Deeq A.

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  1. Ra’iisul Wasaaraha xukuumadda Federaalka Soomaaliya Maxamed Xuseen Rooble ayaa maanta furay Madasha Arrimaha Bani’aadminimada ee Soomaaliya oo ay soo qaban qaabishay Wasaaradda Gargaarka iyo Maareynta Masiibooyinka ee dalka. Madashan oo ay ka soo qeyb galeen wakiillada Beesha Caalamka iyo Hay’adaha gargaarka ka shaqeeya ayuu Ra’iisul Wasaare Rooble ka sheegay in roobabkii la filayay ee baaqday ay sababeen cunto yari iyo abaaro, taas oo keentay xaalad bani’aadminimo oo sii xumaaneysa. Ra’iisul Wasaare Rooble ayaa ugu baaqay Shacabka Soomaaliyeed, Beesha Caalamka iyo Hay’adaha gargaarku in ay gurmad deg deg ah la gaaraan dadka ay abaaruhu saameeyeen,si looga hortago macluul la mid ah tii dalka ka dhacday sanadkii 2011. PUNTLAND POST The post Ra’iisul wasaare Rooble oo daah-furay Madasha Banii’aadanimada Soomaaliya appeared first on Puntland Post.
  2. Dhuusamareeb (Caasimada Online) – Guddiga hirgelinta doorashada ee dowlad goboleedka Soomaaliyeed ee Galmudug ayaa soo saaray jadwalka doorashada labada kursi ee ka harsan Golaha Aqalka Sare ee Soomaaliya ee ka imaanaya dhinaca maamulkaasi. Warqad kasoo baxday guddiga ayaa waxaa lagu sheegay in maanta ay bilaabaneyso diiwaan-gelinta xubnaha musharixiinta, isla-markaana ay beri ku eg-tahay. Sidoo kale guddiga doorashada Galmudug ayaa shaaca ka qaaday in hadal jeedinta iyo doorashada ay dhici doonto 13-ka bishan November oo ku beegan Sabtida soo socota. Jadwalkan ayaa ku soo aadayo, iyada oo xalay Qoor Qoor uu soo saaray liiska afar musharrax u tartamaya labada kursi ee haatan ku harsan dowlad goboleedka Galmudug. Labadan kursi ayaa waxaa ku tartamaya 1. Cabdi Xasan Cawaale (Qaybdiid), Cawil Nuur Cali, 2. Cabdi Cismaan Xareed iyo Mahad Aadan Guuleed. Qabashada doorashada labadan kursi ayaa sidoo kale dhammeystir u noqon doonto doorashada xubnaha Golaha Aqalka Sare ee Baarlamaanka Soomaaliya. Si kastaba, waxaa haatan la guda-galay oo billow ah doorashada Golaha Shacabka oo aad uga culus mida Aqalka Sare, waxaana xildhibaankii soo dooran doono illaa 101 ergo ah. The post Goorma ayey dhaceysaa doorashada kuraasta Aqalka Sare ee ku haray Galmudug? appeared first on Caasimada Online.
  3. Xukuumadda Puntland ayaa mar kale ku celisay in aysan qayb ka ahayn fulinta Sharciga Shidaalka Soomaaliya oo la saxiixay 10 February 2020. Puntland waxay sheegtay in Sharcigaas aanu waafaqsanayn Dastuurka KMG ah ee dowladda Federaalka Soomaaliya hannaanka qaybsiga Khayraadka dalka oo aan weli laga heshiin. War-saxaafadeed ka soo baxay Puntland ayay uga digtay dowladda Federaalka Soomaaliya in ay wakhtigan kala guurka ah gasho heshiisyo lagu xaraashayo Khayraadka waddanka. Sidoo kale Shirkadaha Caalamiga ah ayay uga digtay in aysan heshiis ku saabsan Khayraadka la gelin dowladda Federaalka ee mudda xileedkeedu dhammaaday. PUNTLAND POST The post Puntland oo digniin adag ka soo saartay dhaqan-gelinta Sharciga Shidaalka Soomaaliya appeared first on Puntland Post.
  4. Qaramada Midoobay ayaa shaacisay in Lix iyo toban ka mid ah shaqaalaheeda lagu xiray magaalada Addis ababa ee caasimadda dalka Itoobiya. Stephane Dujarri, oo ah afhayeen u hadlay Qaramada Midoobay ayaa warbaahinta u sheegay in QM ay la shaqeyneyso dowladda Itoobiya si loo sii daayo howla wadeenadooda. “Ma jirto, inta aan ogahay, wax sharraxaad ah oo nalaga siiyay sababta ay shaqaalahan u xiran yihiin,” ayuu sidoo kale warbaahinta u sheegay Afhayeenka u hadlay Qaramada Midoobay. Itoobiya ayaa sidoo kale dhamaadkii bishii Sebtembar amartay in dalkeeda ay isaga baxaan todobo ka mid ah howl wadeenada Qaramada Midoobay oo ay ku eedeysay in ay faragelin ku hayaan arrimaheeda gudaha. Tan iyo markii bishaan oo kale sanadkii hore dalka Itoobiya uu ka bilaabmay dagaalka u dhaxeeya TPLF iyo xukuumadda uu hogaamiyo ra’iisul wasaaraha Itoobiya Abiy Ahmed ayaa waxaa soo baxayay baaqyo loo dirayo dowladda Itoobiya oo ku aaddan in dagaalka wadahadal lagu dhameeyo. Afhayeenka Wasaaradda Arrimaha Dibedda ee Mareykanka Ned Price ayaa sheegay in Washington ay ka warqabto warbixinnada ku saabsan xarigga ayna u aragto inay kuwa caburin ah. “Waxaan si cad u cambaareynay ceyrintii hore ee saraakiisha Qaramada Midoobay ee Itoobiya, waxaan si la mid ah u cambaareyn dooneyna xarigga xubnaha shaqaalaha Qaramada Midoobay ” Price ayaa u sheegay suxufiyiinta Talaadadii. Xariga Addis Ababa ayaa daba socday markii lagu dhawaaqay lix bilood oo xaalad degdeg ah oo dalka oo dhan ah todobaadkii hore ka dib markii dagaalyahanada Tigreega iyo Oromada ay sheegteen horumarro waaweyn oo dhulka ah, taasoo sare u qaaday cabsida laga qabo inay socod ku tagaan Addis Ababa. Kooxda TPLF iyo xulafadeeda, ciidanka Xoraynta Oromada (OLA) ayaa guulo kala duwan kasoo hooyay todobaadyadii lasoo dhaafay, iyagoo qabsaday magaalooyin qiyaastii 400km u jira caasimada, waxa ayna sidoo kale sheegeen in ay qorsheynayaan in ay dhawaan la wareegaan magaalada Caasimadda ah ee Addis ababa ee dalka Itoobiya. Goobjoog News Source: goobjoog.com
  5. Ra’iisul wasaaraha xukuumadda federaalka Soomaaliya Maxamed Xuseen Rooble ayaa kulan dhanka fogaan aragga ah la qaatay xubnaha guddiyada doorashooyinka heer federaal iyo heer maamul. Rooble ayaa ugu baaqay in guddiyada ay dardargeliyaan howlaha doorashada dalka si looga baxo hubanti la’aanta dalka. Wasiirka koowaad ee dalka ayaa sidoo kale faray guddiyada in ay doorashada golaha shacabka ku soo gabagabeeyaan ka hor dhamaadka sanadkaan. “Ra’iisul Wasaaraha Xukuumadda Federaalka Soomaaliya Mudane Maxamed Xuseen Rooble ayaa faray Guddiyada Doorashada Heer Federaal iyo Heer Dowlad-goboleed in ay sida ugu dhaqsiyaha badan u bilaabaan doorashada Xildhibaannada Golaha Shacabka, ayna soo gebogebeeyaan ugu dambeyn dhammaadka bisha December 2021”, ayaa lagu yiri qoraal ka soo baxay Xafiiska ra’iisul wasaaraha dalka. Goobjoog News Source: goobjoog.com
  6. Maamulka Puntland ayaa ka soo horjeystay shirka shidaalka ee ka socda dalka Imaaradka Carabta kaas oo ay Soomaaliya ka qeyb galeyso. Puntland ayaa sheegaty in sharciga shidaalka Soomaaliya uusan jirin iyadoo ku tilmamtay sharcigii shidaalka in uu yahay mid baal marsan dastuurka dalka. Dowlad gobaleedka Puntland ayaa sidoo kale war-saxaafadeed ay soo saartay uga digtay in ay shirkadaha shidaalka caalamiga ah ay soomaaliya heshiis la gaaraan. Hoos ka akhriso war-saxaafadeedka Puntland Source: goobjoog.com
  7. Madaxweynaha dowlad gobaleedka Galmudug Axmed Cabdi Kaariye Qoor-Qoor ayaa shaaciyay liiska laba kursi oo ka mid ah kuraasta aqalka sare galmudug ay ku leedahay. Qoor-Qoor oo in mudda ah ku dhaganaa magacaabista xubnaha liiskan ayaa ugu dambeyn ku dhawaaqay Musharixiinta labadaan kursi. Kursiga koowaad ayaa waxaa ku tartamaya labada musharax ee kala ah Cabdi Xasan Cawaale(Qaybdiid) iyo Cawil Nuur Cali, halka kursiga kale ay ku tartamayaan musharixiinta kala ah Cabdi Cismaan Xareed iyo Mahad Aadan Guuleed. Labada kursi ayaa buuxin doonto lix kursi oo horay galmudug ay u dooratay kuwaas oo aqalka sare ku matali doona maamulkaas. Source: goobjoog.com
  8. Muqdisho (Caasimada Online) – Xisbiga Garsoor ee uu guddoomiyaha ka yahay Xildhibaan Zakariye Xaaji Cabdi oo kamid ah musharixiinta u taagan xilka madaxweynimo ee Soomaaliya ayaa war-saxaafadeed kasoo saaray diyaaradihii Dron-ka ahaa ee lagu qabtay Garoonka Diyaaradaha ee Aadan Cadde. War-saxaafadeedka kasoo baxay xisbiga ayaa lagu caddeeyey in nooca diyaaradaha ee Shirkadda Hufan ay dalka keentay ay noocoodu ahaayeen DJI P4 Multispectral RTK Drone. Shaqada loogu talagalay in lagu qabto Diyaaradahaan ayaa lagu sheegay inay tahay buufinta cayayaanka beeraha, Sahminta dhul beereedyada, Lasocodka xaaladda dalagga iyo Waraabinta beeraha. “Xisbiga Garsoor wuxuu caddeynayaa in Danaha laga leeyahay la-wareegidda iyo xoog ku qabsashada hantidaas ay leedahay shirkadda Hufan ay ka danbeeyaan dano siyaasadeed oo looga gol leeyahay in musharax Madaxweyne Dr. Zakariye Mohamud Haji Abdi oo ah musharraxa kaliya ee ugu rajada fiican xilka Madaxweyninmo ee dalka lagu dhaawaco hankiisa siyaasadeed sidoo kale, waxaa jira cadow shisheeye oo ay ugu horreeyaan kooxda TPLF ee gabalkoodu dhacay iyo xukuumadda Kenya oo dabada ka riixaya si mansabka iyo magaca musharrax madaxweyne Dr. Zakariye Maxamud Xaji Cabdi loo baabi’iyo,” ayaa lagu yiri war-saxaafadeedka kasoo baxay xisbiga. “Waxaa illaah mahadii ah in shacbiga Soomaaliyeed ay ka dharagsanyihiin falalka gurracan ee xukuumaddi afartii sano ee lasoo dhaafay dalka hogaamineysay kula kacdey siyaasiintii hore, kuwi harayna ay maanta kusoo khatintay,” ayaa sidoo kale lagu yiri qoraalka. Halkaan hoose ka akhriso qoraalka iyo baaqa kasoo baxay xisbiga BAAQ FURAN: Xisbiga Garsoor wuxuu ugu baaqayaa shacbiga soomaaliyeed inaan marna la aqbalin in dadka haldoorka ah ee danahooda siyaasadeed ka shaqeynaya kana hor taagan wadamada iyo kooxaha shisheeye ee caadeystay guumeysiga iyo gumaadka shacbiga soomaaliyeed aan hortooda lagu magac dilin taasna ay si wadajir ah uga hor yimaadaan ugana dhiidhiyaan. Xisbiga Garsoor wuxuu ugu baaqayaa shaqsiyaadka beryahan u durbaan tumayay soo noolaanshaha TPLF inay ka waantoobaan lashaqeynta cadowga soomaaliyeed taas badalkeedana aysan magac dilin Haldoorradooda geesiyada ah. Xisbiga Garsoor wuxuu Madaxweynaha waqtigiisu dhamaadey ugu baaqayaa in si degdeg ah uu ugu soo celiyo gacanta shirkadda Hufan hantidii ay xukuumaddiisu si aan sharciga waafaqsaneyn ula wareegtay dhawaantan. Xisbiga Garsoor wuxuu ugu baaqayaaa taageerayaasha xisbiga Garsoor iyo Taageerayaasha Musharraxa madaxweyne Zakariye Maxamuud Xaaji Cabdi inay iska kaashadaan inay ka hortagaan been abuurka baraha bulshada ay ku faafinayaan kooxo caadadoodu ay ahayd afarti sano ee ina dhaaftay sumacad dilka iyo aflagaadeynta Madaxda ay u arkaan inay ka maskax iyo taageerro sarreeyaan kuwa talada markaas haya. Ugu danbeyn, Waxaan ku kalsoonnahay in sida sharciga waafaqsan ay kusoo idlaan doonto xaaladda ay abuurtay xukuumaddan islamarkaana ay cadaalad heli doonto Shirkadda Hufan oo qalabkeedii si sharci darro ah ay u afduubatay Xukuumadda uu hogaamiyo Madaxweyne Farmaajo. Wabillaaaahi Towfiiq The post Wararkii ugu dambeeyey ee muranka diyaaradihii drone-ka ee lagu qabtay Muqdisho appeared first on Caasimada Online.
  9. By: Morgan Riley, Acting Head, British Office Hargeisa On the 1st and 2nd November, 120 world leaders gathered in Glasgow for the most important international climate negotiations yet. COP26 is the biggest diplomatic event the UK has hosted since the Second World War and the commitments made will be critical to limiting global warming and protecting Somaliland, the region, and the whole world from this existential crisis. The UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s latest report states that the consequences of the current global warming crisis are largely irreversible, and extreme events like drought and floods will become even more common. For Somaliland, the devastating impacts of climate change are a daily reality. Over the past year alone, the failed rains, severe floods and locust swarms have destroyed crops and livelihoods for hundreds of thousands of people in Somaliland. The loss of rain-fed pasture is threatening the survival of livestock which is the foundation of many Somalilanders’ livelihoods. Already many people have to travel long distances in search of water and pasture for their animals. This is happening despite Somaliland and the region bearing almost none of the historic responsibility for global emissions. This is grossly unfair. With UK hosting COP26, we are keeping the region’s climate needs front and centre and we are working to ensure the needs of vulnerable communities in Somaliland are recognised and addressed. The UK has invested £20m to increase the availability of clean, affordable and renewable energy. Our investments in the construction of hybrid mini-grids in Badhan, Berbera, Borama, Buhodle, Burao, Erigavo, Gabiley and Sheikh have increased Somaliland’s generating capacity by 1.9 MW, and reduced reliance on diesel power generation. This has cut carbon emissions by 2900 tonnes of CO2 equivalent annually and enabled electricity service providers (ESPs) to lower their tariffs by an average of 42% across Somaliland. The access to more affordable energy delivered through this project is helping people to connect, businesses to grow and social institutions to improve their services. For example, a Hargeisa-based baker who was previously paid $400 a month on electricity is now paying half of that. From regularly switching off air conditioning and security lights to reduce overheads and working at night when rates were cheaper, the bakery is now employing more staff and increasing production of higher-margin products during daylight hours. The potential of renewable energy generation in Somaliland is huge, and there is no better time to switch to renewable energy for not only a better economy but a safer planet. Those ESPs who already started to generate a significant share of their electricity from renewable energy deserve the highest commendation. Climate change affects people’s access to goods and services. The UK is supporting infrastructure in Somaliland to ensure that ordinary people from across the region benefit from economic development. The UK-funded Hargeisa bypass has been designed to ensure it is resistant to shocks and uses materials that do not damage the environment. Our investments in urban water supplies, critical access routes, ports and agricultural development through the Somaliland Development Fund are all designed to increase Somaliland’s resilience to climate change. There is also much that can be achieved at a local level. The use of charcoal for cooking encourages the cutting of trees and leads to a grave environmental degradation which in turn impairs the pastoral economy. Alternative sources of cooking energy, like gas, are indispensable. As part of the transition a shift to more sustainable forms of charcoal production, making use of harmful invasive species like garanwaa for example, can also be part of the solution here. Somaliland’ enforcement of a ban on plastic bags will help curb plastic pollution. We have been doing our bit at the British Office Hargeisa by transitioning to the use of renewable water bottles to curb our usage of single use plastic. We also salute the efforts of Somaliland’s newly elected mayor to clean up the urban environment. COP 26 continues this week, concluding on Friday. Many important commitments have already been made, including:Over 130 countries covering more than 90% of the world’s forests have endorsed the Glasgow Leaders’ Declaration on Forests & Land Use committing to work collectively to halt and reverse forest loss and land degradation by 2030. A 190-strong country coalition agreed to both phase out coal power and end support for new coal power plants. Over $130 trillion of private finance is now aligned to science-based net zero targets and near-term milestones, through the Glasgow Financial Alliance for Net Zero. Almost 90% of global emissions and over 90% of global GDP are now covered by mid-century net zero or carbon neutrality commitments. Leaders have made clear their expectation that COP26 should accelerate action by 2030: a successful conclusion to COP 26 negotiations is now needed to support this, with negotiators working together to accelerate climate action in this crucial decade. Glasgow needs to deliver for Somalilanders, the region and the world. Join us in calling for greater action at COP26 this week to make a difference. Entertainment Sports Business The UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s latest report states that the consequences of the current global warming crisis are largely irreversible, and extreme events like drought and floods will become even more common. For Somaliland, the devastating impacts of climate change are a daily reality. Over the past year alone, the failed rains, severe floods and locust swarms have destroyed crops and livelihoods for hundreds of thousands of people in Somaliland. The loss of rain-fed pasture is threatening the survival of livestock which is the foundation of many Somalilanders’ livelihoods. Already many people have to travel long distances in search of water and pasture for their animals. This is happening despite Somaliland and the region bearing almost none of the historic responsibility for global emissions. This is grossly unfair. With UK hosting COP26, we are keeping the region’s climate needs front and centre and we are working to ensure the needs of vulnerable communities in Somaliland are recognised and addressed. The UK has invested £20m to increase the availability of clean, affordable and renewable energy. Our investments in the construction of hybrid mini-grids in Badhan, Berbera, Borama, Buhodle, Burao, Erigavo, Gabiley and Sheikh have increased Somaliland’s generating capacity by 1.9 MW, and reduced reliance on diesel power generation. This has cut carbon emissions by 2900 tonnes of CO2 equivalent annually and enabled electricity service providers (ESPs) to lower their tariffs by an average of 42% across Somaliland. The access to more affordable energy delivered through this project is helping people to connect, businesses to grow and social institutions to improve their services. For example, a Hargeisa-based baker who was previously paid $400 a month on electricity is now paying half of that. From regularly switching off air conditioning and security lights to reduce overheads and working at night when rates were cheaper, the bakery is now employing more staff and increasing production of higher-margin products during daylight hours. The potential of renewable energy generation in Somaliland is huge, and there is no better time to switch to renewable energy for not only a better economy but a safer planet. Those ESPs who already started to generate a significant share of their electricity from renewable energy deserve the highest commendation. Climate change affects people’s access to goods and services. The UK is supporting infrastructure in Somaliland to ensure that ordinary people from across the region benefit from economic development. The UK-funded Hargeisa bypass has been designed to ensure it is resistant to shocks and uses materials that do not damage the environment. Our investments in urban water supplies, critical access routes, ports and agricultural development through the Somaliland Development Fund are all designed to increase Somaliland’s resilience to climate change. There is also much that can be achieved at a local level. The use of charcoal for cooking encourages the cutting of trees and leads to a grave environmental degradation which in turn impairs the pastoral economy. Alternative sources of cooking energy, like gas, are indispensable. As part of the transition a shift to more sustainable forms of charcoal production, making use of harmful invasive species like garanwaa for example, can also be part of the solution here. Somaliland’ enforcement of a ban on plastic bags will help curb plastic pollution. We have been doing our bit at the British Office Hargeisa by transitioning to the use of renewable water bottles to curb our usage of single use plastic. We also salute the efforts of Somaliland’s newly elected mayor to clean up the urban environment. COP 26 continues this week, concluding on Friday. Many important commitments have already been made, including:Over 130 countries covering more than 90% of the world’s forests have endorsed the Glasgow Leaders’ Declaration on Forests & Land Use committing to work collectively to halt and reverse forest loss and land degradation by 2030. A 190-strong country coalition agreed to both phase out coal power and end support for new coal power plants. Over $130 trillion of private finance is now aligned to science-based net zero targets and near-term milestones, through the Glasgow Financial Alliance for Net Zero. Almost 90% of global emissions and over 90% of global GDP are now covered by mid-century net zero or carbon neutrality commitments. Leaders have made clear their expectation that COP26 should accelerate action by 2030: a successful conclusion to COP 26 negotiations is now needed to support this, with negotiators working together to accelerate climate action in this crucial decade. Glasgow needs to deliver for Somalilanders, the region and the world. Join us in calling for greater action at COP26 this week to make a difference. Qaran News
  10. Qaramada amidoobay ayaa sheegtay in 16 shaqaalaheeda ka mid ah oo Ethiopian ah lagu xidhay caasimada dalkaasi ee Addis Ababa, halka lix kalena la siidaayey. Afhayeenka Qaramada Midoobay Stephane Dujarricoo warbaahinta kula hadlay New York ayaa sheegay inay ka shaqaynayaan sidii ay u sugi lahaayeen in si dhakhso ah loo sii daayo. Ilaa iyo hada ma cada sababta dadkaasi shaqaalaha ah loo xidhay. Qaran News
  11. Saxafiga lagu magacaabo Colin Freeman, oo 52 jir ah, ayaa 13 sano kadib ka sheekeeyey dhibaato fool xun oo uu kala kulmay burcad barcad badeed Soomaaliyeed xili uu baarayay dhibaatada iyo halista burcad baddeeda sanadkii 2008-dii, xiligaasi oo Soomaaliya lagu afduubtay markabka ‘Sirius Star’ oo shidaalka qaada ee Sacuudiga. Colin Freeman, ayaa u afduubnaa kooxaha burcad badeeda Soomaalida muddo lix todobaad ah wuxuuna daaha ka qaaday in kooxihii afduubtay ay doonayeen inay kula xiriiraan shirkaddi uu ka tirsanaa email ahaan. Colin Freeman, oo 52 jir ah, ayaa madax furasho lagu sii daayay lix toddobaad oo argagax leh kadib sanadkii 2008-dii. Colin ayaa loo diray in uu baaritaan ku sameeyo oo uu ka shaqeeyo magaalada Boosaaso, waxaana afduubkiisa ka dambeeyey dadkii uu lacagta siiyay si ay u ilaaliyaan maadaama ay ahaayeen burcad badeed iska dhigaya ilaalo sida ay daabacday warbaahinta MyLondon. Colin oo ah wariye khibrad u leh in uu ka shaqeeyo goobo halis ah ayaa sheegay in ay ahayd maalintii u dambaysay ee safarkiisa markii ilaalo ku hubaysnaa qoryaha Kalashnikovs, kuna amreen isaga iyo saaxiibkiis sawir qaade José Cendon in ay gaariga ka soo degaan. Hase ahaatee markii uu damcay in uu la xiriiro xafiiskiisa uu sheegay in madaxa looga dhuftay qori xabadi ay raacsaneyd. Colin oo sharaxayay qaabkii loo afduubtay ayaa sheegay in lagu amray in ay ka soo degaan gaariga xili ay isku arkeen qolada hageysa buur hoosteeda ka hor inta aan maalmo badan aysan lugayn afduubashadiisa kadib. Laba maalmood kadib oo socod dheer ah kadib Colin iyo Saaxiibkiis Jose waxaa lagu wareejiyay nin magaciisa lagu sheegay Yusuf, waxaana Colin lagu qasbay inuu taleefoon u diro UK isagoo qori madaxa looga haayo iyadoo burcadbadeeddu ay dalbadeen lacag dhan 3-milyan oo doollar in midkiibalaga doonayo si loo sii daayo labadan qof, waxaana si toos ah loola xiriiriyay xafiiska wargeyska The Telegraph ee London. Si kastaba, ha ahaatee, markii dalabaadka la fulin waayay, Colin wuxuu sheegay inuu u baqay naftiisa iyo inay cabsi gelinta sii kororto. Waxa uu yiri: “Waxa ay ahayd wax iska cad wixii markaa ka dambeeyay, in haddii arrimuhu sidii la rabay u socon waayaan, xaaladu in noqon doonto mid kasii darto markii lasoo wacay talleefanka oo xaaladu sidii la rabay noqon weyday markii aan u maleynayay inay bilaabayaan inay na jirdilaan iyo wax la mid ah, nasiib wanaag ma aysan samayn. Ugu danbeyntii waxaa loo sheegay in la sii deyn doono balse qorshaha ayaa isbedelay kadib muran dhexdooda ah oo dhex maray kooxda afduubka geysatay, balse xal laga gaaray. Colin waxa uu sheegay in kooxda aduubka ku haysatay ay si fiican u quudin jirtay intii la hayay, iyagoo cuni jiray hilib ari duban oo bariis iyo baasto la raaciyay, sidoo kale, Shaah Soomaali sonkortiisa lix qaando “Malqacad” la siin jiray aadna ugu heleen. Colin waxa uu sheegay in afduubayaashu aysan ku hadli kareyn Ingiriisi badan, laakiin ay awoodeen inay ku wada xiriiraan Ingiriisi dirsi ah iyo Carabi aan badneyn”maadaama Colin uu ku hadli karo xoogaa luqaddo kala duwan. Mid ka mid ah aduubayaasha ayaa u sheegay Colin in Britain, uu ka taageero kooxda Arsenal ee uu ka tirsanaa Thierry Henry xiligaasi. Colin ayaa si yaab leh u sheegay in mid ka mid ah budhcad-badeedda uu xataa u soo bandhigay in jecel yahay inuu kula xiriirho email ahaan marka uu wadankiisa ku laabto. Ugu danbeyntii Colin ayaa sheegay inta badan aysan sameyn dhacdadaasi foosha xun ayna jiraan dad badan oo walaac ka qaba arrimahaasi sumcad xumida ah halka buu yiri ay jiraan dhalinyaro yar oo burcad badeednimada ay ka heleen in afduubku yahay habka keliya ee lagu gaari karo nolosha.” Qisadaan ayaa buug logu magac daray shaydaanka iyo badda buluuga ah: Hawlgalka badbaadinta la haystayaasha dunidu illowday. kaasoo wax badan lagaga hadlay wanaag iyo xumaanba dunida ku faafay. Waxaa turjumay: Ali Muhiyaddiin Caasimada Online The post Saxafi 13 sano kadib fariin kasoo gudbiyay burcad ku afduubatay SOOMAALIYA appeared first on Caasimada Online.
  12. Madaxweynaha Galmudug Axmed Cabdi Kaariye (Qooroor) ayaa caawa soo saaray liiska xubnaha musharixiinta u tartami doona labada kursi ee ka dhiman Golaha Aqalka Sare ee baarlamaanka federaalla Soomaaliya. Liiska waxaa ka soo muuqday Cabdi Xasan Cawaale Qeybdiid oo kamid ahaa Aqalka Sare ee waqtigoodu dhammaay, halka laga reebay Axmed Ducaalle Geelle Xaaf oo loolan adag ugu jiray sidii uu ku heli lahaa kursigan. Wararka ayaa sheegaya in Xaaf lagu qanciyay in uu tartamo kursi ka mid ah Golaha Shacabka oo deegaan doorashadiisu tahay magaalada Gaalkacyo. Kursiga kale oo ay isku khilaafsanayeen madaxweyne Qoorqoor iyo ku xigeenkiisa uuna horay ugu fadhiyay Cabdiwaaxid Goonjeex ayaa loo soo sharaxay Cabdi Cismaan Xareed iyo Mahdi Aadan Guuleed. PUNTLAND POST The post Qoorqoor oo soo dhameystiray musharaxiinta Aqalka Sare appeared first on Puntland Post.
  13. Dhuusomareeb (Caasmada Online) – Madaxweynaha maamulka Galmudug Axmed Cabdi Kaariye Qoor Qoor ayaa caawa soo saaray liiska musharaxiinta labada kursi ee Aqalka Sare ee ku harsan maamulkiisa. Qoor Qoor ayaa musharaxiinta labadaas kursi isugu aadiyey sida: 1- Cabdi Xasan Cawaale Qeybdiid iyo Cawil Nuur Cali, 2- Cabdi Cismaan Xareed iyo Mahad Aadan Guuleed. Qoor Qoor ayaa sida muuqata liiska aan kusoo darin madaxweynihii hore ee Galmudug Axmed Ducaale Geelle Xaaf oo sheegay inuu musharax u yahay kursiga u uku fadhiyo Qeybdiid, kana digay inaan liiska lagu soo darin. Xaaf ayaa laga hayaa erey can baxay oo uu ku yiri “qiyaamaha ayaa dhici doona, haddii aan la igu soo darin liiska,” wuxuuna sheegay in dagaal beeleed uu ka dhici karo Galmudug. Ma cadda illaa hadda in Xaaf looga tagay si ula kac ah, ama inuu jiro heshiis hoose oo arrintan laga gaaray. Waxaa jira warar sheegaya in Xaaf isku sharxi rabo kursiga Axmed Macallin Fiqi oo ay isku jufo hoose yihiin, taasi oo qeyb ka ah dagaalka maalmahan u dhaxeeya Fiqi iyo Qoor Qoor. Xogta rasmi ah ayaa laga kala ogaan doonaa saacadaha soo socda maadaama uu liiska hadda un soo baxay. Kursiga labaad ee uu Qoor Qoor soo saaray musharaxiintooda ayaa waxaa leh beesha madaxweyne Farmaajo, waxaana horey ugu fadhiyey Senator Cabdiwaaxid Cilmi Goonjeex, oo isna laga tegay. Sida looga tegay Goonjeex ayaa Iyana weli laga hayn faah-faahin maadaama liiska hadda soo dhacay, waxaana xogta labada kursi idinla wadaagi doonaa saacadaha soo socda, haddii eebe idmo. The post Qoor Qoor oo soo saaray liiska musharaxiinta Aqalka Sare – Siduu ka yeelay Qeybdiid iyo Xaaf? appeared first on Caasimada Online.
  14. In the third quarter of 2024, Somalia will go through an evaluation that will assess the country’s laws, regulations, frameworks and institutional oversight for combating money laundering and terrorism financing across the financial and non-financial sectors. As a member of the Middle East and North Africa Financial Action Task Force “MENAFATF” (a regional-style body of FATF - the global anti-money laundering watchdog), Somalia is expected to have implemented a range of local and internationally agreed frameworks, recommendations and UN Resolutions on anti-money laundering and countering the financing of terrorism by this time. This assessment, so called “mutual evaluation” will be carried out by other MENAFATF member assessors with the oversight of FATF. Source: Hiiraan Online
  15. On 26 October 2021, I was convicted of espionage by a Somali court and sentenced to five years in prison. The court also ruled that Sahan Research, a thinktank I co-founded and now advise, will be banned in perpetuity from Somalia. Fortunately, I wasn’t present at the time or I would have been manacled, taken away to a cell and probably prevented from writing this article on my well-worn MacBook. But then, I wasn’t meant to be present in court, let alone arrested and incarcerated: I’d been declared persona non grata and banned from entering Somalia three years earlier. Relatively speaking, I was let off fairly easy. Somalis who cross the ruling cabal in the presidential palace, Villa Somalia, generally fare much worse. Since Mohamed Abdillahi Farmaajo took office as president in 2017, 12 journalists have been killed in Somalia, and in 2021 alone, dozens have been arrested, making the country one of the most dangerous places for media professionals across the globe. Prominent opposition politicians, including two former presidents, have been the targets of assassination attempts staged by government forces. Another has been detained since 2018 without charge or appearance before a court. The disappearance and alleged murder of a young female intelligence officer at the hands of her superiors ignited a national scandal that the government has aggressively quashed. The shoddy episode of judicial theatre that resulted in my conviction was never about espionage, national security or any of the other charges put forward by the prosecution. It certainly wasn’t about justice. And it wasn’t even about me. Like so many other things about the Somali Federal Government (FGS) headed by President Farmaajo, it was an exercise in smoke and mirrors: a way of distracting, deflecting, and deterring anyone who might dare to question, or even contradict, Villa Somalia’s grotesque version of the “truth”. For a start, there was virtually no attempt to create even the illusion of due process. The Attorney General filed charges with the Banaadir regional court, which has no jurisdiction to try cases involving federal crimes – crimes against the state – but which proved conveniently amenable to guidance from the presidency. Indictments were announced by press release and no summons were issued. When Sahan’s lawyer presented himself at the first hearing, he was asked to leave on the grounds that the court had already appointed defence counsel and his presence would only complicate things. The charges proffered by the prosecution alleged espionage and the revelation of state secrets, but in public the government insisted that Sahan published only lies – an assertion entirely at odds with the charge of revealing national secrets. Were we guilty of telling the truth (and too much of it) or lying? The government didn’t seem able to make up its mind. Either way, no evidence was presented in support of the charges, no witnesses were put forward, and no one ever bothered to record statements from the defendants. It was, in the truest sense of the term, a “show trial”. State Capture, Farmaajo Style The first lines in the script of this courtroom drama had been inked three years earlier during the lead up to elections in Somalia’s South West State (SWS), where a charismatic former Al-Shabaab leader, Mukhtar Roobow, had decided to run for president. Villa Somalia had thrown its weight behind a rival politician, Abdiaziz Laftagareen, and was incensed by Roobow’s candidacy: not because of his former jihadist affiliation, but because he commanded significant local support and would likely prove to be a strong and independent state leader. Farmaajo’s administration was in the early stages of a plan to dismantle Somalia’s nascent federal architecture and centralise all power in Mogadishu. To pursue that aim, he needed weak, pliable proxies in charge of each of Somalia’s Federal Member States (FMS). Villa Somalia made no secret of its opinion that Roobow didn’t fit the profile. Farmaajo’s inner circle, led by his intelligence chief, Fahad Yasin, decided to nip Roobow’s ambitions in the bud through a simple, brutish ruse: they convinced the commander of the Ethiopian AMISOM contingent in SWS to invite all presidential candidates to a security briefing on 13 December 2018 where Roobow was forcibly abducted and transferred to the custody of Fahad’s bureau: the National Intelligence and Security Agency (NISA) in Mogadishu. He has since remained in NISA custody without charge or appearance before a court. Roobow’s arrest triggered street protests for three days, which the police quelled with deadly force, killing 15 demonstrators, including a member of the state parliament. Some 300 more were arrested and detained without charge beyond the constitutional 48-hour limit. Baidoa’s police force was largely trained and paid for by international donors through a UN-supervised programme, for which Sahan served as third-party monitor. The police crackdown was widely reported in the media and by various monitoring groups, including Sahan, contributing to a decision by three of the programme’s donors to suspend their support. The Special Representative of the UN Secretary General (SRSG), a highly respected South African lawyer and diplomat named Nicholas Haysom, also expressed his concerns in the context of the UN Human Rights Due Diligence Programme, which governs support to security forces. Three days later the FGS declared him persona non grata (which, legally speaking, it cannot do to UN officials), and he was recalled from his post by UN headquarters. Were we guilty of telling the truth (and too much of it) or lying? The government didn’t seem able to make up its mind. Either way, no evidence was presented in support of the charges, no witnesses were put forward, and no one ever bothered to record statements from the defendants. It was, in the truest sense of the term, a “show trial”. Haysom’s expulsion achieved precisely what the FGS leadership had hoped it would: a chilling effect on much of the remaining diplomatic community in Mogadishu. If the SRSG could be sacked simply for doing his job, who else could possibly stand up to Villa Somalia and prevail? FGS officials, especially those involved in the security sector, from the president’s doltish National Security Advisor (NSA) all the way on down to dubiously qualified ‘technocrats’ in the Ministries of Internal Security and Defence (even those whose salaries were paid for by their donor counterparts) took the lesson to heart: browbeating and tantrums became their default behaviour in encounters with foreign colleagues. Having fulfilled its obligation as a third-party monitor to report on police brutality, Sahan also felt compelled to flag a much broader strategic concern: Villa Somalia’s intensifying efforts to weaken Somalia’s FMS and to dismantle the federal structures mandated by the Provisional Constitution – especially FMS police forces. Few observers realised that the police crackdown in Baidoa had not been led by the SWS state police, but by a few dozen federal police officers operating under direct orders from Mogadishu. On 17 December 2018, following an interview I gave to the Washington Post about how Roobow’s arrest was symptomatic of Villa Somalia’s centralist, authoritarian tendencies, Sahan was banned from Somalia and I was declared persona non grata. Villa Somalia was not to be deterred by a little bad publicity: in August 2019, the FGS attempted to hijack elections in Jubaland, unsuccessfully financing rival candidates and ultimately declaring the re-election of state president Ahmed Madoobe null-and-void. Later the same month, in collusion with Villa Somalia, the Ethiopian army secretly attempted to airlift several hundred commandos from Baidoa to Kismayo, with a view to ousting Madoobe from office. This ended in a tense standoff between Ethiopian and Kenyan troops at Kismayo airport that could have easily ended in armed clashes between the two erstwhile allies. While Madoobe, with the support of AMISOM’s Kenyan contingent, continued to dig in and defend his seat, Villa Somalia deployed troops to Jubaland’s northern Gedo region, wresting most of it from Madoobe’s control (with Ethiopian help) and arresting Jubaland’s Minister of Internal Security. Galmudug’s election was stolen in February 2020 and Hirshabelle’s followed suit in November the same year. In both cases, federal financing backed by the deployment of loyalist, Turkish-trained special forces and paramilitary police helped to ensure that Villa Somalia’s candidates emerged victorious. But, as in SWS, these were hollow victories: weak, proxy leaders proved unable to consolidate their wins and largely incapable of exercising state authority, ceding territory to Al-Shabaab. Through its electoral machinations, Villa Somalia had succeeded in exerting greater and greater control over less and less of the country. Somalia’s Security Sector: Reinforcing Failure While Villa Somalia’s brazen theft of elections and suppression of dissent served to weaken the autonomy of the FMS and enfeeble the federal checks and balances built into the Provisional Constitution, the deployment of security forces for the same purposes illustrated another, equally troubling development: the FGS had abandoned the fight against Somalia’s single greatest security threat – Al-Shabaab. On paper, Somalia’s 2017 National Security Architecture and New Policing Model assign primary responsibility for domestic security, including counterterrorism and counterinsurgency, to the FMS. But in May 2018, the FGS issued a new Somalia Transition Plan (STP), effectively tearing up those previous agreements and clawing back all security functions to the federal level. Under the STP, Villa Somalia systematically obstructed security assistance to the FMS and funnelled resources almost exclusively to the alarmingly dysfunctional federal forces. The STP also made promises upon which it utterly failed to deliver – with just two exceptions: Mogadishu stadium and the Jaalle Siyaad military training academy were both ceremonially transferred from AMISOM’s control to the Somali authorities. These accomplishments were, to be generous, ‘low-hanging fruit’. More importantly, the STP promised to secure the main supply routes (MSRs) between Mogadishu and three strategic towns in neighbouring FMS: Baidoa, Baraawe and Beledweyne. At the time of writing, this pledge had spectacularly failed. For example, Leego, in Lower Shabelle region, lies just a little more than 100 kilometres from the capital and was specifically cited in the STP as a key objective in opening the road to Baidoa. Leego is also a vital Al-Shabaab financial hub, collecting hundreds of thousands of dollars each month in road taxes. More than two years since the STP was first announced, no operation has ever been staged to seize it and the road to Baidoa remains, for government purposes, closed. In 2019, a much-vaunted offensive to clear Al-Shabaab from Lower Shabelle region and open the MSR to Baraawe, nicknamed Operation Badbaado, ultimately fizzled out and was quietly abandoned. The offensive’s greatest achievement was the recapture, in early 2020, of Janaale, which had been abandoned after Al-Shabaab overran a Ugandan Forward Operating Base there in 2015. But between Mogadishu and Janaale, Operation Badbaado succeeded only in establishing a string of disconnected outposts, isolated from one another by large rural spaces controlled by the jihadists. The MSR to Baraawe remained closed. The STP’s pledge to open the MSR from Mogadishu to Beledweyne was especially poignant. Until 2017, the section of road between the capital and Jowhar had been safe to travel, but less than a year after Farmaajo took office, it had become too hazardous for non-military traffic, forcing government officials, aid workers and civilians to make the 90-kilometre journey by air. In May-June 2021, Somalia’s boyish Chief of Defence Forces, General Odowaa Yusuf Rageh, personally led a flurry of aimless and uncoordinated raids into Middle Shabelle. The gesture amounted to little more than a series of chaotic skirmishes, producing nothing but unnecessary casualties and bad blood between the Somali National Army (SNA) and AMISOM, which claimed that Odowaa had failed to coordinate his amateurish expedition with the AU Force Headquarters. The road to Jowhar remained effectively impassable, as did the stretch between Jowhar and Beledweyne. Shielding Al-Shabaab Whereas the shambolic state of the federal security forces might be explained by a combination of incompetence, inexperience, and a mediocre monocracy, the unchallenged expansion of Al-Shabaab’s influence on Farmaajo’s watch suggests a far more sinister explanation: tacit collusion between Villa Somalia and its putative adversaries. Indeed, the jihadists are possibly the only authority in Somalia that the FGS hasn’t chosen to pick a fight with. Al-Shabaab is steadily extending its influence, not only in the interior, but even in territories nominally under some form of government control – including Mogadishu. As Farmaajo entered the latter half of his four-year term, a consensus was emerging that the terror group taxed more efficiently, raised more money, provided greater security, and dispensed higher quality justice than the FGS did. Major businesses in the capital readily acknowledged that they paid taxes to Al-Shabaab because the government could not shield them from the consequences of disobedience. Some of the country’s largest telecoms and financial institutions were found non-compliant with due diligence standards and even minimal anti-money laundering/countering terrorist financing best practices, enabling Al-Shabaab to make routine use of their services – including highly irregular transactions that should have raised red flags. The FGS, for its part, makes little or no effort to enforce its own regulations in this regard. The more Farmaajo’s social media legions huff and puff about his government’s successes, the more obvious it becomes that the war against Al-Shabaab is being lost. These were hollow victories: weak, proxy leaders proved unable to consolidate their wins and largely incapable of exercising state authority, ceding territory to Al-Shabaab. Through its electoral machinations, Villa Somalia had succeeded in exerting greater and greater control over less and less of the country. While the STP produced one military debacle after another, other FGS security initiatives demonstrated comparatively high levels of capability, competence, and determination in quashing Villa Somalia’s enemies: not Al-Shabaab, but rather the political opposition and recalcitrant leaders of insubordinate FMS. For this purpose, Villa Somalia relied not on forces trained, supported, and monitored by Western security partners, but rather upon those established and equipped by its more steadfast political allies: Qatar, Turkey, and Eritrea. In other words, the FGS is fighting two different wars using two very different armies. The cornerstone of Villa Somalia’s parallel security policy was NISA under the direction Fahad Yasin. Having initially served as Farmaajo’s Chief of Staff, Fahad was appointed Deputy Director General of NISA in August 2018 and effectively ran the organisation until his official promotion to NISA chief the following year. With financial and technical support from Qatar, Fahad has transformed NISA from a decrepit, thuggish secret police force into a modern, capable intelligence service and the secretive core of Villa Somalia’s power. From behind the walls of NISA’s sleek, opulent new headquarters, he has overseen the formation of an entirely parallel security establishment. Some elements of these forces were highly visible. In early 2018, Turkey began training the first batch of army special forces known as Gorgor (Eagle); later the same year Ankara expanded its training programme to include a new paramilitary special police unit named Haram’ad (Cheetah). Both units have since been equipped with modern weapons, equipment, and armoured vehicles of Turkish manufacture. As their numbers have expanded, Fahad has deftly manoeuvred to bring them discreetly under Villa Somalia’s direct control – and NISA’s in particular. In 2019, plans were set in motion for another paramilitary force to be stood up, this time as an integral part of NISA. As many as 7,000 Somali youth were recruited on the promise of training and employment in Qatar, but secretly transferred instead to Eritrea. Those that subsequently returned to Somalia became known as Duufaan (Hurricane), while an indeterminate number remained trapped in Eritrea, largely incommunicado, sparking a blistering scandal back in Somalia, where their parents demanded information about their whereabouts and well-being. By some accounts, hundreds, possibly thousands, of these Somali trainees may have been dispatched to fight in Ethiopia in November 2000 against the Tigray People’s Liberation Front, but a communications blackout on the conflict zone has made such reports difficult to verify. Thousands more trainees were enlisted into the Xoogga Wadaniyiinta (Popular Forces), a largely unarmed youth militia apparently inspired by the Guulwadayaal (Victory Pioneers) of Siyaad Barre’s ruling party. And perhaps the smallest NISA unit, known as Ruuxaan (Ghosts), operates in hit squads, conducting political assassinations mainly in Mogadishu. NISA also possesses two armed units trained and mentored (and quaintly misnamed) by the US government: Waran (Spear), which protects NISA facilities and Gaashaan (Shield), which serves as a counterterrorism commando unit. But since the Americans keep an eye on them, they don’t suit Fahad’s purposes. Fahad’s strategy for the use of these politicised units progressively took shape in 2019 during the course of interventions in Jubaland and Galmudug. Following Ahmed Madoobe’s re-election in August 2019, and Villa Somalia’s humiliating failure to have him ousted by Ethiopian commandos, Fahad formulated a new course of action to destabilise Jubaland and undermine Madoobe’s authority. The FGS surged federal forces into Gedo region, whose Marehan clan elites were divided in their loyalties between Madoobe (and his Marehan political appointees) and their kinsman, Farmaajo. Villa Somalia counted on the combination of force and finance to wrest Gedo from Jubaland’s tenuous control. To reinforce the SNA units stationed in Gedo, which were mainly drawn from local Marehan militias, the FGS airlifted a combination of NISA’s Duufaan and paramilitary Haram’ad police from Mogadishu to change the balance of forces on the ground. More importantly, Fahad took direct control of the joint operation, dispatching his trusted NISA deputy, Abdullahi Adan Kulane ‘Jiis’, himself a member of the Marehan clan, to supervise their operations. Official military and police chains of command were short-circuited. Violence in Gedo escalated, and casualties mounted through early 2020, threatening to draw Ethiopian and Kenyan troops into a confrontation on behalf of their local allies. In February 2020, as the situation threatened to deteriorate even further, the US government expressed its concern in a statement to the UN Security Council, describing the deployment of federal forces to Gedo region as an unacceptable “politically motivated offensive” that diverted resources away from the common fight against Al-Shabaab. But of course, that had always been the point. Indeed, Al-Shabaab was the principal beneficiary of Villa Somalia’s hijinks. While federal forces focused on wresting control of Doolow and Buulo Hawa away from Jubaland, they made no move towards Al-Shabaab’s nearby base at El Adde, which at least 150 Kenyan soldiers had died defending in 2016, and which has since served as a critical operational and bomb-making hub for the jihadists. Other parts of Gedo region previously under Jubaland control also fell steadily under the influence of the jihadists. Today, Al-Shabaab controls more of Gedo than it had before Farmaajo took office. Meanwhile, since late 2019, Villa Somalia had been plotting to take full control of Galmudug, dismantling its incumbent administration and engineering a rigged election to install a political proxy as state president the next year. The dynamics in Galmudug were very different from those in Gedo, but the FGS playbook was much the same. Loyalist federal forces were surged into Galmudug to achieve local security dominance and the cash followed in suitcases. The unchallenged expansion of Al-Shabaab’s influence on Farmaajo’s watch suggests a far more sinister explanation: tacit collusion between Villa Somalia and its putative adversaries. Indeed, the jihadists are possibly the only authority in Somalia that the FGS hasn’t chosen to pick a fight with. Roughly 120 troops from the 2nd Battalion, Gorgor Commando Brigade were airlifted to the regional capital, Dhuusamareeb, together with about 100 Haram’ad paramilitary police and 120 officers from the Banaadir Police Force, who had originally been part of NISA. Their commander, Sadiq Joon, had previously served as NISA commander in Banaadir. Villa Somalia also tried to involve US-trained and -mentored Danab (Lightning) special forces in its conspiracy, but this was quickly detected and shut down. Like in Gedo, Villa Somalia established a discreet, informal chain of command that reported directly to NISA, with Sadiq Joon directly supervising the SNA and Haram’ad operations, in addition to his own Banaadir Police contingent. In parallel, Fahad entrusted a close aide named Ali Wardheere (or Ali ‘Yare’) with the financial arrangements, which involved bribing local politicians, clan elders, and leaders of the powerful Sufi militia, Ahlu Sunna wal Jama’a (ASWJ) to acquiesce in the FGS’ scheme. Ironically, the principal threat to Villa Somalia’s plans came from then Prime Minister Hassan Ali Khaire, who tried to outmanoeuvre Fahad using his own ‘fixers’ to influence the Galmudug electoral process – a reckless overreach that ultimately cost him his job. But Fahad prevailed and his chosen flunky, Ahmed Abdi Kariye ‘Qoorqoor’, was duly installed as Galmudug’s president in February 2020. As in Gedo, Farmaajo and Fahad had employed loyalist federal forces to subvert the autonomy of an FMS – not to fight Al-Shabaab, which controlled the entire southern part of Galmudug. On the contrary, by installing a feckless political proxy and dismantling the vehemently anti-Shabaab ASWJ, Fahad prepared the ground for aggressive Al-Shabaab expansion the following year, followed by the most significant offensive by federal forces for over a decade – in support of the jihadists. The Return of Al-Itihaad Al-Islaam Al-Shabaab was not the only Islamist group to benefit during Farmaajo’s term of office. A little-known, like-minded affiliate known as Al-I’tisaam b’il Kitaab wa Sunna had also been growing from strength to strength – mainly thanks to the influence of its powerful representative in Villa Somalia: Fahad Yasin. Widely credited with having engineered Farmaajo’s 2017 electoral victory, Fahad had initially been rewarded with the post of Chief of Staff at the Presidency, followed by the leadership of NISA. With generous support from Qatar, he was able to refurbish NISA, not only as the most powerful instrument of FGS political authority, but also as a de facto secretariat for Al-I’tisaam. Al-I’tisaam and Al-Shabaab share a common ancestor: the jihadist movement Al-Itihaad Al-Islaam, which first revealed itself following the collapse of the Siyaad Barre regime in 1991. Like Al-Qa’ida, Al-Itihaad was an offshoot of the militant Al-Sahwa (Awakening) movement that had been forged in the crucible of the Afghan jihad and which espoused an extreme, intolerant, and explicitly violent version of Islam. Al-Sahwa’s hostility to the Saudi establishment saw its proponents, including Osama bin Ladin, imprisoned or exiled. But Bin Ladin was welcomed by the ascendant Islamist government in Sudan in 1991, and he soon found an eager ally in Somalia’s Al-Itihaad. Together, between 1992 and 1994, they strove to confront US military intervention in Somalia. But AIAI’s ambitions exceeded the narrow military goals of Al-Qa’ida and, against Bin Ladin’s advice, the movement sought to establish an Islamic ‘emirate’ on Somali territory. Their harsh attempts to pursue this objective found little purchase amongst the Somali population and backfired. Their ideology particularly alienated Somalia’s majority Sufi population by blaming Sufism for all the nation’s ills, including the collapse of the state. In 1996, following Bin Ladin’s expulsion from Sudan and relocation to Afghanistan, a much-deflated AIAI suffered successive defeats at the hands of the Ethiopian military and, in early 1997, made its calamitous last stand in Somalia’s southwestern Gedo region. Among the young militants who survived Al-Itihaad’s final battle and escaped to neighbouring Kenya was Fahad Yasin. Born in 1977 or 1978 (his Somali and Kenyan passports contain different dates of birth and different names), his parents separated when he was young and he was raised by his mother and his stepfather, receiving a religious education in Mogadishu. When the Barre regime collapsed in 1991, Fahad and his family fled to Kenya as refugees, but he soon returned to Somalia under the wing of his stepfather, who had joined Al-Itihaad. Al-Itihaad’s military leader at the time was Hassan Dahir Aweys: an unrepentant extremist with whom Fahad would develop an almost filial relationship over the coming decades. Fahad’s stepfather was killed in battle against the Ethiopians in 1997, and when Al-Itihaad’s surviving leaders dispersed, the young Fahad found himself adrift. After a couple of years searching for a new cause, Fahad eventually tried his hand at journalism, blogging for a provocative website called Somalitalk, where he mainly posted political commentary. A supporter of interim president Abdiqasim Salaad Hassam, who notionally held office as head of the then Transitional National Government between 2000 and 2004, Fahad was reportedly discouraged when Abdiqasim was ousted by Ethiopian-backed warlords through a skewed regional ‘peace process.’ Telling friends that he wanted to study Arabic, he travelled to Yemen, where regional intelligence sources say he enrolled at El Iman University: a sort of international finishing school for jihadists founded by Sheikh Abd al-Majid al-Zindani, a close spiritual adviser to Osama bin Ladin and a specially designated global terrorist (by both the US and UN) in his own right. By some accounts, hundreds, possibly thousands, of these Somali trainees may have been dispatched to fight in Ethiopia in November 2000 against the Tigray People’s Liberation Front, but a communications blackout on the conflict zone has made such reports difficult to verify. While Fahad was carving out a career for himself in the aftermath of Al-Itihaad’s 1997 defeat, the movement’s other alumni had divided into two wings: one, asserting that Somalia was not yet ripe for jihad, pursued political and economic interests, while advancing the core tenets of Al-Sahwa’s radical ideology by establishing an underground organisation (tanzim) and by preaching (da’wa). They called themselves Al-I’tisaam. The other faction, unwilling to abandon the path of jihad, sought out foreign fields of battle on which to hone their beliefs and skills: notably Afghanistan, where they renewed their allegiance to Bin Ladin and Al-Qa’ida. Following America’s invasion of Afghanistan in 2001, veterans of these foreign battles would return to Somalia – their allegiance to Al-Qa’ida firmly intact – to establish the terror group that eventually became known as Al-Shabaab. In the late 2000s, as Al-Shabaab emerged from the shadows to become a household name, Fahad Yasin found a job as a correspondent in Somalia for Qatar’s Al-Jazeera news network. Not surprisingly, given his jihadist credentials, he enjoyed unique access to Al-Shabaab’s senior leaders, apparently having no difficulty in obtaining exclusive interviews with reclusive ‘high value individuals’ or ‘HVIs’ whom Western intelligence agencies were desperately seeking to locate and, one way or another, remove from the battlefield. During the course of his relationship with Al-Jazeera, Fahad apparently forged close ties with Qatar’s intelligence services, becoming a valued asset and, ultimately, an agent of influence. By 2011, he was back in the Somali political arena, working in the entourage of President Hassan Sheikh, who was elected to office in 2012. There was not much room in Hassan’s administration for Fahad to shine: although no Islamist himself, Hassan’s kitchen cabinet was dominated by members of Dam ul-Jadiid, an activist offshoot of Harakaat Al-Islaax (Somalia’s chapter of the Muslim Brotherhood), whose progressive ideals had little in common philosophically with Fahad’s conservative, militant upbringing. Moreover, Fahad was politically overshadowed by a close relative, Farah Abdulqadir, who outranked him within the clan hierarchy and served as Hassan Sheikh’s closest advisor. By this time, Fahad had also apparently forged a close relationship with Farmaajo, a dull bureaucrat from Buffalo, New York, who he lobbied Hassan Sheikh to appoint as prime minister. Farmaajo had previously served a 6-month stint as prime minister under the previous president, Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed. Hassan sagely ignored Fahad’s advice, offering him instead the Ministry of Ports and Maritime Transport. By then, Fahad already had his sights set on NISA or, as a consolation prize, the Ministry of Internal Security, and he refused the position on offer. Some members of Hassan Sheikh’s entourage, however, aver that a profound clash of ideologies contributed to this parting of the ways. Fahad returned to Qatar where, around 2014, he was assigned to Al-Jazeera’s Centre for Studies, an independent research institution that has earned a reputation for being, inter alia, a forum for reflection and exchange between various international Islamist movements. But by 2016 Fahad was back in the maelstrom of Somali politics, this time managing Farmaajo’s presidential campaign. Fahad not only shared his candidate’s authoritarian instincts, but he also treated Farmaajo like a kinsman, since his late stepfather had also been a member of Farmaajo’s Marehan clan. Farmaajo was not an Islamist, but from Fahad’s perspective, this rendered his candidate even more useful. During his studies abroad and exposure to members of other Islamist groups, Fahad had apparently internalised a practice more commonly associated with Shi’a Islam: taqqiya – the use of deception and dissimulation in defence of the faith, which Sunni jihadists have pragmatically appropriated in recent decades. Farmaajo’s secular profile, his ultranationalist populism, and his American passport, complemented by an entourage of technocratic cabinet ministers from the diaspora with Western accents and stylish suits, would help to camouflage Fahad’s real ambition: an Islamist coup. In February 2017, through a combination of shrewd electioneering and injections of cash from Doha, Fahad helped steer Farmaajo to victory and was rewarded with the post of Chief of Staff at the Presidency. Having finally ascended to the apex of national power, Fahad wasted no time in impelling the appointment of former Al-Itihaad militants – now re-branded as Al-I’tisaam – to key positions, both formal and informal, in government. Since the FGS had virtually no revenue and Fahad held Qatar’s purse strings, Farmaajo acquiesced to his recommendations. Over the next few years, Fahad succeeded in placing dozens of erstwhile jihadists in key positions throughout the federal administration and security services. Among them were the Deputy Chief of Staff at the Presidency, the Minister of Agriculture, a state minister in the Office of the Prime Minister, the State Ministers of Foreign Affairs and Finance, and at least five senior officials at NISA: a Chief of Staff, Deputy DG, and the directors of Cybersecurity, Counterintelligence, and Foreign Intelligence (subsequently appointed Deputy Ambassador to Qatar). Other members of the group served unofficially, both inside and outside Somalia, as promoters, couriers, financiers, online activists, and informal emissaries. At the same time, Fahad began mobilising Al-I’tisaam networks across the region, including a powerful lobby of Salafi imams and businessmen in neighbouring Kenya. Many of these religious leaders were based in the largely Somali-inhabited enclave of Eastleigh in the Kenyan capital, Nairobi, and had been active supporters of Al-Itihaad in the 1990s. Congregating mainly at a prominent mosque on 6th street, they held regular fund raisers for the jihadists and some of their most prominent activists were killed or captured fighting alongside Al-Itihaad in Somalia. In October 2017, an Al-Shabaab suicide bombing in Mogadishu left more than five hundred people dead and thousands wounded. The disaster prompted an outpouring of sympathy and support from Somali communities worldwide, including the well-established and increasingly influential Salafi constituency in Kenya that had previously invested in Al-Itihaad. A high-level delegation was dispatched from Nairobi to Mogadishu to deliver their contribution for victims of the bombing. Fahad seized upon the arrival of such prominent Kenyan-Somali imams and Al-Itihaad alumni for his own, ulterior motives: since the late 2000s, relations between Al-Itihaad’s two main successors – Al-I’tisaam and Al-Shabaab – had been strained nearly to the breaking point by public spats and mutual betrayal. Fahad saw not just an opportunity for reconciliation, but also to establish himself as an Islamist kingpin, and reportedly arranged a meeting between them. The initial encounter was successful, and a follow-up conference was convened in early 2018 in Kismayo. During his studies abroad and exposure to members of other Islamist groups, Fahad had apparently internalised a practice more commonly associated with Shi’a Islam: taqqiya – the use of deception and dissimulation in defence of the faith, which Sunni jihadists have pragmatically appropriated in recent decades. According to Somali media reports at the time, the meetings produced plans for the two groups to infiltrate Somali government institutions on a large scale, especially the security sector and judiciary. Al-Shabaab sought the integration of Al-Shabaab forces into FGS security forces, together with their weapons, and the departure of AMISOM. An as interim measure, they proposed that forces from Turkey and other Muslim countries could be deployed to supervise the process of integration. A committee was duly established to oversee the recruitment of former militants for training and insertion into the SNA and NISA. The meetings also supported the establishment of ‘Popular Defence Forces’ (Ciidanka Difaaca Shacbiga ah), or PDF, to absorb urban youth and low-level Al-Shabaab fighters. Upon completion of training, these units would initially reinforce security at Villa Somalia and then gradually be expanded across in Mogadishu. However, the PDF never officially got off the ground and was eventually subsumed by Villa Somalia’s Xoogga Wadaniyiinta youth militia. Beyond these security arrangements, Fahad briefed the participants that he had arranged an agreement between the FGS and an Islamic university in Kenya, bankrolled by Qatar, to train the Somali judiciary and Ulema (Islamic scholars). Not coincidentally, the university’s chancellor was a prominent Salafi scholar, businessman and former spokesman for Al-Itihaad. Fahad’s aspirations for the consolidation of Al-Itihaad’s alumni under the umbrella of the FGS were gaining momentum. But in November 2019, he overplayed his hand, triggering a backlash from Somali Sufis. Somalis have traditionally followed the Shafi’i school of Islamic law, guided by several dominant Sufi turuuq, or sects. Despite the aggressive encroachment of exogenous Salafi movements, many Somalis still treasure their Sufi beliefs and practices. Fahad had invited to Mogadishu Sheikh Mohamed Abdi Umal, a prominent Kenyan cleric and businessman whom many consider to be Al-I’tisaam’s spiritual guide. The purpose of Umal’s visit was to donate some US$330,000 that he and his followers had raised for victims of flooding in Hiiraan region, and Fahad planned a lavish ceremony in his honour. No one disputed the worthiness of the cause for which Sheikh Umal had raised the funds, but the high-profile reception planned for him by Villa Somalia did not sit well with Somali Sufis, who seized the moment to protest what they perceived as an alliance between Villa Somalia and Al-I’tisaam. The militant Sufi ASWJ interpreted Villa Somalia’s public embrace of a prominent Salafi imam as confirmation of Al-I’tisaam’s status as the de facto ruling party in Villa Somalia and, by extension, as undeclared custodian of the state religion. Sheikh Abdulqadir Soomow, a leader of the ASWJ and spokesman for the national Ulema Council, angrily charged Umal with inciting hatred against Sufis and their beliefs, promoting the rise of the “Kharijites” (a pejorative term for extremists like Al-Shabaab), and of “killing many people with his words.” Umal defended himself against the allegations, but his visit was hastily downgraded to a low-key affair, hosted in a hotel conference room near Mogadishu’s airport. A serious clash between Sufis and Salafis had been avoided, but the episode foreshadowed a much bloodier reckoning between ASWJ and Villa Somalia less than two years later. Farmaajo’s Extension, Fahad’s Second Term In February 2021, having successfully stolen the elections in SWS, Hirshabelle and Galmudug, Farmaajo plotted another coup: stealing his own re-election. Despite having had four years to prepare the ground for federal elections, the Nabad iyo Nolol (‘Peace and Life’) government reached the end of its term – by design – utterly unprepared. For more than three years, Farmaajo had promised Somalis and international partners alike that he would deliver one-person one-vote (OPOV) elections for the next parliament, which would in turn elect the next president. OPOV had always been a pipe dream, albeit one that Western diplomats enthusiastically subscribed to and, in many cases, oversold to their respective capitals. Not only did insecurity prohibit such an exercise and the federal government manifestly lacked the capacity to pull it off, but even more problematic was the fact that with less than one year remaining in Farmaajo’s term, there was no consensus between political stakeholders, including the FMS and the political opposition, on the electoral model that Villa Somalia was proposing. Moreover, rushing into a hastily concocted, profoundly contested electoral process would be extremely dangerous: by scrapping the longstanding “4.5 formula” of clan-based power sharing, it would create winners and losers across the country. No one had bothered to do the math about which clan constituencies stood to win or lose most, or by how much. The risk of large parts of the population rejecting the electoral results, either because they distrusted an opaque process or because they felt unfairly deprived of representation, was extremely high. The cabal in Villa Somalia was well aware of these considerations and was counting on the collapse of electoral preparations to buy them a term extension of at least two years to deliver on their OPOV commitment. But when they finally showed their hand and tabled the proposed extension in parliament in early April 2021, the opposition was infuriated and fighting erupted in the streets of Mogadishu. More than a hundred thousand people were displaced by the fighting, as the army fragmented along clan lines and opposition forces swiftly gained the upper hand. Faced by the prospect of being evicted from the presidency at gunpoint, Farmaajo reluctantly abandoned the scheme. Seven months later, Farmaajo is nevertheless comfortably ensconced in Villa Somalia and Fahad’s plan to hijack the election is inching forward through iterative bargaining over excruciatingly esoteric electoral procedures. Although an “election” of some kind will almost certainly take place before Farmaajo reaches the benchmark of his coveted two-year extension, there is a clear and present danger that the Islamist ecosystem nurtured by Fahad Yasin will return to power in Villa Somalia – whether under Farmaajo’s leadership or another candidate of Fahad’s choosing. The Talibanisation of Somalia Any continuity of Fahad’s influence in Villa Somalia, with or without Farmaajo, would be disastrous for Somalia. It is increasingly clear what Fahad, his party and his patrons intend for the country: a process of staged negotiations between the federal government and Al-Shabaab, facilitated largely by Qatar and culminating in the ‘Talibanisation’ of Somalia. Notwithstanding the significant cultural and ideological differences between the Taliban and Al-Itihaad, the cynical abandonment of Somali aspirations for some form of liberal democracy in favour of an autocratic, absolutist theocracy would be no less treacherous or traumatic than it was for Kabul. For several years, Qatar has been promoting the notion of dialogue between the FGS and Al-Shabaab as a way of winding down the insurgency. This would likely entail the opening of an Al-Shabaab office in Qatar, some preliminary proximity talks between the parties, followed by eventual face-to-face negotiations. Many Western governments are keenly interested in this possibility: the fight against Al-Shabaab will soon enter its third decade and the jihadists are stronger than ever. As every security analyst is taught, the dismantling of insurgencies and terrorist groups inevitably involves some form of negotiation. Force alone cannot prevail. Villa Somalia has disingenuously reinforced that argument under Farmaajo’s leadership, not by trying to fight and failing, but by not really trying at all. The FGS has spent the past four years waging a war on federalism, on political pluralism and on democratic norms, but not on Al-Shabaab. The largest single offensive military operation undertaken since 2017 was an all-out assault against ASWJ, at Guri’el in Galmudug region in October 2021 that left at least 120 people dead and hundreds more wounded. Al-Shabaab’s nearby stronghold at Eel Buur, to the southeast, was, as ever, left in peace. Guri’el was arguably the bloodiest battle in Somalia since Kenyan troops were overrun at El Adde, only it wasn’t waged against the jihadists. On the contrary, Al-I’tisaam clerics rushed to defend the government’s onslaught against Al-Shabaab’s sworn Sufi enemies: Sheikh Bashir Salaad, Al-I’tisaam’s senior cleric in Mogadishu and Chairman of the Ulema Council, equivocally equated ASWJ with Al-Shabaab, while Fahad’s old mentor, Sheikh Hassan Dahir Aweys (under comfortable “house arrest” in Villa Somalia) praised Al-Shabaab for being monotheists, in contrast with ASWJ’s “polytheist idolaters”. Such sectarian hyperbole also helps to explain why Villa Somalia has been loath to share external support, and especially security assistance, with the FMS. Jubaland and Puntland would, for certain, have put such resources to good use combating Al-Shabaab. Even the other FMS, despite their political affiliations with the FGS, would have found it hard to prevent locally recruited Daraawiish forces from taking the fight to Al-Shabaab on their home turf. Even Galmudug’s own Daraawiish, operating essentially as a community defence force, engaged in several pitched battles against Al-Shabaab in the months prior to Guri’el– without the support of the FGS. Villa Somalia declines to devolve combat capabilities to the FMS, not – as FGS leaders like to repeat – simply because they might turn against Mogadishu, but because they would almost certainly employ them against Al-Shabaab. By the same token, Farmaajo’s deliberate failure to advance the constitutional review process, and stunting of the development of a functional federation, as well as forsaking of any pretext of an electoral system, all serve to strengthen Al-Shabaab’s hand at a future bargaining table. Prior agreement between the FGS and FMS on these vital issues, enshrining them in a completed constitution and complementary legislation, would leave little space to accommodate Al-Shabaab’s demands. Entering a dialogue with these matters unresolved would award Al-Shabaab carte blanche to re-negotiate all aspects of the state building process. Bringing Al-Shabaab into government would also solve another wicked problem that many Western governments feel strongly about: AMISOM. Integrating jihadist fighters into the Somali security sector would obviate the need for an international peace enforcement operation. Bilateral train-and-equip missions for Somali security forces might continue far into the future, but the enormous cost and commitment required to sustain the AU mission would finally come to an end. Since the late 2000s, relations between Al-Itihaad’s two main successors – Al-I’tisaam and Al-Shabaab – had been strained nearly to the breaking point by public spats and mutual betrayal. Fahad saw not just an opportunity for reconciliation, but also to establish himself as an Islamist kingpin As long as Fahad holds the reins of power in Villa Somalia, negotiations with Al-Shabaab would consign Somalia to one-party rule under a reunified Al-Itihaad: a post-jihadist state in the Horn of Africa, Afghanistan on the Gulf of Aden. That might sit well with some donor nations, but it is far less clear how it would be received by the Somali population. Although many have adopted Salafi beliefs and practices in the private and social spheres, the prospect of a totalitarian political system underpinned by ideological intolerance and policed by religious zealots is another proposition entirely. Even more importantly, from the callow perspective of those who advocate stability as an end in itself, is whether such a dispensation would in fact bring enduring stability to Somalia and the region. None of Somalia’s neighbours is likely to be at ease sharing borders with a post-jihadist government that espouses radically different geopolitical perspectives and priorities. The level of discomfort would likely be even higher in those nations that host well-established chapters of Al-I’tisaam, chiefly Kenya and Ethiopia. More distant foreign powers would likely share such concerns: the UAE, Saudi Arabia, and Egypt are all deeply hostile to Islamist political movements and especially to those that carry Al-Sahwa’s DNA. Cosy relations between Mogadishu, Doha, and Ankara would only heighten apprehension in Abu Dhabi, Riyadh, and Cairo – at least as long as the two camps remain strategic competitors across north Africa and much of the Middle East. Conviction Not for Crime, but for Heresy I’m not entirely sure what my FGS accusers were hoping to achieve, but life has changed little since I became a convicted felon. I’m still at liberty, my assets haven’t been frozen, and I face no travel ban. My family hasn’t spurned me, and I’ve been allowed to keep my old job. My colleagues and friends are sympathetic, and I’ve gained a few new ones on social media. The support and solidarity I’ve received from unexpected quarters has given me a small taste of that special kind of sympathy usually reserved for political prisoners — mercifully without actually having to go to prison. If prosecution was intended to muzzle me or my colleagues, it has clearly backfired: the preceding pages offer a foretaste of the story that Villa Somalia had hoped would never be told. None of this information constitutes a national secret or is otherwise protected by law. Much of it has already been reported – albeit in disparate, disconnected fragments – by reputable Somali and international media houses. Few politically conscious Somalis, whether they support or oppose the FGS, will find any of it new or surprising. As an analyst, my only crime has been to arrange these pixels of information into what I hope is a consistent and compelling portrait: to organise the facts and present them in a way that is relevant to policy makers, both Somali and foreign, and that helps to ensure that decisions on the way forward – especially with respect to engaging Al-Shabaab — are based on evidence and reason – not sloth and expediency. Like any other members of my audience, the current leaders of Somalia’s federal government – whether they hold those positions legitimately or not — may choose not to read what I have written. They may read it and disagree, and they might even decide to respond. They may try to sue me, under applicable laws and in an independent court. But to concoct a show trial, to lay charges without evidence or right of reply, and to convict me in absentia and ultra vires? These are the hallmarks of a totalitarian regime with a hidden agenda. Such intrigues say far more about the cabal currently squatting in Villa Somalia than they do about me or the organisation I work with. And they appear to confirm, no doubt inadvertently, the conclusions I have reached in this article: that Somalia’s state building process has been hijacked by an ideological faction well practised in the arts of deceit and dissimulation – taqqiya. The only threat to Somalia’s national security at issue here is the one that Farmaajo, Fahad, their accomplices and enablers collectively pose to the nation’s future: a creeping coup orchestrated by an absolutist clique that brooks no dissent or opposition, and whose dystopian theological worldview construes the truth, when it is inconvenient or inconsistent with their narrative, to be not simply a crime, but heresy. On 26 October 2021, I was convicted of espionage by a Somali court and sentenced to five years in prison. The court also ruled that Sahan Research, a thinktank I co-founded and now advise, will be banned in perpetuity from Somalia. Source: Hiiraan Online
  16. On 26 October 2021, I was convicted of espionage by a Somali court and sentenced to five years in prison. The court also ruled that Sahan Research, a thinktank I co-founded and now advise, will be banned in perpetuity from Somalia Source: Hiiraan Online
  17. Muqdisho (Caasimada Online) – Doorashada heer Federaal weli uma socoto sidii loo qorsheeyey, waxaana lagu eedeeyey madaxda maamul Goboleedyada inay yihiin cidda gadaal uga dhagan geediga doorashada. Sababta keentay inay ku dhagaan geedi socodka doorashada ayaa ah mid wajiyo badan, waxaase ugu weyn kuwa uu sanadkaan gubayo damaca heer Federaal. Seddax kamid ah madaxda shanta maamul Goboleed ayaa dhammaan laga soo wariyey inay sanadkaan leeyihiin qorshooyin ay xilal sare kaga doonayaan Dowladda Dhexe ee Soomaaliya. Warbixintaan waxaan ku eegeynaa seddex madaxweyne iyo mid walba jihada uu u socdo, garabka uu heli karo iyo waxa uu ku doortay inuu ka tago maamul Goboleedka uu hoggaamiyo. 1- Saciid Cabdullaahi Deni Hoggaamiyaha maamulka Puntland waxa uu bisha January ee sanadka soo socdo u dabaal dagi doonaa seddex sano guurada kasoo wareegtay madaxtinimadiisa Puntland, waxaana markaas xafiiska uga harsan laba sano. Doorashada heer Federaal waa dhaafi doontaa xilliga uu Deni xusayo Seddex guuradiisa, wuxuuna kamid yahay Ragga xilligaan soo gaarsiiyey doorashada heer Federaal. Waxaa lagu eedeeyaa inuu dhowr xaaladood isku aadinayey. Waa musharax madaxweyne oo heer Federaal ah, dhowr bilood ka hor si qarsoodi ah ayaa loo dhihi jiray kalmadaas, laakiin muddooyinkii lasoo dhaafay si toos ah ayuu u bilaabay ololihiisa, wuxuuna soo saartay xildhibaano. Saciid Deni wuxuu ku doodaa haddii uusan tartamin inuu kursiga mar kale kusoo noqon doono madaxweynaha hadda talada ka dhammaatay ee Maxamed Cabdulalahi Farmaajo, taasoo ka dhigan inuu isku arko ninka qura ee Farmaajo ka hor istaagi kara kursiga. 1- Axmed Cabdi Kaariye (Qoor Qoor) Hoggaamiyaha Galmudug wuxuu abuurtay xisbiga waaya-arag, waa xisbi ku dhismay oo salkiisu yahay saaxiibtinimo soo jireen ah, tusaalaha ugu fudud waa Dhagey Geelle, Dhagdheer, Cabdi Qeybdiid iyo Saciid Siyaad Shirwac, waxayna Qoor Qoor saaxiibo ahaayeen 20-kii sano ee lasoo dhaafay. Kooxda waaya-arag waxay sanadkaan si aan leex leexad laheyn u sheegeysaa inay dalka ka rabto cad weyn. Qoor Qoor wuxuu ku jiraa qiimeyn, inuu tartamo dareen ah waa laga soo wariyey, inuu qof dhiso oo uu Ra’isuwlasaare qaato damac ahna waa ku jiraa. Haddii uu Farmaajo dhisayo isagoo Ra’isulwasaare doon ah, waxaan la ogeyn sida uu isku aqbalsiin karo saaxiibadiisa waaya-arag iyo Farmaajo oo muddooyinkii dambe aan aad isku jecleyn. Tusaalaha ugu fudud ee damaca Qoor Qoor waa inuu xildhibaano ka dhigayo raggiisa ugu dhow dhow iyo inuu diidan yahay qof walba oo uu u arko inuu musharax kale ku dhex jiro. Bisha February ee sanadka soo aadan waxaa u buuxsami doonta Qoor Qoor laba sano guuradiisa madaxtinimada Galmudug. Inuu labada sano ee ka dhiman muddo xilleedkiisa ka tago dhib badan kuma heyso ayaa la leeyahay haddii uu cad weyn ka helayo Dowladda Federaalka ah. Isaga iyo Saciid Deni waxay ka siman yihiin midna Axmed Madoobe ayuu shirka la yahay midna Lafta Gareen. Damaca soo xoogeysanaya ee ku jira Qoor Qoor wuxuu dharbaaxo ku yahay musharixiin badan oo Kasoo jeeda Galmudug 3- Cabdicasiis Laftagareen Hoggaamiyaha Koonfur Galbeed inta uusan madax ka noqon maamulkaas wuxuu ahaa Xildhibaan Federaal ah iyo wasiir ka tirsan Dowladda Dhexe, wuxuu u tartamay xilka guddoomiyaha Golaha Shacabka markii uu Jawaari is casilay. Waxaa mar walba ka bixin oo uu qabaa damaca ah inuu mar noqdo guddoomiyaha Golaha Shacabka ee Baarlamaanka Federaalka ah. Sida ay xaqiijiyeen ilaha ku dhow dhow iyo qaar kamid ah musharixiinta, waxaa Laftagareen u qorsheysan inuu kursigiisa noqdo xildhibaanka ugu dambeeya ee kasoo baxa Koonfur Galbeed kadibna uu qiimeeyo xaalka doorashada. Haddii ay fursadiisa fiican tahay marka uu qiimeeyo xildhibaanada dhammaan kasoo baxay gobolada wuxuu damacsan yahay inuu kursigiisa qaato kadibna u tartamo xilka guddoomiyaha Golaha Shacabka. Laftagreen waxay dhibaato ka heysataa sida uu u maareyn doono afar guddoomiye baarlmaan hore oo xildhibaano ka rabo Koonfur Galbeed oo haddii ay soo baxaana u tartamaya kursiga guddoomiyaha Golaha Shacabka, waa Jaweeri, Shariif Xasan, Maxamed Mursal Sheekh Cabdiraxmaan iyo Sheekh Aadan Madoobe. Afartaas nin markii lasii kala qaado waxaa laftagareen u daran Shariif Xasan iyo Prof. Jawaari oo labadooda midkii soo baxa ay adag tahay in laga celiyo kursiga guddoonka Golaha Shacabka, labada kale uma badna inay ka adkaan karaan Laftagareen. 19 Bisha soo aadan ee December wuxuu Laftagreen u dabaal dagi doonaa seddex guurada xilkiisa madaxweynimo ee Koofur Galbeed. Seddexdaas hoggaamiye damacooda ku aadan heer Federaal waa mid aad u xooggan, waxaase dhinaca kale lagu eedeynayaa in raajicinta damacooda uu dib usii dhigayo doorashada The post Saddex ka mid ah madax goboleedyada oo sanadkan raba inay xilal ka qabtan DF appeared first on Caasimada Online.
  18. PRESS RELEASE USAID Announces New Partnership with African Union Commission to Reach Paris Agreement Goals in Africa Many African countries disproportionately bear the brunt of climate change WASHINGTON D.C., United States of America, November 8, 2021/ — At the United Nations Conference of the Parties (COP26), Administrator Samantha Power announced a new partnership with the African Union Commission (AUC) to reach the Paris Agreement goals of reducing carbon emissions and building long-term adaptation plans. Administrator Power announced the launch of the Comprehensive Africa Climate Change Initiative (CACCI) alongside Josefa Sacko, African Union Commissioner of the Department of Agriculture, Rural Development, Blue Economy and Sustainable Environment, and other African Union Member States representatives. Many African countries disproportionately bear the brunt of climate change. Adapting and strengthening resilience to climate change is critical. CACCI advances USAID’s climate priorities and its commitment to working with countries to address the effects of climate change. Fifty-four countries in Africa have ratified the Paris Agreement, and as next steps will implement the Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) and National Adaptation Plans (NAPs) that they submitted as part of their commitments to reduce emissions and adapt to climate change. The new partnership with the AUC exemplifies USAID’s commitment to strengthening country-level implementation of NDCs and NAPs led by African leaders and institutions. It will build local and regional capacity and institutional infrastructure and develop an Africa-wide accountability platform that not only informs debate at the continental level but also informs global discussion on climate change mitigation and adaptation. This partnership advances the Global Climate Ambition Initiative, announced by the White House at the U.S.-hosted Leaders’ Climate Summit, to support partner countries in establishing net-zero strategies and strengthening resilience to climate change. SOURCE U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) Qaran News
  19. Ra’iisul Wasaaraha xukuumadda federaalka Soomaaliya ayaa maanta kulan habka fogaan aragga ah la yeeshay guddiyada doorashooyinka labada heer. Ra’iisul Wasaare Rooble ayaa faray guddiyada doorashada in ay sida ugu dhaqsiyaha badan u bilaabaan doorashada xildhibaannada Golaha Shacabka, ayna soo gabogabeeyaan ugu dambeyn dhammaadka bisha December 2021. Sidoo kale Rooble ayaa faray guddiyada doorashada labada heer in aysan dhici karin kursi qof loo xiro iyo qof doorashada loo diido, ayna ilaaliyaan qoonadada haweenka ee 30%. PUNTLAND POST The post Rooble: “Doorashada Golaha Shacabka qofna kursi looma xirikaro” appeared first on Puntland Post.
  20. Muqdisho (Caasimada Online)-Wasiirkii hore ee warfaafinta Soomaaliya Xildhibaan Maxamed Cabdi Xayir Maareeye ayaa soo bandhigay cadeymo muujinaya in Boqor Cusmaan Buurmadow oo ka mid ah hoggaanka odayaasha dhaqanka ee deegaanada Somaliland uu ku biiray waxgaradka Soomaaliyeed ee u diiwaan gashay wasaaradda arrimaha gudaha dowladda federaalka. Maareeye oo soo dhaweeyey tallaabada Boqor Cusmaan Buurmadow ayaa qoraal uu bartiisa Facebook-ga soo dhigay waxuu ku yiri, “In Boqor Cismaan Aw-Maxamuud Buurmadow ogolaaday in uu dib qaato booskiisii 135-ta Oday dhaqameed waa arin lagu farxo oo waxtar weyn u noqonaysa.” Sidoo kale Xildhibaan Maareeye ayaa sharaxaad ka bixiyey muhiimadda ay leedahay in booskaas uu ka soo muuqdo Boqor Buurmadow, waxuuna ku soo koobay laba qodob oo kala ah: 1 – Miisaanka odayaasha dhaqanka beelaha Soomaaliyeed iyo kaalinta ay ka qaadan karaan xalinta khilaafaadyada jira iyo dib u heshiisiinta ummadda Soomaaliyeed. 2 – Xoojinta iyo ka miro dhallinta wadahadalada Soomaaliya iyo Somaliland. Maxamed Cabdi Xayir Maareeye ayaa sidoo kale qoraalkiisa ku sheegay in Boqor Cusmaan Buurmadow uu caan ku yahay xalinta khilaafaadka umadaha ku nool Geeska Afrika, isagoo tilmaamay inuu xiriirro la leeyahay inta badan dhaqanka dalalka Afrika. “Boqor Cismaan Buurmadow waa Boqor ku caan baxay Xalinta khilaafyada culculus ee ka jira dhulalka ay Soomalidu degto iyo guud ahaan Geeska Africa, isla markaana ah Boqor xidhiidho fiican la leh guud Dhaqanka Africa maadaama uu ahaan jiray kuxigeenka Boqorka Africa xilligii uu noolaa Madaxweyne Mucaamar Al-Qadaafi, Boqor Buurmadow wuxuu sidoo kale xidhiidh fiican la leeyahay Dhaqanka iyo Boqorada wadamada Khaliijka iyo Aasiya,” ayuu yiri qoraalkiisa ku yiri Maareeye. Xildhibaanka ayaa qormadiisa soo raaciyey aqoonsi muujinaya in Boqor Cismaan Buurmadow uu ku biiray 135-ka oday ee saxiixayaasha ah, kuwaas oo u diiwaan gashan wasaaradda arrimaha gudaha dowladda federaalka Soomaaliya. The post Maareeye oo soo bandhigay xogta Boqor Buurmadow oo ku biiray odayaasha DF appeared first on Caasimada Online.
  21. Muqdisho (Caasimada Online) – Ra’iisul Wasaaraha Soomaaliya Mudane Maxamed Xuseen Rooble ayaa maanta kulan habka fogaan araga ah la yeeshay Guddiyada Doorashada Heer Federaal iyo Heer Dowlad-goboleed, xili uu socdo diyaar garowga doorashada Golaha Shacabka. Qoraal kasoo baxay xafiiska Ra’iisul Wasaaraha ayaa lagu sheegay inuu Rooble amray Guddiyada doorashooyinka labada heer inay sida ugu dhaqsiyaha badan u bilaabaan doorashada Xildhibaannada Golaha Shacabka, ayna soo gebo-gebeeyaan ugu dambeyn dhammaadka bisha December 2021. “Ra’iisul Wasaaraha ayaa sheegay in Xukuumaddu diyaar u tahay fududeynta arrimaha farsamo, amni iyo dhaqaale ee lagama maarmaanka u ah qabsoomidda doorashada. Isagoo guddiyada faray in ay sida ugu dhaqsiyaha badan u soo gudbiyaan qorshe howleedka qabashada doorashada, ayna tagaan goobaha doorashadu ay ka dhaceyso,” ayaa lagu yiri qoraalka kasoo baxay xafiiska Rooble. Waxa uu kula dardaarmay Guddiga Xallinta Khilaafaadku in ay si dhow ula socdaan howsha doorashada, isagoona carrabka ku adkeeyay in uusan jirin kursi cid gaar ah loo xirayo, ayna lagama maarmaan tahay in tartanku noqdo mid furan oo xalaal ah. Sidoo kale waxa uu Ra’iisul Wasaaraha ku boorriyay guddiyada doorashada in la dhowro qoondada haweenka 30% ee Xildhibaannada Golaha Shacabka ee BFS, oo dhowr jeer ay kasoo yeeren cabashooyin. Ugu dambeyntiina waxa uu sheegay in uu dhawaan booqan doono goobaha ay doorashadu ka dhaceyso, si uu ugu kuur galo habsami u socodka doorashada, islamarkaana loo dadajiyo doorashada. The post Rooble oo waqti u qabtay guddiyada doorashooyinka soona saaray amar culus appeared first on Caasimada Online.
  22. Muqdisho (Caasimada Online) – Maamulka gobolka Banaadir ayaa waxaa mas’uuliyiintiisa ka dhex billowday beegsi uu noociisu ku cusub yahay gobolka, sida uu sheegay Guddoomiye ku-xigeenka Arrimaha Siyaasadda ee maamulka degmada Wadajir oo maanta weerar lagu qaaday. Ciise Sharaawe Cabdi oo warbaahinta kula hadlay degmada ayaa sheegay in weerar ay ku qaadeen xubno ka tirsan maamulka gobolka, kaasi oo uu sheegay inuu ahaa isku dey dil oo uu ka bad-baaday. “Fal yaab leh ayaa igu dhacay maanta aniga oo kusii socda degmada ayaa meesha u dhaxeysa degmada iyo laamiga waxay qolo burcad ah ugu hor jareen gaari Saruf ah igu hor jareen gaarigii waxayna igu bilaabeen xabad, halkaas waxa ka dhacay dhimasho iyo dhaawac,” ayuu yiri Guddoomiye kuxigeenka Arrimaha Siyaasadda ee maamulka degmada Wadajir. “Qolada dagaalka igu soo qaaday waa qolo la yaqaan oo dadkii maamulka aan isku shaqada aheyn oo isku arki jirnay maamulka dhexdiisa, illaa hadda waa yaabanahay sababta ay ku dhacday nin aad iska ilaalineyn oo cadowgaaga ka dhiganeyn uu kusoo wareero.” Sidoo kale waxa uu sheegay in uusan fileyn in beegsiga uu ka dhex bilaaban doono maamulka gudihiisa, ayna fajiciso ku noqotay sababta loo beegsanayo oo uu sheegay in uusan garaneyn. “Ma moodeen maanta ka sokow inaan cadow labaad leenahay, balse waxaa ii cadaatay in cadowgii uu ka dhex billowday dowladda dhexdeeda oo dadkii aan isku cadowga aheyn aan wada-shaqeyneynay ay is beegsanayaan,” ayuu yiri Ciise Sharaawe. Waxa uu sheegay in qaar kamid ah raggii soo weeraray gacanta lagu dhigay, lana aqoonsaday oo qaarkooda dhaawacooda la geeyay Isbitaalka Madiina, halka kuwa kalena la geeyay saldhiga Wadajir. Ugu dambeyntiina waxa uu ku baaqay in si deg deg ah looga howl-galo baarista weerarka lagu soo qaaday, isaga oo nasiib xumo ku tilmaamay in qaar kamid ah maamulka uusan rabin in dowladnimada shaqeyso. The post Beegsi ka dhex billowday Maamulka Gobolka Banaadir iyo mas’uul ‘ka badbaaday’ dil appeared first on Caasimada Online.
  23. Muqdisho (Caasimada Online) – Waxaa cirka isku sii shareeray khilaafka u dhaxeeya maamulka gobolka Banaadir iyo wasaaradda waxbarashada ee xukuumadda Soomaaliya, kaas oo la xiriira sida loo maamulayo goobaha waxbarasho ee ku yaalla caasimadda. War-saxaafadeed kasoo baxay maamulka Gobolka ayaa waxaa loogu jawaabay wasaaradda waxbarashada oo shalay sheegtay in Maamulka Gobolka Banaadir ay ka joojiyeen lacagaha ay ka qaadaan Iskuulada ku yaalla Gobolka Banaadir. Maamulka Gobolka Banaadir ayaa sheegay in uu maamulo waxbarashada Gobolka, sida ku xusan heshiiska dhexmaray Wasaaradda Waxbarashada & Maamulka Gobolka, kaas oo la saxiixay 9-kii Bishii Agoosto 2020 oo ay goobjoog ka ahaayeen Garyqaanka Guud ee Dawladda, Sii-hayihii xillka Ra’isul Wasaaraha, hey’adaha kale ee heer Fedaraal & kuwa Maamulka Gobolka iyo dhammaan daneeyayaasha kale ee Waxbarashada. Sidoo kale war-saxaafadeedka kasoo baxay Gobolka Banaadir ayaa lagu sheegay in Wasaaradda waxbarashada ay jebisay Dastuurka dalka, isla markaana ay faragelin toos ah ku heyso nidaamka adeeg daadejinta. “Maamulka Gobolka Banaadir waxa uu aad uga xunyahay sida ay Wasaaradda Waxbarashada Fedaraalka u hareermarsan tahay una jabiso mar walba dastuurka dalka, shuruucda iyo ku dhaqanka heshiisyada khuseeya adeegyada Waxbarashada ee kala dhaxeeya Maamulka Gobolka Banaadir, iyadoo mar walba faragalin taban ku heysa maamulka waxbarashada Gooblka Banaadir kaliya, taas oo ka soo horjeeda nidaamka adeeg daadajinta, kala saarista awoodaha hey’adaha heer Fedaraal iyo heer maamul Goboleed iyo sidoo kale nidaamka Fadaraalaynta dalka” ayaa lagu yiri war-saxaafadeedka. Sidoo kale qoraalka kasoo baxay maamulka Gobolka Banaadir ayaa intaas ku sii daray, “Wasiirka Wasaaradda Waxbarashada Fedaraalka xaq iyo sharci mid-na uma lahan in uu baabi’iyo ama uu diido go’aankii ku saabsanaa soo saarista TARIIFADA adeegyada Waxbarashada kaas uu si rasmi ah u soo saaray Guddoomiyaha Gobolka Banaadir ahna Duqa Muqdisho oo isaga sharciyada dalka awood u siinayaan in uu soo saari karo xeerar maamul sida uu qabo sharciga Ir 6 ee soo baxay 1980 kii iyo sidoo kale sharciga Ir 116 ee soo baxay 2013-kii.” Qoraalka kasoo baxay Maamulka Gobolka Baanadir ayaa lagu sheegay inay nasiib darro weyn iyo dib u dhac ku tahay waxbarashada Gobolka Banaadir go’aankii kasoo baxay Wasaaradda waxbarashada, waxayna sheegtay inay jiraan dano shakhsiyadeed oo arrintaan ka dambeeya. Halkaan hoose ka akhriso war saxaafadeedka oo dhameystiran The post Maamulka Gobolka Banaadir oo jawaab kulul ka bixiyey go’aankii W/Waxbarashada appeared first on Caasimada Online.