The Zack

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Everything posted by The Zack

  1. LOOL. Are you trying to know where the research is coming from so you can build protection or at least get clues? Clue #1: Do you know Saciid, the runner?
  2. Che Haaheey. Aaliyah, uunsi ma aha walal, fooxu waa another smoke lol. Consider taking Showqi's advice lol.
  3. I will share the detective work my people have conducted in Cambridge and Chelsea, MA area. I am not going to say Shangoole is or is not your adeero now. It won't make a difference until I provide a proof anyways
  4. ^I still standby what I said, anigu waligey uma dhawaan laakiin dadka qaar wey u fiican tahay iney u dhawaadaan. LOL@caba waxaad cabeysiin. Fooxa waa la ruugaa walal lama cabbo, qiiqna wuu leeyahay.
  5. LOOOOOOOOOOOOOL@Sayd. Aaliyah iyo anigu illeen is fahmi weynay. I kept saying some smokes are good for you and she kept declining that statement. Illeen uunsiga inaan ka hadlayo gabadhu maba ogeyn baan u gartay.
  6. Ha igu qasbin to post evidence that you are from Burtinle. I am not sure how close you are to Shangoole though. P.s. Why did you try so hard to hide your identity?
  7. Che lol.. Duke's intelligence got it wrong miyaa? Oba, waan arki doonaa bro.. ninku jihaadka uu dadka u diro inuu aaday baa laga yaabaa.
  8. LOOOOOOOOOOOL@Che.. designated by who?
  9. ^Oba, you should be very happy lol. Wouldn't this be good news for you? Saalax, everything is possible on this sxb. Personally, I need a proof to believe the dude is really dead.
  10. LOL@Sayd. Aaliyah walal Abdi is not me and neither is he my friend. Waan aqaanaa uun yarka, like I said before. Having said that qiiqa (not qaadka) could be beneficial.
  11. ^Xaasha huuno. Afkeyga waligey ma saarin alaabtaas, aqoonta iyo khibradda wey kala duwan yihiin sidaad la socotaba. Dhinaca "harming yourself", there are different takes on that, mid aan aqaano oo la yidhaahdo Abdi would strongly disagree with you. He would tell you that it is his balwad that keeps him going day in and day out laakiin I see whacha saying.
  12. Salaax, I am afraid Obama's claim is true sxb, Bin is deceased sxb. As far as Ina Godane, do you really think it would be difficult the man's picture?
  13. ^If the CIA was able to take out Bin Ladin in a nicely built mansion in Islamabad, they sure can take out Godane in aqal Somali in Caliyaale or Ceelasha biyaha lol.
  14. ^Haaheey huuno. There is Marlboro light smoking, there is real-Marlboro smoking, there is a weed smoking, and last but definitely not least, there is a shiisha smoking. So which one ina adeer?
  15. I am not sure how truthful this piece is, anybody have other sources that report this?
  16. War deg deg ah:Fu’aad Shoongole oo ku dhintay dagaalkii Garbaharey Fu’aad Shongale oo ka mid ahaa horjoogeyaasha sare ee maleeshiyada Al Shabaab ayaa lagu dilay weerar ay maleeshiyada ku soo qaadeen magaalada Garbahaarrey, oo ay ku sugnaayeen ciidamada DKMG ah ee Soomaaliya. Guddoomiyaha gobolka Gedo ee DKMG, Maxamed Cabdi Kaliil, ayaa Bar-kulan u xaqiijiyay dilka Fu’aad Shongale iyo 4 kale oo ajaanib ah, waxaana uu sheegay in meydkiisa iyo saddex ka mid ah ajaanibta iyo baasabooro ay siteen ay hayaan, saxaafaddana ay u soo bandhigi doonaan. Dagaal saaka aroortii ay magaalada Garbahaareey ku soo qaadeen maleeshiyada Al Shabaab ayaa socday ilaa 5-tii galabnimo, waxaana sida uu guddoomiyaha gobolka sheegay in dagaal qaraar oo ay la galeen ay ku gaarsiiyeen khasaaro xoog leh. Kaliil waxa uu sheegay in sidoo kale ay dileen ku dhawaad 75 ka tirsan maleeshiyada Al Shabaab ee duulaanka soo qaaday, isagoo tilmaamay in xilliga uu Bar-kulan la hadlayay uu ku suganyahay xarunta gobolka ee magaalada Garbahaarreey. Dagaalkii maanta ayuu sheegay in ay qeyb ka ahaayeen horjoogeyaal sare oo ka tirsan Al Shabaab oo ay ka mid ahaayeen Xasan Daahir Aweys iyo Abuu mansoor oo markii danbe raacay firxadka maleeshiyada soo duushay, sida uu hadalka u dhigay. Maleeshiyada ayaa dhawaan isaga baxay magaalada Garbahaarrey kaddib markii ay weerar ku qaadeen ciidamada DKMG, saaka ayay markale weerar ku soo qaadeen magaalada si ay dib ula wareegaan gacan ku heynteeda. Xigasho/barkulan
  17. Aaliyyah;716190 wrote: Men who smoke thinking it makes them look cool. A huge turn off..alle ima so ag mariyo nin sigaar caba! Define "smoking" yaa caaliya lol.
  18. Xaaji Xunjuf;716060 wrote: Wa halki faisal cali waraabe if you want to claim land based on tribalism go claim wardheer Wardheer xagaas uga leexo waaryeey.
  19. ^No no no! He needs to get my gas prices cheaper.
  20. Waad isku xiiqdeen ma is tidhi? You are both correct... Fact: Siilaanyo hasreceived a warm welcome in those Arab states. Fact: None of those states recognize him as a head of country. None of you can change those facts as of now.
  21. Can anyone ever really support pirates? That was the question posed by one of Somalia’s most famous poets a few years ago. The answer depends on what part of the world you are in, and is more complicated than a simple ‘yes’ or ‘no.’ Pirates, kidnappers, rag-tag militia, sea-bandits, sea-robbers, disenfranchised fishermen, off-shore entrepreneurs, whatever you call them, it is universally accepted that their way of making a living is unlawful. Somali pirates currently hold 30 ships and more than 660 seafarers from at least 20 different countries. But why are these mostly young former fishermen catching ships instead of fish? The answer lies onshore as well as offshore. By looking at pictures from the pirate havens of Eyl and Hobyo, it is clear that these young men have nothing in common with Johnny Depp in the movie Pirates of the Caribbean. Somalia hasn’t had a functioning central government in the last 20 years. The country is in ruins, thanks to feuding warlords and Islamists. The coastal towns these young men call home haven’t been spared death and destruction. In fact, in some coastal towns, the fighting has been worse, thanks to illicit trading partnerships between warlords and foreign mafia. It is true that for these young Somali men, making money has always been their primary goal. During the “good-old days,” they used to go to the sea and come back with plenty of fish to sell. The sea was not only a provider, but also an escape from the war that was raging on land. Warlords learnt that dealing in the dumping of toxic waste in Somali waters was more lucrative than running check-points and robbing the already penniless populations. Once the dumping of toxic waste had begun, it grew and grew. At height of the dumping operations, foreign mafia were paying local warlords a mere $2.50 (Sh210) per tonne of toxic waste dumped on the Somalia coastline. This made Somalia one of the world’s cheapest dump sites and gave locals unknown illnesses and killed what remained of any fish that had been left by illegal fishing trawlers. This dumping continues today and no one knows if, or when, it will end. Suspicious containers leaking what is thought to be radioactive toxic wastes, surface every now and then in populous coastal towns all along the Somali coast. The rate of birth defects and children born with cancers has increased. Terrible civil wars had already made surviving on land hard enough and these young men now found themselves with no way of making a living from the polluted soil and not being able to support their families. Thus, modern day piracy was born. In places like Hobyo and Eyl, a young man may only have three options to make a living: join local warlords, join the al-Qaeda-linked Islamist group al-Shabaab or become a pirate. Doubled each year One Earth Foundation figures show that for the average ransom paid to free a ship in the last five years, the amount paid to pirates has doubled each year. From around $150,000 (Sh12.6 million) in 2005 to $5.4 million (Sh453 million) in 2010, a 3,600 per cent increase. This makes piracy off the coast of Somalia extremely profitable. Is it any wonder that piracy is the undisputed number one “profession” in Eyl and Hobyo? The world’s reaction to this has been to increase the international naval presence off the coast of Somalia. This hasn’t deterred the pirates and has led to world leaders making exasperated statements about how Somali pirates are taking the world economy hostage. Pirates know that even when caught red-handed they stand an 80 per cent chance of being released to try their luck again. When they are detained and sent to prisons in the West, the prison conditions are much more favourable than those in many Somali coastal towns. The Somali people feel abandoned by the world, their plight seen but not acted upon. They feel they have been left to fight warlords, Islamist and foreign mafia on their own and now the pirates who spend their rich pickings in unknown places, away from the local economy. The world needs to know that sea-borne only operations will not solve the issue of piracy in Somalia. Any solution that is proposed must involve solving the problems on land. The longer these problems are ignored, the bolder and richer the pirates get and harder it will be to dislodge them. As an author of a report on piracy from Chatham House says: “Pirates can be chased on sea, but piracy can only be eradicated on land.” Source
  22. Som@li;715899 wrote: Overrated, ma xuma laakin xogaa caadufad baa ku jirta, waa sheekadii qaar reer waqooyi ku oraneyeen Ilma Mooga baa ugu sareeya abwaanada oo kale. Buraanbur iyo Gabay midna waxba ma soo dhiciyee, Amxaarta ha la iska celiyo. How is she overrated bal? Gabadhu boqolaal gabay oo waddani bey tirisay, you can't many about that.
  23. Senator Kirk’s visit to Puntland on Saturday marks the first high-profile visit by an American leader to Somalia since 1992 Congressman Payne has been to Xamar just recently unless these guys have their own definition of "high profile".