Jacaylbaro

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Everything posted by Jacaylbaro

  1. SOURCE + THE REPORT Residents of Hargeisa District are largely optimistic about their future and credit the Somaliland government with moving Somaliland in the right direction. The government and president have a very high support rating; however, a significant number of respondents also believe that the current government is out of touch with the needs of the people. Outside of their desire for state recognition, most respondents believe poverty, unemployment and a lack of development and industry are Somaliland’s biggest problems. A majority of respondents also indicated that the government is doing a fairly bad or very bad job with regards to job creation and keeping prices down. Of note, 95 percent of respondents feel very safe, but chief among their fears is conflict or civil war.
  2. Farah Macallin would not be in Hargeisa if that is Qabyaalad ....... Yesterday Alshabab were not operating along the Kenyan borders and he was stu^*d not to foresee that but today he realized the threat.
  3. Farah Macallin would not be in Hargeisa if that is Qabyaalad ....... Yesterday Alshabab were not operating along the Kenyan borders and he was stu^*d not to foresee that but today he realized the threat.
  4. Somalia - Join Date Jul 2011 ...................................... and he is the expert
  5. burahadeer;759165 wrote: my intuition tells me SL will go & the rest will have some kind lose federation. That is the way forward ...... t
  6. ^ ^ ..... U need coffee niyow ...................... they are selling dee ,,not buying
  7. Valenteenah.;758831 wrote: ^ Trying to scare him? No ,, he knows what i mean
  8. xiinfaniin;758655 wrote: Jacpher, that was the funniest thing Kenya has done since the invasion begun It is not the funniest thing ..... remember the Donkeys issue ??
  9. Norf, come here ........... Marx is waiting for you
  10. Salaam Xaajiga and all .... Juxa, Ibti imika waa Citizen ,, cidna uma baahna
  11. Is your computer “male” or “female”? 1. Open Notepad 2. Type the following line in notepad: ... CreateObject("SAPI.SpVoice").Speak"I love you" 3. Save file as computer_gender.vbs 4. Run the file. . If you hear a male voice, your pc is a boy If you hear a female voice, your PC is a girl .......
  12. Learn from It people .... this is how we do in Somaliland ... Yes We Can
  13. The declining trend has continued with the largest setbacks, in 2011, being recorded in Africa where declines were noted in Burundi, Côte d’Ivoire, Guinea-Bissau, Madagascar, Rwanda, Swaziland, and Zambia. Improvements were noted in Kenya, Nigeria, Somaliland , and surprisingly, Tanzania. To demonstrate how quickly situations can change, Guinea, received an improvement in status from Not Free to Partly Free. Go Somaliland ,,, Go
  14. We concluded the last column with a global picture of receding democracy and rising authoritarianism. This trend obtains in both the domestic and the international spheres. Internationally, the UN is either being sidelined and rendered redundant or it is being used to justify illegal unilateral action by western powers. The recent unilateral invasion of Libya by Nato forces is a case in point. It stands as testimony to growing impunity in the conduct of international affairs. This trend began with the invasion of Kosovo (1999), continued in Iraq (2003), Libya (2011) and there are now clear indications that Iran may be the next target. Domestically the declining democracy trend has grown in the same period. This suggests that there could be a causal relationship between international impunity and the growth of authoritarianism i.e. international impunity feeds domestic repression. ........................READ MORE
  15. Source: VOA The United Nations special envoy for Somalia says a Security Council-appointed monitoring group will recommend sanctions against the al-Qaida linked militant group al-Shabab. Six East African countries involved in the fight against al-Shabab are appealing for more international support as they seek to defeat the rebels. With al-Shabab said to be in disarray, the defense chiefs of Kenya, Uganda, Ethiopia, Djibouti, Somalia and Burundi met at African Union headquarters Monday to discuss how to defeat them. But sources close to the talks say the day ended with no agreement on a command structure that would coordinate activities of the various forces involved in the fight. The six defense officials issued an appeal to the United Nations Security Council to impose tough penalties against al-Shabab's leaders. U.N. special envoy for Somalia Augustine Mahiga says a Somalia-Eritrea Sanctions Monitoring Group is preparing a list of individuals to be recommended for sanctions. "Sanctions will be recommended, and it will be upon such a recommendation that the council may invoke targeted sanctions against such individuals or group of individuals. It will depend on verified and proved evidence of people who are engaged or actively involved in undermining the peace process," he said. African diplomats say the inconclusive talks among the defense chiefs would resume in a few days. U.N. Chief of Field Operations Susana Malcorra, who is in the region to assess conditions, says closer cooperation among the various entities that oppose al-Shabab is essential. She says the African Union Mission in Somalia's recent success in driving al-Shabab out of the capital, Mogadishu, provides an opportunity for strengthening Somalia's Transitional Federal Government, or TFG. "There is an opportunity. We need to rethink a few aspects of this architecture. AMISOM doing its part in Mogadishu, and eventually beyond. The TFG is becoming the backbone of the security of the country. And the whole political arena being addressed," she said. Some complex command and control issues remain to be settled before the various anti-al-Shabab forces can begin coordinating efforts. But AU Peace and Security Commissioner Ramtane Lamamra says the recent entry of trained and well-equipped Kenyan forces in Somalia makes it possible for the first time to think of cutting off al-Shabab's supply lines. "You see al-Shabab under pressure because Kenya is taking advantage of assets, helicopters, aircraft, navy vessels. So clearly today, we have even the possibility to implement a no-fly zone, thanks to Kenya's assets. So it is different," he said. Lamamra says AMISOM forces should be close to their full authorized strength of 12,000 troops by the end of the year. There are now 9,800 African Union troops in the region. A battalion of troops from Djibouti is expected to begin deployment on December 10. Another battalion from Burundi, one of the two main troop contributors, is set to arrive soon afterward.
  16. Sayid*Somal;758620 wrote: the picture and quote are together - here is the SOURCE They are not together you blind ...............
  17. Nuune is not Jinn ,,,,, laakiin Jin baa isaga ku jira ... that is the difference