SOO MAAL

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  1. Madax wayne ku xigeenka maamulka Gobolada waqooyi, Aqoon sigeena waxaa saldhig u ah xuduudaha oo la Warkii 02-Jul-2006 iyo Qormadii: darwiishland Munaasabad uu shalay subax nimadi ku qantay magaalada hargaysa Madax wayne ku xigeenka maamulka hargaysa ayuu kaga hadlay arimo dhawr ah oo ay ka mid yihiin Munaasabadan ayaa ahayd mid abaal marino lagu gudoon siinayay saraakiil ka tirsan maamulka hargaysa oo tabo bar ugu soo xidhmay wadanka Itoobiya saraakiishan ayaa ahayd difcadii labaad ee dawlada itoobiya tabo bar ay soo siiso munaasabadan ayaa waxaa ka hadlay madax weyne ku xigeenka maamulka hargaysa hadaladii Axmed yuufus Yaasiin ayaa waxay ku bilaabmeen sidan Marka hore waxaanu u mahad celinaynaa dawlada Itoobiya oo uu goobjoog yahay wakiilka hargaysa u joogaa marka xigana waxaan halkan uga mahad celinayaa saraakiisha difcada labaad ee tabo barku u soo xidhmay saraakiishan ayaa u badan mujaahidiintii SNM ee la soo dagaalamay cadawgii siyaad barre waxaan ku dhiiri galinaynaa Saraakiishan khimrada dheeraadka ah soo qaadatay inay uga faa,Iideeyaan ciidamada kala duwan ee qaranka Waxaa kale oo aan uga xog waramaya saraakiishan cusub iyo shacabka somalilandba in aqoonsigeena ay saldhig u tahay inaan xuduudaha soo xidhano isla markaana wadan walba oo aan aqoonsi waydiina wuxu shuruudo noodha dhigaa dadkan hadii la aqoon sado ma yihiin kuwo ilaashan kara xuduudo hooda sidaas daradeed waxaan u sheegayaa saraakiisha ciidamada kala duwan iyo shacabkama in la soo gaadhay xiligii aan ku ruqaan san lahayn xuduudaha somaliland isla markaana wax waliba diyaar inoo yihiin hada waa in loo diyaar garoobaa hawlgalkas balaadhan ee lagu sugayo xuduudaha somaliland waxaanuna ku war galinaynaa shacabku meel uu joogoba inuu heegan u ahaado talaabooyinkaas aanu qaadi doono Kuxigeenka Riyaale ayaa inta badan hadaladiisa waxaa muuqanaya inuu abaabulayo colaad horleh iyo dagaal ay ku qaadaan G/sool oo ay ayb ka mid ah si sharci daro ah ku joogeen maleeshiyaad koodu mudo 2 sanadood ah dhinaca kale mar aan soo indho indheeyey taliskii ciidankii qaranka soomaaliyeed oo hada fadhiisin u ah maleeshiyaadka Riyaale ka amar qaata ayaa waxaa ka muuqanaya abaabul iyo diyaar garoowyo gurmad ah oo ku wajahan dhinaca jiida hore ee Adhi cadeye waxaa indhahaygu qabanayeen raxan gaadiidka dagaalka ah oo isu diyaarinayay inay u ruqaan sadaan dhinaca G/sool gaadiidkan ayaa inta badan waxaa bixisay dawlada itoobiya oo iyadu caadaysatay isku dirka umada somaliyeed tan iyo markii taliskii dhexe meesha ka baxay 1991 kii si kastaba ha ahaatee waxaan marnaba meesha ka madhnayn diyaar garoowga weerer ay ku qaadaan G/sool maleeshiyooyinka Riyaale ka amar qaataa Afnugaal.com hargaysa somalia
  2. Pandora's box of secession conflicts. Somaliland seeks recognition for sovereignty June 27 2006 at 09:49PM Hargesia - Somalia's breakaway enclave of Somaliland, briefly independent in 1960, called for recognition by the world community as an independent state. "It is unfortunate to look for recognition today, 46 years after Somaliland got freedom and recognition," President Dahir Rayale Kahin said at a banquet on Monday to mark independence day. The former British protectorate was independent from June 26 to July 1, 1960, before joining the rest of Somalia. Somaliland wanted to "realise its destiny and aspiration to join the free nations of the world", he said. Kahin has just concluded a 12-day tour of six African states to push for recognition of his country, which declared independence in 1991 after warlords toppled Somali's military ruler Mohamed Siad Barre. So far the world has withheld recognition, preferring the old colonial borders to avoid opening a Pandora's box of secession conflicts. Independent Online, South Africa Somaliland leader not attending AU summit THE PRESIDENT of the self-declared Republic of Somaliland, which the world recognizes as northwest Somalia, will not be attending the African Union heads of state summit currently being hosted by Gambia. Somaliland newspapers and Web sites have been grooming President Dahir Rayale for participation in the AU summit as an observer for several days. But according to reliable diplomatic sources, Arab nations have pressured Gambian President Yahye Jammeh to deny an observer seat for the breakaway regional leader. In 1991, "Somaliland" came into existence after the SNM rebel movement that fought against long-time Somali dictator General Mohamed Siad Barre declared unilateral independence from Somalia, claiming borders of the British Protectorate of Somaliland. President Rayale recently returned from a trip to six African nations and met with heads of states to push Somaliland's independence agenda within Africa. Somaliland's finance and information ministers, Awil Ali Du'ale and Abdullahi Mohamed Du'ale, are currently in Gambia advocating for a last-minute participation in the AU summit by President Rayale. Meanwhile, Somaliland foreign minister Edna Adan Ismail is in Hargeisa while the finance and information ministers perform her governmental duties in Gambia. The AU summit officially opened today in Banjul and all of Africa's leaders are expected. Sudan and Somalia are said to be the top two agendas of the summit and Somali president Abdullahi Yusuf is in Gambia to present his government's controversial military intervention agenda to the AU leadership. Garowe Online (contribution from Somali news wires)
  3. The Secularists Sleep, the Zealots Are Full of a Passionate Intensity The East African (Nairobi) COLUMN June 26, 2006 Posted to the web June 26, 2006 By Charles Onyango-Obbo Nairobi Everywhere you turn, you are either reading or hearing on TV or radio that the rout of the Somali warlords in Mogadishu by the Islamic Courts Union came as "a surprise". The warlords are now dispersed to the far corners of Somalia, leaving the American project of backing their Alliance for the Restoration of Peace and Counter-Terrorism in tatters. There are many who are mourning the fact that the Islamic fundamentalists have won, saying that we are all in danger now. It's not that simple. What we are witnessing is not the triumph of religious fundamentalism, but the crisis of secularism. Those of us who consider ourselves secularists, the fellows who believe in the separation of religion and state, bear the blame for letting the cause crumble in disgrace. Where secularists have risen to power in Africa and other parts of the Third World promising great change, many have ended up being maniacal butchers and thieves. We have let cherished freedoms degenerate into a bottomless pit of immorality and excess. Which is fine, except that we also don't expect to pay a price for it. We allow a hedonistic life, but when our footsoldiers return home wrecked by booze, drugs, and other excesses, we shut the doors of our homes in their faces. We don't even admonish them. Meanwhile, the fundamentalist mosques and churches take them in, chastise and even flog some, then get them to publicly renounce their waywardness and reward them for abandoning "sin". The Islamist are popular because, among other things, they came down hard on Somalia's criminal gangs, chopping off the hands of robbers, and publicly executing rapists. Latter 20th century secularism's abhorrence of the hangman, on the other hand, has gradually led it to underestimate how much the victims of violent robbery, rape, and the relatives of murder victims crave retribution. So you have a corrupt and incompetent Fatah in Palestine, and the world is surprised that it lost the elections to the Hamas hardliners who had a record of a more caring and honest organisation, murderous though it might be. In 1992, the Islamic front FIS won the elections in Algeria, but the army cancelled the results and seized power, setting off an orgy of violence. Yet the FIS victory wasn't a fluke. In the municipalities they ran, garbage was collected and buses ran on time. The future belongs to organisations like the Islamic Courts Union, unless secularism responds with more than guns and deployment of global power. Take post-Revolution Iran. In the violence and assassinations that followed the fall of the Shah, nearly three generations of Islamic leaders were wiped out. But the mullahs kept turning out more and more cadres. Iran is one of the few countries in the world that doesn't run short of alternatives. Before President Ahmadinejad won the last elections, he was relatively unknown. On the other hand, in secularist Russia, even enlightened journalists write about how there is no alternative to President Vladimir Putin. In the US, they are wringing their fingers about who will replace George Bush. The mosques, on the other hand, turn out so many leaders that Islamic republics never have a shortage of candidates to choose from. The worst sin of secularists, therefore, is laziness. We don't recruit new warriors, while the Christian, Jewish, Muslim and Hindu fundamentalists stay up all night swelling their ranks. We don't have leadership factories, while the religious fundamentalists have their churches (many under trees and on street corners), synagogues, temples, and mosques. All we do is whine. The Gap, a very secularist group, had a big hit with a song about how nothing comes to sleepers, but their dreams. We partied to it big time, but learnt nothing. Charles Onyango-Obbo is Nation Media Group's managing editor for convergence and new products.
  4. Guud ahaanba gobolka sool oo maanta laga xusay 26ka juun Laascaanood 26 Juun 2006 Waxaa maanta si weyn looga xusay magaalada laasacaanood sanad guuradii 46aad ee kazoo wareegtay xilgii ay gobolada waqooyi xornimadooda ka qaateen wadanka ingiriiska oo ahaa gumaystihii sida xaqdarada aha ku xukumayey gobalada waqooyi ee dalka Somalia , waxaana magaalada laascaanood ay dadwenuhu maanta si aada u hadal hayeen halgankii dheeraa ee loo soo maray xoriyada maanta lagu naaloonayo,taasoo ay hormuud ka ahaayeen dadwaynaha ka soo jeeda Gobolada SSC oo iyagu saldhig u ahaa gobanimada Somalia, sidoo kale waxaa maanta si hagar laâ€aana uga qayb qaatay fantasiyahayn idaacada radio laascaanood oo hawada ku jirtay in kabadan 10 saacadood, iyagoo bulshada ku dhaqan magaalada laascaanood u soo tabinayey barnaamijyo taariikhiyaysan iyo weliba suugaan wadani ah oo ku taxaluqda maalinta 26ka juun,waxaana suugaantaasi ka mid ahaa geeraarkii caan baxay ee abwaankii soomaaliyeed cabdilaahi suldaan timacade :"kaana sib kana saar " waxaana ay dadwenaha qaarkood hambalyo iyo salaan u gudbinayeen iyagoo adeegsanaya khadka telefoonka asxaabtooda qaraabadooda iyo eheladooda ku sugan magaalada laascaanood iyo weliba daafaha dunida, Aadan jaamac oogle {aadan xabeeb} Jeelle@radiolaascaanood1.com
  5. aminarts XUSKA LIX IYO AFARTAN GUURADII CALANSAARKA XORNIMO
  6. 26-ka June oo si weyn looga xusay magaalada Baydhabo oo haatan ay fariisin ka dhigatay DFKMG Muqdisho, June 26, 2006 (WDN) - Munaasabad ballaaran oo lagu xusay 46 sanad guuradii kasoo wareegatay markii ay gumeysiga Ingiriiska ka xuroobeen gobolada woqooyi ee dalka Soomaaliya, ayaa xalay lagu qabtay aqalka madaxtooyada DFKMG ee magaalada Baydhabo. Munaasabadan xalay waxaa kasoo qeyb galay madaxweynaha dowlada federaalka kmg ah ee Soomaaliya C/laahi Yuusuf Axmed, gudoomiye ku xigeenka labaad ee golaha baarlamaanka Cismaan Cilmi Boqore iyo xubnaha labada gole ee magaaladaasi ku sugan. Md. C/laahi Yuusuf Axmed oo munaasabadaasi hadal ka jeediyey ayaa ku dheeraaday ka hadalka ahmiyada maalintan ay leedahay, isagoo sheegay in 26-ka June ay tahay maalin qiime iyo qaaye ku leh shacabka Soomaaliyeed meel kasta oo ay joogaan. Waxa uuna hambalyo u diray shacabka Soomaaliyeed gaar ahaan shacabka ku dhaqan gobolada woqooyi ee dalka.Madaxweynuhu waxa uu xusay in Soomaalida ay waajib ku tahay in ay ilaashato xurnimadan ay ku naalooneyso isla markaana ka fogaato wax walba oo keeni kara tafaraaruq. C/laahi Yuusuf waxa uu sheegay in Soomaalida aysan kala maarmi karin isla markaana aysan kala go' karin. Waxa uuna shacabka ku dhaqan woqooyiga Soomaaliya ka codsaday in ay ilaaliyaan midnimada ay la wadaagaan walaalahooda koonfurta ku dhaqan oo uu ku tilmaamay in ay yihiin dad haatan ka baxaya mushkilad sokeeye oo 16 sano ay kusoo jireen. Gudoomiye ku xigeenka labaad ee golaha baarlamaanka Cisman Cilmi Boqore oo isna munaasabadii xalay Baydhabo ka dhacday hadal ka jeediyey, ayaa sheegay in shacabka Soomaaliyeed meel kasto oo ay joogaan uu u hambalyeynayo isla markaana uu ku boorinayo in ay ilaashadaan xurnimada, kana fogaadaan wax kasta oo ku keeni kara in ay kala tagaan. Munaasabadii ka dhacday magaalada Baydhabo ayaa la sheegayaa in ay ahayd mid si aad ah loo soo agaasimay oo ay kasoo qeyb galeen mas'uuliyiin aad u fara badan. Inkastoo ay ka maqnaayeen gudoomiyaha baarlamaanka Shariif Xasan Sheekh Aadan iyo ra'isalwasaare Cali Maxamed Geedi. Si kastaba ha ahaatee munaasabada 26-ka June ayaa sanadkan waxa ay kusoo aaday xili isbadal weyn uu ka jiro degaanada koonfurta Soomaaliay, ka dib markii la jabiyay qabqablayaashii shacabka xoogga ku heystay 16-kii sano ee lasoo dhaafay. Inkastoo koonfurta Soomaaliya si weyn looga xusay munaasabada 26-ka June hadana waxaa munaasabadaasi aan si weyn looga xusin ama looga dareemin gobolada woqooyi ee dalka. Waxaana goboladan ay iminka sheeganayaan in ay ka go'een Soomaaliye inteeda kale, inkastoo aysan caalamka ka helin aqoonsi caalami ah. Sidoo Kale magaalada Muqdishu ayaan siddii dhici jartay xiliyadii hore aan maamuuska xuska 26-ka looga agaasimin. Maxamed Cumar Aadan WardheerNews, Muqdisho
  7. Maanta maanta maanta waa maalin weyne maanta Maanta maanta maanta madaxeen bannaane maanta Hanbalyo, Hanbalyo, Hanbalyo. Maalmaha qaranka Soomaaliyeed Ururka Mideynta & Horumarinta Dhalinyarada G/Sool oo u hambalyo u diraysa ku aadan 26 June maalinta xoriyadda Soomaalida.. Sida uu shabakadda warbaahinta Somaliweyn.com u u sheegay afhayeenka ururka Subeer Idiris. Ururka mideynta & horumarinta dhalinyarada G/sool ayaa hambalyo u diraysa umadda soomaaliyeed maalinta xoriyadda 26 june, maalintaas oo ah maalin ku weyn shacbweynaha soomaalida maadaama ay tahay maalintii heeryadii gumaysiga laga tuuray shacbi weynihi Soomaaliyeed ee Goboladii la oran jiray British Somaliland Protectorate, taasoo aan soo xasuusanayna gabaygii uu ka tiriyay goobtii calankii gumaysiga lagu siibay laguna saaray kii shacbi weynaha gabyaagii caanka ahaa Cabdilaahi Suldaan Timacadde ee ahaa (( Saaxirkii kala guurraye kana siib kana saar)) iyadoo umadda soomaalida ay ugu fadhido qiime aad u balaadhan ahna maalin qaran, waxaa maanta sidoo kale lagu xasuusta weftigii ka tegey gobolada waqooyi (Somaliland) ee Garaaad Cali iyo Madaxweynihii hore ee Somaliland ka mid ahaa ee heshiiskii xornimada ku saxeexay magaalada London ee cariga ingiriiska. Sidaas awgeed, hadaanu nahay ururka mideynta & horumarinta dhalinyarada G/Sool (SYUDO) waxaaannu shacbiga ugu hambalyaynaynaa maalintan qiimaha & maamuuska leh waxaanuna u rajaynaynaa umadda guul & barwaaqo. Allaa Mahad Leh, Afhayneenka Ururka Mideynta & Horumarinta Dhalinyarada G/Sool Subeyr Idiris subeyr_2@hotmail.com Lasanod,Sool
  8. Xarago In reality, the Somali civil war era, that caused the collapse of Somali republic, the rise of warlords in the south and clan feithdoms in the north is the most tragic events in history of Somalia Endless clan and sub-clan wars of Borame, hergeysa, burco, Galkacyo, Baydhabo ’92, shabelle region, Kismayo and Juba region, Mogadisho, and the one still raging in Aricadeeye in Sool region. The brightest events in Somali history took place June 26-July 1, 1960, the independence of former British and Italian Somali colonies, and founding of Somali republic. The reunion of Somali territories was a blessing for all Somali people The point of this thread is not only to honor and remember these days but also to commemorate in special way and celebrate the liberation of territories from Europeans, the reunion of Somali people, and the founding of Somali rebuplic, waayo maalmahani waa maalmaha qaranka soomaaliyeed Anyways this thread is not intended to discuss any politics. But with the aim of nomads to exchange congratulations In may 18, I said to northwest Somalis have a great day Please walashiis don’t spoil our celebrations Peace SOO MAAL
  9. taariikhda somalia ma ku jirtaa siyaasi sare oo iscasilay? Is there any Somali politician (top official like president, prime minister or speaker of parliament) who resigned in somali history? Because of scandal, pressure from public, or crisis Dukow Iscasilidu waxeeba siifiicantahay marka ey system jirin
  10. East Timor prime minister resigns By Shawn Donnan in Jakarta Published: June 26 2006 05:56 | Last updated: June 26 2006 05:56 East Timor’s embattled prime minister, Mari Alkatiri, announced his resignation on Monday, bowing to weeks of growing pressure from protesters and senior Timorese leaders. Mr Alkatiri, who has been accused of working with a political ally to arm a hit squad to target opponents and of mishandling the current crisis in the country, announced his resignation during a press conference in Dili. His capitulation came after the surprise resignation of Nobel laureate Jose Ramos-Horta as defence and foreign minister on Sunday, in a move that intensified pressure for the prime minister to resign. Until now, Mr Alkatiri had denied any wrongdoing and argued his resignation would lead to the toppling of a democratically-elected government and set a bad precedent for the four-year-old country. Mr Ramos-Horta is seen as a leading candidate to replace Mr Alkatiri but whether he will do so is not immediately clear. Some have mentioned Mr Ramos-Horta’s former wife, Anna Pessoa, the deputy prime minister, as a possible candidate to lead the government as it prepares for elections next year. The prime minister’s resignation come at a crucial time. A senior United Nations envoy is expected to arrive on Monday for consultations over the shape of a new UN mission to help the country, which it governed from 1999 until 2002, emerge from its current crisis. It remained unclear whether President Xanana Gusmao – who last week called for Mr Alkatiri’s resignation over the hit squad allegations – to dissolve parliament and appoint an interim government led by the Nobel laureate. Mr Gusmao, a former guerilla leader who is treated with Mandela-like reverence in East Timor, does not explicitly have the power to sack a government under the constitution. However, diplomats said a passage describing the president as “guarantor†of the “unity of the state†and “the smooth functioning of democratic institutions†could give him the power to intervene. Mr Ramos-Horta, 56, first drew international attention in 1975 following the Indonesian invasion of East Timor when he became a spokesman for the government in exile of the Revolutionary Front for an Independent East Timor, or Fretilin. He won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1996 together with Bishop Carlos Bello, leader of the powerful Catholic church in East Timor at the time. The prize raised the international profile of East Timor and Indonesia’s brutal occupation of the former Portuguese colony. In 1999 a UN-organised ballot led to almost 80 per cent of East Timorese voting for independence. Jakarta’s scorched-earth exit after the vote left up to 1,500 dead.
  11. Munaasabadda calan saarka Soomaaliya oo la qaban qaabinayo Baydhabo - 25.June.2006 Xaflado kala duwan oo loogu diyaar garoobayo munaasabadda xuska 46-aad ee markii ugu horreysey ee calan Soomaaliyeed oo xor ah laga taago Soomaaliya ayaa ka socota magaalooyin kala duwan oo ku yaal gudaha dalka. Munaasabadahaas midda ugu weyn ayaa habeenka caawa ah lagu qabanayaa xarunta madaxtooyada ee magaalada Baydhabo oo fariirin kumeel gaar ah u ah dawladda federaalka Soomaaliya. Munaasabaddan ayaa waxaa qaban qaabadeeda mas’uul looga dhigay kusimaha wasiirka arrimaha gudaha ahna wasiirka beeraha dawladda federaalka Soomaaliya Col. Xasan Maxamed Nuur (Shaati Guduud). Toddobaadka Qaranimada Soomaaliya (Somali National Week) ayaa sannadkan bilaabanaya iyada oo ay dalka ka socdaan isbeddello isla markaasna ay dhowaan dhaceen dagaallo ay dad badan ku dhinteen kuwaas oo gobollo kala duwan ka dhacay. Maxamuud Faarax Bile farahbile@hotmail.com
  12. Bahda Shabakada wararka Afnugaal.com oo hambalyo ku aadan 26 june u direysa umada soomaaliyeed Warkii 25-Jun-2006 iyo Qormadii: c/lahi bookh hadii aanu nahay Bahda shabakada wararka ee Afnugaal.com waxaanu umada soomaaliyeed meel ay joogtaba u direynaa hambalyo aadan maalinta 26ka june oo ah maalintii xornimada gobolada waqooyi ee soomaaliya maalintan oo ah maalintii ugu horeysey ee calan soomaaliyeed laga taago ciida soomaaliya waa ,maalin qadarin mudan waa maalin ciid ah waa maalintii aduunku inoo aqoonsadey dowlad ka mid ah dowlada aduunka , waa maalintii aynu guraney midhihii kasoo baxay 21 sano oo aynu xoriyada u dagaalameyney , maalintii uu c/lahi timacade uu lahaa (sareeyow ma nusqaamow kana siib kana saar) hadaba hadii aanu nahay , dhamaan howl wadeenada shabakada afnugaal waxaanu umada soomaaliyeed meelkasta oo ay aduunka ka joogto u direynaa hambalyo ku saabsan maalinta 26 june anagoo idiin balan qaadeynaa inaanu idiin soo gudbino xafladaha lagu maamuusayo maalintaas weyn ee ka kala dhacaya dhamaan dacalada aduunka iyo waliba taariikhda jamhuuriyada soomaaliya
  13. Vietnam's Top 3 Leaders Officially Resign By RICHARD VOGEL The Associated Press Saturday, June 24, 2006; 4:45 AM Vietnam's prime minister Phan Van Khai, state president Tran Duc Luongand the NA chairman Nguyen Van An appealed to resign at National Assembly Saturday on June 24,2006.[ HANOI, Vietnam -- Vietnam's president, prime minister and chief of parliament all submitted their resignations Saturday, bowing out in a long-awaited internal shuffle to make way for a new generation of leaders. A spokesman for the National Assembly said legislators would vote later Saturday on whether to accept the resignations of Prime Minister Phan Van Khai, 72, President Tran Duc Luong, 69, and National Assembly Chairman Nguyen Van An, 68. The result of the vote is not expected to be announced until Monday, said the official who requested anonymity because he was not authorized to address the media. The changing of the guard was expected since April, when the three failed to be re-elected to the Politburo, the ruling Communist Party's innermost circle of leaders. Officially their terms do not expire until July 2007. Both Khai and Luong have served two five-year terms, while An has been on the job for five years. "To ensure the party's complete leadership ... and the continuous inheritance of leaders, rearranging some top state leaders is needed," Communist Party Chief Nong Duc Manh was quoted by the online VnExpress as telling the National Assembly. Manh praised the three for their "strategic thinking, rich experience in leadership," it said. Last month, Khai told reporters at the opening of the National Assembly session that he would retire because of his age and that he had nominated Deputy Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung as his successor. Khai was appointed prime minister in 1997 and led Vietnam through the Asian financial crisis. During his tenure, the economy grew an average of 7 percent annually for the past nine years, including 8.4 percent growth last year _ the highest in a decade. In 2005, Khai became the highest-ranking Vietnamese official to visit the White House since the Vietnam War ended in 1975. Dung, 56, a one-time central bank governor, has long been groomed for the top spot, overseeing the economy in recent years. He attended Intel's launching of a $300 million chip plant in Ho Chi Minh City earlier this year and hosted lunch for Bill Gates when the Microsoft chairman visited Hanoi in April. Party officials have said that Nguyen Minh Triet, 64, currently party secretary for Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam's economic engine, is the front-runner for president. Nguyen Phu Trong, 62, now the party boss for the capital, Hanoi, was poised to replace An as the National Assembly chairman. The National Assembly will elect the three new leaders next week before the legislature wraps up its six-week session on Thursday, the official from the National Assembly's office said. They will be tasked with maintaining political stability and high economic growth, while also fighting rampant corruption, which the party said has caused people to lose confidence in its leadership. An told local media recently that the new leaders should be in place before Vietnam hosts a summit of the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation forum in November. President Bush is among the leaders expected to attend. The National Assembly is also expected to approve the appointments of six ministers including the ministers of defense, foreign affairs and transport, the official said.
  14. The celebrations of the Somali National Week (June 26 - July 1) Maanta maanta maanta waa maalin weyne maanta Maanta maanta maanta Madaxeen banaane maanta.. June 26: British Somaliland colony (northwest and northcentral Somalia) took independence from Britain June 26: Somalia's Flag Day; first Somali flag was raised in the city of Hargeisa June 27: Djibouti took independence from France July 1: Italian Somaliland colony (South, and north East Somalia) took independence from Italy July 1: the somali Union Day July 1: the Somali Republican Day It is the 46 anniversary of Somalia 1960-2006 Congratulations to all Somali people Happy Somali National Week for all Somali people Dhamaan Umada Soomaaliyeed Hambalyo Ilaahay haa ka dhigu tobaadka wadanka Soomaalia mid farxad badan amiin waa 46 guuradii ka soo waraagtey maalmihii xuriyada, calanka, midowga, iyo aasaskii jamhuuriyada Somalia Happy Somali independence week VIVA SOMALIA Heeso Wadani ah Heeso Wadani ah
  15. Ghana apologises to Arab nations over Israel flag at W.Cup Thu Jun 22, 2006 6:14 PM GMT Printer Friendly Top News S.African minibus crash kills 14 schoolteachers Germany tells Iran: stop enrichment and we can talk Benin parliament votes itself extra year in office Somali Islamist chief says will find cameraman's killer Chad rebels call congress to name leadership MORE ACCRA (Reuters) - Ghana's foreign minister has apologised to ambassadors from Arab nations after a Ghanaian soccer player triggered a diplomatic bust-up by raising the Israeli flag to celebrate a World Cup victory. Defender John Paintsil, who plays his club football in Israel with Hapoel Tel Aviv, waved a small blue and white Israeli flag after Ghana's 2-0 win over Czech Republic last Saturday, provoking anger from Arab states. Libyan authorities summoned Ghana's Ambassador in Tripoli earlier this week to express their indignation over the incident, Ghana's Foreign Minister Nana Addo Akufo-Addo said. But he said Paintsil had no ill intent, and his actions were not officially sanctioned. "The incident was the act of an individual, who was completely ignorant of its political and diplomatic implications, and clearly had no official support," Akufo-Addo told Reuters on Thursday. Akufo-Addo on Wednesday met ambassadors from the Palestinian Authority, Libya, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Lebanon, Algeria and Morocco and apologised to them, he said. "The government of Ghana deeply regrets this act by one of our citizens," Akufo-Addo said. "Ghana has not drifted from its even-handed diplomacy in the Arab-Israeli conflict and we hope that this incident will not affect our relations with our Arab brothers and sisters," he said, adding he believed the explanation was taken in good faith. Ghana's Football Association apologised on Monday for Paintsil's conduct and the Arab League said on Wednesday it had received an official apology from Ghana over the incident.
  16. SOO MAAL

    Dubai

    Dubai - Global Talent Magnet News website reader Pier Pistocchi has sent in two pictures showing the changing face of Dubai in the United Arab Emirates. This picture was taken in 1991... ...and this one showing the same view in 2005. Dubai_Metro Hydropolis. Entirely assembled in Germany, this underwater hotel will be immersed with broad of Dubai at the end of 2006. It will comprise 220 continuations whose panoramic windows will give on sea-beds. The price of a room for the night would rise with 500 dollars. Dubai is not China or India. Far from it. In fact, in terms of population, it is entirely at the other end of the scale. But, having just returned from a trip there, I came back with a growing sense that Dubai has an opportunity to become a much more significant player in the global economy. Urgency What Dubai has in common with China and India is a sense of urgency. This urgency is deep and it is pervasive, starting at the top with Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum, Dubai’s crown prince and de facto leader of the country. Mohamed Ali Alabbar, the founder and chairman of Emaar, one of the leading real estate development companies in Dubai, provided an example of this urgency in a recent article: This region is way behind all the regions of the world, except sub-Saharan Africa. There’s no time to stop, the world is so advanced compared to us, we’ve been sleeping for so long. Unlike many of its Arab neighbors, Dubai’s oil is going to run out soon, some time in the next 5 to 15 years. From the outset, Dubai has been serious about using its oil revenue to bootstrap its way into a much more diversified economy. While Dubai can continue to prosper from the petroleum wealth of its neighbors, Dubai’s aspirations are much grander. As grand as these aspirations are, Dubai has even greater potential. Dubai, along with Abu Dhabi, is one of the most significant participants in the United Arab Emirates, a federation of Arab states along the Arabian Gulf. The people of Dubai have historically been traders, successfully participating in both regional and global trade flows. Over the past 30 years, Dubai found innovative new ways to play the role of middleman. I spent quite a bit of time in Dubai almost 30 years ago and the transformation since then has been staggering. The development of a vibrant tourist industry is the most apparent transformation. One source of urgency on this front involves the troubles further north in Beirut. Thirty years ago, Beirut was a key tourist center for the Middle East. Famed for its cosmopolitan atmosphere and wonderful climate, Beirut attracted affluent tourists from the rest of the Middle East as well as from Europe. After the civil war broke out in Lebanon in the 1970’s, Dubai saw an opportunity to step into the vacuum and launched an ambitious program to establish itself as a major tourist destination. But Dubai had a limited window – as the civil war subsided (even if random car bombings continue to scare away more risk averse tourists), entrepreneurs were scrambling to re-establish Beirut as a regional pleasure center. With a less accommodating climate (temperatures in the summer average 104 degrees Farenheit), Dubai sought to compete with Beirut in terms of physical facilities. The building boom The construction boom playing out is awe-inspiring as Dubai seeks to establish itself as a combination Miami/Orlando (another analogy would be Las Vegas, but Dubai lacks the gambling) for tourists from Europe, Asia and Africa. Extraordinary resort complexes continue to rise along the beaches of Dubai. Hotels compete for opulence – the winner so far is the Burj al Arab, the world’s tallest hotel built on an artificial island and boasting a distinctive and eye-catching shape like a spinnaker filled with wind. The Burj al Arab bills itself as the world’s only seven-star hotel, with Rolls Royces and helicopters ready to ferry its guests to and from Dubai’s airport. Among many other hotel projects, plans are under way to build the Hydropolis, a large five star hotel completely under water in the Arabian Gulf. Since beach real estate was relatively limited, Dubai addressed that natural constraint by launching massive programs to fill in land in the Arabian Gulf, initially in the shape of massive palm trees (the first – and smallest – of these covers an area of several square miles) and then in the shape of the world itself (I kid you not, The World is a major real estate development three miles off Dubai’s coast consisting of over three hundred man-made islands designed to mirror a map of the world – interested investors can buy an island in the shape of France or India). These developments will create almost 400 miles of new waterfront property to augment the 40 miles of natural beachfront. Hotels will occupy some of this new land, but an increasing amount of the land is being set aside for posh villas and apartments. Residential developments sell out almost as quickly as they are announced. Dubai lacks much in the way of natural attractions other than desert (covering over 90% of the 1,517 square mile country), so it is building massive recreational facilities to keep its tourists entertained. Ian Parker’s fascinating article on “The Mirage: The Architectural Insanity of Dubai†in the October 17, 2005 issue of the New Yorker (the article itself does not appear to be online, but an audio slide show based on the article is available here) provides some sense of the scope of Dubai’s ambitious construction projects. Modern shopping malls sprout up almost overnight, each one out-doing the previous ones in terms of scope and amenities. One of the newest, the Mall of the Emirates, boasts over 400 retailers and an indoor skiing facility (no, I am not kidding, it produces over 6,000 tons of snow), including a choice of five ski and snowboard runs, with the longest measuring 1,300 feet long with a 200 foot vertical drop, a black diamond run of 900 feet and a ski jump. Offices are going up even more rapidly, with the foundations of the world’s tallest new building, the Burj Dubai, already in place (the final height of the building is a closely guarded secret, but it is expected to be on the order of one hundred and sixty stories). This contender for the tallest building will have an Armani-run hotel on the lower floors, about one hundred floors of apartments and fifty or more floors of office space above that. As one further sign of the urgency in Dubai, the crews on many construction projects work 24 hours a day, seven days per week. Dubailand – Dubai’s competition to Disney World is under construction. Dubailand, of course, will be bigger. Covering a one hundred square mile area, the five billion dollar Dubailand project will be three times the size of Manhattan. When it is built out, Dubailand will include Eco-Tourism World, Sports & Outdoor World, Auction World, Virtual Games World and Themed Leisure & Vacation World. It will include replicas of the Eiffel Tower (70 feet taller than the original), the Taj Mahal (150 percent bigger than the original) and other major attractions A vibrant night club scene with hundreds of night clubs featuring a bewildering array of world music from reggae and salsa to hip hop and bhangra attracts some of the hottest DJ’s from around the world, keeping tourists entertained until late at night. In this context, the Las Vegas analogy becomes more appropriate – a vast entertainment complex is arising out of the desert. Insourcing human capital But the physical facilities, as impressive as they might be, aren’t the most interesting aspect of Dubai’s tourism play. It’s the human capital that Dubai has mobilized to support this initiative. Just the construction projects alone require more people than Dubai has (there are only about 120,000 citizens of Dubai), so Dubai imports construction workers by the hundreds of thousands from a broad range of countries, especially India and Pakistan. In fact, over 80% of Dubai’s population consists of expatriates from over 160 countries. About 200,000 of these expatriates provide a diversified managerial class for many of Dubai’s commercial enterprises. Unlike many other countries where immigrants are resented as potential competitors for jobs, Dubaians recognize that they cannot realize their ambitions without lots of foreign labor. Richard Florida in his book The Flight of the Creative Class reports one study showing that Dubai leads global cities in the proportion of foreign born population to native born population. Even more significantly, Dubai ranks third in the world on Richard Florida’s Mosaic Index, measuring immigrant population diversity. In staffing its hotels and entertainment facilities, Dubai has taken a very targeted approach to attracting appropriate talent. Tourists could spend weeks in Dubai without ever meeting a native of Dubai. The hotels are largely staffed by people imported from countries known for their hospitality, including Thailand, the Philippines and Indonesia. Tourists venturing out into the desert for a camel ride are apt to find that the “Bedouin tribesman†tending to the camel is actually an immigrant from Tunisia. In effect, Dubai has become a new kind of tourism middleman – it attracts tourists from around the world and serves them in great style with highly trained hospitality staff also imported from around the world. This strategy is paying off – the World Tourism Organization recently declared Dubai to be the fastest growing tourism destination on earth. Expanding the role of middleman In commercial activity, Dubai has also capitalized on its role as a middleman, spawning a growing financial services industry (it has created a free zone known as Dubai International Financial Centre) and trading industry (it built the world’s largest man-made harbor in 1976 to expand its role in the shipping industry). I wrote earlier this week about Dubai’s growing role as a global outsourcing provider of containerized port management services. Building a global e-business hub in Dubai Dubai also has aspirations in the e-commerce and Internet arena. It is building Dubai Internet City in the hope of attracting and incubating a growing set of e-businesses. It is in this area that Dubai’s aspirations fall short of its potential. Dubai’s government and business leaders tend to talk about its opportunities in this area in terms of becoming a center of e-business for the Middle East. Why stop here? Why not seek to become a center of e-business for the world by pursuing the same kind of human capital insourcing strategy that has driven its success in the tourism industry? Given Dubai’s growing attraction as an entertainment and pleasure center, it could potentially attract techies from around the world to build entrepreneurial e-businesses targeting global markets. With enterprise zones offering modern telecommunications infrastructure and office facilities along with the lure of no corporate or personal income tax, many Internet entrepreneurs might be willing to brave the summer heat to build promising e-businesses headquartered in Dubai and staffed with skilled techies imported from Eastern Europe and Asia. Of course, potential tech immigrants would have to forego the pleasures of pornography and drugs (Dubaians tend to be pretty unforgiving about such vices, even though they are in general much more liberal than their Saudi neighbors). Those with families might find it an attractive environment to raise their children and others might be enticed to come for a few years in search of interesting business and technology opportunities. Given the growing global shipping, trading, financial services and travel and leisure businesses being built in Dubai, there are ample opportunities to extend these business initiatives on the Internet. Opportunities in global education On a related note, Dubai has a similar opportunity to use its insourcing strategy to build out innovative educational businesses targeting faculty and students on a global scale. By creatively using the Internet to extend its reach, Dubai could establish itself as a major educational destination for students from Asia and Africa as well as the rest of the Middle East to come for technical and professional training. It could then provide continuing learning services over the Internet after the students return to their home countries. Once again, Dubai’s growing status as an entertainment and pleasure center might be helpful in attracting both faculty and students from around the world. The bottom line If they play their cards right, Dubai’s leaders could establish their country as much more than a tourism and trading center. Harnessing the capabilities of global technology networks and an innovative insourcing strategy attracting talent from around the world, Dubai could become a global e-business and educational center as well. Dubai’s leaders have the sense of urgency and the ability to think big in their construction projects. The irony is that they just may not be thinking big enough. The formula driving the success of their tourist industry is much more robust than they realize. The tourism industry could serve as a powerful bootstrapping device to position Dubai as a global talent magnet. Sure, it is hot in Dubai but, with some creative promotion, business investment could get a lot hotter – and it is tax free.
  17. U.S. welcomes accord between rival Somali leaders The United States on Thursday welcomed an agreement reached between rival Somali leaders earlier in the day, saying it is a positive step toward ending fighting in the war-ravaged Horn of Africa country. "We believe that this is a positive first step in what will be a long process to bring security and stability to Somalia," deputy State Department spokesman Adam Ereli said at a news briefing. Ereli made the remarks after the Somali interim government and the Islamic Courts Union (ICU) signed an accord for cease-fire, mutual recognition in Khartoum, Sudan during talks sponsored by the Arab League. The Islamic Courts Union seized control of the capital Mogadishu early this month. Somalia has been without a central government since 1991, when warlords first occupied the capital. U.S. forces intervened in 1992 to protect famine aid and withdrew in 1994 after a Mogadishu street battle in which 18 American service members were killed. Washington said earlier this month that it was looking forward to working with groups or individuals who have an interest in a better, more peaceful, more stable, secure Somalia ... who are also interested in fighting terrorism." Source: Xinhua
  18. U.S. welcomes accord between rival Somali leaders The United States on Thursday welcomed an agreement reached between rival Somali leaders earlier in the day, saying it is a positive step toward ending fighting in the war-ravaged Horn of Africa country. "We believe that this is a positive first step in what will be a long process to bring security and stability to Somalia," deputy State Department spokesman Adam Ereli said at a news briefing. Ereli made the remarks after the Somali interim government and the Islamic Courts Union (ICU) signed an accord for cease-fire, mutual recognition in Khartoum, Sudan during talks sponsored by the Arab League. The Islamic Courts Union seized control of the capital Mogadishu early this month. Somalia has been without a central government since 1991, when warlords first occupied the capital. U.S. forces intervened in 1992 to protect famine aid and withdrew in 1994 after a Mogadishu street battle in which 18 American service members were killed. Washington said earlier this month that it was looking forward to working with groups or individuals who have an interest in a better, more peaceful, more stable, secure Somalia ... who are also interested in fighting terrorism." Source: Xinhua
  19. Survey: Muslim women don’t feel oppression They least admire moral decay, promiscuity and pornography in West Muslim women do not mind veil, want to vote as they wish, link sexual equality with the West. NEW YORK - Muslim women do not mind the veil but want to vote as they wish, according to a survey released Thursday, in which respondents did not feel oppression in Muslim countries. Lebanon had the highest proportion of women who feel they should be allowed to make their own decisions on voting, at 97 percent, followed by Egypt and Morocco, each at 95 percent. Lowest was Pakistan, with 68 percent, according to The New York Times reporting on a Gallup poll. None of the 8,000 women surveyed even mentioned the use of the head scarf or the full-lenth burqa in open-ended questions, the Times said. Despite the suffragist leanings, Muslim women set aside their own issues and said their countries had greater problems, such as violent extremism, corruption and lack of unity among Muslim countries. Although women largely said they should be able to work outside the home and serve in the highest levels of government, they linked sexual equality with the West: 78 percent in Morocco, 71 percent in Lebanon and 48 percent in Saudi Arabia, the New York daily reported. However, when asked what they least admired about the West, they said moral decay, promiscuity and pornography, which degraded women. A majority of the women said that economic or political advancement in Muslim countries would not improve with the adoption of Western values, the survey said, according to the New York daily. Face-to-face interviews were conducted among 8,000 women in 2005 for "What Women Want: Listening to the Voices of Muslim Women," part of The Gallup World Poll, a project to canvass 95 percent of the world's people. Overwhelming majorities of the women said the best aspect of their cultures was their countries' "attachment to moral and spiritual values," the Times said of the poll. "Women's empowerment has been identified as a key goal of US policy in the region," said Dalia Mogahed, of The Gallup World Poll. However, Mogahed said that what Muslim women really want has not been plumbed. Egyptian-born Mogahed wears a head scarf, and said that Muslim women have not been brainwashed, according to the Times. She cited as proof statements of the respondents that they deserved certain rights. "In every culture there is a dominant narrative, and in many cases it is constructed by people in power who happen to be men," she was quoted as saying in the Times.
  20. Could Mogadishu Islamic Courts be eligible for the Nobel Peace Prize? By BASHIR GOTH June 22,2006 If impossible is a word to be found only in the dictionary of fools as remarked by Napoleon Bonaparte, the world may see the Somali Islamist fighters of the Union of Islamic Courts in Mogadishu reversing the trend of history by turning tables on advocates of the clash of civilizations, by inventing a new meaning for the concept of Islamism and by becoming alien contenders for the Nobel peace prize. A bizarre idea you may say and I would agree with you as long as you and I are normal people living under normal circumstances. But imagine if you live 15 years in a state of lawlessness where your day starts with death and ends with death, where your only hope in life is to return safely to your family from the shortest trip to the bakery, where you live in constant fear of an imminent rape for the womenfolk of your household, where an hour without seeing a bullet riddled corpse at your doorstep is heaven's gift, where your children's lullaby is the sound of mortar explosions and their sleeping riddles is to compete with each other on figuring out which sound belonged to which gun. Imagine if you live in a city that has been destroyed beyond recognition, where 90 per cent of your neighborhood have either been killed or have left without any hope of returning, where ruthless warlords coercion you and rob you of anything of value that you own, where your relatives, your friends, your childhood classmates have either been murdered, crippled or have died on the high seas while seeking a safer place. Imagine you live in a city where the only familiar sound you hear, reminding you of the good old days and giving you hope for the future is the prayers' call coming from your neighborhood mosque. This farcical situation is the life that millions of Somalis have led since 1991 when the late military dictator Mohahmmed Siyad Barre was driven out of power by a coalition of clan militias in 1991. Ever since, Somalia has fallen into the hands of feuding warlords who have divided the country into fiefdoms. The warlords have not only foiled the only humanitarian mission launched by the United Nations and international community for Somalia in 1992 to secure food supplies for tens of thousands of people trapped in war zones, but have blocked 14 attempts by the international community to restore peace and stability to Somalia. Spreading a culture of gangsterism, big warlords have subcontracted lesser cronies, turning Mogadishu into the largest arms market in the Horn of Africa and a hiding place for terrorism. They made dubious trade deals with international mafia companies that dumped all kinds of hazardous waste in Somalia's territorial waters and coastal areas. In their spree to capitalize on everything including the image and pride of the nation, the warlords have sent gunboats manned by trigger happy young men to the sea to hijack commercial ships, thus making the Somali coasts as one of the most dangerous and piracy infested waters on earth in the 21st century. It is amid this background that Islamic clerics have stepped in to establish Islamic Sharia Courts with the aim of protecting their neighborhoods against the marauding militias of the various warlords. Tired of lawlessness and false hopes on stillborn transitional governments formed in foreign capitals, first in 2000 in Djibouti and in 2004 in Nairobi, the Somali people have found the idea of finding safety in their own neighborhoods, setting up their own bakeries and groceries, sending their children to school albeit Islamic Madrassas, and building their lives and peace in small steps to be more practical and attainable goals than building hopes on the return of a central government and restoration of peace and stability to a country that has been fragmentized beyond reparation. This is how local Imams preaching peace and brotherhood in the familiar language of Islam have won hearts and minds despite the terrorism stigma hanging over them like Damocles sword. Using their greatest credence as dispensers of justice, the Islamic Courts Union (ICU) began asserting their authority in 1999 by taking control of the main market and soon bringing the vital Mogadishu-Afgoi road under their control. As the warlords who held the country hostage for more than 15 years found themselves cornered they cried wolf, succeeding to exploit Washington's paranoia of Islamic extremism in the region. The jubilation of the Somali people at the fall of the warlords from grace that they never earned was no less than the sense of liberation and freedom the people of Romania felt at the ousting and execution of dictator Nicolae Ceausescu, a feeling that the .S.dministration needs to take note. The rise of the Islamists in Mogadishu, however, has sent fears through the region, drawing analogues to the march of the Taliban against the warlords in Afghanistan. These fears, however, are not unfounded as the ICU is not monolithic in its schools of thought and agenda and includes a kaleidoscopic mixture of Islamic movements such as Al Ittihad Al Islami, Al Takfiir Wal Hijra, Al Islah and Al Tabligh. The Al Ittihad Al Islami, an organization suspected by Washington of having links with Al Qaeda, was found to be behind the killings of foreign aid workers in Somaliland, the self-declared state over looking the Gulf of Aden. Armed militants arrested in Hargeisa confessed that they had been taking orders from Ahmed Hashi Ayro, an Afghan trained militant and a senior commander of the ICU forces. Ayro is also accused of being behind the digging up of the old Italian cemetery in Mogadishu and dumping human remains in garbage pits. Another senior ICU commander and head of one of the courts, Sheikh Hassan Dahir Aweys, who is on Washington's wanted list, is also former leader of the Al Ittihad Al Islami. There are also worries that the ICU may whip up Islamic dissent in the hitherto peaceful and stable states of Puntland and Somaliland as well as neighboring Ethiopia, Djibouti and Kenya. Suspicion is also building up that the ICU may re-ignite the old Somali irredentism, thus inciting the sizable Somali populations in Ethiopia and Kenya to take up arms against their governments to realize the dream of greater Somalia. Ethiopia, which is already entan
  21. ma Puntland baa lagu dayanaya? maaha in laga badbadiyo maxaakiimta
  22. Originally posted by Mr. Red Sea: ouch! did you have to remind us that Soo Maal. Never entered, never Qualified for world cup, and according to the report, it's one of the weakest teams around the globe. We have alot to be proud of, don't we Soomalow? Salaam Bro Red sea, Everything you said is true, according to the report Somali team is one of the weakest teams around the world. However, my point is Somali team can improve like Angola; Angola had a civil for over 20 years that ended 2001. According to the report, all the east African teams like Ethiopia, Kenya are also the weakest teams around the world. West Africans outperformed easterners
  23. oog, you seriously need to learn the geography of sool region and Somalia, Laascaanood is the heart of Sool region oog is located in the west end of Sool region, just a few kilometers from caynabo not Laascaanood Laascaanood and oog are on two different districts of Sool region, meaning they are far from each other The relation between Laascaanood and oog/caynabo, is same with the relation between burco and buuhoodle Caynaba? Are you trying to be funny? No one can set foot in Caynaba without the approval of its Mayor, let alone occupy it. No one can set foot in Laascaanood and Buuhoodle without an apporoval of their mayors What stops me from going against the "Lascanood people" if I may ask? I happen to have my own agenda just like they have their own. Your agenda only applies your oog and caynaba It seems that or friend soo maal thinks that Sool is only lived by the "people of Lascanood". I might have to give you a lesson on the composition of the people of Sool some time in the future. Well, my friend you think that Togdheer is lived by the “people of burcoâ€, I think I will teach a lesson on the geography and composition of the people of Sool, Toghdheer and Somalia when you ready Your people of Lascanood are no where to be seen in sizable numbers outwith the Lascanood area. Your claims of being the Sool Sanaag and Cayn people are hidious. Your people of burco are no where to be seen out of burco area. Your claims of being oag, sool, or toghdeer people is unfounded sxb, somali people and whole world knows the position of the majority of population of north central Somalia (sool sanag and cayn), so give me a break because I don’t want to argue about the facts on the ground, and stop your nonsense Its funny man, how can Buhoodle be Cayn when there is already Caynaba! Its does make no sense, How can northwest be Somaliland when there is already Somalia? how can there be frenchland when there is France? how there be Canadian land when there is Canada? how can there be Indianland where is India? After 16 years, the world is against a clan-state Boohoodle is the capital of Cayn region, a new region in Somalia just like Somaliland and puntland Cayn region includes (former buuhoodle district of toghdeer and former caynabo district of sool) Qudhac here we go again, sxb you dont have to regurtitate what you have been told to keep you entertain, there is no garaad for sool and sanaag, and lascanood is the capital of sool and nowhere else, isnt funny you are accusing somaliland of being tribal entity yet everything you argue for (sool sanaad and cayn)is based on tribal entity. and for your information young man ceerigabo is the capital of sanag maybe that’s your case, its you who repeating all the time what you have been told to keep yourself entertain like broken record, soomaalidu waxey dhahaan “Nin waliba waxa uu yahay ayuu ku moodaa.†You shouldn’t be concerned about if there is Garaad of north-central Somalia (SSC), just be concerned about your suldaan To tell the reality, Hergeysa is the capital of woqooyigalbeed and no where else, I am not accusing Somaliland a clan-faction based in hergeysa ( formerly known as SNM) of being tribal entity, the whole world knows that snm – a clan militia unitarily declared Somaliland All I am saying is North central Somalia region is 100% for United Somalia, I am citizen of United Somalia a nation-state for all somali people, and qudhac you are claiming being a citizen of utopia clan-state Somaliland for british subjects sxb waxaa xaqiiq ah, qabiil qaran ma noqdo
  24. Somalia national football team Somalia - Ghana
  25. Abti wiil duco Indhmadoobe inoo ka taliyo mogdisho iyo marka baaba xaqdarro ah, anuu waan ka soo horjeeda in dhul nabada lagu duula, Reer Laascaanood ayaga uun bey u taala inay tashadaan,