Sky

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Everything posted by Sky

  1. og girl dont know what the hell youre talking about. the link works just fine. qorsheel true that and amiin to them making a positive change.
  2. a technical part of the federal convoy has slipped from the road in qayaadsame on the road between boosaaso and qardho causing 4 deaths and more casualties. the survivors are brought to boosaaso isbitaal. the car accident happened behind the hills in the back ilaahay haa uu naxariisto dadka ku dhintay shilkaan baabuur.
  3. http://hafza.com/page79.html i think this is serious, everybody is talking about it. i think i underestimated this. AWDALNEWS EDITORIAL= "The second blow came from Puntland whose Machiavellian warlord had first played the tribal card to dismember Somaliland and throw its territorial integrity into a perpetual doubt. With Abdillahi Yusuf Ahmed now buoyant with his newfound power and international recognition as the leader of Somalia, there is no doubt that he will make his priority to stymie Somaliland’s ambition for nationhood. The establishment of the Horn of African Free Zone (HAFZA) in Puntland is a step to tighten the noose on Somaliland’s dying economy and force it to fall into Ahmed’s lap like a ripen fruit.........." ARTICLE= Editorial: How much longer can Somaliland survive on armchair politics and empty stomach? http://www.awdalnews.com/wmview.php?ArtID=4881
  4. og girl do me a favour and show me yourself on these pictures. i want to see how you look like.
  5. abwaan i dont like ethiopians but they aint like before. they changed a lot, the only ones who are messing up are somalis themselves. ka waran, zone 5 in ethiopia of the somalis, its more backward and underdeveloped compared to the other ethnicities' states than it used to be. why? somalis are killing each other in almost every district, somalis toppled 6 somali zone presidents, the most dominant clan the og fought over wich of their own cities should be capital, godey, jigjiga or qabridahare? the ethiopians even gave their sworn enemies onlf the rule but they are marred in corruption. ka waran? some somalis should analyse themselves and not fingerpoint others as if we are inferior to them. this is one of somalis' many weaknesses, total lack of truth and reality.
  6. somali doqonsanaa. ETs are much better than nigerians, if i was reer muqdisho i would be screaming if nigerians would be coming, walaahi these guys are monsters. the only thing they do good is their job but if you research and see what they did in countries they were deployed than you will forget to breathe. example= if you just look at them in a wrong way, they will make you pay for it.
  7. what if the dude boasts, aint interested in that. can he do something for the country, dont get all worked up over shit he says that you think is showin off. i think he says that to make a point, not to boast like bilan said.
  8. i still havent seen any pictures, i expect from beledweyn, baydhabo and puntland cities a lot of pictures. till now this could be a setup and they are actually in nairobi. im kind of disappointed with the somali media, a bit amateurish.
  9. this thread is fantastic, duke valentino keep em coming saaxib.
  10. i have no problems with the somalilanders ya know, as long as they lose the attitude and understand that were serious about controlling our territories than we fine namsaying. plus i didnt know that the somalilanders are closest to puntlanders in terms of dhaqan and shit like that, i hear it more and more everywhere these days.
  11. that son of a b!tch. just because we have low pollution we should pay for it. where does he live?
  12. By Waweru Mugo Somali woman erect a shelter after they were forced to an internally displaced people’s camp in Barrdo in north east Somalia due to the severe effects of the tsunami. The environmental impact of the deadly Asian Tsunami was laid bare yesterday as it emerged that it stirred up nuclear and hazardous waste deposits dumped in the Somalia coastline. Fears were also expressed that the situation in the war-torn Somalia poses "a very serious environmental hazard" to the east African countries following possible contamination of the environment by radioactive waste. There are worries too that the tsunami may have impacted negatively on the mangroves and coastal vegetation, coral reefs, surface and ground water, soils, marine and coastal environment. In a new assessment report released yesterday, the United Nations revealed that contamination from these waste deposits has caused serious health and environmental problems to fishing communities in Somalia’s affected areas. "Many people in Somalia’s impacted areas are complaining of unusual health problems including acute respiratory infections, mouth bleeds and skin conditions," the report released at the Unep’s 23rd Governing Council/Global Ministerial Environment Forum where some 100 environment ministers have gathered for their annual talks says. Tsunami winds blowing inland villages has also caused other health problems like dry heavy coughing, abdominal haemorrhages, unusual skin chemical reactions, and sudden death after inhaling toxic materials, Unep added. The report "After the Tsunami- Rapid Environment Assessment" said nuclear and hazardous waste had for long been dumped in beaches around North Hobyo (South Mudug) and Warsheik, south of Benadir igniting catastrophic environmental concerns following the Tsunami wave.’’ The report released by the Unep executive director Klaus Toepfer blamed the huge human environmental impacts to Somalia to the lack of proper central government and associated civil war. From the early 1980s and continuing into the civil war, the hazardous waste dumped along Somalia’s coast comprised uranium radioactive waste, lead, cadmium, mercury, industrial, hospital, chemical, leather treatment and other toxic wastes, hesaid. The report noted, "Somalia’s coastline has been used as a dumping ground for other countries’ nuclear and hazardous wastes for many years as a result of the long civil war and the consequent inability of the authorities to police shipments or handle the wastes." It warns that while natural disasters are short-term catastrophes, the contamination of the environment by radioactive waste "can cause serious long-term effects on human health as well as severe impacts on groundwater, soil, agriculture and fisheries for many years". "Therefore, the current situation along the Somali coastline poses a very serious environmental hazard, not only in Somalia but also in the eastern Africa sub-region," the 140-page report further warns. Unlike in the other six affected countries featured- Indonesia, Thailand, Sri Lanka, Maldives, Seychelles and Yemen, in Somalia, the report is based on desk study only, as security restrictions did not allow an assessment mission to be fielded by Unep. Approximately 650 km of the Somali coastline was impacted by the tsunami, primarily in the stretch between Hafun (Bari region) and Garacad (Mudug region), with varying degrees of devastation. Some 300 people died from the tsunami effects while shelters, houses and water sources as well as fishing gear were extensively destroyed in the country. The livelihoods of 18,000 households were devastated, and all the people now need urgent humanitarian assistance. Send to friend -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Print friendly Copyright © MMV . The Standard Group I & M Building, Kenyatta Avenue, P.O Box 30080, 00100 GPO, Nairobi-Kenya. Tel: +254 20 3222111, Fax: +254 20 214467. News room Fax: +254 20 3222111,. Email: editorial@eastandard.net, online@eastandard.net Terms & Conditions
  13. velvet check your pm, you will be grateful. dinho, ill make sure il update it every now and then. rokko, saaxib frank horwood, an australian botanist took them in the 80s. show us your pictures then.
  14. no velvet i dont live in the uk, but i have been to the uk 5/6 times visiting family in london and birmingham. an uncle of mine took me to the british library and museum, but not to the royal garden. but after you told me they have a lot of exclusively somali flora, i will make sure ill visit it insha Allaah. the biodiversity indeed has been damaged profoundly by nature and humans alike. pretty heartwrenching. in my visit to somalia last year i was lucky to see some jackals, thats all. while there used to be lions only 3/4 decades ago. if you want i can give you links of somali environmental organisations that are busy replanting forrests, preserving endangered plants etc.
  15. http://sky-african.blogspot.com/2005/02/images-of-dry-tropics-somalias-rich.html enjoy :cool: if anybody got some more pix of strange and exclusively somali flora/fauna be sure to share it with me. im having a nature-obsession these last days, ive been watching national geographic channel and animal planet too much last weeks. did you guys know that there is an antilope internationally known as garanuk. the word is from the soomaali word garanuug that the british adopted from the somali people in nfd.
  16. rudy you got my respect too bro. these warlords aka homoboys will get their punishment, we just need to hang on for a while and let them fart all over the place till their butt breaks. ama write some mo on my webpage, but this kinda shit takes a lot of time man. am busy with posting plants and animals exclusive to somalia. did you see the picture on my page, thats a somali plice officer standing next to a termite hill like a giant onion. normally police are me enemies, but i like this one. and yo why wont you rate me bruv, nobody rated me yet. a 5 will do loooool :cool:
  17. http://www.garoweonline.com/index.php?ID=154 meeshatan waxaad ku daawan kartaan sida aaska marxuumka ay uu dhacday.