Che -Guevara

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Everything posted by Che -Guevara

  1. ^Geeljire's relationship with his geel is intimate. Each geel has name.
  2. Originally posted by Taleexi: 4.5 miyaa ciyaalka xaafadana kuraasta ku qaybsadaan? mise nidaam kale baa jira? Taleexiyow meelbaad nooga dhacdey :mad: LooooL@Wardhiigley..maya aniga ciyaal bilaajo ahaa the place was full of Somali Yemenis including reer Naaji markii danbana ciyaal yaaqshiid laakin reer Wardhiigley shirabkooda waas xasuustaa Washington waabab waaye Inta kale wa kaalad waaye Wardhiigley wasaarad waaye Nina...Igaar q@ldaan wiririf ah haduus kudhaho marwo micnaheeda soobax liido ii raac waaye ee warka soodaa.
  3. LooooL@marwo-abkoo axmed, Nina eebaheylow taleexi nacash nacash inuus kula ciyaaruus rabaa
  4. Originally posted by Taleexi: Thanks guys.... One question though, I watched the buraanburka from the lady in Boston event. Daa..roo.. d.ku ma quraysh buu galaa?.... Runtii way iga There was a Boston event?
  5. Sh. Shariif oo eedeyey Shariif Xasan 24 Oct 24, 2010 - 8:57:39 AM Madaxweyne Sh. Shariif oo eedeeyay Shariif Xasan Madaxweynaha Somalia Sh. Shariif Sh. Axmed ayaa ku eedeeyay war-saxaafadeed uu kasoo saaray Villa Somalia Gudomiyaha Barlamaanka DF Shariif Xasan Sh. Aadan, isagoo ku eedeyay inuu ka horyimid dastuurka dalka iyo ansixinta Ra’iisul wasaaraha cusub. Warbixinta, ayaa lagu sheegay in Madaxweyne Sh. Shariif uu xaq u leeyahay inuu magacabo Ra’iisul wasaraha, balse baarlamaanku uu xaq u leeyahay inuu ansixiyo, sidoo kalena uu awood u leeyhaay inuu diido. “Afhayenka Barlamaanku, wuxuu si cad u khilaafay dasturka dalka u yaala, wuxuna ku xadgudbay dasturka, mana jirto ra’iisul wasare uu Madaxweyne soo magacabay oo uu diiday barlamanka tan iyo 1960-kii” ayaa lagu yiri war-saxaafadedka uu soo saaray Madaxweyne Sh. Shariif. Sidoo kale, waxaa qoraalka lagu sheegay in arrinta uu sameeyay Shariif Xasan ay tahay mid ugub ku ah Golaha Baarlamaanka, welina aysan dhicin in baarlamaan Soomaaliyeed uu diido Ra’iisul wasaare la magacaabay. Madaxweynaha Somalia Sh. Shariif, ayaa [Oct 14], u magacabay Ra’iisul wasare cusub Max’ed C/llaahi Max’ed [Farmajo], iyadoo [Oct 20], uu hortagay barlamanka, isagoo jeediyay khudbad uu kaga hadlay howshiisa, waxaase xildhibaanada baarlamaanku ay isku khilaafeen ansixinta Farmajo. “Gudoomiyaha Baarlamanku wuxuu shaaca ka qaaday markii loo diyaargarobayay inuu hayo laba mooshin oo iskasoo horjeeda, iyadoo 140-xildhibaan ay ku baaqeen in codka gacan-taaga ah loo qaado Raíisul wasaaraha, halka 40-Xildhibaan oo kalena ay codsadeen in codka qarsoodi laga dhigo” ayaa lagu yiri war-saxaafadeedka. Warbixinta, waxaa lagu sheegay in kalsoonida la siiyo ay ku xiran tahay Ra’iisul wasaaraha cusub ee Somalia, iyadoo Madaxweynuhu uu ka codsaday xildhibaanada inay codka siiyaan Ra’iisul wasaaraha cusub. Qodobbo badan, oo ka mid ah Dastuurkii 1960-kii, kuwaasoo lagu sheegay in Shariif Xasan uu ku xadgudbay dastuurka, iyadoo ay jiraan mudanayaal dhowr ah oo ku hanjabay inay ka geyn doonaan Mooshin, haddii uusan ka laaban go’aanka uu ku diidan yahay Ra’iisul wasaaraha. Gudomiyaha baarlamaanka, ayaa la sheegay inuu kasoo horjeedo Ra’iisul wasaraha cusub, waxaana la safan mudanayaal badan, kuwaasoo ku adkeysanaya in codka kalsoonida laga dhigo mid qarsoodi ah. Khilaafka soo dhexgalay labada Shariif, ayaa noqonaya kii ugu awooda badnaa ee soo dhexgala labadan mas’uul oo saaxiibo isku dhow ahaa tan iyo markii ay burbureen Maxkamadihii Islaamka. GAROWEONLINE
  6. Under the present circumstances, the ruling of the Speaker of the Parliament is erroneous and unacceptable in that it: Failed to apply article 82(2) of the 1960 Somalia Constitution where no similar provisions could be found in the Transitional Federal Charter. Failed to conform and apply the provisions of article 30(6) which categorically states that any motion contravening the Sharia Law, the Charter or the Constitution and the other laws shall be null and void. The motion requesting secret vote contravenes article 82(2) of the 1960 Constitution. The Speaker failed to give members of the Parliament an opportunity to debate and express their opinion or vote on and choose one of the two motions. The Speaker also ignored intentionally the convention (tradition) in the Somali politics that a new Prime Minister should not be rejected or refused before assuming office. Therefore, the Somali President calls upon the Speaker of the Parliament to uphold the law and to not obstruct lawmakers from discharging their solemn Constitutional duties, especially at these critical times when we need a government that can stand to address the mammoth tasks facing it.
  7. Under the Somali Constitution, the President has the power to appoint a Prime Minister (see article 44 of the TFG Charter) and the Parliament confirms the appointment made by the President. Since the Parliament has the discretion to confirm the appointment made by the President, it may as well reject the appointment. If there is a right to confirm there might also be a right to reject. Ever since the system of a President appointing a Prime Minister has been introduced into the Somali politics, no trace or precedence could be found where the Parliament has rejected an appointment made by the President ab initio (out right). Therefore, any rejection of the appointment of a Prime Minister by the Parliament shall be an innovation and unprecedented. Article 49 of the Charter stipulates; "A person whose appointment as Prime Minister has been confirmed by the Parliament shall assume office upon taking the oath". The assumption of office by a Prime Minister depends upon the confirmation of the Parliament. On 14th of October the President of the Republic appointed the new Prime Minister, H.E. Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed and introduced him to the Parliament in person on Wednesday October the 20th. The Prime Minister gave a speech outlining his priorities and programme of action. Immediately after the Prime Minster finished his speech, the Speaker of the Parliament declared that he had two contradictory motions in hand, one of which 140 MPs requested confirmation by open vote and another where 40 MPs requested confirmation by a secret ballot. The Transitional Federal Charter contains no provisions relating to the way or the method that the Parliament can express its confirmation. Article 71(2) of the Charter provides that “the 1960 Somali Constitution and other national laws shall apply in respect of all matters not covered and not inconsistent with the TFG Charter". Thus, since the Charter does not provide how or the way the Parliament shall express its confirmation to the Prime Minister, the 1960 Constitution must be referred to and shall apply. Article 82(2) of the 1960 Somalia Constitution provides that "the National Assembly shall express its confidence or non confidence of the Prime Minister and his ministers by means of a motion stating the grounds thereof approved by a simple majority in open vote". According to this article, confidence by the National Assembly to the Prime Minister or the confirmation of office of the Prime Minister must be expressed in open vote. Therefore the motion by the 140 MPs requesting confirmation by open vote must prevail and the other motion must be rejected since it does not conform with article 82(2) of the 1960 Constitution. Sii akhri
  8. Historical Picture: Who is who in Somali Military Source
  9. By Mohamed Haji (Ingiriis) Friday, October 22, 2010 A shepherd, medical doctor, communist, émigré and former Somali minister, Dr Mohamed Aden Sheikh Aw-Mohamud deserves a loving eulogy that touches hearts, but not the one for Tony Judt. Born in Somali territory in Ethiopia, he was one of the leading Somali intellectuals of his peers. He was Somalia’s parallel to Sali Berisha who embarked on his career as a cardiologist and ended up with the category of communism that Nelson Mandela summarised “it has always played an active role in the fight by colonial countries for their freedom, because the short-term objects of Communism would always correspondent with the long-term objects of freedom movements.” Prior to associating himself with Dictator Mohamed Siad Barre, Dr Mohamed Aden was one of the most revered cardiologists in Somalia. As a young graduate who specialised cardiac surgery in Italy, he began his career at Digfer Hospital. Barre found him to be a very intelligent and exploited him in planning a coup against the civilian government. It was a time when certain Somali intellectuals – Dr Mohamed Aden was a unique in this regard – came up with, what Dr Ali Jimale Ahmed described, moral justifications from the lore of the people for Barre’s ascendancy - Songs like geediga wadaay (Lead the track), guulwade siyaad aabihii garashada (Siad the victory-bearer and the father of knowledge) and caynaanka haay (may you hold onto the reins of power forever) became the hue-and-cry of an intellectual. But Mohamed Siad, to quote from I. M. Lewis, “had the skills of a practical Machiavelli and the mind of a political computer,” notwithstanding, Dr Galayr, in his authoritative Notes on The State of Somali State, written in 1990 on Horn of Africa Journal, reckons that Barre was a man of an average mind. Galayr observed, “Personal relations, face to face contact and an insatiable demand for-raw-intelligence data have been his preferred ways for domination and control.” Soon after Barre’s rise to power, Dr Mohamed Aden was not only appointed as Health Secretary, but also the speechwriter and ‘thinker of the regime.’ For many years, he acted as a Gramscian and was the Malcolm X of Siadist dogma and its conjunction with philosophical assumption of Scientific Socialism as an ideology within dynasty (Mohamed Siad was both Elijah Mohammed and great demagogue in this case). But the two kinsmen fell out shortly before the eleventh hour (Barre called the doctor as his kinsman in an interview he gave to an Italian journalist). In that interview Barre said, “I dragged him (Mohamed Aden) out of the dirt, and now I referred him to hell” (read more about the interview on La Repubblica published in 19/04/1988). On the contrary, Barre dragged Mohamed Aden out of Digfer, not out of dirt. By this time, Dr Mohamed Aden emerged as a victim of personal rule by his mystical mentor – and to put it the other way – a victim as his own drum, what a typical traditional Somali intellectual would say ‘kacaankii uu durbaanka u garaacayey ayaa isla isagii xabbisay.’ Before his imprisonment, the good doctor was the brain of Barre and too, according to his long-time friend, Pietro Petrucci, “The most valuable man inside Siad’s inner circle.” Mohamed Aden was jailed in top-security prison Labaatan-Jirow in June 1982, along with Ismail Ali Obokor, Osman Mohamed Jelle, Omar Arte Qaalib, Warsame Abdullahi Ali (Juguf), Omar Haji Masalle and Mohamed Yusuf Weyrah. They were accused of implicating in a sinister plot against the regime. Juguf was died inside the prison because of torture as Dr Mohamed Aden was trying to treat him with no avail. The perfect analogical illustration of this incident and its implication was close to the role of the young doctor in the movie of Iddi Amin “The Last King of Scotland”. Asked by Italian newsmen for the reason behind his arrest for more than twice and why many Somalis finished their career in jail under Mohamed Siad Barre’s rule, Dr Mohamed Aden responded, “Barre wanted to stay (power) as long as possible and became increasingly suspicious of the people around him by starting to doubt many of us.” When he was released from custody, thanks to his ties with Italian communist party, Dr Mohamed Aden was treated differently than other fellow inmates and the man liked to be called ‘The Teacher of Revolution’ granted him government factories – Itop and Jilayga – as for doctor’s personal property. After the downfall of the regime, he co-authored a book about Somalia through Petrucci. To be sure, my study of his book, Arrivederci a Mogadiscio, has not aroused in me feeling of admiration. In the book, he permitted himself to be moralist and chauvinist at the same time. In fact, his career as a cardiac surgeon, perfected after Digfer, was to be where he was and yet not to be where he was. I engaged with Dr Mohamed Aden three times – I had not done this by taking him critically as a politician, but by respecting him as a person and by reading his works closely. The first time I met him was in Kenya when he was with his long-time friend Ahmed Hasharo; the second time he was with Osman Jama Ali (Kallun) in Leicester, UK and the last time I saw him was last July when he came to London to attend the wedding of his nephew. However, Dr Mohamed Aden was a rational man in regretting for his past blunder of involving in dictatorial regime. His last interview posted on numerous Somali media outlets proves that he was not just remorseful, but apologetic to the public for his role of the coup d’état of 1969. Somalia truly entails men like him who admit and learn from their mistakes. May Allah rest him in peace and bless his family with utmost strength, aamiin. Mohamed Haji (Ingiriis) ingiriis@yahoo.com
  10. ^Xaasha saqiir juujis jooji bu noh
  11. Th Red Sox didn't make it to the Playoffs this year but the management has been good and consistent.
  12. I wonder what's difference in terms of attire between bare-chested Himba women and bikini-clad Western women? One can be called primitive and other civilized?
  13. Originally posted by Taleexi: The more his flashlight illuminates the more his fallacies surface. He's the Ayaan Hirsi's type. He's not really looking to add anything to the body of knowledge or seek change in any meaningful way-just an angry atheist mullah with self indulgence and belief that he has higher intellect.Only if this sheep called Muslims will shed this medieval religion and see my ways
  14. ^It was just yesterday you were saying it is the Woyanes that were bombing the town? The return of any warlord is bad news for Somalia.
  15. Another one bites the dust-having said that I think Rick Sanchez before him was unfairly fired
  16. LooooL@Taleexi..You should see reer Waqooyi preachers too.
  17. Funny thing some people will feel uncomfortable seeing Juan in dark alley or late at night.
  18. ^I think we have to balance the what regime did vs what rebel groups did. In my humble, the rebel groups are worse than Barre government in some perspective.