General Duke Posted June 27, 2011 Abdiweli resume is for all to see. He has a Master’s in Public Demonstration, Graduate certificate in Government Taxation, PHD in Economics and has worked on the ground as a consultant for the UN.He has the necessary education to help in his job role. He isn’t a confused Anthropologist coming up with weird exotic names for regions. Somali needs a man who understands what Public Administration is and one who learned in the best, the John Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. Somalia needs a leader who understands what Taxes are and the methodology required to collect and generate revenue for the government. This man has the right education for the job at hand. Far more than any Somali man in history. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
The Zack Posted June 27, 2011 Maybe you should have said the best applicable education for the pm job then. He is not the "most" educated person to run ANY office in Somalia as you put it. Nagala kala yaree bahasha. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
NGONGE Posted June 27, 2011 All his educational qualifications show him to be an able bureaucrat (might even be him that plotted the earlier Farmajo course!). However, for his job to be a success he has to be much more than that. He has to become a hard-nosed politician, have the charming skills of Orpheus and the cold blooded reserve of a snake. He has to forego petty squabbles and embrace compromise (even the Kampala-esque type), as long as they help in achieving the ultimate goals of his job. It is said that Cnut the great (the old Danish King) once went to the beach, put his throne on the ground and ordered the tide to stop! Of course, it didn’t work (time and tide wait for no man) and this story has since become a popular example of arrogance in leadership. Let us hope Abdiweli is not “nice” enough when attempting to stop the endless Somali tide that he faces; he has to avoid bottlenecks and become a master of distraction and evasiveness. He has to ride the ebb and dodge the flow. But first, he has to immediately claim credit for all Farmajo’s work. And, once he’s done all of that, he has to tackle Al Shabab. Good luck. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
A_Khadar Posted June 27, 2011 ^ I agree with you NG. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
General Duke Posted June 27, 2011 Ngoonge is right, the new PM has the right qualification to do the job, how er he has to compromise and make deals to get Somalia to where it beds to be. Zack again you are arguing only for the sake of being heard on this.it's to be expeced from you dear lad. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Somalia Posted September 3, 2012 Hah, look at the sceptics now! I believe he has done the finest job, lets look over major landmark achievements. I will bold his personal ones. Security -Al-Shabaab left Mogadishu -Special Force -Somali Navy -Rebuilding Army Political -Road Map -Garowe Principles -London Conference Somalia -Istanbul Conference Somalia -Constitution -Technical Selection Committee --Warlords & Criminals Out -Post transitional road map Development -Oil exploration Public Administration -Anti-Corruption Committee -UNPOS Nairobi to Somalia -Administrations for liberated regions -Return of embassies Environmental -Charcoal lobbying (Al-Shabaab) Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
MoonLight1 Posted September 3, 2012 nuune;730120 wrote: I have a feeling that he will resign on September 27, 2011, forced resignation by our king Mahiga. where is Nuunow horta? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
General Duke Posted September 3, 2012 NGONGE;730662 wrote: All his educational qualifications show him to be an able bureaucrat (might even be him that plotted the earlier Farmajo course!). However, for his job to be a success he has to be much more than that. He has to become a hard-nosed politician, have the charming skills of Orpheus and the cold blooded reserve of a snake. He has to forego petty squabbles and embrace compromise (even the Kampala-esque type), as long as they help in achieving the ultimate goals of his job. It is said that Cnut the great (the old Danish King) once went to the beach, put his throne on the ground and ordered the tide to stop! Of course, it didn’t work (time and tide wait for no man) and this story has since become a popular example of arrogance in leadership. Let us hope Abdiweli is not “nice” enough when attempting to stop the endless Somali tide that he faces; he has to avoid bottlenecks and become a master of distraction and evasiveness. He has to ride the ebb and dodge the flow. But first, he has to immediately claim credit for all Farmajo’s work. And, once he’s done all of that, he has to tackle Al Shabab. Good luck. lol@NGOONGE. Abdiweli has outlived any other PM without causing any fuss. He has managed to bring together a diverse alliance of clans, regions and even the international community. In his term he has managed to complete and ratify the new Federal Constitution, end the transition and help usher in a new Warlord free Parliament. In his short term, Al Shabaab have been routed and chased out of Mogadishu, Balcad, Afgoyee, Balcad, Baidoa, Beledweyne and are now only holding on to Kismayu. Forget what Farmaajo did, Abdiweli has made the impossible, possible. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites