said Farah Garad, who was backed by Ethiopia and also did not appear on lists of candidates published by the media. The source adds that the bid of the Ahlu Sheikh faction to insert Farmajo could not have been successful had Washington not become exasperated with the delay in naming the candidate for prime minister and sided with the Jama group against Sharif Hassan, while at the same time urging compromise between the disputants. Taking Sharif Hassan out of the loop in the selection of the nominee for prime minister insured that the speaker would fight back when Farmajo faced parliament for a vote of confidence. The ostensible disagreement between the president and speaker came over the president’s claim that voting was legally required to be conducted by an open show of hands, and the speaker’s counter-position that voting was required to be by secret ballot. According to a source, the legal issue, which caused the vote to be delayed three times, was a based on Sharif Hassan’s attempt to bribe parliamentarians in his favor, and Sh. Sharif’s blocking move to insist on an open vote that he believed would not allow parliamentarians to make secret deals with the speaker. According to the source, both sides had funds to influence the vote, with Sharif Hassan having received $(U.S.)1.5 million from Ethiopia and Sh. Sharif $(U.S.)7.5 million from Arab countries in addition to $(U.S.)1.5 million more that had been used to buy off Sharmarke. The machinations of both sides and the delays led to a visit to the airport in Mogadishu by a delegation of regional actors led by United Nations special representative for Somalia, Augustine Mahiga, that met with the two Sharifs and warned them to reach an agreement immediately. The adversaries reportedly met privately directly afterwards and the deadlock was broken, with an open vote being held approving Farmajo 297-92-3 on October 31. According to the source, the next moment of the intrigue will be revealed in Farmajo’s list of proposed cabinet ministers that must be submitted for approval to parliament within a month after the vote of confidence. The source reports that some politicians believe that Sharif Hassan has capitulated and has even lost support among his Bay&Bakool clan backers, whereas others believe that a deal was struck, partly at the behest of Washington, between Sh. Sharif and Sharif Hassan, giving the latter the right to stack the cabinet in favor of the old corrupt political elite. Indicative of the power of Sharif Hassan is the fact that, breaking with precedent, he was the one, as speaker, swore in Farmajo as prime minister on November 1. In any case, says the source, the power struggle will continue with the Ahlu Sheikh faction making a bid to have the transitional institutions extend beyond August, 2011 in order to preserve A.R.S. power in the T.F.G., and Sharif Hassan attempting to unseat Sh. Sharif. New splits are also possible when parliament convenes to approve Farmajo’s cabinet list; some members of parliament have warned that they will not endorse a list that includes figures from the old corrupt political elite. Within this maelstrom of intrigue, Farmajo appears as an inexperienced player who represents a narrow faction and cannot even serve that base fully because he is checked by Washington’s desire for a compromise with Sharif Hassan. Bottom Line Reports from closed sources make Farmajo’s selection intelligible. Farmajo is an indicator of an ever more narrow hyper-factionalization within the T.F.G. aided and abetted by default by Washington. By: Dr. Michael A. Weinstein
  13. PasserBy. Because Puntland is like a little boy seeking attention.
  14. Aaliyyah. We are just curious obvisiouly we know the crime they did is horrible which is why we think those convicted criminals deserve whatever they get. We never though we would see a day where a supposed "Somali prostitution slave ring" would be busted to the world to see. It was common to see things like this in the Latino's, Hispanic, Black communities etc but not Somalis.
  15. Somalis are their own enemies ethiopia iyo waxas marmarsiiyo yana laga dhiigan. Somalis destroyed somalia not Ethiopians.
  16. Very hilarious video featuring 50 Cent & (Keenan Cahiil kid. Keenan Cahiil ( Feat.50 Cent) - Down on me
  17. Well done wasiirka warfaafinta ee JSL shedding light to the nature of the pirate enclave and it's false allegations.
  18. I find it strange most of the somalis convicted in the court are claiming they were born in the 1990's. With the expection of few born in late & early 80's. ma odaygan ba dahaya 1990kii bu dhashay? wada fake age bii isku dhibeen for sure.
  19. Anybody remembered this guy "Dahir Lucky" he was a music artist at Sclub19. How things change.
  20. Che. It must be something to do with the foreign element mixture culture of the south. City size is not a excuse. Burco as of today is bigger than Kismaayo, Brava, iyo magaaloyinka koonfurta expect Mogadishu.
  21. Geel_jire you have a point there. Which is why i think Somaliland should decline this offer of getting their hands dirty into Southern/Amisom affairs.