Jacaylbaro

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Everything posted by Jacaylbaro

  1. loooooooooool ,,,,,, just to update myself dee
  2. ,,,,,,, why feel annoyed bal ?? The group is doing its job sow maaha ??
  3. Ethiopia Soon Ready To Export Power Addis Ababa, Feb 13, 2007 – Ethiopia would start exporting electric power to neighboring Djibouti and Sudan beginning next year, according to a statement by the state-owned Ethiopian Electric Power Corporation (EEPCo), issued yesterday. Within short, Ethiopia will further become a hub in an electricity network that connects the grids of North Africa with those of East and Southern Africa. In an interview with 'WIC', the Ethiopian Electric Power Corporation General Manager Meheret Debebe and Public Relations Manager Sendeku Araya said exporting the "white oil" had equal priority as electrifying the nation by 2015. Accordingly, the construction and installation of transmission lines would begin this year and both lines connecting the country to Djibouti and Sudan would be commissioned, power was to flow to the countries and selling was soon to begin - by 2008 - the General Manager disclosed. The over 1,200 kilometers long and 500 kilovolt Ethio-Kenyan power transmission line, the first highest power transmission undertaken by EEPCo, would then be commissioned by 2010, Mr. Meheret was qu0oted by the Ethiopian Foreign Ministry as saying. The finalization of the Ethio-Kenyan line would enable Ethiopia to get connected to the Southern Africa grid, while that of the Ethio-Sudanese line helped it enter the Northern Africa grid and across Egypt to the Mediterranean whereas that of Ethio-Djiboutian would connect the line to the Middle East system. This would make Ethiopia a hub in three regional power line grids within short. Taking into consideration the global concern on environmental issues caused by the use of other types of energy and the subsequent tendencies to look for alternative environmental friendly energy as well as the strategic advantage, Ethiopia could get "a huge amount of foreign currency," the officials were quoted as saying. Ethiopia has been dubbed by some experts as the Northern Hemisphere's water tower. The Horn country has a potential to generate 45,000 MW of electric energy. It has however generated only 3.5 percent of its potential so far. Only a slight increase in production is foreseen for the next few years. Therefore, EEPCo is still far from reaching even national targets of a general electrification. Currently, the power supplier is only reaching 19 percent of the 75-million population. The power utility has pledged to provide electricity to the entire Ethiopian population by 2015 - at a time when this is expected to reach 100 million. Mr. Meheret recently told the press in Addis Ababa that the construction of five hydropower dams, including Tekeze with a capacity of 300 MW, Gellgele Gibe 2 with a capacity of 420 MW and Belesse with a capacity of 435 MW was expected to be completed by 2010. Also by 2010, EEPCo expected to provide "access to electric power to over 50 percent of the country's population," he said. Source: Afrol News
  4. He should apply again using the name Osama Bin Laden
  5. looooooooool ,,,,,,,,, read here ,,,, it is full of clan name but in a good way of course
  6. The country is destroyed ,, ppl shouldn't start from the top. why building universities where there is not primary, intermediate and secondary schools ?? that would me more effective than an empty university ,,,,,, just my lil 2 cents ,,,,,,,
  7. Forced marriage, often of girls in their early teens, is a persistent problem in the Sahel. Thus far, legal and educational measures, including bans on child marriage and efforts to keep teenage girls in school, have had limited effect in containing the practice given the economic incentives to marry off young daughters. In one recent case in Burkina Faso, however, technology succeeded where other measures failed. A 15-year-old girl in the central town of Koudougou, who was being taken to be married against her will, "sent her friends and teachers a text messages begging for help," resulting in the police intercepting her abductors and setting her free. This incident, which was headline news throughout the country, isn't the only case in which access to communications technology has begun to affect the status of women in conservative societies. Cyberdating in Somaliland, for instance, which has grown from the intersection of urban Internet cafes and a large Western-based diaspora, has raised many younger women's expectations concerning their rights in marriage. In time, the effects of free access to communication could be pervasive in breaking repressive social norms. What the automobile did for the United States in the 1920s, cell phones and Internet access could do for the Sahel in the 21st century. Another lesson of the Burkina Faso case, however, is that technology by itself isn't enough. What saved the Koudougou bride (whose name has not been released) wasn't only that she had a cell phone, but that she had a network outside the family that she could call. For her, as for most teenagers, the place where she was able to form such a network was at school, meaning that the classroom was not only a place of education but a community she could look to for help when her family attempted to victimize her. This community, however, is a resource that many Burkinabe girls don't have: The government says while nationally 55 percent of girls are now being educated, only 11-19 percent of girls get schooled in the east and north of the country. This is among the lowest proportion in the world, but nonetheless an improvement from 38 percent [nationally] in 2000. The rest usually get married, exchanged for dowries while they are as young as 11 or 12, or as soon as they start menstruating. Most of these girls will live as illiterate servants to their new husbands, carting water, performing menial tasks and raising numerous children. [...] Issa Barry, a teacher at one of those schools in the remote eastern town of Dori, blames people’s dire economic problems for their unwillingness to keep their children in school. “Keeping girls at school is always a problem when they come from families in abject poverty,” she said. “For them, marrying the girl off as soon as possible becomes an economic necessity.” Several reasons have been cited to explain the widespread resistance to secondary education for girls. In part, the problem is simply that the educational infrastructure isn't sufficiently developed to accommodate all the potential students. Recently, the national government tried to improve the economic incentives for rural families to keep teenage girls in school, including "free textbooks, suspension of school fees and more small schools in villages." As in other African countries that have introduced free public education, however, there weren't enough classrooms to accommodate the new students, and many families withdrew their daughters from school rather than keeping them in squalid and unsanitary school buildings. Others have pointed to cultural objections. Sister Monique Bonamy, a French missionary who runs a rural primary school, argues that "people are simply afraid of losing their values with foreign teaching methods." She recommends that "teaching... be integrated into the way of life of people through satellite schools and bilingual schools more adapted to their milieu" in order to make rural families "more comfortable about giving their children an education." Left unspoken is the corollary that rural families will view such schools as places where their daughters will stay close to home and be less likely to become sexually active; There may be some cogency to this argument, because similar factors have led to greater female educational participation in other countries. In Iran, for instance, the stricter supervision of female university students under the Islamic Republic has been credited with making conservative rural families more willing to send their daughters to college, resulting in women becoming more than 60 percent of university entrants. Paradoxically, the short-term restrictions imposed on women at Iranian universities may have dramatically increased their long-term economic independence and resulting social status. In Burkina Faso, where a sympathetic teacher and classmates may be what stands between teenage girls and forced marriage, whatever measures are necessary to make rural parents more comfortable with their daughters' secondary education could also be worth the momentary sacrifice. Here you go .............
  8. Wazni iyo Qaafiyah are the back bone of every poem/song ...... hadaanay lahayn oo weliba aanay isku dubadhacsanayn maba dhegeysto.
  9. Mogadishu - A suspected bomb blast near a busy Mogadishu market on Tuesday killed five women, the latest victims of Somalia's unceasing violence that has killed more bystanders than combatants. Residents said an explosive device was apparently detonated by the burning of garbage in the city's central Howlwadag area. "Five died. I could not count the wounded. They were all women who were cleaning the streets," said Hawa Ibrahim, a cleaner who witnessed the blast. "We will stop the clean-up exercise. No one is willing to die for cleaning the street." 'I could not count the dead' Businesswoman Hawa Jama described an "ugly scene". "I could not count the dead. I just glanced immediately and ran away for my life," she told Reuters. I THOUGHT THE JIHAD IS AGAINST XABASHIS NOT AGAINST WOMEN .... Full Story
  10. Wed. June 27, 2007 03:54 pm.- (SomaliNet) - Hundreds of Somali Diasporas opposing the visit by the Somalia premier Ali Gedi in USA made demonstrations in front of the US State Department in Washington accusing Mr. Gedi of putting the country into the hands of the enemy of Somali people. The protesters gathered outside of the state department chanting anti Gedi slogans blaming him for the responsibility of the crisis in the horn of the African country Somalia. The marchers also condemned the presence of the Ethiopian forces in Somalia as illegal and in violation of the state sovereignty. Sources say that the organizers of the rally submitted a complaint letter to the state department on pressuring the Ethiopian government to pull its troops out of Somalia. They also asked for the US government to stop the financial support it offers to the transitional government. Somalia’s Prime Minister Ali Mohamed Gedi will attend the United Nations assembly on June 28 in New York where he will be delivering speech on the current crisis in Somalia. I THOUGHT HE WAS WELCOMED AS A HERO LOOL
  11. Installing unwanted governments and bringing presidents by force without the will of the people is the new form of re-colonization in the world. tolow what is next ,,,,,,,,,
  12. Kuwii hore iyo qaar kele oo ka dambeeyayba way yaalaan baan filayaa ,,,,, Adigu buugga aad tartanka kaga qayb geleyso soo diyaari ,, oo u *** qoladaas ,, you have 6 months inaad editing ku samayso where is Nuune , ?? ,,,,,, i thought he was planning for something ,,
  13. Waxba ha is wareerin adeer ,,, the deal has been done and the projects has been officially started ,, that is under the eyes of the tfg da aad sheegayso .... maxaaba keenay legal and illegal and all that BS ..... they could talk about it and say NO but they didn't ,,,, so what does that tell you ??? it is the same ,,, cirka iyo dhulkaan xidhnay the whole somalia and the airports we working normally here ,,,,,, what do u think ?? when the tfg is talking about somalia they really know what they mean ,,, it is only for somalia ,,,,, markaa yaan lagu khaldin adeer
  14. waynu iska cafin karnaa haday edeb yeeshaan ,,,
  15. I can change the somaliland charter and Claim Djibouti ,,,,,,,,, but is that real ??? charterka dad baa qortay and they can claim whateva they want ,,, but they can do nothing about it ......
  16. 26 june Party ,,,,,, Birthday Party ,,,, Farewell party ,,,, Another farewell party ,,,, WTF is going on here ? ? ?
  17. yaa kuu duceeyay ,,,,,,,,,,,, horta anigu i was habaaring you
  18. loooooool ,, YES you do support them just for the sake of hating somaliland (cadowgaa cadowgiisu waa saaxiibkaa ) As long as aanad adigu maamulin wadanka then forget about the integrity and soon you'll accuse them of wadankaa la kala goynayaa ,,, i tell ya We need no Arabs here ,,, i wonder waxay meelahan u yimyimaadaanba horta. They either be our friends or our enemies ,,, wax ka dhexeeya la leh ,,,,,,, And for your information: We are not in the Arab League
  19. I love the ISKU DHEX KARIS with MUUS ,,,,,,,,,