Qudhac Posted July 29, 2007 http://www.radiowidhwidh.com/html/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=7795 Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Jacaylbaro Posted July 29, 2007 looooooooooooooooool ,, is that widhwidh or it is my eyes ?? A big change i say ,,,, i still don't trust them ,, may be the ministers are from the webmaster's sub-clan Good development indeed .............. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Jacaylbaro Posted July 29, 2007 LAS ANOD, Somalia July 28 (Garowe Online) - A delegation from the breakaway Somali region of Somaliland arrived in the provincial town of Las Anod Saturday, the first such visit to the region since 2003. The Somaliland delegation included ministers and parliamentarians and were received in Las Anod by local elders, politicians and former Puntland officials, local sources said. Bashi Mohamud Farah, second deputy Speaker of Somaliland's House of Representatives, told local press that the unannounced visit to the region is part the Somaliland administration's efforts to bring development initiatives to Las Anod. Deputy Speaker Farah's delegation, which included Justice Minister Ahmed Hassan Ali, met with local leaders in Las Anod. It was unclear if the Somaliland delegation met with Ahmed Abdi Habsade, the former Puntland security minister who was sacked earlier this month. [ Full story] Delegation members told reporters that they plan to regularly conduct government affairs in Las Anod, noting that Puntland soldiers who used to stand in their way are no longer there. Somaliland, the northwestern regions in Somalia, unilaterally declared independence in 1991 but has not gained recognition since. The breakaway region claims ownership of Sool and Sanaag regions under colonial-era boundaries, but neighboring semiautonomous Puntland administration forcefully evicted Somaliland officials from Las Anod in late 2002. Officials in the Puntland capital, Garowe, said Puntland troops in the Las Anod area were redeployed to other regions, including the Somali capital Mogadishu. Others had simply left their barracks due to nonpayment, the same source said. The two sub-regions fought bloody wars several times along their unofficial border, including a single-day battle in Sanaag region three months ago. Source: Garowe Online Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
AYOUB Posted July 30, 2007 Like everywhere else, Lascaanod welcome Somalilands' leadership. The trouble-makers are always out-siders. The shit-stirers who use hold the people hostage are now embroiled in chaotic Mogadishu. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Fabregas Posted July 30, 2007 quote:Lascaanod welcome Somalilands' leadership. How?Because one minister met Xabsaade? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites