Saalax

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Everything posted by Saalax

  1. spoken like a true patriot. :cool: but i am afraid some somalis are xasiidin and don't want to see their fellow brothers progress , instead they want to keep everybody in a dark hole.
  2. that is true, imagine having Strong somaliand and strong dijbouti side by side and helping to restore the peace in somalia maxa ka ficaan ariinta? heck they might even tame Eritrea and Ethiopia.
  3. Ciyaar Saaxiibtinimo oo Dhex Martay Degmooyinka Ceerigaabo iyo Burco Waxaa galabta ka dhacday garoonka ku bada cagta ee DAALLO stadium eek u yaala magaalo madaxda gobolka sanaag ee degmada ceerigaabo ciyaar aad u xiiso iyo xamaasad badanayd Ciyaartaas oo u dhaxaysey laba da kooxood ee ku ciyaarayey degmada ceerigaabo iyo degmada burco ayaa bilaabantay saacada afrikada bari markay ahayd 4:00PM Ciyaartu waxay ku bilaaban tay jawi degan oo farxadeed ha se yeeshee kooxada kubad cagta ee ku ciyaaraysey magca degmada burco ayaa labadii daqiiqadood ee ugu horaysey laba gool ku dhaliyey shabgii kooxda reer ceerigaabo hase yee shee kooxda reer ceerigaabo waxay muujiyeen geesinimo iyo kelyo adayga. Waxaana loo raciyey gool sadexaad daqiiqadii 5aad waxaa ay sameeyeen dhiiri gelin iyo dedaal dheeraad ah kooxda reer sanaag waxaanay daliyeen gool koodii ugu horeeyey waxaana kooxdaa reer ceerigaabo u dhaliyey gool kaa ciyaartoyga da’ad yare ee ibraahim sh cabdiraxmaan waxana uu goolkaasi noqday mid niyada u sii toosiya kooxda reer ceerigaabo waxaa halkaa ku dhamaatay qaybtiii hore ee ciyaarta. Qaybta labaad oo ay labada kooxoodba la soo bexeen ciyaar aad u qurux badan ayaa waxay kooxda reer ceerigaabo dhaliyeen goo aad u qurux badan oo uu u dhaliyey ciyaaryahanka kale ee axmed dalmar siciid {boqole} Sikastaba ha ahaatee ciyaartaasi waxay ku soo dhamaatay 2 & 3 oo ay guushu ku raacda kooxda reer togdheer ee burco waxaana la filayaan in ciyaartaas mid lamid ahin la isugu soo noqdo maalinta baerito ah wixii ka soo kordha waanu idin la soo socod siin doonaa Siciid axmed tamreyse Xamaasnews Ceerigaabo/sanaag/somaliland
  4. horta who trusts this Calasow guy from the comforts of his flat writing all kind of unreliable news. Wagaacusub of all websites? :
  5. where is the news? or am i missing something here :confused:
  6. C.G, if Ina Waraabe said outrageous staff in the past then why are many people surprised by this? surely knowing he has a habit for it.
  7. that is true i really think this whole hunger issue is a tool used by the west to continue holding a grip on africa, the biggest problem in africa is many countries are not self -relient, they need farming, all sorts of stuff to produce food, instead of wasting thousands and millions on giving money direct to corrupted politicians who will just use that money and food to sabotage the people, they should bring equipments instead like farming equipments, iyo waxayalaha oo dhaan it would have been better if they teached people in africa to be more - self -relient.
  8. War i didn't say it was funny, since you responded with so what ( you also seemed careless) about Djbouti neighbours. hunger must be a curse to africa still.
  9. Hanjuf^^ i don't think that is a good thing. wax fiicnaan lahayd if haadi muslimka kula jiraan instead.
  10. they need some french aid, President Sarkozy should be concerned.
  11. NAIROBI (IRIN) - The main rainy season in Djibouti has been poor, prompting fears that some pastoralist households could face serious food shortages in the coming months. "Consecutive seasons of poor rainfall, a possible failure of the current Heys/Dada rains, high staple food prices and a significant reduction in emergency food aid distribution are pushing households towards extreme food insecurity," the Famine Early Warning System Network (FEWS Net) said. The Heys/Dada rains last from October to February and are the main source of water, especially in the coastal grazing belt. "In most areas, no significant rains were observed in November, normally the period of peak rainfall, suggesting that the season may be a complete failure," FEWS Net said in an 11 January alert. "Earlier rains in 2009 were also below normal." The situation comes at a time when the UN World Food Programme (WFP) has reduced general emergency food aid distributions in most pastoral areas by nearly 74 percent, compared with last year. The reduction followed a May 2009 assessment that had shown a significant improvement in water and pasture conditions, especially in the coastal belt. Food and energy prices were also stabilizing. "WFP is following the current situation in Djibouti closely together with the government and other partners and is concerned by the poor performance of the rains in some parts of the country," Marcus Prior, WFP spokesman in Nairobi, said. "Up to October 2009, WFP was providing general food rations to 80,000 vulnerable people in Djibouti," Prior told IRIN on 13 January. Following the assessment, that number was reduced to 25,000. The poor rains have already led to livestock deaths, FEWS Net said, particularly in the northwest and southeast pastoral zones. Some households are failing to meet basic food and water needs. "The rural population in need of emergency assistance, both food and non-food, is expected to increase in the coming months to 80,000 to 100,000 persons," it noted. "Current emergency food aid distribution is inadequate and should expand to meet the expected caseload." In central pastoral zones, people had already started selling their remaining livestock, taking children out of school, reducing dietary intake, and migrating to cities in search of casual labour. Prior said WFP, with regional authorities, was planning to roll out food-for-work activities for the moderately food insecure. These would include building or rehabilitating access roads, and agricultural and water supply infrastructure. "It is expected that up to 21,500 additional people will benefit from these projects," he added. "WFP's nutrition programme in Djibouti, targeting over 3,200 of the most vulnerable mothers and their children, continues." Two-thirds of Djibouti's estimated 800,000 people live below the poverty line, 10 percent in extreme poverty, according to Djibouti health ministry statistics. At least 85 percent of the population lives in urban areas, but 60 percent are unemployed. Djibouti, according to the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, is also fundamentally dependant on imported cereals. Food prices are approximately 30 percent above the market average. According to the UN Children’s Fund, UNICEF, an estimated 30,000 children were acutely malnourished last year. In an update for December 2009-February 2010, UNICEF said global acute malnutrition (GAM) prevalence among children under five was at a critical level of 28.8 percent nationally.
  12. looool@ wtf since did J.erti became part of Habasha, i though they were from Yemen.
  13. Cowke, there is no Habash in eritrea i think you mean Tigrinaya and Afar peoples of Eritrea. the habesha primarily inhabit the west parts of Ethiopia they do not inhabit eritrea they are cut down by the tigre region of ethiopia and the afar region of ethiopia.
  14. Saalax

    Sool

    Horta what happened to the SSC thing?
  15. Saalax

    Sool

    Originally posted by Mr. Red Sea: Yeah Sool, Somaliland.
  16. lol that is like asking Europe to merge with Africa get out of here son.
  17. Obama says no plans for US troops in Yemen, Somalia Monday, January 11, 2010 Washington (dpa) - The United States does not plan to send its troops to either Yemen or Somalia amid growing concern about terrorism threats from those countries, President Barack Obama said in an interview. "I never rule out any possibility in a world that is this complex," Obama said in the interview with People magazine, excerpts of which were released Sunday. "In countries like Yemen, in countries like Somalia, I think working with international partners is most effective at this point." "We have known throughout this year that al-Qaeda in Yemen has become a more serious problem," Obama said in the interview, the full version of which is to be published Friday. He also acknowledged that "the same is true in Somalia, another country where there are large chunks that are not fully under government control and al-Qaeda is trying to take advantage of them." But the president said he had "no intention of sending US boots on the ground in those regions," according to The New York Times. "One of the things that we have to understand is that unlike a traditional war, the threats that we face and our allies face are not always going to be centred or localized in a particular geographic area but are rather networks that are connecting over cyberspace," Obama said. "And how we project ourselves to the world, the message we send to Muslim communities around the world, the overwhelming majority of which reject al-Qaeda but where a handful of individuals may be moved by a jihadist ideology, what countermessaging we have to them - all those things - continue to be extraordinarily important." The al-Qaeda terrorist group's affiliate in Yemen is believed to have been behind the failed attempt to blow up a Christmas Day flight over Detroit. Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, a 23-year-old Nigerian, is accused of trying to ignite explosives as the Delta/Northwest Airlines flight was to land. Abdulmutallab on Friday entered a not-guilty plea during a brief arraignment hearing in a federal court in Detroit. He faces up to life in prison if convicted. An initial inquiry commissioned by Obama found last week that the intelligence community had "sufficient information" to stop the attack. Obama has sharply criticized his intelligence community for the "systemic failure" and outlined a series of measures to strengthen intelligence gathering and analysis.
  18. lets see the outcome of his visits to washington.
  19. SOMALILAND: Foundation stone laid for new livestock quarantine station [/url] BERBERA (Somalilandpress) — Suleiman Al-Jabiri, a Saudi tycoon and livestock investor, is constructing a second livestock quarantine facility in the Somaliland port town of Berbera worth millions, Berberanews reports. Somaliland’s livestock minister, Idiris Ibrahim Abdi and Mr Suleiman laid the first foundation stone on Saturday for the new facility which is expected to house more than 1.5 million heads. “The plant will have international standards and will equally be shared by all Somali livestock traders in the region,” Mr Idiris told local media. The facility is expected to boost Somaliland’s livestock exports that’s disease-free to neighbouring countries and the Middle East, which accounts for over 90 per cent of its trade. The ceremony was attended by Somaliland ministers, regional Sahil authorities, local traders and Hassan Al-Hussein, the chairman of Gulf International, the company that will construct the facility. Early last year, Al-Jabiri completed a $5-million livestock quarantine station and has since exported thousands of live animals to the Arabian peninsula. Saudi Arabia relaxed a eleven-year ban on Somaliland livestock last October and Somaliland animals have been steadily on high demand in the Saudi Kingdom ever since. Livestock market is estimated to be worth $250-million annually in Somaliland.
  20. Originally posted by GAAROODI: boooo.hooooo. Las canod is under occupation. looool, give me break. If you have an army and want to take it from me, then come and take it from me. If not keep crying on the internet. I will turn it into a garrison, i will demolish it if i choose, i will turn into las vegas if i want. You are lucky you have bosaso and garowe left. Before we take these little villages you should keep quiet. looool, i will do with las canod as a please. looooool "i will turn into las vegas if i want."
  21. Also Haradheere is a major town in Galmudug.