Xaaji Xunjuf

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Everything posted by Xaaji Xunjuf

  1. Oba if you want Mooge to like the president adigu maha inad hoos carartid Madaxweynaha. hadi kale Mooge madaxweynaha muufe iyo cambuulo bu ka urinaya wax fahan.
  2. You cannot please every one give the president a chance for a year and than we can talk about his achievements its very difficult to lead Somalis since there is so much distrust between the people. And ofcourse not everything is perfect or will be perfect, but Somalia is slowly emerging. As for the the Prime Minister and his job we can say that the Prime Minister took the role of a mere vice president than the head of the executive branch of the government. But as long as there is some sort of governance in Mogadishu its better than what we had few years ago , so mooge you might not like the government or hassan, but support the people. the image of Somalis is tarnished all over the world. You can only help you're people if you support what is right.
  3. Ninkan Mooge ninka mucaraad xun waligay ma arkin
  4. Mooge agreeing with Cali khalif Galaydh this is astonishing:D
  5. I can move my ears while not touching my ears.
  6. I never said the world is perfect nor is life fair but that doesn't mean we shouldn't act as humans and try to look for the positiveness of our societies. I always see things from a clear perspective African Americans some of them think White people are beasts and evil by Nature. Because of what was done to them in the early 19 century. But that doesn't mean the future has to be dictated of what happened in the past. There is a difference between hatred and distrust Somali tribes distrust each other but they don't hate each other. I don't believe there is hate between Somalis. Now distrusting feelings was cause by many factors the decimated of large segments of population during the war, nepotism. We need to think and see the bigger picture and learn from our mistakes and learn from our histories. in Africa in Asia in south America in Europe and all over the world. There is no point of repeating the same mistake over and over again.
  7. He believes lets talk to Somalia like many but he believes that the recognition the Somalia govt received from the Washington has some consequences for Somaliland, now that can be debated and there might be some truth in that.
  8. Kenya oo beri bilaabeysa Raafka Soomaalida Islii oo loo rarayo Xerada Dhadhaab [Daawo] on January 20, 2013 * Qoraal kasoo baxay Xafiiska Madaxweynaha Kenya Mwi Kibaki ayaa amar lagu siiyey dowlada iyo ciidamada Kenya inay bilaabaan aruurinta ama raafka qaxootiga Soomaalida ah ee ku sugan magaalada Nairobi gaar ahaan Xaafada Islii. Qoraalkan kasoo baxay Xafiiska Madaxweynaha 16kii bishan Janaayo ayaa lagu sheegay in beri oo ku beegan 21ka Janaayo hawlgalkan la bilaabi doono, iyadoo ciidamada Kenya aruurin doonaan Soomaalida ku sugan xaafadda Islii ee aan sharciga heysan. Hawlgalkan ayaa loogu magacdaray (Relocation of Uran Refugees to Officially Designated Camps) Di u rarida Qaxootiga Magaalooyinka ku dhaqan oo loo wareejinayo Xeryaha loogu talo galay. Dadka ayaa la qorsheeyey in la isugu geeyo marka hore Istaadiyumka Thika Municipal Staduim, kadibna gaadiid lagu qaado oo loo raro xerada Qaxootiga ee Dhadhaab. Qorshahan ayaa waxaa si weyn udhaliilay qaar kamid ah Xildhibaanada Soomaalida ah ee ku jira Baarlamaanka Kenya. Faarax Maalim oo shalay shir jaraa’iid ku qabtay magaalada Nairobi ayaa sheegay in arrintan ay tahay fal cunsurinimo ah isla markaana hay’adaha amaanka Qaarkood ay caado ka dhigteen in ay Soomaalida u bartilmaamsadaan si ay dhaqaale uga sameeyeen, wuxuuna sheegay in ay hay’adaha sirdoonka hawshooda kasoo bixi waayeen oo ay eeda uun dusha ka saaraan dadka Soomaalida ah oo uu sheegay in dhibaato weyn lala damacsan yahay. Daawo wareysi uu bixiyey Faarax Maalim Magaalooyinka dalka Kenya gaar ahaan Nairobi iyo Mombasa ayey bilihii lasoo dhaafay ka dhacayeen weeraro aan la aqoon kooxaha ka danbeeya, balse dowlada ay ku eedaysay inay ka danbeeyaan kooxda Al Shabaab, waxaana horey xabsiyada lagu xiray dad badan oo Soomaali ah oo aan iyagu wax danbi ah lagu helin. Waxaa sidoo kale jiray weeraro lala beegsaday goobaha Ganacsiga iyo Masaajidada Soomaalida oo ay Soomaali badan dhimasho iyo dhaawacyo kasoo gaareen. Go’aanka kasoo baxay Xafiiska Madaxweynaha Kenya Kibaki ayaa kusoo beegmaya xili dhawr todobaad laga joogo markuu dalka Kenya safarkak u yimid Madaxweynaha Dowlada Federaalka Soomaaliya Xassan Shiikh Maxamuud. Madaxweynaha Soomaaliya ayaa asagu sheegay inay doonayaanin dadka loo soo cesho balse, ay diidan yihiin in si jahwareer ah dadka Qaxootiga Soomaalida ah dib loogu soo cesho. Qorshaha Kenya hada wado ayaa cabsi weyn ku abuurtay shacabka Soomaalida ah ee ku sugan xaafadda Islii ee magaalada Nairobi oo caawa cabsi ku seexanaya, manaca cada hawlgalka balaaran intuu socon doono.
  9. http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=X-l7zYtblXc" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen>
  10. Seems the author is trying to convince him self rather than Somalilanders:D
  11. Che -Guevara;910234 wrote: Nagadaa Xaaji, this 'new generation' thinks Somalis have hooves for feet and horns on their head lool :D:D
  12. We should ask our selves is there Something Somalis actually agree on, i can think only religion excluding the few Christians and atheists. All the other things Somalis don't agree on. Like every one talks about Somalinimo but we don't have a clear definition what Somalinimo is yet every one talks about it? For Some it means a country or the unity of the Somali inhabited areas in the Horn for others its just about social interaction of Somalis in a positive way
  13. Ethiopia: British MP Denies UK funding the Notorious Liyuu Police Force Saturday, 19 January 2013 21:09 Somalilandsun - British MP responds to Guardian Report accusing the government of funding the Liyuu police force as misleading. Lynne Featherstone MP said " Not a penny of British money will go to the Liyuu force. We take human rights extremely seriously and recognise that reform of the special police is critical for achieving a safe and secure Somali region. That's why we are discussing with UN partners how we might work together to improve the police's human rights record. This is something that Human Rights Watch has called for. The Peace and Development programme as a whole will help over 300,000 people get access to safe, clean water, give thousands of young people an education and help 700,000 people get a job and earn an income. This is in addition to the hundreds of thousands of people who will receive better access to justice and security. The Somali region of Ethiopia is one of the most deprived areas in the country. This programme is intended to create the conditions they need to lift themselves out of poverty. " Lynne Featherstone MP is the International development minister
  14. Those who maintain domination over the global economy need an opponent a healthy opponent so that things can be a balance. Never said the world is perfect but its up to the human race to make mother earth a better place we are the predecessors of our grand children and their children.
  15. I don't really care much about liberal media they cant influence me how i view people. I value humans for what they are and because of their achievements black white yellow Latino Mulatow Indian Europeans Ethnic Somalilanders and the rest of Africa. Not all people have fake superiority complex Like Oba who thinks he is better than Sub saharan Bantu people when they have better economies better thriving nations better infrastructure. No my friend the world doesn't work like that i believe in justice in the constitution of the United states and when i see injustice i point that out but there is always a but i believe people should fight for their rights.
  16. When the Lamu project is finalized in kenya south sudan will use Kenya's largest port in East Africa and it will totally ignore Khartoum and Israeli engineers will build a pipeline from Juba to Kenya
  17. Sudan, South Sudan border talks get nowhere, delay oil exports KHARTOUM/JUBA | Sat Jan 19, 2013 6:16pm EST (Reuters) - Sudan and South Sudan on Saturday failed to agree on how to withdraw armies from their disputed border after a round of talks in Ethiopia, delaying again the resumption of crucial oil exports. The African neighbors came close to war in April in the worst border clashes since South Sudan seceded from Sudan in 2011 under a 2005 deal which ended decades of civil war. After mediation from the African Union, both countries agreed in September to set up a demilitarized buffer zone and resume oil exports from landlocked South Sudan through Sudan. Oil is vital to both economies. But neither side withdrew its army from the 2,000-km (1,200-mile) border due to mistrust left from one of Africa's longest civil wars. To end the stalemate the AU brought together Sudan's President Omar Hassan al-Bashir and South Sudan's Salva Kiir two weeks ago in Ethiopia. But after a week of talks in Addis Ababa to discuss how to set up the buffer zone, as agreed by the presidents, both sides accused each other of making new demands. "We were facing difficulties during the talks in Addis Ababa because of the changing position of South Sudan which keeps altering every time we reach an agreement," Sudan's defense minister Abdel-Rahim Mohammed Hussein told reporters after his return at Khartoum airport. Talks would be postponed until February 13, he said. Hussein said South Sudan made new demands for demilitarization of a disputed border area called Mile-14 and had not given up support for rebels fighting Sudan's government. Khartoum accuses Juba of backing Sudan People's Liberation Movement-North (SPLM-North) rebels in South Kordofan and Blue Nile, two Sudan states bordering the South. Juba denies this. The SPLM-North, made up of fighters who sided with the South during the civil war, controls part of the Sudan side of the border, which complicates setting up the buffer zone. South Sudan accused Sudan of refusing to withdraw its forces from the border and making new demands regarding "Mile-14". "The Republic of South Sudan also agreed to resume oil production immediately ... (but) Sudan has refused to accept the oil for processing and transporting in Sudan," until the buffer zone was fully operational, South Sudan said in a statement. MORE DELAYS South Sudan, which says Sudan often bombs its territory, shut down its entire oil output of 350,000 barrels per day (bpd) a year ago after failing to agree export and transit fees with Khartoum. It had hoped to be producing 230,000 bpd by December. Crude from southern fields will take two months to reach the Red Sea terminal on Sudan's coast after output resumes, South Sudan said this month, suggesting exports are unlikely to hit markets until April or even May after the latest delay. The AU had planned to publish last week a timetable for setting up the buffer zone. But in a statement on Saturday it only said both sides had made "substantial progress" and would hold further talks regarding the buffer zone and "the key issue on when oil exports could resume and under what circumstances." It did not say when talks would resume. Apart from oil and the buffer zone, the two countries must also agree on ownership of Abyei and other disputed areas. On Thursday, Juba had raised hope of an understanding when it said it had started withdrawing its army from the border. But it was unclear whether Juba had actually begun pulling out its forces because its military spokesman Philip Aguer told Reuters the army was still awaiting orders to do so.
  18. Its still wrong you cannot hate people based on the color of their skin and their physical appearance
  19. Racism is never good every one is equal in the eyes of Allah
  20. Assad's overthrow "red line" for Iran: supreme leader's aide Reuters – 22 mins ago Reuters/Reuters - Syria's President Bashar al-Assad answers journalists after a meeting at the Elysee Palace in Paris, December 9, 2010. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier DUBAI (Reuters) - A senior aide to Iran's supreme leader warned against the overthrow of Syria's President Bashar al-Assad, saying his fate was a "red line", in one of the Islamic state's strongest messages of support for the Damascus government. Iran has steadfastly backed Assad's rule since an uprising against his rule began almost two years ago and regards him as an important part of the axis of opposition against arch-foe Israel. "If the Syrian President Bashar al-Assad is toppled, the line of resistance in the face of Israel will be broken," Ali Akbar Velayati, who is seen as a potential contender in Iran's June presidential election, said in an interview broadcast on Sunday. "We believe that there should be reforms emanating from the will of the Syrian people, but without resorting to violence and obtaining assistance from the (United States of) America," he told Lebanon's Al-Mayadeen satellite television. Asked if Iran sees Assad as a red line, Velayati said: "Yes, it is so. But this does not mean that we ignore the Syrian people's right in choose its own rulers." More than 60,000 people have died in the uprising against Assad, part of the Arab Spring protests that have swept aside four heads of state since 2011. Iran, a regional Shi'ite Muslim power which backs Lebanon's Hezbollah group, describes many Syrian opposition groups as "terrorists" who are backed by Western and Arab states. Assad follows an offshoot of Shi'ite Islam. Velayati blamed what he called "reactionary" Arab states for the violence in Syria and singled out Qatar, accusing it of bringing in fighters from Somalia and Afghanistan to help topple Assad. Velayati said all parties linked to the crisis in Syria needed to negotiate. "Anyone who comes to the talks cannot negotiate on the table and support the armed elements, but must enter the negotiations and stop supporting the armed elements," he added. The Islamic Republic has sought international backing for its six-point plan to resolve the Syrian conflict. The plan calls for an immediate end to violence and negotiations between all parties to form a transitional government, but does not call for Assad to step down. (Reporting by Sami Aboudi; Editing by Andrew Heavens)
  21. The thing is the old generation of sl they lived worked with somalia interact for 30 years The new new generation had zero social interaction with the people of somalia keep in mind they dont live in the west like most of us where people are neighbors. All they know about somalia is that they live in somalia and there was big war between sl and somalia. They dont how how the koonfurians act work if they are nice or not All they know is that somalia has anti somaliland senitment