Hassan6734

Nomads
  • Content Count

    475
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Hassan6734

  1. That Guy was a well known supporter of the puppet TFG, Dhubad are you telling me you did not see him in somali TV dismissing the resistance and telling somalis to back the Puppet Government. Come on guys, follow the schedule. We need to keep records of those that supported the ethiopian occupation either verbally or otherwise.
  2. Witnesses: Ethiopian shelling kills 10 in Somalia 51 minutes ago MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP) — Mortar shells slammed into a residential area in Somalia's capital, killing at least 10 people — including a mother and her child, witnesses and a hospital official said Tuesday. The bloodshed Monday came as Ethiopian troops backing Somalia's shaky government battled Islamic insurgents who have been fighting an Iraq-style guerrilla war for more than a year. Thousands of civilians have been killed. "There were 40 of us gathered under a wall to shield us from the mortars, but one landed near us," Mogadishu resident Shamsa Kheyre told The Associated Press from her hospital bed. Kheyre said she saw six bodies — including a mother and her young son. Another resident, Shekhey Nur Ahmed, said he and his friends collected the bodies of four people nearby. "All of them died because of mortar shelling fired from the Ethiopian base," Ahmed said. Long one of the world's most violent cities, Mogadishu has been decimated in recent months as the U.N.-backed government and its allies try to hold off the insurgency. On Sunday, a bomb hidden under a pile of garbage killed at least 20 people, half of them women who were sweeping the street in Somalia's capital. Somalia has been at war since a group of warlords overthrew a socialist dictator in 1991 and then spent years fighting each other. Over the weekend, 10 of the government's 15 ministers broke with the prime minister and announced they would resign. Prime Minister Nur Hassan Hussein said Saturday that the resignations were designed "to derail the ongoing reconciliation process." On Sunday, he nominated five new ministers.
  3. Witnesses: Ethiopian shelling kills 10 in Somalia 51 minutes ago MOGADISHU, Somalia (AP) — Mortar shells slammed into a residential area in Somalia's capital, killing at least 10 people — including a mother and her child, witnesses and a hospital official said Tuesday. The bloodshed Monday came as Ethiopian troops backing Somalia's shaky government battled Islamic insurgents who have been fighting an Iraq-style guerrilla war for more than a year. Thousands of civilians have been killed. "There were 40 of us gathered under a wall to shield us from the mortars, but one landed near us," Mogadishu resident Shamsa Kheyre told The Associated Press from her hospital bed. Kheyre said she saw six bodies — including a mother and her young son. Another resident, Shekhey Nur Ahmed, said he and his friends collected the bodies of four people nearby. "All of them died because of mortar shelling fired from the Ethiopian base," Ahmed said. Long one of the world's most violent cities, Mogadishu has been decimated in recent months as the U.N.-backed government and its allies try to hold off the insurgency. On Sunday, a bomb hidden under a pile of garbage killed at least 20 people, half of them women who were sweeping the street in Somalia's capital. Somalia has been at war since a group of warlords overthrew a socialist dictator in 1991 and then spent years fighting each other. Over the weekend, 10 of the government's 15 ministers broke with the prime minister and announced they would resign. Prime Minister Nur Hassan Hussein said Saturday that the resignations were designed "to derail the ongoing reconciliation process." On Sunday, he nominated five new ministers.
  4. Dominic Pkalya of the University for Peace writes: When the Islamic Courts Union (ICU) was driven out of Mogadishu in December 2006 by a combination of Ethiopian and the Transitional Federal Government forces, many pundits were quick to note that Somalia has once again squandered another chance of pacification and statehood. This was based on the understanding that for the six-month period starting in June and ending in December 2006 in which the ICU was in control of Mogadishu and much of central and southern Somalia, a hitherto unprecedented period of peace, order and security was realized. In other words, the security situation was getting much better in this swathe of land that had only known and lived with over 15 years of statelessness, insecurity, clan feuds, thriving warlordism and lawlessness. But five months since ICU was routed out of Somalia by the Ethiopian backed fire-power, Mogadishu has regained its notoriety of lawlessness, creeping insurgency against the occupiers and chronic insecurity. So the question is why did Ethiopian-backed offense with tacit support from United States and a number of western powers decide to kick out the Islamic Courts Union out of Somalia when the Courts merited an opposite response, having already delivered stability and order to the whole of Somalia? One of the lies peddled by the Transitional Federal Government (TFG) and its allies Ethiopia and United States among others that ICU was a bunch of al-Qaeda operatives, sympathizers and terrorists hell-bent on turning Somalia into another Taliban-like regime was a straight lie, a lie that intelligently fits very well in the post 9/11 discourse where if you don’t like a given regime or organization, the easiest bet is to label it terrorist and al-Qaeda operatives. With this label, US and the coalition of the willing will be on your side, and this is exactly what TFG deed and indeed succeeded in duping the world. The alleged link between ICU and al-Qaeda was at best mirrored on the now infamous WMDs the Saddam-al-Qaeda link that never was. The fact that ICU was headed by Sheikh Hassan Dahir Aweys, a person listed by US as a proxy of the al-Qaeda terrorist network and the fact that Sheikh Aweys glorified Osama bin Laden by likening him to Nelson Mandela does not necessarily mean that ICU is a proxy of al-Qaeda or trying to turn Somalia into a Taliban-like administration. As such, it is not farfetched to state that ICU was filling the power vacuum in Somalia and trying to pacify the stateless horn of Africa country. In order to appreciate the role of ICU, it would be important to note that in the last sixteen or so years, Somalia has been plagued by clan-based conflicts and warlodism especially in what used to be the capital, Mogadishu. During this tumultuous period, as many as fourteen attempts have been tried to form a central government without success. The formation of Transitional Federal Government in 2004 in Nairobi was the latest attempt, an attempt that is still struggling to endure itself to Somalia people despite of the fact that it is recognized by UN and many countries. As these attempts to establish a central government continued to flop, Islamic Courts, imposing Traditional Islamic Law (Sharia) began to be active in the capital Mogadishu and increasingly became popular because of their ability to provide some semblance of order in a hitherto chaotic environment; a city that had been labeled the most dangerous in the world. By early 2005, these tribunals came together and formed the Islamic Courts Union (ICU), a network aimed at expanding their influence and pacification across the entire country. Somali business leaders, many of whom fund their own private militias, began providing financial and military backing to the ICU in hope that the Islamists could bring wider stability. One thing that these courts demonstrated is that religion was proving to be a unifying factor for the Somalia people than anything else. The fact that Somalia is predominantly a Sunni Muslim country played to the advantage of these courts and soon they started drawing support, loyalty and legitimacy from the people. With this unprecedented support and legitimacy, the ICU’s area of control spread from the central region of Somalia south toward Mogadishu, the capital leading to violent confrontations between it and a coalition of warlords covertly backed by United States that were controlling the capital. These warlords, calling themselves the Alliance for the Restoration of Peace and Counter-Terrorism (ARPCT), feared loosing their influence and control of the capital to the courts and mounted deadly defensive attacks. Despite its name, the ARPCT probably did little to combat terrorism and was more interested in maintaining the lawless status quo in which the warlordism thrived. Finally, on June 5, 2006, the ICU claimed control of Mogadishu from the US backed alliance. Though sporadic fighting continued for several weeks with fatalities reported in hundreds if not thousands, by July 15, the ICU had wrestled control of the entire capital from ARPCT. By this time, Sheikh Hassan Dahir Aweys and Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed had emerged as the key leaders of ICU. The latter has since been touted by US as a moderate leader with little or no contacts with al-Qaeda. As the militias loyal to the ICU began expanding their territorial control, Islamic values and Sharia Law, the Transitional Federal Government of Abdullahi Yusuf that had stationed itself in the provincial town of Baidoa and its allies Ethiopia and US were alarmed by this turn of events. The TFG feared being routed out of Baidoa by the fast expanding ICU whereas Ethiopia thought that their key ally in the name of President Yussuf would be toppled. Compounded with the fact that Ethiopia has had long standing disputes with Somalia since the 1970s ****** war when Somalia claimed that ****** is part of its territory, the need to oust ICU was calling day by day. On its part, US was alarmed with the possibility of Taliban-like government emerging in Somalia and possible surge of international terrorism. As I said in the beginning of this article, in post 9/11, the easiest way to get timely and unconditional US support in any war is to brand your enemies terrorists and this is exactly what TFG and Ethiopia did. Towards the end of 2006, the transitional government and Ethiopia became hostile to the courts and sabotaged several attempts to resolve the impasse. As hostilities between the ICU and TFG became imminent, President Yussuf categorically made it clear that his government was not interested in peace negotiations with ICU leadership finally culminating to arrival of Ethiopia troops in December 2006 to shove support for his TFG troops. Within two weeks, the superior Ethiopian airpower and infantry divisions was no match for the ill-quipped and teenage boys that made the core of ICU fighters. The US occasionally joined in by striking several ICU hideouts and providing intelligence information to the Ethiopians. At this time, the ICU claimed that they are not yet defeated and al-Qaeda number two Ayman al-Zawahiri was in the news urging Muslims to “rise up to aid their Muslim brethren in Somalia” and urging the ICU to mount insurgency like war against the infields. After the ouster of ICU in the capital and southern part of the country, the transitional government moved to the capital in an attempt to consolidate its power and authority but no sooner had the government settled than the city reverted back to its dark days. President Yussuf started on the wrong foot by sacking the TFG speaker of parliament for initiating peace dialogue with the defeated ICU and from this point it became clear that this latest outfit called TFG meant to establish a central government in Somalia could probably be another hoax. With the Islamist fighters defeated and or hiding, the transitional government failed to gain any real foothold in Mogadishu. Soon, insurgency attacks mainly aimed at government troops and their Ethiopian allies intensified and the warlords’ started erecting their own roadblocks and exhorting the city residents of money and illegal taxes. The Presidential Palace continues to be greeted with daily mortar power and scenes reminiscent of October 1993 Black Hawk humiliation when dead US soldiers were dragged in the capital continues to be replayed as the residents often drag and burn bodies of government and Ethiopian soldiers killed in combat with clan militias and remnants of ICU fighters. Within a short period of time, Mogadishu is once again slipping into the dangerous city in the world. Residents have been quick to bemoan the TFG for the mess and insecurity in the city. The transitional government has since found it extremely difficult to regain control of the city. The government tried to persuade the warlords to disarm their militias and integrated them into the national army but to no avail. The dominant clan in the city, Hawiya, has been wary of the disarmament and insisted that if the government is sincere, it should also disarm the other clans in the country. Hawiya thought that maybe President Yussuf wants to punish them for largely supporting the ICU and the fact that there has been long-standing suspicion between Hawiya and the President’ clan, *****, continues to complicate this initiative. Anti-government attacks and protests continued to increase in early 2007 and to stem this tide, the government and Ethiopian troops launched another offensive against the insurgents in the city in March/April in which aid agencies described it as the worst fighting in 15 years. Fatalities could not be independently verified but conservative estimates put the dead at over 1,000 and much more in juries. The actual causalities could be several times higher than this estimate. And to demonstrate that TFG is a powerless shell completely incapable of managing Somalia even with the huge Ethiopian presence, the Ethiopians military commanders were forced to conduct direct ceasefire negotiations with Somali clans and groups in early April. Since then, the two sides are observing a very fragile ceasefire. Many more city residents have fled to the countryside for fear of renewed fighting in the city where nobody trusts the government and its Ethiopian ally even an inch. But despite of this anti-government wave, President Yussuf is going ahead with plans to host an all-inclusive and clan based reconciliation conference in the capital in May 2007. It is yet to be seen what would come out of these conference if it would ever materialize. Although Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed, who was captured by Kenyan and US authorities as he tried to cross over the border under a hail of Ethiopian firepower, has publicly accused US for supporting the Ethiopian offensive, the US maintains that he is a moderate that the TFG should work with in trying to fix the Somalia problem. While in brief sojourn in Kenya before he was deported to Yemen, Sheikh Sharif is reported to have met with US ambassador to Kenya in which the local media reported that US insisted Sheikh Ahmed must be involved in peacebuilding and reconciliation initiatives in Somalia. As the talk of this conference gets underway, it has been reported that many clan elders have insisted that the Ethiopian forces occupying Somalia must leave first otherwise the conference would achieve little if any. This is a very hard pill for the government to swallow for it wholly owes its power and presence in Mogadishu to the Ethiopian forces. Ethiopian has also found itself in the same position as US in Iraq and Afghanistan. It cannot leave now for its protégé government of President Yussuf will not be able to wither the storm of ICU insurgency and clan militias. Ethiopia, one of the poorest countries in Africa is also finding it hard and expensive to continue maintaining its forces in Somalia but there is rumors that their stay is being financed by US dollars, a rumor that further irks and isolates the largely anti US and Ethiopian population. African Union, which was supposed to deploy a peacekeeping force to replace the Ethiopian contingent, is in a more beleaguered position. It is finding it hard to get and deploy more troops to Somalia. Already, the Ugandan force of 1,200 men is in the capital but the target of 8,000 peacekeepers is becoming an illusion. For those countries willing to contribute troops, they are not sure who will pay for it for AU’s experience in Darfur in terms of funding peacekeeping is quite wanting. Rwanda, Senegal and Nigeria have all hinted at contributing troops but the ongoing hostilities in the capital in which already there have been Ugandan fatalities might scare them. Kenya, Djibouti and Ethiopia have been ruled from contributing troops to Somalia mainly because they are frontline states with extensive interests in Somalia, interests that might worsen the situation. Any US support is unwelcome. Many Somalia don’t want anything to do with US presence and support in their country just as they dislike Ethiopia. However, the irony is that these people will shout death to America but in the following weeks you find the same faces lining up in US Embassy in neighbouring Kenya seeking asylum and applying for immigrant visas. What is coming out clearly in this hullabaloo is that ICU was better placed to pacify Somalia than any of the previous attempts. TFG is continuing to be a cropper however the good news is that some leaders of ICU have expressed desire to establish a broad-based and all-inclusive government in Somalia. In a recent conference in Leicester (April) that brought together various Somalia leaders, Prof Addou, the then ICU foreign minister, observed that all Somalis have to put aside their differences to wage a common, national front to regain their sovereignty. The former foreign minister also acknowledged that the ICU could have made some mistakes, “but they were minor.” To him, more troubling were the actions of some hot-headed ICU members not approved by the leadership. It is true some cinemas were closed, property was burned, secular radio stations closed, football matches disrupted and khat (a popular stimulant) banned. This were small miscalculations that some elements of the ICU made but the least the international community and TFG could have done was to support ICU restore security and order in the whole of Somalia and slowly and gradually engage with ICU leadership for slowing down some of their “unpopular” activities/policies and start a national and broad-based dialogue to establish a central government in Somalia incorporating TFG leadership. This roadmap could have saved Somalia its current problems. It is thus clear that international community once again failed Somalia people in their attempt to establish self rule and at minimum, they should apologize. For record purposes, Prof Addou said in Leicester that “not a single terrorist act occurred during ICU rule, and that ICU was completely opposed to terror”.
  5. Some Somali soldiers desert the army to join the Al-Shabab fighters, amid calls for President Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed's resignation. Around 37 Somali government soldiers who were trained by Ethiopian forces left the army and joined the Al-Shabab fighters, Press TV correspondent quoted the rebel group's spokesman as saying. Sheikh Mukhtar Rowbow Ali Abu Mansur called on the remaining soldiers to join Al-Shabab to fight the Ethiopian occupying forces. Meanwhile, thousands of Somalis took to the streets demanding the resignation of the country's President, Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed. In another Somali development, some 10 cabinet ministers on Sunday, stepped down from their posts following a dispute between the president and Prime Minister Nur Hassan Hussein (Nur Adde) over the dismissal of Mogadishu mayor. Somalia has been the scene of violence after the allied Ethiopian troops entered the Horn of Africa nation and toppled the rule of Union of Islamic Courts (UIC) in the country. The UIC wants the execution of Sharia laws in Somalia. The Al-Shabab group is Somalia's main oppositon militia which has been fighting the Somali interim government, the Ethiopian forces and the AU peacekeeping forces since 2007. The Untied States has lumped the Somali rebel groups and al-Qaeda militants together, a claim that is rejected by the group.
  6. Mon, 04 Aug 2008 20:42:47 A top regional judge has stepped down in Somalia in protest to the government's mismanagement and lack of coordination among officials. The Attorney General of the Supreme Court of Banadair and lower Shabelle region in southern Somali, Osman Ali Jiisow cited the ongoing crisis in the government as the cause of his resignation, Press TV correspondent reported. Jiisow's resignation was announced amid massive calls for Somali President Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed's resignation over abuse of power, fraud and corruption allegations. Somali leaders have conflicting views and each one is accusing the other of embezzlement and corruption, said the judge. Recently, the Somali Prime Minister Nur Hassan Hussein (Nur Adde) dismissed Mogadishu mayor Mohammed Dheere, accusing him of orchestrating killing of civilians in the capital. Dheere's dismissal led to the resignation of 10 cabinet ministers Sunday, which was meant to undermine Nur Adde's position. Jiisow also accused the Somali government and its allied Ethiopian forces of committing crimes, massacres and displacing thousands of Somali civilians. The US-backed Ethiopian forces invaded Somalia and started an armed conflict with the Union of Islamic Courts (UIC) fighters before July 20, 2006 in an attempt to back Somalia's Transitional Federal Government (TFG). The UIC seeks the execution of rule of Sharia -Islamic law- in Somalia. AO/RA
  7. News has now reached us that it was warlord Moh.Dhere that was behind the bombings. Unbelievable. He is doing this to buy time to kill more somali women and children.
  8. Mon, 04 Aug 2008 14:26:22 President Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed Thousands of protestors have rallied against Somali president demanding he step down, while showing support for the country's premier. "We ask the international community to issue arrest warrants for President Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed and the mayor of Mogadishu, Mohammed Dheere, who are responsible for the massacre of more than half a million of our people," demonstrators rallying in north Mogadishu said in a statement on Monday. "These merciless warlords must be tried for the daily agonies they have imposed on our men, women and children, by inviting Ethiopian soldiers to our country," the statement read, adding that "we support Prime Minister Nur Hassan Hussein (Nur Adde) and his newly-appointed ministers in these trying times." The protest was triggered by a dispute between the president and the prime minister, over the dismissal of Mogadishu mayor -- a close ally of President Abdullah Yusuf -- last Tuesday on the grounds of embezzlement, incompetence, insubordination and abuse of power. The dispute led to the resignation of 10 cabinet ministers, many of them allied to the president. However, ignoring calls on him to step down, Nur Adde on Sunday named six new ministers to fill in the vacated posts, adding he would name the remaining ministers "after consultations with the people as to the best person to fill in those positions".
  9. He might get a slap from the ethiopian general that could end up giving him a brain damage. After that its a problem solved for the ethiopians
  10. J.a.c.a.y.l.b.a.r.o , be careful because he is a stooge that dishonours the great SYL name. I know this man, he lives in London and is very Pro-Ethiopia, i think he get's paid I seen him once on somali TV defending the ethiopian occupation of somalia and saying that all resistance fighters must surrender to the ethiopian forces that he claimed were bringing peace to somalia. Plus the party he talks about just includes himself only, the guy is a loser and s desparte one, once he he buyed a ticket to Ethiopia and went to Addis Abba to try and See meles, but the loser could not even managed that. He now attends discussions about Africa in the United Kingdom and tries to pretend that he represents somalia. What a sad loser.
  11. They are wondering what are the consequences? "It is not clear what will be the consequences of summoning the commanders of Ethiopian troops in Somalia but observers will be closely monitoring their actions after their return to Somalia". Ask ****** what will be the consequences & they will tell you in earnest "Amxaaro iyo Dameeraba geedka geed ugu dhaw ayeey cunaan", believe me they know what they are talking about with precision & experience. Very soon we will hear ******** screaming "Ba'a War heedhe nimanka yaa af yaqaan"? Guess what our response will be; (Afkaad Addis Abeba kaga keentay kula hadal)because even ****** don't know Tigrenia; good luck with it. I believe they will blow up the old stooge & blame it on Maqaawamo & pull out another stooge from their pocket just like they do in Kililka shanaad. I will be laughing to death if they transfer one of the other stooges Cade Muse or Riyale Kaahin to Mogadishu & tell him forget about your artificial enclaves because their use is over besides there is more money to be made in Mogadishu than Hargeysa or Garowe. This entire picture is a cruel joke. Shamefully Used and abused and now soon to be discarded away. That's what happens to someone who betrays he's deen, country and people. [ August 03, 2008, 11:12 PM: Message edited by: Miskiin-Macruuf-Aqiyaar ]
  12. Geel_jire you could not have put it better. Personally i am having a laugh as the traitor's fight each other while their tribal warlords seemed to be more confused than ever.
  13. sunaari, don't worry, i am sure General Gabre would reconcile them.
  14. Brave Somali liberation forces stand your ground. Peace will only come after ethiopian withdraws from somalia.
  15. Che -Guevara, what can you say, the TFG is a sinking ship and right now everyone is jumping off.
  16. Here's another source, straight from the hores's mouth. http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5i1rcJ1dNO1UqJkynMiEsIaUAogOw
  17. A senior military commander has resigned in protest at Somali President Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed's policies amid political turmoil in the country. Colonel Ibrahim Hassan Isse, the Commander of Bali- Doogle Air Base, and 26 other military personnel resigned on Sunday, Press TV correspondent reported. Speaking to reporters inside the base, Col. Hassan Isse accused the Somali president of being "a puppet of foreign countries." "The Somali Government is a slave of the Ethiopians and the so-called President is an old puppet," he said. He slammed the transitional government of Somalia for seeking support from non Muslims. A number of soldiers left the base after the resignation of five high-ranking officers who quit their posts along with the colonel. The report comes after 10 Somali ministers quit over a dispute between President Yusuf Ahmed and Prime Minister Nur Hassan Hussein (Nur Ade). The row was sparked after the president opposed the dismissal of the Mogadishu Mayor who is accused by the Premier of being responsible for the killing of civilians. Source: PressTV, Aug 03, 2008
  18. alaad Iidow Xasan (Xiis), Hiiraan Online sxiis@hiiraan.com Sunday August 03, 2008 Mogadishu, Somalia (HOL) – Reliable sources close to both the office of the President of Somalia’s Transitional Federal Government (TFG) and senior Ethiopian government officers in Somalia told us that differences have emerged between the President of TFG of Somalia and the Ethiopian government. It is reported the differences between the two sides are based the refusal of President Abdulllahi Yusuf Ahmed by an offer from Ethiopian government to mediate current disagreement between him and his Prime Minister Mr. Nur Adde. Sources say that as a result of the differences between the two sides, the Ethiopian government has summoned to Addis Ababa its most senior officers in Somalia, Gen. Gabre who is the commander of Ethiopian troops in Somalia and Gen. Johans who is the commander the Ethiopia’s infantry troops in Somalia. It is not clear what will be the consequences of summoning the commanders of Ethiopian troops in Somalia but observers will be closely monitoring their actions after their return to Somalia. English adaptation by Mohamed Amin Ahmed, Hiiraan Online Lets discuss!
  19. Sun, 03 Aug 2008 21:41:22 Somali Prime Minister Nur Hassan Hussein (Nur Adde) has appointed six new ministers to fill some of the vacant seats in his cabinet. The appointment of the new ministers came on Sunday, a day after ten cabinet ministers stepped down from their posts amid a political row between the Premier and President Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed. The PM and President are at odds over Yusuf Ahmed's support for Mogadishu Mayor Mohamed Dheere who has been sacked by Nur Adde. Nur Adde had earlier said that while he was ready to resign to restore peace to the country, he would not be forced out of the office by mass resignation of his ministers. The Prime Minister, who accuses the Mayor of orchestrating killing of civilians in Mogadishu, hinted that ministers from the President's clan were undermining his government over his differences with Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed.
  20. Geel_jire but you must admit, its a good thing seeing the traitors confused and fighting each other. I think its time General Gabre forced them to resolve their differences and give AY another hard slap in the face for misbehaving himself.
  21. MPs seeking arrest of Somali President Sun, 03 Aug 2008 17:04:07 Two Somali lawmakers have asked the parliament to bring President Abdullahi Yusuf Ahemd and the Finance Minister to justice over corruption. Parliamentarians Mohamed Khanyare Afrah and Abi Abdulle said Sunday that the President and Finance Minister should be brought to justice over what they called "stealing the money of the nation". They made the remarks during a parliament session held to decide on whether Prime Minister Nur Hassan Hussein (Nur Adde) should be sacked, the Press TV correspondent reported. The majority of the lawmakers supported the Prime Minister while a few parliamentarians called for his dismissal. Abdi Abdulle said the Somali President deserves to be arrested as he has "stolen money form the public funds" and he must be brought to justice. Mohamed Khanyare also said the Somali President and Finance Minister of the Somali Transitional Government should be arrested and tried in a court as they have "siphoned off a large sum of money the government received as humanitarian aid". Tension is high in Somalia amid a political row between the Ethiopian backed President and Prime Minister over the dismissal of the Mogadishu Mayor. President Yusuf Ahmed opposed the dismissal of Mayor Mohamed Dheere who is accused by the Premier of orchestrating the murder of civilians in the city. Wanted for arrest Mr Yey
  22. And they said that the Ethiopians will bring security to somalia, ever since the ethiopians came into somalia, things have got worse. Ethiopians must leave somalia as soon as Possible otherwise their will be more deaths.
  23. Yey is a joker because the west backs Nur Addde, if Nur Adde goes its definitely the end of the TFG, god Willing.
  24. Che -Guevara, what's so funny about a brother saying Allhu Akbar all the time? Absolutely ridiculous