Jacaylbaro
Nomads-
Content Count
44,142 -
Joined
-
Last visited
-
Days Won
1
Content Type
Profiles
Forums
Calendar
Everything posted by Jacaylbaro
-
Wasiirka Hawlaha Guud Ee Somaliland Oo Ka Dalbaday Wakiilada Inay Si degdega u ansixiyaan Xeerka Dhulka “Saharciga dhulku.... Dastuurka”. hadhwanaag 2007-07-02 (Hadhwanaagnews) Hargeysa(HWN):-Wasiirka Hawlaha Guud iyo Guryeynta Somaliland Md. Siciid Sulub Maxamed ayaa ka codsaday Golaha Wakiiladu inay si deg-dega u ansixiyaan Xeerka dhulka,oo uu ku tilmaamay sharciyeyntiisu inay muddo todoba sanadooda dhex wareegeysanayey Sadexda Gole. Sida waxa uu wasiirku ku sheegay mar shalay hortagay fadhigii Golaha Wakiilada oo uu gudoominayey Gudoomiye ku-xigeenka kowaad ee Golahaasi CabadiCasiis Maxamed Samaale, oo uu ka jeediyey war-bixin ku saabsan xeerka dhulka oo doodiisu maalmihii u danbeeyey ka socotay xarunta Golaha. “Waad ogtihiin waxaanu idinka Caawinaa wadooyinka, dhismayaasha quruxda Magaalada,nin waliba markay Gurigiisa timaado waa laga yaaba inuu jecel yahay in wadada laga leexiyo, hortiisa markay mareyso inay yaraato, markaa ninka awooda dhulka bixinta lehi waa inaanu yeelan awooda nashqad ka bedelida. Haddu awooda nashqad ka bedelida uu yeesho waxa dhacaysaa inay wadooyinku qal-qaloocdaan” ayuu yidhi Wasiirka Wasaarada Hawlaha Guud iyo Guryeynta Somaliland Siciid Sulub Maxamed oo sharaxaad ka bixinayey inay dhibaato iyo mukhilad noqonayso hadii qof kaliyaatii uu keligii isku qabto nashqadeynta iyo dhulka bixintiisa. Wasiirka Wasaarada Hawlaha guud iyo Guryeynta Somaliland Siciid Sulub Maxamed waxa uu iftiimiyey inaanay dawlda dhexe wax luga ku lahayn dawlada hoose arrimaha Maamulka dhulka, isaga oo arrintaa ka hadlayana waxa uu yidhi. “Markaa, wax awooda oo faro-gelin gaara kuma laha Dawlada dhexe dawlada hoose oo aan ahayn sharciga la sameynayo ee ah kan ay Golaha wakiiladu ansixindoonaan ee ay Golaha Guurtidu idiinka danbeyndoonto ee Xukuumada imandoonaa waa in kaa lagu maamulmaa” Md. Siciid Sulub Maxamed waxa uu tilmaamay inaynu nahay Qaran, isla markaana aynaan sharciga dhulka degmo qudha wax loo sameyn, waa inuu sharcigu dalka oodhan ka wada jiraa oo degmo kasta lagu maamulaa, ayuu yidhi. “Tusaale ahaan, Un-Habitat oo Dawlada hoose caawisa shir aanu maalin dhaweyd yeelanay, waxay noo sheen dhowr degmo oo ay ka mid yihiin degmada Boorame, Hargeysa, Burco, Berbera ay degmo kasta ugu tageen shuruuuc gaara [Dhulka], oo aanay degmo degmo la wadaagin, Waanu ku ogayn annagu [Xukuumadu] waxaanu sugeynay inaan faro-gelin ilaa inta sharciga la ansixinayo, oo sharcigii dhulka hoos imanayey ciddkasta awoodiisa u gaaryeelayey” ayuu yidhi Siciid Sulub. Isaga oo hadalkiisa sii watana waxa uu intaa raaciyey oo uu yidhi “Marka Xeerka la sameynayo waxa laga yaabaa inay dad qaar u fikiraan wacdiga markaa jiraa oo qudha in loo sameeyo, Waxaan qabaa [siciid Sulub] idinkuna aad qabtaan hadaad tihiin sharci dejintii sharcigu inuu yahay mid lagu dhaqmi karo boqolaal sano oo loogu talo-galo wacdiga imika jira iyo duruufaha soo socda” “Sharcigu maaha mid la leekaysiiyo cida markaa xukunka gacanta ku haysa, haday dawlad dhexe tahay iyo haday dawlad hosoose tahay” ayuu yidhi Wasiirka Hawlaha Guud iyo guryeynta Somaliland waxa uu soo jeediyey inuu sharciga loo ansixinayaa dhulka, inuu noqdo mid dadka oo dhan wada deeqa.“Waa inuu sharciga ka fikiraa ninka sharciga hayaa berito marka uu suuqa tago Wasiirku, xildhibaanku mid walba uu deeqo, hadii kuraasidu is-bedesho oo ay isku bedesho dawlada dhexe mid dawlad hoose iyo xeer-dejini waa inay noqoto mid aanay wax iska bedelin” ayuu yidhi. “Xeerkii hore ee [dhulku] waxa uu kala saarayey nashqada guud oo ay leedahay dawlada dhexe, iyo qeybinta dhulka oo ay leedahay dawlada hoose Waana laba awoodood oo isku dheeli-tiran oo isna ilaalinaayaa, suurta-galna maaha cida sameynaysaa nashaqadayntu inay hadana wax fuliso oo ay awood wax bedelka yeelato” ayuu yidhi Wasiirku “Waxa lagama maarmaan ah, in sharcigan dhulku waafaqsanaado Dastuurkeena, kuna cadaato awooda dawlada dhexe iyo dawlada Hoose, sida sameynta nashqadeynta iyo ku ilaalinteeda waxa leh dawlada dhexe. Qeybinta dhulka iyo fulintiisa waxa leh Dawlada hoose, muujinta iyo adkeynta dhulka danta guud iyo inaan dan gaara loo isticmaali karin waxa maamulaysaa oo dusha ka eegeysaa dawlada dhexe” ayuu yidhi Wasiirka Wasaarada Hawlaha guud iyo guryeynta Siciid Sulub Maxamed. Md. Siciid Sulub waxa uu soo jeediyey inay xeerkan dhulka ay ku cadaato sidii ay Maxkamada Sare u soo celisay ama Golaha Wasiiradu uga dooday qaab cad oo lagu xililo wixii murana ee dhulka. Wasiirka hawlaha guud iyo Guryeynta Somaliland Siciid Sulub waxa uu cadeeyey inuu xeerkan dhulka ee Golaha wakiilada horyaala uu madmadow badan ku jiro, isla markaana uu xeerkii hore ka fiicnaa oo ay xildhibaanadu indhaha u furaan.“Sharcigii hore dhulka ee la ansixiyey waxa uu ka koobnaa 35 qodob., oo badanaa aan lahayn galdaloolooyin iyo hadal dhinacyo badan loo dhigi karo, kana [sharciga dhulka] waxa uu ka kooban yahay 66 qodob oo isku soo noqnoqonaayaa, markaa waxaan ka codsanayaa xildhibaanada Golaha Wakiilada taasna is-barbar dhig ku sameeyaan” ayuu yidhi Isaga oo hadalkiisa sii watana waxa uu inyaa raaciyey oo uu yidhi. “Waxaanu wasaarad Hawlaha guud ahaan ku talinaynaa in loo noqdo xeerkii hore Xeer No 17aad ee la ansixiyey 26 june 2003, wax ka bedel iyo Kaabid uun lagu sameeyo oo sida uu u dhignaa qodob qodob loogu noqdo wixii aad gole ahaan ka badaleysaan iyo wixii aad ku kaabaysaan ee lagu sameynayo” Wasiirka Wasaarada Hawlaha Guud iyo Guryeynta Somaliland Md. Siciid Sulub Maxamed ayaa waxa uu hoosta ka xaqiiqay inuu sharcigan dhulku muddo todoba Sanadoona uu dhex wareegeyey sadex Gole, isla markaana waxa uu tilmaamay inay haboon tahay in si degdega loo ansixiyo si loo helo sharci la isla ogyahay oo dhaqangal ah, suurtagelinkaraa,wixii mushaakila ee dhulku leeyahay sameyn karana magaalooyin bilic leh.
-
Why Foreign Intellectuals Support Somaliland That many foreign intellectuals and opinion makers support Somaliland’s independence is an established fact. Somalilanders see this as a validation of their quest for independence. This phenomenon however does not sit well with Somaliland’s opponents. But instead of trying to understand just what it is about Somaliland that foreigners find appealing, Somaliland’s adversaries often attack foreign supporters of Somaliland as a way of either getting back at them or scaring them off. And mind you, this crude and unethical tactic is not just employed by the ignorant, but is even used by the educated among the Somaliland-haters, such as Abdi Ismail Samatar and his brother Ahmad. It was actually these two brothers who pioneered this tactic of trying to destroy the reputation of anyone who shows even the least sympathy to Somaliland. For instance, when Anthony J. Carroll and B. Rajagopal published an article in the prestigious Journal of International Law & Politics in which they argued that Somaliland has a sound legal basis for independence, Mr. Abdi Samatar in article in the Journal of Modern African Studies, v.30 no.4 1992, accused the authors (without providing any evidence) of having received $60, 000 from the SNM for writing the report. When the above tactics don’t work, then the Somaliland-bashers accuse the foreign person of some sort of sexual malfeasance. If the foreign supporter of Somaliland happens to be married to a Somalilander, then they would say that person is supporting Somaliland only because they are married to someone from there. Lately though, some of them have gone even farther and have been saying that Somalilanders are recruiting Western gays to champion their cause. The Somaliland haters use these nasty tactics while at the same time mouthing pieties about democracy, integrity and human rights. It is as if it never occurred to them that a person can actually believe in, or support a cause, without some monetary, sexual or any other gain. One of the people who was recently targeted by the Somaliland haters is the journalist Peter Tachel. But it looks like they got more than they bargained for. They thought they could frighten him and force him to quit having anything to do with Somaliland, instead their poisonous smear campaign only made him double his efforts to bring Somaliland’s case to the world’s attention, as evidenced by the superb TV program that he put together entitled “Somaliland – Africa’s Success Story”. HERE IS THE PROGRAM Enjoy it, and let it be a lesson to the Somaliland haters, that there are things in life neither money nor sex can buy. Somalilandtimes.com
-
It goes both ways ,,,, usually they make their assessments and through that assessment they identify the needs in a certain region/area. But the first request comes from the ministries concerned. For example, the ministry of health is raising a certain need in Burco hospital to WHO, then they both make a joint assessment to identify the actual need and the planning for support. Then WHO send this to its headquarters if the funds are not available for that gap then it takes sometime before they get the actual funds for that certain problem. That is how it works with every ministry and their NGO/UN partner ,,, but when the ministry itself failed to raise the issue they shouldn't blame the NGOs. The government is supposed to lead them not them to lead the government.
-
ii kaalaya oo ha dhaqdhaqaanina miyaa
-
Celebrating Kowda Luulyo in Maine state
Jacaylbaro replied to Miskiin-Macruuf-Aqiyaar's topic in General
Originally posted by Miskiin-Macruuf-Aqiyaar: WOW WOW ,,,,,,,, Maaansha Allah -
NOW WATCH THE WEDDING HERE
-
hadhwanaag 2007-07-01 (Hadhwanaagnews) This July 1, 2007 will be remembered the worst day in the history Somalia. Invaded by its arch enemy, Mogadishu is now known as the 4th capital to be sacked by its enemy since Gengiskhan grandson invaded what once at the heart of the Islamic world, Baghdad. The Somali people will not be the first people whose capital is invaded by its enemy; many people have had similar experience and at the end, drove their enemy out of their land. The question is, are we going to get to use to Ethiopian solders sibling coffee in our capital, killing and raping our brothers and sisters or are we going to raise up to the occasion as many people have done in the past and use this occasion liberate our land from the historic enemy. Our past brothers and sisters have librated their land from the enemy in the past. One Muslim great leader was Salahidin ayubi who liberated Jerusalem from the crusaders after their hundred years of occupation and treated the occupiers after their defeat with respect. Salahidin was a great leader. I hope it doesn’t take us that long to liberate these Tigrinya cowards their sponsor out of out land. The capital of the Islamic world Baghdad was once sacked by the Mongols and destroyed the grand library, the largest library in the world then. This was the largest empire the world has ever seen. At its peak, it had over one million people. This evil empire continued its onslaught what was once at the heart of the Islamic world until they were defeated at the battle of ain jalut by the mukluk caliph of Jerusalem. Most of the invading force after their defeat accepted Islam and changed from destroyers to builders of mosques and institution of higher learning. July 1, 2007 will not be a time of celebration rather it must me a time of contemplation of our next move to liberate our land from the invaders and the traitors who brought with them. If our current divisiveness (Somaliland, Puntland, Jubbaland…..) continues, we will fall the schemes of our enemies. We must rise up above tribalism and I against my brother and step up to the plate and liberate our people once and for all and make Somalia the best country to live in the world. July 1, 2007 is a sad day for all Somalis except the warlord and traitor dominated TFG. If we allow, these traitors will sell our land and our brothers and sister for miserable price. Jibril Ibrahim Engineer1@shaw.ca
-
Waar kuwan aan arkayo malaa minjo-baastada halkan jooga ayaaba ka badin lahaa
-
imisaan cagaha dhulka ku hayay ,,,, it is time to fly niyow
-
sent me an email and he said he is in Erigavo ,,,, he'll be there for 3 good weeks.
-
Explosions in Somalia as leader vows to end mayhem
Jacaylbaro replied to Jacaylbaro's topic in Politics
It is where i used to live back in da days ,,,, -
Ranneberger: Asmara group lacks support from people
Jacaylbaro replied to Gordon Gekko's topic in Politics
Yes A/Y visited may cities in the neighboring Somalia but he was always coming by an ethiopian hilicopter and guided/sorrounded by tanks. It is a visit by force so it is Ok. Honestly speaking Sh. Sharif (although i don't support him personally) has more supporters than this regime not only in Mogadishu or his clan territory but outside that limit. For Example, the A/Y's own clan supported the ICU when A/Y was the president. It was expected the contrary but you can imagine his own sub-clan supporting Sh. Sharif. Outside Somalia, YES he has a wide support in Somaliland, Somali galbeed in Ethiopia and the Somali region in Kenya. If A/Y has more support than Sh. Sharif then he wouldn't need ethiopia to back him against the ICU ,,, that is clear and cut. Let Abdullahi Yusuf do a speech in a packed Muqdisho stadium. Then let the Shariff do one, then you will see who has more support......... ,,, that is a good one .... tartan ha la qabto meesha bal looooooooool -
A Somalia with peace and stability A Somalia neighboring Somaliland, Ethiopia and Kenya A Somalia without killings, bombings and kidnappings A Somalia with an elected government A Somalia without Ethiopia A Somalia without Eriteria A Somalia without Egypt A Somalia without a military general on the top A Somalia with a politician leading A Somalia with a growing economy A Somalia without those murderers A Somalia with Barwaaqo A Somalia with its beautiful landscape and decorated buildings MY WISH FOR MY NEIGHBORING SOMALIA .... ALLAH HA DAAYO
-
Today, i want to fly ,,, not with a plane but ME FLYING
-
looooooooool ,, you're not Djiboutian but i will invite you to the next group when i'm funding the same
-
RIYADH, Saudi Arabia - As the car stopped outside a Riyadh amusement park, two bearded men dragged the driver from the wheel and took the three women on a wild ride of more than an hour, bouncing over sidewalks and finally abandoning them on a darkened street. The women at first thought they had been kidnapped by terrorists. The two men however, said they were religious police. It might have gone down as just one more excess of zealousness by the forces charged with upholding Islamic modesty, except that Umm Faisal, the senior of three women, did something that is believed unprecedented in Saudi Arabia: She went to court. On Monday, four years after the incident, the latest chapter of the legal battle being waged by this 50-year-old mother of five reopens before Riyadh's Grievances Court, which handles damages suits for abuses by government and public figures. The unusual publicity surrounding Umm Faisal's story comes on top of two cases involving the death in religious police custody of two Saudi men — one arrested for allegedly consuming alcohol, another for being alone with a woman not of his family. A trial opened Sunday against three religious police officers and a fourth man in the death of Ahmed al-Bulaiwi, the man detained for being alone with a woman. Relatives demanded the death penalty against the defendants. Taken together, the cases threaten to undermine the authority of the force's employer, the powerful, independent body called the Commission for the Promotion of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice. Since the commission's creation more than six decades ago, there has been no known public legal action taken against its members despite complaints they occasionally overstep their boundaries. The public view has tended to be that whatever their faults, they are acting in Islam's name to defend morality. But things may be changing. The National Society for Human Rights, a nongovernment body, has issued a report which, according to the daily Arab News, levels a string of allegations at the religious police: abusive language, unsubstantiated accusations, humiliation of people during interrogation, beatings, unnecessary body searches, forced entry into private homes and coerced confessions. The report, as well as the extensive coverage the cases have received and editorials calling for the commission's reform, suggest the government may act to regulate the force. Another setback for the commission came in the appointed Consultative Council, the nearest thing to a parliament in Saudi Arabia. It rejected proposals to build more commission centers and give its members a 20 percent salary raise. While the council's actions are not binding, they reflect a general desire to curb the religious police's power. "Society has developed and the relationship of other governmental bodies with the people has developed and become more human," said Dawood al-Shirian, a Saudi journalist. "Yet the commission has not changed." "Society in principle doesn't reject the commission," he added. "But the commission's problem is that it doesn't have a proper job description." Several media outlets have conducted informal surveys asking Saudis whether the commission should be dissolved. Some have said yes. While the polls may be unscientific, simply asking the question is significant. Ibrahim al-Ghaith, the commission's head, dismissed the polls, saying the commission is "one of the oldest governmental agencies ... and not a cooperative that can be eliminated because of individual mistakes," according to the Al-Jazira newspaper. The Saudi government is reluctant to tamper with its religious establishments for fear of angering conservatives and weakening its credentials as custodian of Islam's two holiest shrines. The conservative impulse has lately been illustrated by a request from 14 faculty members of King Saud University's medical school to ban male students from treating women and vice versa, on the grounds that handling bodies of the other sex is un-Islamic. But there are signs the commission is acting to limit the damage to the religious police's reputation. It now has a spokesman and a legal department to guide its members. Umm Faisal — her full name is withheld in reports on the case — says she, her 21-year-old daughter and her Indonesian maid went to pick up her two teenage sons from the amusement park in the family's new Chevrolet Caprice. "I kept asking the men, 'Are you terrorists?' They finally said they were members of the commission," she said. "When I asked what they wanted, they called me names, including adulteress." Umm Faisal said the men drove so fast and badly that smoke came out of the car. The men stopped the car, called their friends and asked them to pick them up. The women, who don't know how to drive (and can't anyway, under Saudi law), were left to the mercies of passers-by. Umm Faisal headed to the police to lodge a complaint. "When questioned, the commission members claimed we were indecently covered," because her daughter's veil didn't cover her eyes, she said. In early 2004 she filed suit at Riyadh's General Court, but says several judges pressed her to drop it and late last year the case was dismissed. She then turned to the Grievances Court, which fined one official $540 for mistreating the women and acquitted the other. Umm Faisal isn't satisfied, and her appeal opens before the court on Monday. HERE
-
I think we can do it ,,,,, let's be optimistic ,, sometimes the solution is in unexpected directions and this might be one. Although i would say we group in regions first then we can come together as a whole.
-
looooooooool ,,, u guys are funny I think i've some news today ,,,,,,,
-
President Yusuf: on stability, Kismayu and NRC
Jacaylbaro replied to General Duke's topic in Politics
looool -
looooool ,,,, waa in loo sameeyo hada wixii ka dambeeya
-
MOGADISHU, July 1 (Reuters) - Explosions and gunfire rocked Mogadishu on Sunday hours after President Abdullahi Yusuf promised to stem a bloody insurgency against his government and bring back stability to the war-ravaged Horn of African country. Speaking at a function in his bullet-scarred hilltop presidential palace to commemorate 47 years of independence from Italy, Yusuf vowed to lead Somalia to prosperity. "It's sad after 47 years of independence that killings are going on," he told several hundred supporters gathered for the ceremony late on Saturday ahead of Independence Day. "This government will not be cowed. It will face head on anyone who stands in its way to bringing back stability." But soon after Yusuf's address was broadcast live across Somalia, overnight insurgents hurled grenades at police in central Mogadishu's sprawling Bakara market and the northwestern Kasabalbalare neighbourhood. And in yet another headache for his young administration, a bomb targeting Somali troops went off near the city's Kilometer Four junction on Sunday in the latest guerrilla-style attack on the government and its security apparatus. Officials blame Islamists militants for the violence. "It was a remote-controlled bomb targeting a vehicle full of government troops. It went off when the vehicle was a few steps from where the bomb was hid. I heard a loud explosion. No one was hurt," Farhan Ali, who lives nearby, told Reuters. There were no casualties in the overnight attacks either. BOY SHOT DEAD In yet more violence on Sunday, a Somali soldier shot dead a 10-year-old boy in the Gupta area of north Mogadishu after one group of troops tried to stop another apparently extorting cash from the public. "A quarrel broke out between the two armed groups and suddenly a single gunshot was heard and the boy fell down dead. It hit him in the head," witness Ahmed Ali said in a low, hoarse voice of shock. "The troops dispersed as if nothing happened leaving the bloodied boy lying lifeless." Civilians have borne the brunt of the bloody insurgency that has claimed more bystanders than combatants this year since Islamists were ousted from Mogadishu in December. Somalia has not known peace since a dictator was overthrown in 1991 by clan militias. Wearing a grey suit and looking relaxed, Yusuf also used his speech to call on the insurgents to stop the killings. He said his government -- formed in 2004 in the relative safety of neighbouring Kenya -- would not cling on to power when its mandate expires in 2009. "This is an interim government. Its programme is to ensure Somalia attains sovereignty, brings back peace, comes up with a constitution and prepares the country for elections," he said on a dais surrounded by guards with AK-47 rifles. "We will hand over power to whoever is chosen by the Somali people."
-
Those laboratories should check the camel milk seriously .... they'll see miracles walahi
-
looooooooooool@dabshid and Munira I think he is travelling by foot ,,,,, never thought of this .....