Adam

Nomads
  • Content Count

    290
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Adam

  1. ^ what you on about joining the armie in Finland sounds cool , Wonder if you get to shoot a MOose chilling with Sami Nomads . Peacefull nation extreme cold.
  2. ^Guys just to let you know Luiz/Cubano is a Troll who for some reason wanderer from forum to forum obessed with 1977 ColdWar please do not feed him I know this guy you can not reason with him.
  3. ^ Buddy this blog is for the local Somali community under siege in the Syrian conflict alot of SOL'ers will be making Zakat and Sadaqa donations I do hope that they include qaxoonti somaliyeed and make small donation as I know that there are families and children who are starving and have no one to help them. Ruunti Carabta dagta Geeska afriiga waxba igma galiin anigu ummada somali taa heysa igu daran .Tan labaad daqaatirtan aad ka hadleysid meesha waxhey un yimaadey daantoda waayo masr iyo lubnann qof dadkooda mooyaani ee qof kale oo qaxoonti ajinbiga sida suriyaanga loma ogola ino ka shaqayo waa sharci dalal badn oo arabta u yaala amba aduunkakaba. Marka waxan waa siyaasad qoofa marbu ogadaa. Somalida marbey umaduda shaaqada ka hoor sini doonan kuwa ajinabiga .
  4. ^ Haha delete the tribe names buddy haha what happend to We are all togeher the youth must save the nation that went right out the window aboowe ,kkkkk
  5. Geelbeedi, did you watch the clip the lady speaking was only refering to police. With Regards to the African Forces in Somalia , they get paid more than in their own homecountry so im sure they are not in a hurry to go bacck.
  6. <cite> @cubano said:</cite> You are right Somali Army was defeated by Cubans and Soviet Union. Hi Luiz you still obsessed with the 77 ColdWAR . seriously, when will this obsession end luiz???
  7. ^ What 16 year old kid holds a deeply religious conviction , come on buddy we both know these two Kids are naive , lackof commen sense, not worldly travelled see the Syria civil war as their call to change the world and make it more peaceful place. Sadly for these two When reality hits them its too late.. @ Xadbad I know you obsessed with religion but Syrian civil war has many deep underlying reasons, Read this : Drought helped cause Syria’s war. Will climate change bring more like it? http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/wonkblog/wp/2013/09/10/drought-helped-caused-syrias-war-will-climate-change-bring-more-like-it/
  8. How Ironic , reading about the stories of young syrians desperate to get out and make alife and mustaqbal for themselfs. While these muppts and their older brother have decided their future is a bullet in the head by Iranian and Syrian Special Forces.stupid kids reality will hit u like a train .
  9. I think it speaks volume that not one soler has commented on the dangerious situation your fellow country men and women are facing in Syria while some of you are spamming this site with other nations nations wars, solutions and whatnot . How naive of me be to think you the somaal will for once think about you own , for that will be strange of you . Now back to the important stuff , the real humans not the africans they deserve no help nor rememberance .Afterall truth like this is nether fashionable nor " hip" to talk about. You are in my prayers somali refugee community in syria stay strong God will protect you. #notforgotten .
  10. IAN ROBERTSON | QMI AGENCY TORONTO - Where is suspected Somalian war criminal Mohamed Hassan Farah? The federal government - and Toronto-area police - want to know. On Wednesday, a federal source provided photos and backgrounds on Farah, who officials believe is hiding here, plus Atean Al Meliky Kesir Firs, who is said to be in Montreal. Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) documents say they are wanted for violating "human or international rights" under the Crimes Against Humanity and War Crimes Act, or international law. A Canada-wide warrant naming Farah, 56, says he is being sought "for removal because he ... is inadmissible to Canada." A similar warrant names Kesir Firs, 37, claiming he committed war crimes in his native Iraq. The CBSA document includes aliases Bashir Haider, Haider Bashir, Kesir Al Meliky and H. Abed Rashid Bashir. The federal source said Public Safety Minister Vic Toews is expected on Thursday to announce names of 32 wanted foreign fugitives and seek public help to find them. While lauding the decision, David Harris, president of Insignis Research and former Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) planning chief, questioned the delay. "It does remain a mystery why authorities would not long ago have considered doing this in the public interest," he said from Ottawa. "It sounds like, after trying everything else, the government is finally for common sense." Two weeks ago, a CBSA official told the Sun 50 alleged war criminals, plus 1,400 hardened foreign criminals, are wanted as illegal immigrants in the GTA. Many came as refugee claimants from Baltic countries, Africa and Central America, the agency said. When asked to release photos, names and backgrounds on the fugitives, however, officials cited privacy laws that prohibit releasing such details. But a former prosecutor accused the CBSA of stonewalling, saying Privacy Act exceptions permit disclosure of information in some cases. Canadian Police Association head Tom Stamatakis recently joined NDP and Liberal MPs seeking the release of pictures and descriptions when convictions have been registered or there is sufficient evidence to justify charges. The federal source suggested fewer than 50 wanted war criminals are hiding in the GTA, three others in Quebec and several out West. Those involved in war crimes or crimes against humanity "will find no haven" in Canada, the source said. "They will be located and they will face the consequences. "This Conservative government was given a strong mandate to keep Canadians safe, that is why we are ensuring suspected foreign criminals in Canada face justice," the source said.
  11. Tuesday, July 22, 2014 GLASGOW: Jamaican sprint star Usain Bolt and middle-distance king Mo Farah headline a stellar track and field line-up at the Commonwealth Games which start in Glasgow on Wednesday. Bolt, world record holder in both the 100 and 200m as well as double Olympic and world champion, has consistently said since his victories at the Moscow worlds in 2013 that the Commonwealths were his goal, depending on coach Glen Mills' wishes. So the strapping Jamaican, arguably the biggest name in world sport, will be in Scotland to give the biggest boost to an event that draws competitors from 71 nations, mainly former British colonies, in 17 sports. But Bolt, a six-time Olympic gold medallist and making his Commonwealth debut in Glasgow, will likely compete only in the 4x100m relay after missing the Jamaican national championships. "I do not wish to take the place of anyone who qualifies this weekend in an individual event but am available for relay duty if the selectors feel I can be an asset to the Jamaican team in Glasgow," said the 27-year-old, who has missed proposed comeback meets in Ostrava and Paris because of a foot injury. "I have received lots of requests, invitations and messages of support from my fans in Scotland who are looking forward to a great event." What event Bolt will actually race remains to be known, he himself having expressed his desire to race his preferred 200m. Track and field will also boast several other household names, notably Farah, who will compete for England. The Somali-born double Olympic and world 5,000 and 10,000m champion will be going for the double in Scotland's biggest city after a troubled season during which he has suffered abdominal problems. Farah had been undecided about whether to compete after finishing eighth in the London Marathon. But his presence, with the 10,000m final on the opening day, is a fantastic boost for British sport in the wake of the London Olympics, when he won his first gold in an evening session during which Greg Rutherford (long jump) and Jessica Ennis (heptathlon) also triumphed. UK Athletics performance director Neil Black eased fears over Farah's medical issues, insisting last week: "Mo has had some challenges with his health which have all been dealt with and he is now phasing back into full training. "He is really positive about things and he is thinking optimistically about the summer." Other notable athletes on show will include David Rudisha, Kenya's Olympic 800 metres champion and world record holder, and New Zealand's Olympic and world shot put champion Valerie Adams, who is on an unbeaten streak of 53 competitions. Rudisha, on his way back from injury, won the Diamond League meet in Glasgow and while not winning in Monaco last week-coming in sixth, his sub-1:43 time indicates he will be in Scotland for gold. For Kenya, the long distance men's team is hoping to end 12 years of frustration in Glasgow. After dominating both races at the 2002 Games in Manchester, Kenya have since been overshadowed by their Ugandan rivals in the past two Commonwealth Games in Australia and India. They also lost the 2012 London Olympics and 2013 world championships 5000m and 10000m titles to Farah. "We lost the 5,000m and 10,000m in New Delhi four years ago. We cannot make a repeat of the same mistake in Glasgow," Kenya's athletics coach Boniface Tiren told AFP. Bolt's female teammates Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce and Veronica Campbell-Brown, albeit the former solely in the relay, will also be on show at Hampden Park in what promises to be one of the best Commonwealth track and field line-ups in many a year.
  12. Syria strife sends Somali refugees on the run Many are being forced to flee conflict again, years after having sought refuge in Syria from civil war back home. Mona Kosar Abdi Last Modified: 22 May 2013 12:51 Somali refugees in Syria are leaving the country to escape civil war in their new homeland [Getty Images] San Diego, United States - It has been a strenuous 9,000-kilometre journey across the Atlantic to the US for Amal Kahim Jama and her Somali family. Fleeing civil war in Syria, they were recently forced to leave everything behind and rebuild their lives - yet again. Buildings she used to walk by in the heart of the Syrian capital, Damascus, have been reduced to rubble: a vestige of what once was a vibrant metropolis. It is an all too familiar image for Jama and the thousands of Somalis who fled to Syria in the 1990s to escape their own civil war. Jama and her five children left the capital Mogadishu in 2005. As threats to their safety increase, the wait to be transferred to another host country for the second time is raising fear and uncertainty among the Somali community in Syria. "We were welcomed in Syria. It was a great place for the Somali people," Jama said, recalling a time of peace and stability. "The kids were enrolled in school and there were no problems. Life was normal." We can't forget about them, we need to help them. They have nowhere to go. Amal Kahim Jama, Somali refugee That recollection stands in sharp contrast to the violence that has engulfed Syria over the past two-plus years. Her homeland, meanwhile, has been plagued by fighting for the past 20 years, though a relative calm has recently prevailed. Since the ousting of former dictator Siad Barre in 1991, Somalia has been viewed by the international community as a failed state. The armed conflict has put civilians in the middle of the clash between rival warlords, the interim government, and al-Shabaab fighters with ties to al-Qaeda. Jama said she and her family were relocated to Syria, where visas were not required for citizens from Arab League nations. However, one drawback was that the Syrian government did not grant work permits to the refugees. In recent reports, the UNHCR documented 3,000 registered Somalis living in Syria - a decline from the previous 5,000 registered before the onset of the armed conflict. "The Somali community in Syria consists mostly of women and children. Although some are fortunate enough to receive remittances from their families living abroad, the rest of us rely on aid from the UN," explained Jama, who now lives in San Diego, California. Their limited sources of income were all they had to buy food and pay rent, but the Somali refugees did have access to higher education. Another Somali who fled the Syrian conflict, 26-year-old Zahra Mohamed, lived in Syria since she was five-years old. She fled to Damascus with her grandmother, mother and four younger siblings in 1992. Mohamed left Damascus for the first time in 2012 as the violence escalated. She said leaving behind friends she cared deeply about brought great sadness, even as she settled into her new life in sunny San Diego. "I can't be happy without feeling guilty. Just thinking about them [friends and neighbours] takes away my happiness … I pray for my neighbour of 20 years every day," said Mohamed. She said she never thought the conditions, similar to those that forced her family to flee Somalia, would also drive them out of Syria - the country she calls home. Mohamed didn't graduate university, leaving the country before completing her final semester. But what is most troubling for her is the thought of what is happening to the "good people of Syria", she said. Bob Montgomery is the executive director of the International Rescue Committee in San Diego, which relocated Mohamed and her family and helped them settle into life in the United States. "There certainly is a traumatic impact on people who have suffered and been through such an experience," Montgomery told Al Jazeera. "There are still people there that are pending to come to the United States. A lot of them have to lay low until it is time for them to leave." Escalating violence According to the UNHCR, "the incidence and severity of security and protection incidents affecting refugees rose perceptibly in mid-2012, with reported killings, kidnappings, domestic violence, threats, and harassment". Jama recalled when the violence directly affected a prominent member of the Somali community named Abukar. "He was with his young son and daughter when a nail bomb exploded," she said. The shrapnel from the bomb killed Abukar and seriously wounded his two children. The rebellion to overthrow Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's regime has forced more than one million Syrians to seek refuge elsewhere. But the lack of travel documents has prevented Somalis from entering neighbouring countries in order to escape the violence. And returning home is still a difficult option. Despite the formation of a new government in 2012, the UNHCR has stated: "Somalia may not yet be fully conducive for returns." Spotlight In-depth coverage of escalating violence across Syria As remaining Somali families wait to be relocated, others have become internally displaced as a result of the civil war. Somalis living in remote parts of Syria were forced to congregate in the Masaken Barzeh neighbourhood on the outskirts of Damascus, where the vast majority of Somali refugees are now concentrated. According to UNHCR spokesperson Adrian Edwards, a minibus carrying a Somali refugee family of 11 were caught in crossfire on the way to the village of Hurnah, while attempting to flee the conflict in the southern town of Menin. A nine-year-old boy was rescued by a group of Syrian men and taken to the Somali community in Hurnah. He is believed to be the only surviving member of his family. In August, the Syrian Arab Red Crescent relocated 70 Somali refugees from Hurnah to live with Somali host families in Masaken Barzeh. However, the burden has become too much as the number of internally displaced Somali refugees increases. There were even reported cases by the UNHCR of Somali families being evicted by landlords for hosting displaced refugees. Exodus to Turkey Because of the drawn-out response from the UNHCR and the sharp rise of violence in Syria, any attempts to enter Turkey - legal or illegal - is a risk Somalis are willing to take instead of idly waiting. With just the clothes on their backs, countless Somalis left behind what took them more than two decades to establish, and embarked on the arduous journey to the Turkish border to seek asylum. Jama is also concerned for the wellbeing of her Somali neighbour who still remains in Syria. She said the neighbour's 21-year-old son died after the Syrian government allegedly detained him and two other Somali men. Many are fleeing the violence to refugee camps [Getty Images] The 21-year-old diabetic was denied the medication he regularly took to control his disease. He died in the arms of his friend while in captivity, Jama's neighbour told her. "His mother wasn't allowed to give him a proper burial," Jama said. In the weeks before she left Syria, daily life was becoming an eerie reminder of the conditions that forced her to leave Mogadishu. "Food must be purchased during the day. It doesn't matter if you're Syrian or Somali, the streets are empty by 6pm," said Jama. "The fighting erupts in the late hours of the night and is at its worst on the weekend." Fortunately for Jama and her family, the UNHCR was able to relocate them to the United States, but she said it is imperative to help Somalis stranded in Syria. In December, the UN-Arab League envoy to Syria, Lakhdar Brahimi, warned the international community against the threat of Syria becoming the "new Somalia," if the civil war failed to subside. "We can't forget about them, we need to help them," said Jama. "They have nowhere to go."
  13. ^ It was Holac whom I Assume is From Reer Somalia who posted this. However the question is still very relevant why does the Moqadishu Goverment need to appointment this international criminal as the somalia national police and what message will this send to neighbouring countries and the international community. Also will this criminal with innocent blood in his hands bring peace to Moqadishu somalia or will he continue his killing spree this time among the civilians of Moqadishu after all you cant teach an old dog new tricks .
  14. @ Gooni - only a walewyn will publicly no shame and regret support international criminals as their leaders . I call them cursed people , both in this world and in the herafter. Aslong as you stay in this kfra path may you and your children be punished continouesly .
  15. Loooolz what a mug picture , respect to the dad.
  16. Very interesting ? I even see Old Ma Tuke on the list of criminals . Good old siyadest you Allways Know where you have them killing innocent women , children and old men. And in SOL we have people asking why peace is not coming to them look at this video and know Alllah is punishing you communist criminals then its right to Hellfire / Jahanaba .
  17. ^ maybe its you who is wrong anyway opinions differ as they should , and good to know my old pal The Xaaji is off for tarawex and taguda prayers ninko ileen waaba sheikh weeyn bal nossoo Duceey Xaajow . Hawdi Nabaddoon
  18. ^ always looking back to the days when reer Jerberti where robbing the national treasure somaha , sweet days eaten Italian Galato and you were given the key Ministries kkkkkk kibir waa lagu kufaa is an old somali saying how true , now enjoy the fish in benderqassim Booowe .
  19. @Smartie , what in gods name are you on about ? Whaat ! Yaaab. SOL has lately become a place for bored teenagers to write what they want just to pass time until afuur. How lame .dhibta naga daa ciyaal diassboroow. Z
  20. Yes Alx we are in the last 10 days of ramadan and alot of people are rightfully taken advantage of this situation and increaasing their prayers in this holy magnificient month. So to keep it short where is Xaaji Xaanjuf the elderly LOng time SOL member ? Give us a shout out old boy - Hawdi Nabadoon
  21. This is a funny little story I heard the other day so im gonna share , It goes like this . Bariga daalka laga qaxeey in 91 diyaarda Luftaansa ( Lufthansa) waxey kaso qaadey somali badan Xamar oo keenty Jarmalka , raaag asaaxba ah baa dowaladu jarmalu seeesy ogolasho inad daalkas dagaan amin galy oogeed. Kadib ragi baa lacag yar oo qaxoonti lasee yey kkkk weey tagin supermarketka suuqa markaeeey kadib hilib bisada so iibsadeen , oo eey cuniin weeyna dargeen oo si fcn uu dargeen kkkkkk kadib marki hungri ka damaatey bacda 3 week baa mid ka mida ax raggi xanaaqy oo yidne waaryadheeen hoyadeen wasa waar hilib aad malin kasto bariisga nogu dareeysaan waa horta ma Xalaal baa, ragii kale asxabti baa u jawabeey oo ku yidhe waarya Sheikh Saif laboodw ma markaad daragtey baad anig cuntady ka kibirty kkkkkkkkkk the moral of story horta maku jidhko ku nuuro oo calsho ku buxnaado Baa laga fikira waxan ma xalal baa mise was xaaramm. Kkkkkkkkhhjj. Note another version i heard waxu aha hilib Eey both story are funny lkn not truee . Illah dambigooda ha daafo kkkkkkkkkk
  22. This man is racist little bastard , a coward and is rightfully fired. What he needs now is a good beating to cut his fuck face down and break his little legs. I loved to do kickboxing on him until his blue and yellow . Nabadoon Hawdi Kickboxer and 6.3 / 100 kg Angry black man .