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Everything posted by Xaaji Xunjuf
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Somaliland minister of trade and industry is the nephew of caaqil hoolif people are basically all related there which makes all somalilanders one big family
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Official Somaliland provincial football tournament thread
Xaaji Xunjuf replied to Xaaji Xunjuf's topic in General
^^ Tomorrow against hawd lets watch that -
Boosaaso(AllPuntland)-Dab khsaare xoogan geystay ayaa caawa ka kacay Suuqa weyn ee magaalada Boosaaso, iyadoo aan la ogeyn sababta dabkaasi ku dhashay. Dabkani ayaa waxaa uu xooggiisa uu ku faafay qeybaha Suuqa Boosaaso ee lagu iibiyo Cuntada, Maacuunta, Khudaarta, Bagaashka, dharka iyo Kabaha, waxaana xiligani ku howlan damintiisa gaadiidka dab damiska iyo dadweyne kale. Wararka laga helayo Boosaaso ayaa sheegaya in dabku uu u muuqdo mid marba marka ka danbeysa sii xoogeysanaya, taasoo dadku ay sheegayaan in ay adag tahay in si fudud loo damiyo. Warku wuxuu intaa ku darayaa in dabku uu dhaliyay qaraxyo xoogan oo ka dhashay fuustooyin shidaal oo qeybo ka mid suuqa dhexdiisa ku keydsanaa, iyadoo warar horudhac ah ay sheegayaan in dabku uu sababay dhimasho iyo dhaawac, walow aan ilaa weli si rasmi ah loo xaqiijin. Ciidamada ammaanka oo ku sugan guud ahaan suuqa iyo xaafadaha u dhow dhow ayaa rasaas kor u ridaya si dadka u kala eryaan, kuwaasi oo doonaya in hantidooda ay badbaadsadaan. Wariye ku sugan Boosaaso ayaa APL u sheegay in Isbitaalka Boosaaso la gaarsiiyay tiro dhaawacyo ah oo dabku uu waxyeeleeyay, kuwaasi oo xaaladooda qaarkood liidato. Ilaa weli laguma guuleysan in dabka la damiyo, walow ay socdaan dadaalo xooggan oo ganacsatada ay wadaan iyo gaadiidka dab damiska, waxaana meesha ka maqneyn Dowladda Hoose ee Boosaaso. Wixii ku soo kordha wararkeena danbe ayaa kala socon doontaan Haduu Alle idmo.
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War Deg Deg: Suuqa weyn ee Boosaaso oo gubanaya Dab aad u xoogan ayaa caawa ka kacay qaybo badan oo kamid ah suuqa weyn ee magaalada Boosaaso, Dabkan oo aan ila iyo hada la garanayn waxa uu kacay ayaa dhulka la simay qaybo badan oo kamid ahaa suuqa Boosaaso oo ay ku jiraan: Qaybta iibka Maacuunka. Qaybta dharka iyo kabaha. Qaybta bagaashka. Qabta qudaarta. Iyo in badan oo kamid ah qaybaha Raashinka lagu gado. Ciidamada dab demiska iyo dadweyne aad u tira badan ayaa ku howlan sidii ay dabkaas u demin lahaayeen inkasta oo dabku uu u muuqanayo mid marba marka ka danbeysa sii xoogeysanaya ayna adag tahay in si dhakhsa ah lagu damiyo maadaama suuqu uu yahay mid aad ciriiri u ah Booyadaha iyo gawaarida kale ee dab demiskuna aanay gudaha u geli karin. Qaraxyo xoogan ayaa la maqlayaa kuwaas oo ka dhashay fuustooyin shidaal ah oo uu dabku gaarey wuxuuna ololka dabkaas ka baxayaa aad u iftiimiyey qaybo badan oo magaalada kamid ah iyadoo qiicuna uu cirka isku shareeray una ekaaday sidii muuqaalka daruuraha. Xaafadaha ku yaala hareeraha suuqa waxaa ka qaxaya qoysas badan oo ka cabsi qaba in dabku uu guryahooda soo gaaro , sidoo kale waxaa wadooyinka suuqa laga galo ku sugan ciidamada ammaanka oo iyagu rasaas kor u ridaya si ay u kala eryaan kumanaan qof oo u badan dadkii suuqa ku ganacsan jirey islamarkaana doonaya inay soo arkaan sida uu dabku hantidoodii u waxyeeleeyey. Sidoo kale waxaa jira warar hordhac ah oo sheegay in ay jiraan dad ku dhintay iyo qaar kale oo ku dhaawacmay dabkaas iyo weliba rasaas ka qaraxday qaar kamid ah bakhaaradii uu dabku gaarey inkastoo anigu aan soo arkay dhaawaca labo qof oo midkood ay xaaladiisu aad u liidatey kuwaas oo durbadiiba loola cararay goobaha caafimaadka. Waa markii ugu horeysey oo dab baaxadiisu ay intaas le’eg tahay uu qabsado Suuqa magaalada Boosaaso oo ah kan ugu weyn guud ahaan deegaanada Puntland welina laguma guuleysan in dabkaas la demiyo inkastoo ay jiraan dadaalo badan oo ay ciidamada dab demiska iyo dadweynaha magaalada oo iskaashanayaa ay ugu jiraan sidii ay dabkaas u xakameyn lahaayeeen. Wixii kasoo kordha dabkaas iyo baaxada khasaaraha uu geysteyba faah faahintooda ka filo saacadaha soo fool leh Warbaahinta Horseed Media
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Muu gaaray mise wu gaadhay?
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Colonialism what is he talking about i don't see any Colonialists but the fact that you said is that they welcomed them is enough for me there is no invasion what's so ever point taken adeer.
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Official Somaliland provincial football tournament thread
Xaaji Xunjuf replied to Xaaji Xunjuf's topic in General
Wasn't that illustrated by Amiin -
Duufaan;762817 wrote: Landers are all brothers and sisters. If they are from Djibouti or Somali region in Ethiopia, it does not matter. JB is from Hargeysa for example, the clan issue in Yagoori from Sool region is local for him. The non Yagoori SSC community did not even participated so far. The SSC YAGOORI community welcomed those clan mallesia. They now learn lesson that you never invited clan armed gangs to your villages. They need to stand firm and expelled these Melissa from their villages. So much for invasion if they invited imisan laha meesha occupation iyo waxasi ma jiro oo meesha rabitan ba ka jira Caaqil hoolif na wa caaqil sharfeed reer Somaliland allah ha dayo.
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Eritrea rebels say they killed 12 government troops
Xaaji Xunjuf replied to Xaaji Xunjuf's topic in Politics
The Afars with in Eritrea are fighting for self determination and wish to have an autonomy in their regions i don't blame them a government dominated by Biher Tigrayans and tigres. -
Eritrea rebels say they killed 12 government troops
Xaaji Xunjuf replied to Xaaji Xunjuf's topic in Politics
Eritrea rebels say killed 17 soldiers in raid Addis Ababa, December 2 (WIC) - Two Eritrean rebel groups said on Thursday they had killed 17 government soldiers in a dawn raid on a military base in the south of the Red Sea state. The Eritrean Salvation Front (ESF) and the Red Sea Afar Democratic Organisation (RSADO), said their fighters launched the attack in Enda Haji near the town of Tsorono on the border with Ethiopia. The rebels also said they had taken two prisoners. "We held the area until 11 a.m. before we returned back to our positions," RSADO spokesman Yasin Mohamed told Reuters. "Our fighters captured two soldiers, they are in our possession now. The army suffered 17 losses and five injured." Yasin said the rebels also suffered casualties in the attack but he gave no further details. The two rebel groups said in October early-morning attacks in southern Eritrea's Kermed, Adi Metras, Ingra Abo, Adi Tela'a and Meshal Akran killed 12 soldiers and wounded 15. The claims are impossible to verify because there is no independent media in secretive Eritrea and it rarely grants visas to foreign journalists. The Eritrean government has in recent months come under growing pressure from its neighbours who see it as a destabilising influence. Kenya has accused it of flying in weapons for al Shabaab, an insurgent group linked to al Qaeda that has been fighting the Western-backed Somali government since 2007, and which is now also battling Kenyan forces. Eritrea on Wednesday said the war in Somalia could only be solved through talks and that military action would fail. (Reuters) -
Eritrea rebels say they killed 12 government troops 2011 3:54pm GMT NAIROBI (Reuters) - Two little known Eritrean rebel groups said on Friday they had killed 12 government soldiers in an early morning attack. The Red Sea Afar Democratic Organisation (RSADO) and the Eritrean National Salvation Front said they carried out the raid on Thursday in Kermed, Adi Metras, Ingra Abo, Adi Tela'a and Meshal Akran, all in southern Eritrea. "The enemy units were engaged for nearly two hours," the groups claimed in a statement. "They suffered both human casualties and material losses that included 12 dead and more than 15 wounded, in addition to various types of military hardware." The claims were the first since last year when RSADO said it killed 17 intelligence agents and wounded another 37 in an attack on army barracks. There was no immediate comment from the Eritrean government but authorities in Asmara often dismiss foreign-based opponents as "puppets" acting under the orders of foreign governments. Eritrea accuses arch-foe Ethiopia of working to destabilise the Red Sea state, while Addis Ababa declared openly in April that it would support Eritrean rebels in a bid to oust President Isaias Afewerki's administration. RSADO says its operations are in response to Asmara's refusal to grant autonomy to the Afar, whose homeland straddles Eritrea, Ethiopia and Djibouti.
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Official Somaliland provincial football tournament thread
Xaaji Xunjuf replied to Xaaji Xunjuf's topic in General
Very nice Amiin Amiir -
I don't believe that is true taleexmedia needs to bring factual audio of them saying that
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Putting Somalia into an AU Trusteeship is the Only Option
Xaaji Xunjuf replied to Jacaylbaro's topic in Politics
We will never accept this when alshabaab is ousted from somalia or the rebel groups international jihadist elements are filtered from the group a reconciliation conference will happen.And the new leadership will decide the future of the state not the failed organization called the african union no sane person will ever accept to come under the authority of the so called african union. -
Guys this was an incident between two soldiers not an inciden between the army of somaliland one guy got seriously injured and one soldier got killed , the seriously injured soldier will be brought to justice when he recovers so its already been resolved. Anyway what was the beef about why did one soldier killed his colleague.
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Ethiopia’s military intervention in Somalia will not please the current Transitional Federal Government (TFG) president Shaykh Sharif Shaykh Ahmad, a former leader of the Islamic Courts Union (ICU), ousted by the Ethiopians in 2006. Abdihakim Aynte says President Shaykh Sharif Shaykh Ahmad and the TFG do not have a choice in the matter. Somali Defense Minister Hussein Arab Isse welcomed the entrance of Ethiopian forces to eradicate al-Shabaab but warned Ethiopia against having any other objectives that damage the reputation of the country: “ We welcome Ethiopian troops…and any other country that contributes forces to fight against the Shabaab militants, as long as they do not violate our sovereignty” (AFP, November 21). ilahoow haa iyo maya mar hanaga wada yeedhsiin
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Will the Return of Ethiopia’s Military to Somalia Destroy al-Shabaab or Revive It? Publication: Terrorism Monitor Volume: 9 Issue: 44December 1, 2011 07:25 PM Age: 17 min By: Muhyadin Ahmed Roble Ethiopian Troops Just 40 days after Kenya’s military intervention against the militant al-Shabaab group began in Somalia there are indications that the Kenyan effort may become part of a joint operation with African Union and Ethiopian military forces to eradicate terrorist elements in the Horn of Africa. The African Union has backed the Kenyan invasion of southern Somalia and has also invited the Ethiopian army to join the African Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM), currently consisting of military contingents from Uganda and Burundi. The Ethiopia army crossed the border into Somalia on November 19, with more than 20 Ethiopian military vehicles supported by helicopters immediately seizing towns in central Somalia close to al-Shabaab bases. Ethiopian forces created a large military base on the outskirts of Guri’el, Abduqwaq and Balanbal near the Somalia-Ethiopia border (Reuters Africa, November 19; Somalia Report, November 19). The Ethiopia intervention began before the African Union invited Ethiopia troops to join African Union peacekeepers in Somalia in stabilizing Somalia. Ethiopia’s current involvement is intended to create a new front against al-Shabaab in the Ethiopia-Somalia border region by working with local clans and factions. Knowing the results of Ethiopia’s bloody invasion of Somalia in 2006, the AU’s invitation to dispatch Ethiopia troops to Somalia will be another counterproductive and undiplomatic move according to Abdihakim Aynte, a Somali political analyst in Nairobi. “The African Union seems to ignore the last experience of Ethiopian's business with Somalia,” Aynte told the Jamestown Foundation. [1] The U.S. State Department also seems wary of the outcome of another Ethiopian invasion. Johnnie Carson, the State Department’s top Africa policymaker, said: “Ethiopia went into Somalia some four and a half years ago and stayed for approximately two and a half to three years. That effort was not universally successful and led in fact to the rise of Shabaab after they pulled out” (McClatchy Newspapers, November 22; The Standard [Nairobi], November 22). Ethiopia’s military intervention in Somalia will not please the current Transitional Federal Government (TFG) president Shaykh Sharif Shaykh Ahmad, a former leader of the Islamic Courts Union (ICU), ousted by the Ethiopians in 2006. Abdihakim Aynte says President Shaykh Sharif Shaykh Ahmad and the TFG do not have a choice in the matter. Somali Defense Minister Hussein Arab Isse welcomed the entrance of Ethiopian forces to eradicate al-Shabaab but warned Ethiopia against having any other objectives that damage the reputation of the country: “We welcome Ethiopian troops…and any other country that contributes forces to fight against the Shabaab militants, as long as they do not violate our sovereignty” (AFP, November 21). However, Aynte fears that Ethiopia might strengthen al-Shabaab, which he believes is currently at its weakest point. Because of Ethiopia’s bitter history with Somalia, Aynte said that al-Shabaab might start to engage nationalist fighters who consider Ethiopia an old enemy. All foreign interventions in post-independence Somalia, including Ethiopia’s 2006 invasion, have ended in a bad way. This is unsurprising as Somalis are notoriously xenophobic in terms of intervention in their own affairs, especially interference from Ethiopia, which they view inherently as their arch nemesis. Al-Shabaab has appealed to these nationalist sentiments since 2007. Macharia Munene, Professor of International Relations at Nairobi’s United States International University (USIU) said that some al-Shabaab members might raise the unforgiving and bloody wars between the two countries as a rallying point: “Somalia is currently a big mess. For me, the Somali people are wiser than that and such sentiment will not work for al-Shabaab.” [2] Admitting that Ethiopia’s 2006 invasion had helped the creation of the Islamic insurgency by giving it a strong popularity, Professor Munene said the times have changed. “Since then al-Shabaab has done nothing good for Somalis other than [inflict] severe suffering. Ethiopia withdrew from the country and they still keep [mounting] suicide attacks and killing innocent Somalis and that is why Somalis will not support al-Shabaab in this war.” According to Munene, the AU does not have a good reason to deny Ethiopia’s help in improving the Somali situation because the AU doesn’t have enough resources and manpower to confront the current situation: “Ethiopia wants to do the job as a volunteer so the AU should be happy to use the Ethiopian army and military equipment.” However, Munene’s colleague Hannah Macharia, international relations lecturer at USIU, said the Ethiopia invasion might complicate the conflict. She noted that in 2006 al-Shabaab existed mainly as a militia, but the Ethiopia invasion radicalized them as they felt that their country was under occupation. As a result of that, al-Shabaab was able to begin recruiting Somalia across the world. [3] “Partly, the Ethiopia invasion will complicate the whole process because the two-year Ethiopian presence in Somalia was unpopular and coalesced support for al-Shabaab because of indiscriminate mortar fire in the towns,” she observed. Professor Munene said that the previous aim of the AU was to maintain the position of the Somali TFG, but the common goal now is to defeat al-Shabaab militants. Munene believes the defeat of al-Shabaab will require the effort of every country and state. Al-Shabaab responded to the Ethiopian action by saying the incursion was required after the Kenyan Army, a “non-combat tested yet highly bumptious force,” had failed in its attempt to secure southern Somalia due to fierce resistance from the mujahideen of al-Shabaab. The movement further appealed to Somali nationalism to increase its numbers: “We… urge the Muslims of Somalia to set their differences aside and unite against their common enemy as they have done in the past in order to defend their country as well as their religion from the aggressive invasion of the allied African crusaders. You are facing a barbaric enemy that has no appreciation for the sanctity of human life; be firm and steadfast against them and fight them with all your might.” [4] With troops from four African nations now operating on Somali soil backed by the military power of the United States, al-Shabaab is certain to try to capitalize on traditional Somali xenophobia and nationalism to preserve and even expand the radical Islamist movement.
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Somalia Tops Most Corrupt Countries List For Fifth Year see photosAP Photo/David Guttenfelder Click for full photo gallery: Most Corrupt Countries Politicians in Somalia have come up with a new way to profit from that country’s misery: They set up rival refugee camps to divert food donations they can then steal and sell on the black market. This is just one of the many practices that landed Somalia atop Transparency International’s list of Most Corrupt Countries for the fifth straight year. Compiled through a variety of independent surveys, Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index attempts to measure the level of bribery, diverted aid and stolen political power that enrich a country’s leaders at the expense of its citizens and overall economy. This year’s list contains many familiar names, including Venezuela and Haiti, as well as newcomer North Korea, which tied with Somalia with a score of 1 out of 10 and operates like a big criminal enterprise with nukes. For thoroughgoing, consistent and deadly corruption, Somalia is hard to beat. The worst crimes are committed by the jihadist Al-Shabaab movement, which controls large swaths of the countryside and finances its operations partly through ransom money it demands as tribute from pirate gangs. But Somalia’s hopeful-sounding Transitional National Government isn’t much better: According to a recent report by U.N. monitor Matt Bryden for the Enough Project, an anticorruption group, the government led by President Sharif Sheikh Ahmed is competent mainly at stealing foreign aid. No Famine Has Ever Taken Place In A Democracy Robert Lenzner Forbes Staff “While donor governments pay the TFG’s bills and African Union forces do most of the fighting on its behalf, corrupt government officials have made off with as much loot as they possibly can,” Bryden wrote. Even the government’s own accountants reported $72 million in aid stolen between 2009 and 2010, with another quarter-billion unaccounted for. “The scale of the TFG’s financial hemorrhaging is so immense that the term ‘corruption’ seems barely adequate.” Tied with Somalia is newcomer North Korea, which entered the list for the first time. More information is becoming available from executives doing business in the secretive kingdom as well as tens of thousands of escapees who have made their way to Korea and China. Author Melanie Kirkpatrick of the Hudson Institute is writing a book about life in North Korea under the hereditary dictatorship of Kim Jong-il. Kirkpatrick described North Korea as “more like Imperial Japan than anything else,” with a godlike leader and rigid caste system that allows members of the military and preferred castes to prey on everybody else. To curry favor with his highest-caste subjects, she said, Kim Jong-Il hands out expensive foreign-made watches, cars and silk underwear on his birthday, Feb. 16. They’re likely purchased with the hard currency Jong-Il earns from international sales of counterfeit currency, illegal drugs, and weapons. “It’s no exaggeration to say it’s the most corrupt place on earth,” said Kirkpatrick, who interviewed dozens of recent escapees for two years to compile her book. “The basic means of everyday survival are based very heavily on who you know and who you can bribe.” Videos spirited out of the country show military trucks being used for an illegal bus service – lower-caste citizens must bribe military officials to leave their designated villages and labor groups – and bags of United Nations-donated rice being sold in markets. North Korea considers itself a communist country but after the government-induced famines of the 1980s Kim Jong-il’s government abandoned any pretense of serving the poor, Kirkpatrick said. Millions of peasants died of starvation and the police, military and even embassy officials switched to corruption and bribery to finance their operations. In one case reported by the New York Times, two North Korean diplomats were stopped in the Moscow airport and found to have 77 pounds of cocaine in their diplomatic pouches. In 2002, officials in Taiwan intercepted 174 pounds of heroin that had been offloaded from a North Korean naval vessel. Myanmar, or Burma as it is known to its political opposition and the U.S. government, is another Asian nation that earned a place on the list because of the rampant corruption of its military-dominated government. The Obama administration has warmed slightly to Burma recently after the government allowed Secretary of State Hilary Clinton to visit Nobel Prize winner and longtime political prisoner Aung San Suu Kyi. But elections held in 2010 were widely criticized and boycotted by the main opposition party, National League for Democracy. The president, Thein Sein, is a former military commander and present and former officers still extract large amounts of graft from bribery and illicit sales of timber and other resources. The Obama administration has kept in place sanctions for the regime’s political repression and failure to control illegal drug production.
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Djibouti Guelleh: Internal and Regional clarifications
Xaaji Xunjuf replied to Abu-Salman's topic in General
God bless president Geele -
Abdi ismail samatar and Ahmed Ismail samatar are often criticized because of the lack of involvement of these two gentlemen in the past, to bring forward some sort of solution as they only criticized the political situation and leaders of Somalia in the past.This is not the case any more with the formation of Hiilqaran new party created by the Samatars brothers, give the two brotherly professors a chance.
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All Doors are slammed on “Somaliland’s” Secessionist Faces
Xaaji Xunjuf replied to Somalia's topic in Politics
Somalia;762616 wrote: ^^ But you don't control your supposed border to the east, how can you let people violate your territorial integrity? Somalia: Puntland Condemns Somaliland Leader’s Provocative Visit 9 Oct 9, 2011 - 3:08:21 AM Puntland State of Somalia Garowe PRESS RELEASE 09 October 2011 Somalia: Puntland Condemns Somaliland Leader’s Provocative Visit The leader of Somaliland’s separatist administration, in northwestern Somalia, has visited military positions in parts of Sool region of Puntland. Sool and Sanaag regions are part of Puntland State of Somalia. Since October 2007, Somaliland forces have occupied Las Anod town against the wishes of the local population. Regrettably, it is Somaliland’s occupation that has triggered extremists to operate in those regions by benefiting from local grievances. The Somaliland leader, Mr. Ahmed Mohamed Mohamud (Silanyo), visited Las Anod town and reached approximately 18km from the Puntland defense line at Tukaraq town in Sool region. We urge Somali neighbors, regional powers and the wider international community to note Somaliland’s provocation against Puntland, which might ignite a conflict and destabilize the region. --- END --- -
Carafaat;762502 wrote: Indeed the UAE is an example of a real Union, working for its people after more then 40 years and where the Somali one failed after less then a year in 1961. Inshallah one day Djibouti, Somaliland, Somalia, Somali region of O, NFD will sit around a table and deliver throught unity and cooperation for their people as well.
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