Daqane

Nomads
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Everything posted by Daqane

  1. Al-Hindi plaza hotel [Hamarweyne] [Hilarious video] " frameborder="0" allowfullscreen>
  2. Ilaa 2 Garoon oo waaweyn ayuu Turkiga hada ka dhisayaa agagaarka Garoonka diyaaradaha, waxaana uu ugu tala galay ineey ku ciyaaraan dhalinyarada dagan Nawaaxiga Eelaboorka ilaa deegaan weeynaha Madiina.
  3. A tuk-tuk ride most expensive $1 closer areas 2,000 - 3,500 Somali shillings depending on how good you bargain it seems they are quite popular for a couple of reason 1/ cheaper versions of hooyo-iga-qaari and its seems since most Somali ladys are blessed with considerable seating allowance a small scooter might not be sufficient to transport the necessary tonnage. Another new taxi company in Xamar City taxi service..
  4. At the south africa rally near daljirka dahsoon
  5. Dayactir laga bilaaby waddada Makkah Al Mukarramah.
  6. Dayactir ka socda waddada sodonka ee dagmada Hoolwadaag.
  7. Opening of the renovated Suuqa bacadlaha The Mayor H.E Tarzan arriving at the venue The guest of honor Interior Minister Abdikarim Gulled cutting the ribbon
  8. xiinfaniin;961568 wrote: Carafaat the SOL kid, The conference in Mogadishu is nothing more than a face saving exit for the federal government to step back and let Jubbaland be. Ahmed Madoobe will participate in it as a the dully elected president of Jubbaland , Faroole will be there as well . So if there is any disappointment with respect to this, it is NOT mine . I am content with with Jubbaland status under the circumstances. The political conflict between Jubbaland and Mogadishu was never about opposing Hassan's government. It was about defending the federal political framework ...and on that account , the president has been humbled. Lool hot air as usual....your ilks theivery is not working xiin, and the very same mogadishu confrence you were swearing like an inebriated sailor would never happen, is going to happen and the legitimate and free residents of the three provinces of jubba will take part, and as for madoobe being there as a "legitimate" president so will hiiraale, basto, and which ever other warlord will care to join , spin as you wish as that is the only thing you or the shop keepers you represent can do in their effiminate rage, lakiin the machine called SFG is grinding on....oh and please add the usual buraanbuur in your reply
  9. Congratulations to them a peacefull election, peacefull tranfer of power.
  10. Emergency Services Drill Operation in Somalia's capital lnvolving the Somali police, Ambulance, and Fire Service
  11. H.E President Hassan meets with the new UNSOM director british diplomat Nicholas Kay at the Villa Somalia
  12. Renovation of the fish market Al Fajri school
  13. Maamulka Gobolka Shabellaha Hoose ayaa sheegay in la dhameystiray qorshayaashii lagu weerari lahaa deegaanada gobolkaas ay kaga sugan yihiin Xarakada Shabaab. Gudoomiyaha Gobolka Shabellaha Hoose C/qaadir Maxamed Nuur (Siidii) oo la hadlay mid ka mid ah idaacadaha Muqdisho ayaa sheegay in dhowaan ciidamada dowladda iyo AMISOM ay ku wajahan yihiin degmada Baraawe. "Baraawe ayaa kulaaleynaa mar dhow, saraakiishii waa diyaariyeen qidadii dagaalka, taangiyadii iyo hubkii kuli waa la diyaariyay"ayuu yiri C/qaadir Siidii. Waxaa uu sheegay in ciidamada AMISOM ee ka kala soda Brundi iyo Uganda ay u diyaarsan yihiin sidii Shabaab uga saari lahaayeen deegaanada ka harsan Gobolka sida uu yiri. Ciidamada dowladda iyo kuwa AMISOM ayaa maalmihii u dambeeyay dhaq dhaqaaqyo ciidan ka waday qeybo ka mid ah ah Gobolka, waxaana la arkayay gawaarida gaashaaman iyo dabaabadaha oo ka baxayay Muqdisho, kuwaasoo ku sii jeeday deegaanada. Xarakada Al-Shabaab ayaa lagala wareegay deegaano ka tirsan Shabellaha Hoose, sida xarunta gobolka ee Marka, Afgooye. iyo deegaano iyo tuulooyin kale. Somali news leader www.jowhar.com jowharcom@hotmail.com
  14. By LIAM STACK Saturday, June 08, 2013 Egypt’s president, Mohamed Morsi, had some important information to share with a room full of politicians who, believing they were in a secret meeting, had just laid out all the covert ways that their country could stop a Nile River dam project in nearby Ethiopia: they were on live television. Mr. Morsi convened a meeting of political leaders from both Islamist and secular parties on Monday to discuss the potential impact of a proposed Ethiopian dam on Egypt, which views access to the waters of the Nile as a vital national interest. Unaware that their words were being broadcast live on a state-owned television channel, many of those seated around the table said the dam was in fact a secret American and Israeli plot to undermine Egypt that must be stopped at all costs. Excerpts from the meeting were posted to YouTube on Wednesday by the Middle East Media Research Institute, an organization that monitors the Arabic-language media and was founded by a former Israeli intelligence officer. Mr. Morsi broke the news to the gathered politicians after Magdi Hussein, the leader of the Islamic Labor Party, proposed that the men gathered around the table vow not to leak any information from their meeting to the news media. All information must first go through Pakinam el-Sharkawy, he said, one of Mr. Morsi’s top aides. I’m very fond of battles. With the enemies, of course, with America and Israel, but this battle must be waged with maximum judiciousness and calm. Even though this is a secret meeting we must all take an oath not to leak anything to the media unless it is done officially by Sister Pakinam. We need an official plan for popular national security, even if we did … At that point, someone off camera then handed Mr. Hussein a note, which he studied for a moment before chuckling and quickly changing his tone. “O.K. Fine. It’s good that you told me,” he said. “The principles behind what I’m saying are not really secret. Our battle is with America and Israel, not with Ethiopia. Therefore, engaging in battle, this is my opinion … ” Mr. Morsi then interrupted him, “This meeting is being aired live on TV.” The men seated around the long table burst into laughter, as Mr. Hussein, who less than a minute earlier had earnestly described the gathering as a “secret meeting,” began to backtrack with a hint of embarrassment in his voice. “I am not presenting a secret plan or anything,” he said, as the other politicians continued to laugh. “All countries do what I am saying and what has been said by others. All countries with regional interests do that.” Off camera, someone can be heard saying, “Why didn’t you tell me that earlier?” Earlier in the meeting, the assembled politicians proposed a number of ways that Egypt could attempt to stop the dam project. Some were relatively benign, like organizing artistic and cultural exchanges between the two countries. Others were hostile and clandestine, like arming rebels to fight against Ethiopia’s government or instructing Egyptian spies to simply destroy the dam altogether. Younis Makhyon, a senior member of the ultraconservative Salafi Nour Party, said he believed that the United States and Israel were secretly behind the dam project and “would use it as a lethal bargaining chip to pressure Egypt.” But not everyone at the meeting was opposed to the idea of foreign countries intervening in the domestic affairs of others. “We should intervene in their domestic affairs,” said Ayman Nour, a liberal politician jailed under the former President Hosni Mubarak’s regime. Mr. Nour proposed exploiting political rivalries in Ethiopian society as a cost-effective way to fend off the danger of the dam. He also proposed that instead of attacking Ethiopia, Egypt could leak false “intelligence information” to the news media suggesting that such an attack was imminent. By airing his proposal in front of a live television camera, Mr. Nour may have unwittingly done just that. Saad El-Katatni, a leader of the Muslim Brotherhood’s political wing and a longtime lawmaker who served as speaker of the country’s first post-Mubarak parliament, told the gathering that the government had to prepared to do anything “in order to protect our water security, because for us, water security is a matter of life and death.” Last week, Ethiopia began diverting water to begin construction of a large hydroelectric dam called the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam, which is expected to produce 6,000 megawatts of electricity. Ethiopian officials have said it will not be used for agriculture and so it should not substantially decrease the amount of water available to downstream countries like Egypt and Sudan. The Nile is a vital lifeline for Egypt. Egyptian agriculture is wholly dependent upon the river and the vast majority of the country’s population lives along its banks, but the question of who has a right to the water has long been contentious. Under an agreement negotiated during the colonial era, Egypt is entitled to the majority of the water. Sudan is entitled to a significantly smaller share, but Ethiopia, home to the source of 85 percent of the Nile, is entitled to nothing, as are the other seven countries along the its path. Source: NY Times