Xaaji Xunjuf

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Everything posted by Xaaji Xunjuf

  1. The building is nice and big it looks good but I think the design could have been better , but Puntlanders will get there keep on building and you will get the right design
  2. What do you expect from the pirate boys Melez zanawi is their daddy they will do everything he askes
  3. Yes perhaps i am the somali diid what does that make garaad jamac Kenya doon
  4. But the anti-somali and anti-muslim somalidiidland doesn't deserve recognition, (snm is pro-isreal and pro-habashi)
  5. Are you sure you support the tfg I am sure the tfg doesn’t support you it was just a few weeks back when cumar buur accused the khusuusi of being linked to terrorism
  6. wamaxay garaadkan caruurtu ay so dhaweynayaan tallow ma garaad caruureed bey moodeen ?
  7. Originally posted by RedSea: I agree with Qudhac and that is exactly what Silaanyo has done thus far. They will have two ministers equal to that of Awdal. That seems fair wala soo dhaweyn taas
  8. dee kosovo wa dal anu u walaalo nahay oo muslim ah
  9. Originally posted by Duufaan: We have to claim our share of UN programs given to somali people. Anagu sirdoonka ingiriiska or sirdoonka mareyknka lacag kaash kamaqaadano. ^^ So now its the sirdoon oo gaalkii xuma noqday gaalki wanaagsana na cuntadii wuu ku siiyey
  10. I did not say we don’t have non-government organisation offices in Somaliland but your cousin duufaan acts like we can’t survive without them, while his own garaad begs Mark Browden the un Humanitarian coordinator isn’t that Hypocritical?
  11. meeshan kaliya eeh aan wax u waday waxay ahayd maxkamada aduunka oo shariciiyesey Jiritaanka dalka kosovo. Adigu halkeed wax u wada?
  12. This topic is about the newly independent recognized country called Kosovo stay with the topic my friend
  13. The end of the battle for Kosovo Written by UTV News Jul 22, 2010 at 03:37 PM Separatists, secessionists and splittists from Taiwan, Xinjiang and Somaliland to Sri Lanka, Georgia and the West Country will welcome today's precedent-setting legal opinion from the UN's international court of justice effectively upholding Kosovo's unilateral declaration of independence from Serbia. With hindsight it seems clear the 1990 reunification of Germany ran contrary to modern history's tide, marking a sort of last stand for the old 19th-century model of the unitary nation state. Since the Berlin wall came down and the Soviet Union disintegrated two years later, things everywhere have been falling apart. Fractious minority movements seeking recognition, autonomous rights, or outright independence since the cold war's end loosened the global geostrategic straitjacket have become commonplace across Europe. Spain frets about its Basques and Catalans, the unifying impact of its World Cup success notwithstanding. Italy's Germans often give cause for concern. The United Kingdom may prospectively be obliged to change its name, should breakaway Scottish and Welsh nationalist parties have their way. Some speak passionately of independence for the ancient kingdom of Kernow, otherwise known as Cornwall. And if it's Kernow redux, then why not Northumbria, Mercia, and Wessex, too? In Wiltshire they await a new Arthur. The accelerating trend towards the assertion of minority national, basically tribal rights, usually defined in terms of sovereign territory, delineated borders, ethnicity, language and history, appears global in nature. Vuk Jeremic, Serbia's foreign minister, who led opposition to Kosovo's UDI, suggested the fracturing of the nation state paradigm, like cracks in glass plate, could spread widely and do great damage. Speaking before Kosovo's formal 2008 break with Serbia, Jeremic looked beyond the Balkans to countries such as Sudan, a country that is likely to break in half this winter. In Africa, he said, "there are about 50 Kosovos waiting to happen". International acceptance of Kosovo's unilateral act "would be a very dangerous signal, a signal that there are no rules. Serbia wants to play by the rules. You just can't come along and say they don't matter any more." Boris Tadic, Serbia's president, revisited this argument this week. A ruling favouring Kosovo "would destabilise many regions of the world", he said. Now that Serbia's worst fears have been realised, it remains to be seen whether such dire predictions prove accurate. More prosaically, the world court's delayed advisory opinion hardly came as a surprise and must now be managed politically if new strife, most possibly in ethnically mixed northern Kosovo, is to be avoided. In the end the ruling was more a matter of hard-headed realpolitik than carefully appraised international law. The US, Kosovo's principal sponsor, was adamant all along the court's opinion would have little practical impact, a view echoed by Tony Blair, Kosovo's self-styled liberator, during a visit this week. Joe Biden, the US vice-president, also emphasised that independence was a done deal while affording Kosovan prime minister Hashim Thaci the Washington red carpet treatment on Wednesday. Independence was not primarily a matter of law, a White House spokesman said. "We do not believe that declarations of independence are legal acts whose legality is affirmed or denied by this international court. They are political facts that have to be established through political realities." The US has its own experience in this department. In 1776, American independence came at the muzzle of a musket, not in the form of a lawsuit against George III. Despite their protestations, and they will be long and angry, Serbia and its main backer, Russia, half expected this outcome. Their best course now may be to turn it to their maximum advantage rather than play a spoiler's game at the UN general assembly (which must endorse the ruling). One obvious approach is to accept the EU's proposed technical talks on creating a pragmatic modus vivendi between Belgrade and Pristina while seeking support, as a tacit quid pro quo, for a renewed effort to advance Serbia's EU membership bid. The US may think it's got ahead. But Russia could win both ways, not least in terms of its Georgia intervention. The court's failure to oppose Kosovo's secession "would automatically weaken the west's case against the recognition of [the independence of] Abkhazia and South Ossetia by Russia," said Petr Iskenderov of the Russian Academy of Science in International Affairs magazine. Moscow could also use the decision to push for an "overhaul" of the international community's approach to frozen disputes in the Balkan and Caspian regions that affect its interests, such as that between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the breakaway enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh, he said. Serbia now faces the prospect of increased international recognition of Kosovo, the country's prospective membership of the UN, and the permanent loss of a territory its regards as a defining part of its sovereignty and history. At the same time, the gates to Europe swing open. It is a bitter pill to swallow. It could trigger domestic political upheavals. But when the dust settles, common sense and self-interest may dictate acceptance of the outcome. Like the Battle of Kosovo Field in 1389 that was so critical to Serbia's identity, the modern day battle for Kosovo is lost. guardian.co.uk © Guardian News and Media 2010
  14. Dufaan your landlocked don’t even try. I don’t need any permission from any one to go to any part of Somalia. what’s there to do in Ethiopia and, why do I need permission from you to go to Ethiopia unless you’re an Ethiopian agent
  15. So now a telecom company is the enemy of Somalia hilarious
  16. Originally posted by Duufaan: you are pro-colonial. You do not beleive you can survive without outside support. Yesterday, you were british protected tribes and now receive benefits and protection by Malazawi and others. Right now Your very busy to get benefit by T card. Somaliland was colonised by the British Empire you was being protected by Brigadier R.H. Smitth the late British Empire Brigadier It’s you who can’t survive with out outside support with no port no access to sea It was not that long ago when your garaad was writing letters to Mark browden the un resident and humanitarian Coordinator he was addressing the humanitarian situation and crisis in the eastern sool region and buhoodle , your supreme leader clearly said his people cant survive without humanitarian help so who is begging for outside help One question what did melez zanawi do for Somaliland? Absolutely nothing
  17. Loool does that include all territories of sool and sanaag lol
  18. haatu stop this nonsense i am not this chief caaqil Guy, dadka lama masabido sxb
  19. There is no such thing as pro colonial or anti-colonial in 2010 because there aren’t colonialist in Somaliland or Somalia , Somaliland is very independent you are anti-Independence anti nationalist even from a Somaliweyn point of view you draw fake letters on the Somali flag , that’s not nationalism the cayn province didn’t even exist in the former Somalia , there for your pro tribilist You have your own regional government Where?? so now your part of the pirate state when ever it suits you
  20. Duufaan the only thing that will be discussed on the negotiation table is how the ssc faction will be disarmed , that is if it comes to Negotiations which i doubt very much
  21. A khadar Dadka shacabka argagax ku riida wa argagixso shacabka bariga somaliland idinka xabbad la so dhex galay oo mar ba xabbad yar meesha ka riida markana dhuunta , wa argagax sxb
  22. in 1960 Somaliland Said laa yaa garaad And 50 years later again we say Laa yaa garaad