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Everything posted by Xaaji Xunjuf
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Somaliland finance minister with delegation visits Djibouti.
Xaaji Xunjuf replied to Xaaji Xunjuf's topic in Politics
Somaliland Iyo Jabuuti Oo Ka Wada Hadlay dhismaha Wadada isku xidha Hargeysa iyo Jabuuti July 19th, 2011 Jabuuti (Somaliland.Org) Xukuumadaha Somaliland iyo Jabuuti ayaa ka wada hadlay sidii maalgelin wada jir ah loogu raadin lahaa dhismaha jidka isku xidha Hargeysa iyo Jabuuti. Arrintan waxa labada dal ku faaqideen Kulan ay maanta ku yeesheen Jabuuti waxaana dawladaasi matelayay Wasiirka Maaliyada ee Jabuuti Ilyaas Muuse Dawaalle iyo masuuliyiinta Rugta Ganacsiga ee Jabuuti, halka Somaliland-na ay shirkaasi ay uga qeyb galeen Wasiirrada Maaliyada Eng. Maxamed Xaashi Cilmi, Ganacsiga Md. C/Risaaq Khaliif Axmed iyo Guddoomiyaha Rugta Ganacsiga Somaliland Xasan Cabdi Cawad. Wasiirka Maaliyada Jabuuti Ilyaas Muuse Dawaale, oo ka hadlay kulankaasi ayaa sheegay in shirkan ay la yeesheen masuuliyiinta Somaliland uu la xidhiidho sidii bog cusub loogu furi lahaa iskaashiga labada dal ee dhinaca Ganacsiga. “Fadhigan oo ah kii ugu horeeyay ee aanu la yeelanay walaalahayaga Somaliland waxaanu is leenahay waxyaabo badan oo aad wada qabsan kartaan ayaa jira, waxa jira dhaqan ah in Ganacsatada Jabuuti ay jecel yihiin inay wax la qabsadaan walaalahayaga Somaliland halka Ganacsatada Somaliland-na ay Jabuuti wixii allaalle iyo wixii ay jecel yihiin ka qabsan karaan,”ayuu yidhi Wasiirka Maaliyada Ilyaas Muuse Dawaalle, waxaanu intaasi raaciyay “Anaga iyo walaalahayaga Wasiirrada ah hawlo badan ayaa na horyaala waxa ka mid ah sidii aanu wada jir maalgelin ugu heli lahayn Jidka isku xidha Jabuuti iyo Hargeysa.” Wasiirka Maaliyada Md. Maxamed Xaashi Cilmi oo hoggaaminayay weftiga Somaliland ayaa dawlada Jabuuti uga mahad celiyay sida wanaagsan ee ay ugu soo dhawaysay dalkeeda waxaanu sheegay in loo baahan yahay in la sii xoojiyo isku gudubka ganacsiga ee labada dal. “Waxaan aad u rajaynayaa fadhigeenani kii ugu dambeeyay ee aynu yeelano shirar joogto ah oo la mudeeyo oo aynu kala faa’iidaysano oo la isweydiiyo maxaynu ka kordhisanay halkii aynu taagnayn waxaanan qabaa in waxyaabo badan la is weydaarsan karo,”ayuu yidhi Wasiirka Maaliyada ee Somaliland. Shirkan waxa kale oo laga wada hadlay in la dhiiri geliyo Ganacsatada labada dal si ay u fududaato iskaashiga Ganacsiga labada dal. -
Aaliyyah;734912 wrote: ^ those cowards who killed those five innocent women, and who have been killing innocent people throughout the years are no one other than the somaliland admin who are in laascaanod by force. And, if you cant see that then you are the one who is qabileste! salaam Lool accusation and accuastion and some more accuations and no evidence the woman was part of the Somaliland police force that part you forget deliberitly. There was another woman called Ina culujoog she was badly injured by those cowards Somaliland president Ahmed Siilanyo arranged a private plane so that she can be flown to Adis ababa for treatment.
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A khadar Where did politicize anything i just posted the video of the legendary Hadraawi with the moving library delegation in sool.
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Aaaliyah if people are determined to achieve one thing they will get it, see i understand where you are coming from your from the diaspora and many of the garaad clan feel the same way as you feel the clanish way of thinking he is from Clan X and i am from Clan B there for he is my enemy. But that's not the case the locals of Laascanood in the 2007 were fed up with the pirate admin in garowe whom they share a clan lineage with and they chased them out of Laascanood. Yeah terrorist cowards killed the Somaliland female Police officer in laascanood and may allah bless her soul she was part of the police force of Somaliland maintaining the peace in the city why the hell would the Somaliland army Kill a Somaliland police officer see thats again the clanish mentality people of the garaad clan carry in the west the likes of xaglatoosiye and Ali sabaray. Not the Likes of Khusuusi leader Abdirisaaq and Keyse Abdi Yusef. Aaaliyah as for Somalilanders fighting the government of Somalia i was merely pointing out that the people of Somaliland were determined to have their free and and an independent Somaliland wether Somalia was peaceful was irrelevant to the people of Somaliland. Because the topic opener asked would Somaliland consider unity with Somalia when Somalia becomes peaceful. Col Xassan kayd walanwal in 1961 with officers from Somaliland Carried out coup d'état to make Somaliland an independent state again. The Attempt of of Col Xassan kayd walanwal did not materialize, but it paved the road for another man to stand up Ahmed Mohamed Gulaid (Ahmed Jimcale) born in Adan founder and first chairman of the SNM and the former general secretary of the NUF party this time after a long and bitter war independence became reality for the people of Somaliland.
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a demonstration in lascanood somaliland is a democracy people can demonstrate here is a demonstration in hargeysa
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Wait wait aaliyahs come back will be these people are occupied and afraid loooool and they are forced to celebrate
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Aaaliyah nice try Aaliyah the people of sool wa kuwan Fardihi darawiishta ba xisbiga kulmiye loogu dabal dega:D The people of sanaag The great people of awdal
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Lool do you want me to show you quotes of world politicians on Somaliland , A khadar stop being a xaqiir adeer
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Why drought in Somalia is not our problem Thursday July 14 2011 Even by the deranged standards of non- discussable African issues, the dilemma that the West now faces in Somalia is exquisitely hideous. Drought has returned there yet again, putting the lives of millions at risk. What has not returned, having remained there throughout, and meanwhile increasing its hold on the population there, is the al-Qa'ida offshoot al-Shabaab. Contacts between UN relief agencies and al-Shabaab have already taken place. Mark Bowden, the UN co-ordinator for Somalia, said this week: "Our staff are in contact with al-Shabaab at a local level -- we now need to see what assurances and security guarantees they can give." My guess is, a lot. Why wouldn't the local al-Qa'ida franchisee give every possible guarantee to an organisation that will in return feed and protect its volunteers, its infrastructure and the local population pool that it needs to stay alive? How difficult A) is it for even the thickest Islamists to see that it is in their interest to behave like Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm while the drought threatens to exterminate them, and so destroy their ability to wage war on the West? And B) how thick must they think the West is to comply with this strategy? The answers to these two questions are A) not very, and B) incredibly. There is another question here -- the difficult one, the painful kind that gets people into trouble. It is this: what is the rationale for keeping a particular demographic group alive when the main result is the maintenance of an implacable enmity towards the rescuers? It is that existential argument -- not the one that the UN admits to, of aid-material falling into the hands of the Islamists -- that we should be discussing. It's not easy, to be sure. For immediately we must face a fourth question: who can look at the photograph of a tiny, fading child, with flies supping the last juices from its desiccating eyes, and decide to let her die? And likewise, hundreds of thousands of other such children? I ask these questions with no hope whatever of the least kind of intelligent debate. After all, perhaps the most intelligent man in the world, Bill Gates, apparently thinks Africa's problem is that its po-pulation (which doubles every 25 years) is not growing fast enough. So he wants to abolish AIDS and malaria there, and is spending billions to bring about this earthly paradise. If successful, this means that Ethiopia (1985 population, 33.5 million) will reach a population of 177 million even earlier than 2050, which current UN figures project. Likewise, Nigeria will reach its projected population of 340 million even earlier. And presumably, those living models of racial harmony, Rwanda and Burundi -- already among the most populous places on earth -- have further glories to explore. Meanwhile, totally bankrupt Ireland is borrowing money -- to be repaid by our grandchildren -- in order to give more financial aid to these demographic lunatic asylums. That is to say, Ireland, population four million, is now financially supporting countries that are many, many times larger than us, and by 2035 will have at least doubled their populations. Whoa. Steady there. Is this clever behaviour? And which is the more intelligent? Al-Shabaab, which is temporarily prepared to suspend its epochal hostility toward us so that we can, rather decently, prevent calamity destroying its population bases? Or us, as we comply with its requirements? And when the drought passes, then what? Let me break some bad news to you. It is now a standard exercise in NATO military colleges to plan for troop deployments in the Horn of Africa -- Kenya, Somalia, Ethi-opia and Eritrea -- where the next phase of the great global cultural war is expected, if, as is likely, militant Islam trium-phs in Afghanistan/Pakistan. These two latter countries have absorbed -- almost with no visible outcome in terms of friendship toward the donors -- many tens of billions of dollars in aid. And Somalia will probably be the same. A Somali you save today is unlikely to turn into a sort of grateful Nilotic-Dane in 20 years. No, indeed: the chances are he will remain a proud and resentful Somali Islamist, and even if he comes to the West -- as hundreds of thousands already have -- he will probably despise us as backward savages, who are too lazy even to circumcise our little girls the wholesome radical way, as they should be, with rusty blades and no anaesthetic. I'm not sure whether I've yet given Denise Charlton of the Immigrant Council of Ireland and many splendid PC multi culturalists, who sought my head on a pole three years ago, quite enough ammunition to destroy my life this time. Probably not: what a shame. So let me conclude now with a suggestion. We should accept that the entire region is of really only proper interest to the Chinese. They are geographically far closer, and seem to dote on Africa, its many peoples and its luscious minerals. So it's simple. Somalia is not our problem -- whereas our unborn grandchildren, upon whom we are already saddling vast debts, including the cost of ALL our current African aid-operations, most emphatically are. Irish Independent
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Eritrea’s Economic Growth Vital Lesson To Other Countries: Economic Expert Asmara, 18 July 2011 – Prof. Mark D. Juszczak, an economic expert, said that at a time when the majority of western nations are faced with economic meltdown and African countries are engulfed in dire drought situation, Eritrea is registering continued economic growth anchored on the principle of self-reliance. He made the salient remarks in an article he wrote under the title: “An Economic Lesson We Can Learn from Eritrea”.Stating that such principle was resorted to both in the days of the liberation struggle and in the reconstruction and nation-building endeavors after independence, the Professor explained that self-reliance played decisive role towards enabling the people and Government of Eritrea achieve reassuring progress. He further underlined that the countries possessing abundant natural resources are presently facing acute economic crisis have a vital lesson to learn from the Eritrean experience. In this connection, Prof. Mark D. Juszczak cited Eritrea’s rejection of external handouts and subsides in the implementation of development programs. In the conviction that human resource capacity constitutes guarantee for economic independence, the Eritrean government exerts unremitting efforts to this end, in addition to ensuring equitable distribution of resources and avoiding corruption, he added.
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How Broadband will get to Somaliland and the horn of Africa Posted on 18/07/2011 in Special Report Last week, I interviewed Mohamed Ahmed Jama, CEO of Dalkom Somalia and board member of Frontier Optical Networks Ltd (FON) in Kenya. Jama described four potential Broadband cables that could be a part of a terrestrial backbone throughout East Africa, including in Somalia. A fifth was announced yesterday in Somaliland. Though all three of these proposed links are just that—proposals—they are indicative of the rapid growth of Broadband connectivity in the region. Most East African governments are actively engaged in rolling out backbone terrestrial networks, while four years ago the World Bank called East African connectivity the world’s only “missing link.” South Sudan is working with the CTO to develop an ICT strategic plan; Burundi recently received funding from the World Bank; and Uganda has also invested as well. And private companies are facilitating the expansion of Broadband cables as well as they are working with the national governments to lay the cables and to fund the projects. The East African Backhaul System was recently announced as a combined $400 million partnership between Burundi, Rwanda, Uganda, Tanzania, South Sudan, Kenya, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo governments and a variety of private telecoms. The unique partnerships between the public and private sector make the ICT space in East Africa distinct from other regions. Potential backbone networks in Somalia, Ethiopia, and South Sudan are outlined below: * Somalia’s Connection to EASSy Cables According to Jama, Dalkom Somalia has built two cable landing sites in Somalia from the EASSy submarine cable, one in Somaliland and the other in Mogadishu, Somalia. Unfortunately, the government of Somaliland revoked Dalkom’s license last year before the cable was completed (scheduled to be finished in October, 2010). The Somaliland government claimed that they had already signed an agreement with a local company, SomCable. However, no additional work has been carried out since last year, leaving construction at a stand-still and the region unconnected. In Mogadishu, on the other hand, the landing cable lays ready to be used, but remains unconnected due to security issues at the site. To make matters more frustrating, Dalkom has funding, contracts awarded and the regulatory approval to extend the cables from the landing site inward, creating a national terrestrial backbone. Security issues in the area are the only contingency. * Mombasa—Nairobi—Moyale, Ethiopia Cable The EASSy submarine cable has been extended inland previously from Mombasa to Nairobi. For the past year, discussions have been underway been the Kenyan and Ethiopian government on possibly constructing a terrestrial cable from Nairobi to Moyale, on the Ethiopian border. However, with FON’s assistance, the cable has been built, but is yet to be lighted. The only remaining holdup is to sign an agreement of understanding with the Ethiopia government, which has historically been reluctant to work with private sector ICT companies. * Somalia—Kenya Connection According to Jama, there is 560 km remaining between fiber optic terrestrial backbone cables in Somalia and the state of Mandera in Northeastern Kenya. Jama proposes that the Kenyan government bring the fiber to the border, and then Dalkom Somalia would complete the Somali side. This connection would connect Somalia to the African backbone network. However, there has been intermittent violence on the Kenya-Somalia border in Mandera, with the most recent issue being a land mine blast that killed eleven Kenyan officers. The volatility of the border could potentially lead to another security standstill before lighting the fiber, like in Mogadisho. Dalkom and the governments, then, need to concern themselves not only with the technical issues and construction of the remaining fiber, but also on the political instability of the region. * Juba—Lokichogio Link Southern Sudan and Kenya plan to construct a fiber optic cable link between the two nations as part of a larger project entitled “four-in-one.” The project includes the construction of a railway line from Lodwar-Lokichogio to Juba, road rehabilitation, an oil pipeline, and fiber optic cables. Currently, the governments need to conduct a feasibility test given the mountainous nature of the route, especially the Great Rift Valley. In all likelihood, the project will not be finished before 2015. * Djibouti—Somaliland SomCable SomCable, supported by the interim government in the territory of Somaliland, reportedly signed an agreement to buy the necessary buildings and licensing in Djibouti to route the EASSy cable into Berbera and throughout Somaliland. The President of SomCable, Mohammed Gueti, announced his recent acquisitions just yesterday. Gueti has strong ties with the president of Djibouti’s family, arguably giving his company an advantage over Dalkom Somalia at winning the contract. However, as Jama points out, construction has yet to begin on this cable line, possibly suggesting that the announcement is merely a political move by the government of Somaliland as Gueti does has any rights to extend the EASSY Cable. Neither purchases any capacity from the members of the Consortium.
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Actually the world knows Somaliland as a self reliant nation they also know Somaliland a beacon of hope in the horn of africa. While Somalia is known as a wartorn state and as a failed state.
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Protecting Somaliland's endangered cave paintings Young archeologist works to save prehistoric rock paintings in war-torn Horn of Africa. Haley Sweetland EdwardsJuly 19, 2011 07:08 PrintEmail0diggsdigg HARGEISA, Somaliland — Follow an unmarked dirt road to a dry riverbed in the scrubby, northwestern Somali plains and in the shadows, beneath the sandstone outcroppings, are remarkably well-preserved paintings. They date back between five and 11,000 years and cover the rock walls in streaks of white and black and barbeque sauce red. White stripes highlight a warrior's clothing, the point of his spear and the curve of an ancient cow’s udder. This is Somaliland's Laas Geel. Anywhere else in the world such cave paintings would undoubtedly be a UNESCO World Heritage Site, but here — in the unstable Horn of Africa — it’s in danger of being swallowed up by decades of war, political unrest, drought, poverty and neglect in a region that most of the Western world has left for dead. And that’s where Sada Mire, a young London-educated Somali archeologist, enters the scene. As the only Somali archeologist working on the ground in greater Somalia, and one of only a handful of academics worldwide focusing on the region, she is trying to almost single-handedly identify and protect what’s left of Somali heritage. And she’s doing it without adequate funding, resources or a qualified staff. Although Mire is originally from Mogadishu, the young archeologist now heads up the Department of Antiquities for the unrecognized republic of Somaliland, a breakaway region in northern Somalia. While visitors to Somaliland are still required to travel with guards armed with AK-47s, the breakaway republic’s de facto government has been able to maintain a relative peace for nearly 17 years, creating a platform from which the preservation of Somali cultural heritage may begin — if it’s not too late. “Protecting these cave paintings is very, very important to us. This is our history. It’s who we are.” ~Abdirisaq Wabre Roble, Somaliland’s former Minister of Tourism and Culture “A whole country’s history is almost gone already,” said Mire, who received her doctorate from the University College London last year. “So much has been destroyed already. Boxes of documents, Bibles, scrolls, coins, swords, knives, traditional art, jewelry, beads — all of it is gone forever.” The entirety of the former Somali National Museum in Mogadishu was looted in the period before 1979, and no museums or archival spaces exist today, she said. “We don’t even have complete records of what we once had,” Mire said. “The only thing we can do is try to protect what’s left.” Mire has been able to survey sites from the Ethiopian border to Berbera, a port on the Gulf of Aden — all of which is under the auspices of the de facto Somaliland government — but it’s still too dangerous, even for her, to work in Somalia itself. In the last half-century, troves of archeological artifacts have been removed from Somalia, first by the Italians and British who colonized the region in the first half of the twentieth century and then, after independence, by impoverished Somalis themselves, driven to sell artifacts for a handful of U.S. dollars to feed their families. This week's winner asks, how did Europe's militaries get so weak? Here's the article we published. .When Somalia descended into civil war in 1991, the problem worsened as warlords began “systematically looting” archeological sites to fund the war, Mire said. In some places, historic buildings, like the Mogadishu Cathedral, were destroyed by mortars and bombs. In other places, buildings have been deconstructed, stone by stone, by locals to build corrals for their goats or houses for themselves. In Laas Geel, local herders, unaware of the historic significance of the rock paintings, used to take shelter in the rock outcroppings, lighting campfires that destroyed some of the ancient images. “The thing is to get there before it’s all destroyed, to preserve at least a record of what was there,” said Geoffrey King, a professor at the School of Oriental and African Studies at the University of London, who worked with Mire when she was a graduate student. Modern-day Somalia spans a region where first generation Muslims, traveling from Arabia by boat, would have landed in Africa in the seventh century, King said. “This time period has never been studied in much of this region, so protecting what we have is beyond important.” Mire’s work so far has focused on educating locals, and especially the respected elite — sheikhs, elders, community leaders — who live near important heritage sites and who can act as unofficial custodians and protectors. “It’s not an ideal solution, but it’s a start,” Mire said. The rock art at Laas Geel, the most well-known of the heritage sites in Somaliland, is the only archeological site in greater Somalia that employs guards, at the expense of the Somaliland government. Mire’s next priority is to establish antiquity laws in Somaliland that would prevent the sale of remaining artifacts to rich collectors abroad — a task that will require that she essentially write legislation for a country that does not yet exist. Unrecognized by the international community, the territory does not qualify for traditional avenues of funding or protection from institutions like UNESCO, and its laws are toothless in an international context, as it is still officially under the auspices of long failed Mogadishu in Somalia proper. Mire will face “incredible challenges from every direction” since most international institutions’ bureaucracies are not equipped to work with unrecognized or failed states, said Andrew Reid, an archeologist at the University College London’s Institute of Archeology, who is familiar with working in sub-Saharan Africa. But Somaliland’s former Minister of Tourism and Culture, Abdirisaq Wabre Roble, isn’t daunted. He says Mire’s work is vital, both culturally and for the economy of the semi-state. “Laas Geel is a national monument. People from all over come to see the paintings there,” he said in an interview last year. “Protecting them — and all the other sites around Somaliland — is very, very important to us. This is our history. It’s who we are.” And then, echoing Mire’s wildest dreams, he mused, “Maybe soon we’ll even have a museum.”
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Well i saw mahiga talking and some other TFG Minister but the question was is Saado a politician or a singer,now Ambassador Mahiga didn't clarify in the video if she was a politican like him and the minister or not maybe you can
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I watched it as i said now answer me my question
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i watched it before the last part of the video you posted
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Is saado a politician or a singer mahiga ma album bey rabtay inay wada so saaran?
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Shoot out between the two sharifs in Villa Amisom
Xaaji Xunjuf replied to Xaaji Xunjuf's topic in Politics
Somali President, Speaker’s Guards’ Clash Wounding Three Tuesday, July 19, 2011 By Hiiraan Online Reporter At least three soldiers assigned to Somalia’s top leaders were injured on Tuesday following an exchange of gunfire between escort troops belonging to president shariff and speaker Hassan. Eye witnesses told Hiiraan Online (HOL) that gunfire erupted early in the morning when an escort brigade belonging to the parliamentary speaker attempted to enter Villa Somalia, the headquarters of the Transitional Federal Government of Somalia (TFG) in the restive capital Mogadishu. “One of the speaker’s guards attempted to enter the headquarters of the government, but he was turned down by presidential escorts. He later came back with reinforcement and fighting started after long confrontations” one witness told us HOL learnt that a senior official of the presidential security team identified as Mohamed Arab was one of three injured soldiers. The three are reportedly admitted into Mogadishu’s hospitals for further treatment as HOL correspondent in Mogadishu says that there was no official communication from the government. Sources hinted that an anticipated press conference by Prime Minister Dr. Abdiweli Mohamed Ali was delayed after the embarrassing incident that has stunned both the local populations and officials of the TFG. Little is known about the delayed press conference from the office of the prime minister. On Monday TFG officials hinted that a new cabinet could be named today (Tuesday). Our correspondent says, there has been political arm-twisting within the TFG and particularly between the president and the speaker over the naming of the new cabinet. -
Mahiga oo Ka Sanqariyey in aan Shirka dib u heshiisiinta lagu qabanayan Garoowe Nairobi/ToggaHerer 19 July 2011 Ergeyga gaar ah ee QM u qaabilsan arrimaha Soomaaliya Augutine Mahiga ayaa isaga oo jooga magaalada Nairobi waxaa uu sheegay in ay been abuur yihiin islamarkaana waxba ka jirin wararka sheegaya in shirka wada tashiga la qorsheeyay in lagu qabto magaalada Garoowe maamul goballeedka Puntland. ‘’Wali magaalo loo xushay ma jirto in shirka, waxaa arintaa u xil saraan guddi gaar ah oo u guurgalaya magaalada ugu mudan in kulankaasi lagu qabto, sidaa daraadeed wali wax go’aan ah oo la gaaray malaha ayuu yiri,’’ Mahiga. Hadalka Mr. Mahiga ayaa ku soo beegmaya xili madaxda maamulka Puntland ayaa ku cel celinayeen maalmihii aynu soo dhaafnayba in shirka lagu wado in lagu qabto gudaha dalka Soomaaliya uu ka dhici doono magaalada Garoowe ee xarunta u ah maamul goballeedka Puntland. Wasiirrka waxbarashada maamulka Puntland Cabdi Faarax Juxa oo qeyb ka ah guddi QM u saartay ka soo baaraan dagida halka lagu qabanayo shirka ayaa saxaafadda u sheegay in hadda meesha ugu mudan ee leysla wada gartay tahay magaalada Garoowe, hasse ahaatee hadalka wasiirka waxaa meesha ka saaray Augutine Mahiga oo sheegay in ilaa hadda aysan jirin meel gaar ah oo loo cayiman in uu shirku ka dhaco. Madaxweynaah maamulka Puntland C/raxmaan Shiikh Max’ed Faroole oo warbaahinta la hadllayay ayaa sheegay “Cidii diida shirkaasi waxaan u aragnaa cid dooneysa dhibaatada Soomaaliya, anaguna waan arkeynaa.. Beesha caalamkuna way arki doontaa”
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Iran seeks to triple China trade to $100 billion
Xaaji Xunjuf replied to Xaaji Xunjuf's topic in Politics
Iran, China ink $4 bn in infrastructure deals Released on - Saturday,16 July , 2011 -19:34 Iran and China on Saturday signed a series of agreements worth $4 billion (2.8 billion euros) for infrastructure projects as part of a broader bid to boost trade volume between the two nations, Iranian state media reported. The bilateral agreements span cooperation in water, mining, energy and industrial sectors. As part of a $500 million (354 million euros) deal, China agreed to provide Iran with 60 energy recovery incinerators, which are to be installed within a year in major cities and in Iran's northern tourism hub along the Caspian sea. China also pledged to boosts its imports of Iranian mineral products, state TV reported. Iran's Vice President Mohammad Javad Mohammadi-Zadeh told the television that China was Iran's leading economic partner, with last year's trade volume reaching $30 billion (21 billion euros). The agreements were signed during a visit by He Guoqiang, a senior executive of the Chinese Communist Party, who heads a delegation visiting Iran. He was received by Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. "The main objective is to quickly bring our economic and trade exchanges to $100 billion," Ahmadinejad said during Saturday's meeting, according to his website. "China, with a strategic vision, wants to strengthen its cooperation with Iran, because it is in the interest of both nations as well as regional countries," He Guoqiang was quoted as saying by the website. China's ambassador to Tehran told IRNA recently that bilateral trade would reach $40 billion (28 billion euros) this year. China and Iran have become major economic partners in recent years, partly thanks to the withdrawal of Western companies in line with sanctions against the Islamic republic over its contentious nuclear drive. Beijing, which now buys about 20 percent of Iranian crude, opposes the policy of the United States and its European allies seeking to strengthen UN sanctions against Iran, which they believe is seeking nuclear weapons. Tehran denies this, saying its nuclear programme is purely for peaceful objectives. -
Iran seeks to triple China trade to $100 billion The Associated Press Saturday, July 16, 2011 | 11:34 a.m. Iran's official news agency IRNA says President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has called for a quick increase in trade with China to $100 billion a year. The news agency says current trade between the two countries is worth about $30 billion. Iran turned to China after the West imposed economic sanctions over Tehran's suspected nuclear weapons program. Iran says it's nuclear program has a strictly peaceful purpose. Ahmadinejad spoke after a meeting Saturday with He Guoqiang, a senior executive of the Chinese Communist Party. The Iranian president says he hopes the new trade goal will be reached quickly, but did not give a time frame. IRNA says the two countries signed agreements worth $4 billion in mining, energy and other areas.
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Shoot out between the two sharifs in Villa Amisom
Xaaji Xunjuf replied to Xaaji Xunjuf's topic in Politics
Ilaalada labada Shariif oo isku rasaaseeyay Xarunta Madaxtooyada Muqdisho: (Sh. M. Network) Iska horimaad qasaaro gaystay ayaa Ciidamo ka tirsan dowladda KMG Soomaaliya waxaa uu ku dhexmaray iridka hore ee Xarunta Madaxtooyada Villa Soomaaliya. Inta la’ogyahay 2-qof ayaa ku geeriyootay tiro intaasi ka badan oo uu ku jiro Sarkaal sare oo ka tirsan Ciidamada dowladda oo magaciisa lagu soo gaabiyay Gaashaanle sare Carabna way ku dhaawacmeen kadib markii Xarunta Madaxtooyada ay is rasaaseyn muddo kooban socotay ku dhexmartay Ciidamo kawada tirsan dowladda KMG Soomaaliya gaar ahaan Ciidamo kal kala tirsn kuwa ilaalada Madaxtooyada iyo Ciidamo daacad u ah gudoomiyaha barlamanka Shariif Xasan Sheekh Aadan. Israsaaseynta ayaa bilaabatay kadib markii labo askari oo ka tirsan ciidamada dowladda uu dhexmaray muran sababay gacan ka hadal, waxaana xiligaasi kadib bilowday rasaas xooggan oo ay isweedaarsadeen labada Ciidan, iyadoo Sarkaalka geeriyooday la tilmaamay in uu kala dhexgalayay laba askari. Intaasi kadib ayaa goobta uu iska horimaadka ka dhacay waxaa soo gaaray Saraakiil iyo Ciidamada ka kal tirsan dowladda KMG iyo AMISOM kuwaasi oo kala dhexgalay askartaasi oo u muuqday kuwa wali uu dhexdooda ay ka taagneyd xiisada dagaal. Saraakiil ka tirsan ciidanka ilaalada madaxtooyada Soomaaliya oo aan qadka taleefanka kula xariirnay ayaana inoo suura galin si aan wax uga weydiino dhacdada sababtay gacan ka hadalka ee ciidamada DKMG ku dhexmartay Madaxtooyada, hase ahaatee dadkii ku dhaawacamay israsaaseyntaasi ayaa waxaa loo qaaday qaar ka mid ah Xarumaha Caafimaad ee Magaalada Muqdisho, iyadoo isku dhacaasi uu samayn ku yeeshay dhaq dhaqaaqii Xarunta Madaxtooyada ee Villa Soomaaliya. Aqriso oo la soco Shabelle.net Saacad Walba si aad u hesho wararkii ugu dambeeyay ee Soomaaliya. -
Shoot out between the two sharifs in Villa Amisom
Xaaji Xunjuf replied to Xaaji Xunjuf's topic in Politics
oo anigu ma danbi baan sameyey denbiga waxa la qoraya marku qof denbi sameyo ama qof cayo ama qof xanto inta ba meesha adeer lugu ma hayo. -
Shoot out between the two sharifs in Villa Amisom
Xaaji Xunjuf replied to Xaaji Xunjuf's topic in Politics
Maxaad ka sheekeneysa Museveni waxa u dan ah dee inay ciidankisa meesha si joogaan Lacag na ku sii qaato Ileen wa mashruuc eh