
General Duke
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Updated About:9 hours ago0 Ra’iisul Wasaaraha Soomaaliya Dr. Cabdiweli Maxamed Cali Gaas iyo wefdi ka kooban Wasiiro ayaa maanta si diiran loogu soo dhoweeyey magaalada Garoowe ee xarunta maamulka Puntland, iyadoo la filayo in maalinta berri ah uu ka furmo shirka Garowe2. Wefdiga Ra’iisul Wasaaraha ayaa waxaa si diiran ugu soo dhoweeyey garoonka madax uu horkacayay madaxweynaha maamulka Puntland Mudane Cabdiraxmaan Maxamed Faroole iyo madaxweyne kuxigeenka Mudane C/samad Cali Shire iyo sidoo kale Wasiiro Xildhibaano, saraakiil, iyo dadweyne aad u tiro badan, wuxuuna R.wasaaruhu salaan sharaf ka qaatay cutubyo ka tirsan ciidankan Puntland. Ra’iisul Wasaaraha oo warbaahinta la hadlay ayaa u sheegay in imaatinkiisu uu la xiriiro shirka maalinta burrito ah laguw ado inuu ka furmo magaalada Garoowe isaga oo ku tilmaamay shir muhiimad gaar ah xambaarsan maadaama looga arrinsanayo sidii dalka loogu sameyn lahaa Dastuur ay ku dhaqanto maadaama ay la qaatay Nidaamka ku dhisan Federaalka. “Waxaan halkan u imid sidii aan uga qeybgali lahaa shirka Garowe2 oo daba socda shirkii horay halkan uga dhacay, wuxuuna xambaarsan yahay muhiimad gaar ah maadaama looga hadlayo sidii dalka loogu sameyn lahaa Dastuur” ayuu yiri Ra’iisul Wasaaraha oo tilmaamay inuu filayo in shirkani ay ka soo baxdo natiijo wanaagsan. Sidoo kale, Ra’iisul Wasaaraha ayaa xusay in diirada la saari doono dabogalna lagu sameyn doono go’aanadii ka soo baxay shirkii midkan ka horeeyey ee (Garowe Principles), si looga gun gaaro go’aanada iyo balanqaadyadii horey loogu heshiiyay. Xafiiska Wararka Midnimo, webmaster@midnimo.com midnimo12@googlemail.com.
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Somalia: Somali PM wants ‘Marshall Plan’ at London meet
General Duke replied to General Duke's topic in Politics
Ra'iisul Wasaaraha Soomaaliya oo rajo ka muujiyay shirka lagu qabanayo London Talaado, Feberaayo 14, 2012 (HOL) − Ra'iisul wasaaraha Soomaaliya, Cabdiweli Maxamed Cali ayaa rajo wanaagsan ka muujiyauy shirka lagu qabanayo London 23-ka bishan Feberaayo, kaasoo looga hadlayo arrimaha Dalka Soomaaliya. Dr C/weli Gaas wuxuu sheegay in shirkan uu udub dhexaad u noqon doono deggenaaasho lagu soo celiyo Soomaaliya 20-sano oo colaado ah kaddib, isagoo xusay in shirkan uu indhaha caalamka kusoo duwayo Soomaaliya. "Waxaan rajeynayaa in shirkan ay kasoo bixi doonaan qorshe dhameystiran oo dib loogu dhisayo Soomaaliya," ayuu ra'iisul wasaaruhu u sheegay warbaahinta, isagoo sidoo kale xusay inay dadka Soomaaliyeed rajo wanaagsan ka filayaan shirkaas. Ra'iisul wasaaraha Ingiriiska, David Cameron ayaa sannadkii hore sheegay inuu shir u qabanayo Soomaaliya, kaasoo uu sheegay inuu indhaha caalamka ugu soo jeedinayo Soomaaliya si wax looga qabato colaadaha raagay ee ka taagan. "Waxaan sidoo kale rajeynayaa in shirka London uu sabab u noqdo in caalamka uu kordhiyo taageeradiisa Soomaaliya, dibna u soo celiyo dareenka bulshada caalamka ee ku aaddan Soomaaliya," ayuu Dr C/weli hadalkiisa ku daray. Ra'iisul wasaaruhu wuxuu intaas ku daray in Soomaaliya ay tahay dal xor ah oo ay dunidu aqoonsan tahay, balse ay dagaallo muddo dheer ka socdeen, isagoo xusay in xukuumaddiisu ay xoogga saarayso sidii uu ku fuli lahaa Raodmap-ka oo looga saarayo Soomaaliya xilliga KMG ah. Dhanka kale, Xarakada Al-shabaab oo ku biirtay Al-Qaacida ayaa waxay shirka London ku tilmaantay qorshe lagu doonayo in Soomaaliya lagu geliyo maxmiyad, iyagoo sheegay inay shanta farood uga hortagayaan qodobbada kasoo shirkaas. Maxamed Xaaji Xuseen, Hiiraan Online maxuseen@hiiraan.com Muqdisho, Soomaaliya -
Somalia: Somali PM wants ‘Marshall Plan’ at London meet
General Duke replied to General Duke's topic in Politics
Bold stance from the PM... -
Updated:- 11 hours ago| Commnets MOGADISHU — Somali Prime Minister Abdiweli Mohamed Ali said Monday he hoped an upcoming conference in London on the war-torn country would produce a “Marshall Plan” to end two decades of chaos. “Somalia expects a lot from this conference. We expect the establishment of a trust fund for Somalia. We expect a complete reconstruction plan for Somalia. We expect a Marshall Plan for Somalia,” he told AFP in an interview. British Prime Minister David Cameron will chair the February 23 conference, gathering Somali and foreign leaders to find a solution to the civil unrest that has plagued Somalia almost without interruption since 1991. The meeting will “help galvanise a common approach to address the problems and challenges of Somalia that affect us all,” the Foreign Office said. “I hope the London conference will galvanise the international support for Somalia, bring back the attention of the international community on Somalia, and with it all the necessary help for rebuilding Somalia,” Ali said. Decades of war and lawlessness have ruined the Horn of Africa country, leaving it with no basic infrastructure, its people in deep poverty and a humanitarian crisis the United Nations describes as the worst in the world. Earlier this month, British Foreign Secretary William Hague visited war-scarred Mogadishu, marking a new drive by London to address the country’s protracted crisis. During the visit, London also appointed an ambassador to Somalia, the first in 21 years. Ali dismissed a proposal circulated ahead of the London conference that Somalia be put under a temporary UN or African Union administration until December 2013. The mandate of Somalia’s Transitional Federal Institutions expires in August, and the country’s Western backers are against any further extension. “We are in the 21st century. Somalia is a sovereign country with a government recognised by the international community, it is ridiculous,” Ali said of the proposal. “I understand the concern. … We have to give the maximum efforts in the implementation of the roadmap,” he added, referring to a UN-backed plan agreed by Somali leaders to secure the country, write a new constitution and hold elections by August. Somalia has lacked an effective central government since president Mohamed Siad Barre was ousted in 1991, unleashing cycles of bloody conflict that have defied countless peace initiatives. Since then, the country has been variously governed by ruthless warlords and militia groups in mini-fiefdoms, becoming the epitome of a failed state. A hardline Islamist movement with links to Al-Qaeda now controls much of southern and central Somalia, while pirate gangs rule coastal villages. The Islamist Shebab rebels have been fighting to topple the Western-backed Somali government in Mogadishu, where the administration survives under the protection of a 10,000-strong African Union force. Regional countries have recently increased pressure against the Shebab, with Kenyan troops battling the rebels in the south of Somalia since last October. Ethiopian also sent forces to southwestern Somalia in November, the second such incursion in less than three years. The 9,700-strong AU force, comprising troops from Burundi, Djibouti and Uganda, protects the government. The Shebab abandoned fixed positions in Mogadishu last August, but has continued to carry out grenade and suicide attacks on government targets in the anarchic capital. Source: AFP
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Its a good to try and build relations.A good move indeed.
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JB, Warlord Siilanyu aggression avaunt the people of Cayn will not go unpunished and if it turns into an all out war it will be the SNM who will bare the responsibility.
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Why would you need shoes in paradise?
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The rise of Somalia is evident Adeer. Today there is Oul drilling in Puntland, a road map to peace, the unification of Mogadishu under the government. Indeed Somalia is rising. The fact that a British foreign ministrer has visited Mogadishu & is writing about his trip is proof. Your only prediction news that Somaliland was bit going to the London conference and you got that wrong. We await your next one lad. Lol
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Somaliland ma istaahisho in aanu deeq waxbarasho siino waayo waa dal nabadi ka jirto markaa hadii aad jeceshihiin dhamaantiin in aanu wada qaadno ku noqda dalkiinii islamarkaana dagaal ka bilaaba oo isdila" ...... Somalia: Mortality rates among world's highest in Somaliland Thursday, February 02, 2012 By IRIN The self-declared Republic of Somaliland is grappling with high child and maternal mortality rates, malnutrition and inadequate medical personnel, health officials told IRIN. "Somaliland has one of the worst maternal mortality ratios in the world, estimated to be between 10,443 and 14,004 per 100,000 live births," said Ettie Higgins, head of the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) field office in Hargeisa, capital of Somaliland. "The infant mortality rate is 73/1,000 while the under-five mortality [rate] is about 117/1,000. Fully immunized children represent a mere 5 percent. Environmental sanitation is highly challenged,” she said. "There are a little over 100 doctors in the country, both in the public and private sectors, and about the same number of registered midwives," Higgins explained. "Maternal mortality is the leading cause of death among women of reproductive age; it is caused mainly by haemorrhage, puerperal sepsis, eclampsia and obstructed labour," Higgins said, adding that women in Somaliland had a one in 15 risk of dying of maternal-related causes. Child mortality Abdillahi Abdi Yusuf, head of Somaliland's National Health Management and Information System (NHMIS) in the Ministry of Health, said acute respiratory infections accounted for 40 percent of child mortality in Somaliland, while acute watery diarrhoea and malnutrition accounted for another 40 percent. "Diseases that can be prevented through vaccination, such as polio, diphtheria, tetanus, TB, measles and whooping cough cause 20 percent of children's mortality in Somaliland," Yusuf said. According to NHMIS statistics, in 2011 “acute respiratory infections [excluding pneumonia] were the highest [cause of] morbidity in Somaliland's public health centres”. Other leading causes included “anaemia, urinary tract infections, watery diarrhoea, pneumonia, skin diseases, eye infections, trauma and burns, sexually transmitted infections and bloody diarrhoea”. According to a UNICEF/Ministry of Health Multi-Indicator Cluster Survey (MICS), diarrhoea is the second-highest cause of morbidity and mortality in Somaliland due to poor sanitation and low rate of access to safe water supplies. "In Somaliland, only 42 percent of the population have access to latrines and 41 percent have access to safe water supplies,” the survey said. Yasin Nur Tani, a private doctor in Hargeisa, told IRIN: "I used to receive about 20 patients daily, complaining of different ailments; the most common disease is upper respiratory tract infections in all ages while skin disease is second and diarrhoea comes third. These are then followed by acute gastritis, intestinal parasites, gynaecological and obstetric diseases and other non-communicable diseases including hypertension and diabetes." Somaliland health authorities, in collaboration with international aid workers, conduct a weekly surveillance of communicable diseases and take action as soon as possible. "The Ministry's focus on the communicable diseases control programme identifies the control and the prevention of those diseases contributing to the highest burden of disease in the country; these include malaria, tuberculosis, diarrhoeal diseases, HIV/AIDS, meningitis and vaccine preventable diseases," a report by the Health Ministry states.
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^^^^Siilanyu's spokesman is losing the plot.
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Updated:- 2 mins ago| 0 Commnets Wasiirka Britain u qaabilsan arimaha Africa ayaa sheegay in la joogo xiligii saxda ahaa ee ay dowlada Ingiriisku hormuud u noqon lahayd nabad kusoo dabaalidda iyo xal u helidda dhibaatooyinka mudada 20-ka sano ka badan ka jirey dalka Soomaaliya. Henry Bellingham ayaa warkan sheegay mar uu waraysi gaar ah siinayey Idaacadda VOA laanteeda afka Soomaaliga, wuxuuna intaas ku daray in Britain ay isu xil saartay hogaaminta dadaalka caalamiga ah oo ku wajahan xal u helidda dhibaatooyinka Soomaaliya. Bellingham ayaa mar uu ka jawaabayey su’aal la weydiiyey oo ku saabsanayd Safaaradda Ingiriiska ee Soomaaliya iyo sida ay suurtagal u tahay in Safiirka Soomaaliya loo soo magacaabay uu meel aan magaalada Muqdisho ahayn ugu howl galo wuxuu yiri: “ Tani waa ku talagal keena, danjiraheena waxan dooneynaa inuu Muqdisho tago, laakiin waxaa muhiim ahayd marka hore inaan ku dhawaaqno ku talagal keena ” Wuuuna intaas raaciyey: “ Magacaabista Safiirkani waxaa fariin cad oo muujineysa sida ay Britain uga go’an tahay xal u helidda dhibaatooyinka Soomaaliya, waxan dooneynaa inaan qayb ka qaadano nabadda iyo wax walba oo soo maaliya looga dhalin karo degenaasho buuxa” Wasiirka Britain u qaabilsan arimaha Africa Henry Bellingham ayaa ugu danbeyntii mar la weydiiyey muhiimadda uu dowlada Britian u leeyahay shirka 23-da bishan magaalada London ka furmayo ee arimaha Soomaaliya looga hadli doono sheegay in dowlada Ingiriisku aysan wadin qorsheyaal cusub oo wax looga bedelayo dadaaladii xal u helidda dhibaatooyinka Soomaaliya ku aadanaa ee horay u socdey. “ Ma dooneyno inaan la nimaadno wax ka bedelan dadaalada hada socda, laakiin Britain waxay dooneysaa inay horumariso dadaaladaas oo ay wax ku biiriso, waxan dooneynaa inaan hormuud u noqono talaabooyin kale oo caalami ah oo laga qaato arimaha Soomaaliya ” Dowlada Britain oo kamid ah dalalkii Soomaaliya horay usoo gumeystey waxay u muuqataa xiligan mid si aad u ah danaynaysa arimaha Soomaaliya, in badan oo kamid ah dadka Siyaasadda aqoonta u leh iyo kuwa wax dhiraan dhiriya ayaana sheki ka muujinaya waxa xiligan kusoo beegay dadaalka Britain ee ku aadan sidii xal loogu heli lahaa dhibaatooyinka mudada 20-ka sano ka badan ka aloosnaa dalka Soomaaliya. In badan dadka wax faaleeya ah ayaana saadaaliyey in shirka dhowaan magaalada London ee caasimada Ingiriiska ka furmi doonaa uu noqonayo mid dhabaha u xaara Ictiraaf ay Somaliland oo ah dhulkii uu horay ingiriisku u guumeysan jirey islamarkaana in mudo ah ku howlanayd sidii ay Soomaaliya inteeda kale uga go’i lahaydi hesho. Horseed Media
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In September 1992 Foreign Secretary Douglas Hurd visited Mogadishu. He could not have known that it would be 20 years before any of his successors set foot in the country again. Shortly after his visit Britain's Embassy was shut and Somalia plunged deeper into the vortex of suffering and violence that has consumed it ever since. Today, it is the world's worst failed state, one that is staggering back onto its feet. This week I visited Somalia's capital. Mogadishu is a city where people until recently were surviving, not really living. As its Mayor said to me, a 20-year-old Somali has never known anything other than violence and war. The road I took from the airport to the city is flanked by derelict and bullet-ridden houses that used to be homes, and torn roads that used to lead somewhere but have been savaged by fighting. One million people have died in those 20 years, out of an average population of nine million. More people are dependent on food aid - literally kept from starvation - than the entire population of Edinburgh, Manchester, Sheffield, Leeds and Liverpool put together. If you are born in Somalia today you can hope to live to the age of 48, roughly the same average life expectancy of people in Britain in 1880. Large areas of the country are controlled by extremists and militants. Most people live without access to justice and human rights, and Somalia has become a haven for the some of the worst criminality and terrorism in the world. Piracy has flourished and innocent British holidaymakers have been seized in neighbouring countries and surrounding waters, including Kenya and the Seychelles. During my visit I met the President, members of Somalia civil society and the Mayor of Mogadishu. I wanted to hear their views and their view of the world. I was struck by their resilience and their desire to move on and to experience peace and some semblance of normality. Our presence was greeted with enthusiasm, as was the visit of Andrew Mitchell, International Development Secretary, to other parts to Somalia last week. I took with me Britain's newly-appointed Ambassador to Somalia and I pledged that we will re-open an Embassy in Mogadishu as soon as local circumstances permit. We are making active preparations for this. I left Somalia more convinced than ever that we have a responsibility to do our utmost to stem the decline of Somalia. Its people deserve a better future, and our own security requires their country to become more stable. In three weeks' time Britain will host a Conference on Somalia in London. It will bring together 50 countries and organisations to try to agree a new international and Somalian strategy to turn around the failed state that is Somalia today. There are two reasons why the time is right for this effort. The first is that the African Union troops in Somalia have made some important progress, wrestling nearly all of Mogadishu from the control of insurgents, and making other security gains. Second, the mandate of Somalia's Transitional Federal Government expire in August. This gives an opening to launch a new and broader political process embracing all Somalis, with a greater emphasis on supporting regional governance as well as stronger and more representative government from the centre. This sense of a moment of opportunity was shared by the Somali leaders and citizens that I met, who welcomed Britain's engagement. The London Conference will aim to agree practical steps to support a new political process, as well as assistance to Somalia's regions, funding for the African Union Mission, more effective arrangements to tackle piracy and terrorism, and increased humanitarian coordination. It will be different from previous conferences because it will put the needs of Somalis front and centre, not just our own security, and it will attempt to address the root causes of the conflict rather than just the symptoms. Somalia's problems are extraordinarily complex and dangerous and clearly cannot be resolved by one conference. Somalis have struggled with these challenges for years, aided by many valiant aid workers, diplomats, charities and individuals. Royal Navy vessels are carrying out the fight against piracy, along with ships from 15 other nations. A huge amount of international aid has poured into the country, but only a coordinated approach of the kind we are proposing will it make it really effective for the long term. Somalia is part of a wider problem. The international community needs to get more effective at conflict prevention and supporting weak states. This is a major emphasis in British foreign policy today. Not only are we trying to ensure that we bring our own national resources to bear in foreign policy more effectively than in the past through our National Security Council, but we are urging better coordination by the international community as a whole. Somalia may well be the hardest case of all, but there can be fewer countries in the world where an investment in peace and security is more desperately needed, or where international effort can more worthily be devoted. By devoting diplomatic time and effort into Somalia today, we are investing in our own security and prosperity in years to come. Britain is committed to playing its part not only with the London Conference, but for the years to come. Source: Huffington Post
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Somaliland participates united in the upcoming Somalia Conference
General Duke replied to Carafaat's topic in Politics
^^^Yeah, when Tuur & Egaal went to war, costing the lives of thousands and destroying whole towns. Who was not ready? Adeer spare us the bull.. Siilanyu has been forced to abandon the legacy of Egaal. Now that's a good thing. -
I am not related to him like JB is.
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Somaliland will be Attanding the London Conference
General Duke replied to Jacaylbaro's topic in Politics
I know, cause you lost the argument nooh..