Sherban Shabeel

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Everything posted by Sherban Shabeel

  1. Bollocks! Doesn't play outside the UK Yet another indication that I need to move to the UK lol
  2. Here is an interesting comment from a member of the group: "me hates sol, not a member tho i sometimes come to sol to se how is it going with my gurl aka Butaaco, she really enjoys polluting the site and many guys like jeceelbaro and the old man Ndongo are always on her trail, what is wrong with them? i hate these niggaz..macantey hates them too but she alwayz says to me boy get over it ma kwan? they become very tame so easy ma boi..no worry sokorow...4me its hard but what can i do than to believe her..anyway my girl had left the sol building and deactived her membership. is she lying? or to appease me? who knows, so far a victory 4 old soljah...hehehe bilayo ka decday."
  3. Clashes have broken out in the southern Egyptian town where seven people died in a drive-by shooting outside a church after a Coptic Christmas Eve Mass. A BBC correspondent in Cairo said protesters clashed with police at the hospital in the town of Naga Hamady. The shooting happened as churchgoers left midnight Mass to welcome in the Coptic Christmas on 7 January. The attack is thought to be in revenge for the alleged rape of a 12-year-old Muslim girl by a Christian man. Following the reported rape in November there were five days of riots in the town, with Christian properties set on fire and damaged. The BBC's Yolande Knell, in Cairo, said more than 1,000 Christians had gathered at the hospital to collect the bodies of six of the victims. Stones were thrown at security forces and ambulances were smashed as they vented their anger, she added. Three people are reported to have pulled up outside the church in Naga Hamady on Wednesday evening, killing at least six Coptic Christians and a security official and injuring 10 others, including two Muslim passers-by. Police say the chief attacker in Wednesday's shooting has been identified but no arrests have yet been made. The church's Bishop Kirollos said there had been threats in the days leading up to the Christmas Eve service - a reason he decided to end his Mass an hour earlier than normal. "For days, I had expected something to happen on Christmas Eve," he told the Associated Press. He said he left the church minutes before the attack. "A driving car swerved near me, so I took the back door," he said. "By the time I shook hands with someone at the gate, I heard the mayhem, lots of machine-gun shots." Witness Youssef Sidhom told the BBC that the attack shocked everyone, including police guarding the church. Harassment claims Naga Hamady is 40 miles (64km) from Luxor, southern Egypt's biggest city. Coptic Christians - who make up 10% of Egypt's 80 million population - have complained of harassment and discrimination. Some Copts argue that previous attacks on them have gone unpunished or have resulted in light sentences. Most Christians in Egypt are Copts - Christians descended from the ancient Egyptians. Their church split from the Eastern Orthodox and Roman Catholic Churches in AD451 because of a theological dispute over the nature of Christ, but is now, on most issues, doctrinally similar to the Eastern Orthodox Church. (BBC)
  4. Originally posted by Sherban Shabeel: Those who cry out the loudest for heaven are the ones who feel the flames of hell drawing close. And you can quote me on that. Shaakirullaah please refer to my previous post. I question your past and the past of your cherished mujahideen. Have you truly repented for your past actions before telling others how to live according to God? Let's get real here. A 20-year old civil war doesn't breed saints.
  5. I only recognize rudy on there lol
  6. Originally posted by General Duke: ^^^Oh pardon me my Romanian friend, I was just giving my feedback on what I saw on FB, I apologies if you took as an insult.. No offense taken my jolly fat friend
  7. Originally posted by General Duke: Yeah I saw a few people on there, the Romanian dude looked drugged. Indo-Blue was there, and a few SOL elders, funny stuff, maybe we should have a thread where people could post their real pics and we can have a guessing game. I love it how you're so infatuated with me you don't waste a single opportunity to say something about Shabeel. Loser.
  8. Those who cry out the loudest for heaven are the ones who feel the flames of hell drawing close. And you can quote me on that.
  9. I'm on fb all the time. Just search "Sherban Shabeel" either on fb or the SOL group.
  10. Originally posted by ElPunto: Hungry people drive revolutions. Truest thing ever said in this forum.
  11. Originally posted by ElPunto: Hungry people drive revolutions. Truest thing ever said in this forum.
  12. Originally posted by ElPunto: Hungry people drive revolutions. Truest thing ever said in this forum.
  13. The King decided he doesn't need his shoes shined after all.
  14. "Mr. Farole is reduced to roaming the countryside, begging for alms." "Successful land operations in Puntland’s coastal towns have accompanied these marine assaults. One afternoon, while in Bossaso, the president personally led a sudden raid on a gang of pirates preparing to shove off into the Gulf of Aden" This article is so full of crap I can't believe it made it into the NY times. Look at the tone of it, the wording, the whole thing reads like pure propaganda. And it's not hard to see why: " Conducting research with a local journalist — who is the son of Puntland’s president , Abdirahman Farole — I gained an inside view into the workings of this fledgling and largely autonomous state within Somalia" LMFAO! Luckily there is one thing the author got right - this quote is just for you Duke: "Buttressing Puntland will not bring an end to the piracy problem"
  15. Originally posted by General Duke: ^^^The Romanian expert, adeer the Piracy issue can be solved by developing the capacity of the state. Puntland is the only way it can be solved, as the author explains clearly. You think constantly referring to my nationality will make you more right? I thought you used to say Puntland was sitting on "vast reserves" of oil & gas. Maybe you should exploit those reserves yourselves and develop "the capacity of the state". The only thing international donations will do is line the pockets of your politicians. The people will still have a hard time, and young men will still turn to piracy. Not to mention that Farole is all for a forceful approach to piracy, which won't work. Puntland isn't England in the 1700's.
  16. BBC: The UN's World Food Programme (WFP) has pulled out of large parts of southern Somalia because of threats from powerful Islamist rebel groups. The WFP says the suspension is its biggest shut-down in years and will affect about one million people. The al-Shabab militant group has repeatedly threatened the WFP - who it accuses of ruining local farming by forcing Somalis to rely on imports. The WFP says without help, Somali farmers cannot supply enough food. Drought and war have left more than 109,000 young children and many more adults dependent on the feeding centres run by the WFP. But late last year al-Shabab, which controls large parts of southern Somalia, gave the WFP a deadline of 1 January to halt all of its operations in the area. Staff evacuated The group also issued a string of demands for aid agencies working in the region. The WFP's Peter Smerdon said these included removing women from their jobs and a demand for a payment of $20,000 (£12,400) every six months for security. "WFP's humanitarian operations in southern Somalia have been under escalating attacks from armed groups, leading to this partial suspension of humanitarian food distributions in much of southern Somalia," the agency said in a statement. Six of its offices - in Wajid, Buale, Garbahare, Afmadow, Jilib and Belet Weyne - have been shut temporarily, which the agency said would affect more than a third of the people it feeds in Somalia, most of whom are women and children. The WFP said it would continue food distribution in other parts of Somalia, including the capital Mogadishu. Its staff who have been evacuated from the south will be redeployed in other parts of the country, preparing to help people who might start moving away from areas where feeding programmes have been suspended. Somalia has been in turmoil since 1991 when its central government collapsed. The transitional government, helped by an African Union peacekeeping force, runs only parts of Mogadishu. Groups such as al-Shabab want to impose a hard-line interpretation of Islamic law on the country.
  17. BBC: The UN's World Food Programme (WFP) has pulled out of large parts of southern Somalia because of threats from powerful Islamist rebel groups. The WFP says the suspension is its biggest shut-down in years and will affect about one million people. The al-Shabab militant group has repeatedly threatened the WFP - who it accuses of ruining local farming by forcing Somalis to rely on imports. The WFP says without help, Somali farmers cannot supply enough food. Drought and war have left more than 109,000 young children and many more adults dependent on the feeding centres run by the WFP. But late last year al-Shabab, which controls large parts of southern Somalia, gave the WFP a deadline of 1 January to halt all of its operations in the area. Staff evacuated The group also issued a string of demands for aid agencies working in the region. The WFP's Peter Smerdon said these included removing women from their jobs and a demand for a payment of $20,000 (£12,400) every six months for security. "WFP's humanitarian operations in southern Somalia have been under escalating attacks from armed groups, leading to this partial suspension of humanitarian food distributions in much of southern Somalia," the agency said in a statement. Six of its offices - in Wajid, Buale, Garbahare, Afmadow, Jilib and Belet Weyne - have been shut temporarily, which the agency said would affect more than a third of the people it feeds in Somalia, most of whom are women and children. The WFP said it would continue food distribution in other parts of Somalia, including the capital Mogadishu. Its staff who have been evacuated from the south will be redeployed in other parts of the country, preparing to help people who might start moving away from areas where feeding programmes have been suspended. Somalia has been in turmoil since 1991 when its central government collapsed. The transitional government, helped by an African Union peacekeeping force, runs only parts of Mogadishu. Groups such as al-Shabab want to impose a hard-line interpretation of Islamic law on the country.
  18. BBC: The UN's World Food Programme (WFP) has pulled out of large parts of southern Somalia because of threats from powerful Islamist rebel groups. The WFP says the suspension is its biggest shut-down in years and will affect about one million people. The al-Shabab militant group has repeatedly threatened the WFP - who it accuses of ruining local farming by forcing Somalis to rely on imports. The WFP says without help, Somali farmers cannot supply enough food. Drought and war have left more than 109,000 young children and many more adults dependent on the feeding centres run by the WFP. But late last year al-Shabab, which controls large parts of southern Somalia, gave the WFP a deadline of 1 January to halt all of its operations in the area. Staff evacuated The group also issued a string of demands for aid agencies working in the region. The WFP's Peter Smerdon said these included removing women from their jobs and a demand for a payment of $20,000 (£12,400) every six months for security. "WFP's humanitarian operations in southern Somalia have been under escalating attacks from armed groups, leading to this partial suspension of humanitarian food distributions in much of southern Somalia," the agency said in a statement. Six of its offices - in Wajid, Buale, Garbahare, Afmadow, Jilib and Belet Weyne - have been shut temporarily, which the agency said would affect more than a third of the people it feeds in Somalia, most of whom are women and children. The WFP said it would continue food distribution in other parts of Somalia, including the capital Mogadishu. Its staff who have been evacuated from the south will be redeployed in other parts of the country, preparing to help people who might start moving away from areas where feeding programmes have been suspended. Somalia has been in turmoil since 1991 when its central government collapsed. The transitional government, helped by an African Union peacekeeping force, runs only parts of Mogadishu. Groups such as al-Shabab want to impose a hard-line interpretation of Islamic law on the country.
  19. No matter how you put it it's still called fighting piracy. Whether it's by warships or financing the local coastguard. And fighting piracy is like treating a cholera patient for leg cramps but ignoring the diarrhea.
  20. Puntland propaganda. Piracy will continue no matter how much money you pour into PL's amateur coastguard. The only way to stop piracy is to have a peaceful, independent Somalia where every Somali can enjoy a normal human life. Until that day, pirates will keep doing their thing. What else is there to do? At least they're not killing people. Pirates are Somalia's least concern right now.
  21. Don't say "hop" before you've jumped the fence my fellow SOLers. The President is still quite alive and up to something.
  22. It's all bullshit. The word **** has been around at least since the 1500s. It meant pretty much what it means today, but it's not really clear whether it was considered as profane.
  23. Originally posted by Napoleon: Change your name from peacenow, to Serenity Now! LMFAO