oba hiloowlow Posted February 2, 2013 Yaaqshiid Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
xabad Posted February 2, 2013 oba hiloowlow;914856 wrote: ^^ Now this is the kinda of architecture that hankers back to Xamar's glory days, not the gaudy overcolored amateurish buildings we are so used to. is that the central bank oba ? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
oba hiloowlow Posted February 2, 2013 I have no idea what that building is. This is the central Bank Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
cadnaan1 Posted February 3, 2013 [/QU OTE] Sawirkan wuxuu I xasuusiyey inaysan talo gacanta somalida ku jirin,,,anagana halkan ayaan qabiil ku murmaynaaa maalin walba. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Haatu Posted February 3, 2013 Oba, how are the house prices in Xamar? In Gsa ever since peace returned and the refugees started to leave, land prices have fallen back to their normal levels as in 2000 levels. It's never been better for you average Jaamac in Gsa coz they can now afford land again but Xamar must be a nightmare with all the returnees. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
oba hiloowlow Posted February 3, 2013 prices are focked up right now in H/wadaag, km4 area the houses cost up to $1million. It aint best time to buy some houses if you are smart wait couple of years however sell if you own properties. My family got some landplots outside xamar specfically in darmooley they cost 20 000 dollars each and my father bought them for 800 dollars each. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Haatu Posted February 3, 2013 lol in Gsa all the speculators are cursing their rotten luck. In the good years, houses that were bought for 20,000 shillings were being sold for up to 1.5 million shillings. Now they're back to their normal price. Imagine paying 1 mil shillings for a plot of land only for the price to half overnight Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
oba hiloowlow Posted February 3, 2013 Dayuum yeah bruv that will happen in xamar too within 5 yrs uu fiirso lee. specially in Yaaqshiid,huriwaa,kaaraan,dayniile area. The central districts will always be expensive Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Daqane Posted February 5, 2013 This should give a heart attack to brother MMA it looks like the entrance to an eatery/what Somalis call "hotel"... Road widening airport road Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Daqane Posted February 5, 2013 Mogadishu launches cleaning campaign with cash prize incentives The piles of rubble and trash that litter Mogadishu's neighbourhoods are getting smaller thanks to a cleaning campaign mobilised by the Somali government and carried out by citizen volunteers. The campaign started January 26th and will continue for one week, or longer if needed, to beautify and sanitise all 16 districts of the Benadir region. Volunteers say they need no remuneration for their work, but to sweeten the deal, the federal government is offering cash prizes for the districts that make the most progress in the clean-up. "I will reward the districts that take the first three spots in the Mogadishu cleaning competition," Prime Minister Abdi Farah Shirdon said on January 21st. "The winning district will get $15,000, the second district will get $10,000 and the third district will get $5,000." The federal government has not yet disclosed the criteria for selecting the winners when the campaign ends on Friday (February 1st), or whether it will require the winning districts to spend the money on specific projects. Benadir region sanitation department director Hussein Warsame Abtidon said cleaning operations are going well so far, with up to 200 volunteers taking part in each district. "We want to complete the cleaning campaign in a week, but the time will be extended if necessary to make Mogadishu a clean and healthy city," he told Sabahi. Abtidon said the campaign would make a big difference in the sanitary conditions in Mogadishu and that he is hopeful it will bring back the beauty of the city's heyday. Districts competing for top prize Omar Abdulle Osman, administrator of the Hilwa district, said the clean-up is going well in his area. "I am optimistic that my district will win because we are making a great effort to improve the general sanitation of the Hilwa district," he told Sabahi. "If we win this competition, I promise all the volunteers will have the opportunity to decide what the money is used for." Deqa Abdikadir, administrator of the Warta Nabada district, which was formerly known as Wardhigley, said the 200 volunteers cleaning her district do not expect any compensation for their efforts. Still, she hopes they will win. "I am hopeful that the Warta Nabada district will get first place in this week-long Mogadishu cleaning competition," she said. "We will work hard to win." The men and women volunteers taking part in the week-long campaign were selected and recommended by the elders in each neighbourhood, according to the district administrators. The volunteers work from 8:00 am to 12:00 pm daily and are dispatched to each neighbourhood in teams of 15 to 20. Volunteer Osman Abdi, 36, said he wants to be part of the effort to restore cleanliness in Mogadishu, especially in Warta Nabada where he lives. "No one is paying us for the clean-up operation we are conducting," he told Sabahi. "We want to clean our district to improve our lives because as the saying goes, 'disease is as close as the garbage nearby'." Dr. Ahmed Mohamed Sheikh, a public health specialist, said the cleaning campaign is a small but very important start for the capital. He said Mogadishu needs a much longer sanitation campaign because no one has attempted to clean the city in over 20 years. "A week is not enough to clean Mogadishu and it should be regularly scheduled," he told Sabahi "I believe our biggest challenge is the unsanitary state of the whole country," he said. "We expect the new administration to address that problem." Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Daqane Posted February 5, 2013 Apparently this is the planned interior design of the rehabilitated Somalia parliament, 350 seater capacity, an inside arena for the cabinet, the speaker support staff, and 9 other halls for committee meetings. I do not know if this render is correct, allthough it does kind of go allong the lines of the previous design I do not understand the seating area for the M.P's they have neither desks or microphones...anyway we can take this design with a grain of salt until better renders are uploaded to the net!! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites