
Jacaylbaro
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Everything posted by Jacaylbaro
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and what are you running from yaa Sayid ?? runta iska sheegoo ,,, Sheh ,, naga daa dee ...looooooooool ,,, i don't mind getting some percents here markaa ,,, even if it is too low ,,,, ciid baa soo geleysa you know ,,,
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sheh, But once you finalize the Concept Paper then writing the proposal is not that problem. You just have to follow the guidelines depending on the Donor. which donor did you send the proposal to ??
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Sayidka, naga daa dee siyaasada meesheedii ma joognee ,, halkani waa meesha keliya eenu kaga soo dhuumanee ,,
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Morning Sheh ,,,, I miss that coffee too but there is a good news coming from our Admin department. The office will be closed for the last 10 days of Ramadan ...... So we are officially OFF... hehehe I still have to finalize one main report ,, means i will come everyday (not early though) to the office until Thursday ...... Good you finalized the proposal ,,, damn you're too fast.
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Cool man ,,, Habeenkii hurdo ma leh ,,, maalintiina waa wax aan laga sheekayn karin ,,,,,,, waar maxaa la sheeegay ,, bal soo daaya warka
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You tell me ,,,, sow adigu maad dayacin ,,, Morning keligaa ,,,,
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In the United States, at least, 2007 was judged to be a pretty bad year for war films. As Edward Helmore noted in the Observer last month, a clutch of multi-million dollar movies on conflict and terrorism - including Lambs for Lions, Rendition and The Kingdom - got the big thumbs down from moviegoers and critics alike, pretty much bombing at the box office. But why? One explanation is people have simply had enough of war, and don't want it shoved down their throats in their leisure time too (the liberal view). Or perhaps they don't welcome criticism of the troops when they're still being killed and injured in the field (the conservative view). Helmore suggests that audiences "seem to be reacting against the lazy uniformity of Hollywood liberalism" - which fails to question its assumption that you can oppose the war in Iraq while still rallying behind the troops. Yet another interpretation is that movies have just become too depressing. Helmore quotes Variety editor Peter Bart, who observed in a column last October, "Now, I'm not a cinematic philistine; I applaud filmmakers for dealing with real issues in the real world. At the same time, the feel-bad genre (which is only in its early stages) is becoming downright oppressive. Filmgoers have a right to ask: When do we get some comic relief?" Now, I'm not a film critic, so I'm afraid I can't give you an exhaustive analysis of whether the boom in "feel-bad movies" is about to crash. But over the holidays, I spotted a couple of interesting projects that could help buck the trend. There was the news, again in the Observer, that Harry Potter star Daniel Radcliffe is due to swap his school blazer for a flak jacket, playing the part of Dan Eldon - a young photographer killed in Mogadishu in 1993 while working for Reuters - in a film called Journey, which will be based on his tragically short but prolific career. Eldon was one of four journalists stoned to death by an angry mob after a botched bombing by international forces in Somalia killed and injured dozens of civilians. He left behind 17 journals documenting his work in Africa, which were compiled into a book, "The Journey is the Destination", selling more than 200,000 copies. Eldon's mother Kathy told the Observer she'd met and turned down several other stars eager to play her son, but Radcliffe fits the bill perfectly because of the many parallels between the two - not least a global outlook, magic and poetry. And for those looking for feel-good films about war, Journey seems to fit the bill. "The film is a teen coming of age story - entertaining, funny, dark at times - but ultimately triumphant," Kathy is quoted as saying. "People will leave the cinema feeling inspired, thinking: "Oh my God, let me start living right now!" It won't be pious. We're not trying to idolise him or make him or a hero." Filming is due to start this year in Kenya, with profits going to the Creative Visions Foundation, which supports artistic activists trying to raise awareness and motivate people to take action on social, humanitarian and environmental issues. Another forthcoming drama hoping to shed new light on the challenges of covering conflict in Africa is "Taking the Flak", a six-part BBC comedy said to be based on the experiences of the British broadcaster's world affairs editor, John Simpson. According to the BBC, it's "an acerbic, authentic and caustic comedy that covers the entire progress of a small African war, as seen through the eyes of a team of journalists sending back the nightly reports for the BBC 'Ten'". The BBC Two press material for the winter/spring 2008 season continues: "The team includes the smooth, veteran correspondent; the harassed, but infinitely resourceful, producer; and the green and gauche rookie stringer, dropped into a hotel and forced to choose between a room on 'the shooting side' and 'the mortar side'." So not too many stereotypes then! A senior source involved in the production told the Observer: "The series really makes fun of what it's like to be a reporter in a war zone - it's a bit like Drop the Dead Donkey meets The Constant Gardener and it's very funny." War's no laughing matter, but providing this series can be humourous and nuanced at the same time (and it's a big ask), a light-hearted take on the subject could be just what's needed to get conflict-fatigued viewers watching again.
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Aid workers in Ethiopia's remote ****** region are currently facing an impossible dilemma. In order to carry on helping people in the east of the country, the government has warned them that they better keep quiet about allegations of army atrocities in the area. International humanitarian staff have spoken anonymously to the Boston-based Christian Science Monitor about public executions, rapes, torture, arbitrary detentions and beatings of civilians by government forces in ******, where most people are ethnic Somalis. Aid workers also accuse separatist rebels in the ****** National Liberations Front (ONLF) of terrible crimes against civilians who refuse to help them. Relief agencies were expelled from ****** during Ethiopian government crackdowns on the ONLF in late 2007. They are now gradually being allowed to return with food and medicines - but only if they stay silent about what they see. "We have two options: either we come out with a nasty press release tomorrow on protection of human rights, and we will have to leave behind a substantial population still facing atrocities, or we just do our work," an aid worker said to the Monitor. ******'s residents have greeted aid workers enthusiastically, eager to share their stories with humanitarians. "They have begged us to stay," an aid worker tells the paper. Conflicting reports from locals, and a ban on journalists entering the area, mean that allegations are hard to verify. The government denies its troops have committed any atrocities. "I can assure you that the government is not in the business of killing people and putting them in mass graves," government spokesman Bereket Simon told the Monitor. The need for aid workers in ****** is great. Food and water are in short supply and medical supplies in the Somali area ran out long ago. The U.N. Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights still has no access to investigate allegations, and the World Food Programme's food aid distributions have been hampered by conflict in the area. "You always come down on the same side," the director of one organisation operating in the region said to the Monitor. "It's better to keep yourself operational and to do something." Some frustrated aid workers are beginning to speak out discreetly, but it's dangerous. International staff run the risk of being expelled or seeing their operations closed down, but the stakes are even higher for local staff. Many said they didn't want to say anything to the Monitor for fear they might be imprisoned or killed. One local aid worker who talked to the paper said: "It's a relief to speak with you. You hear these things and they weigh on your heart." But for now, most aid workers are just getting on with the job of delivering humanitarian relief. When does the moral duty to bear witness outweigh the need to try to save lives? Or where is it more important to stick by people who are suffering, even if it means not speaking out about what's going on? Does it depend how many aid agencies are on the scene? Is it possible to tell the truth and keep running a relief programme? What should aid agencies do? web page
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Sure the elections are going to be so tough this time. People have some experience from the last elections and they know how to play cards. The politicians will bring surprises in order to gain votes from the public. The new Electoral Commission is new to the field and people worry about them being unexperienced in this field but i hope they will learn from the previous members as well as what is happening in Africa. So far they've got many trainings. UCID is not under the discussion but the ball is between KULMIYE and UDUB. So far, KULMIYE Played some of his cards (if not most) but people are waiting what is hidden in UDUB's drawers. Are they going to play the same old cards or they have something new to show to the public ? Either way it is going to be heated this time ......
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Somali police free kidnapped German and local wife BOSASSO, Somalia, Sept 22 (Reuters) - Somali police attacked a kidnappers' hideout before dawn on Monday to release a German man and his local wife, officials said. The pair had been taken at gunpoint on Saturday and held in a hilly region east of Bosasso, the main port of the northern Somali region of Puntland. Police said one of the kidnappers was injured in gunfire during Monday's operation.
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10 MInutes to the Tahajud ....... just passing by and to say hi to the trollers before i habaar them all ,,,
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hadhwanaag 2008-09-21 (Hadhwanaagnews) Abu-dhabi(HWN)-Wasiirka Deegaanka iyo biyaha ee dalka Imaaraadka Carabta Md. Dr. Raashid Axmed Bin Fahad, ayaa soo saaray go’aan rasmiya oo uu ku caddaynayo in xayiraaddii laga qaaday xoolaha laga soo dhoofiyo Somaliland iyo dalka Somaliya. Wasiirku sida uu ku caddeeyey digreetada uu ku qaaday xayiraadda xoolaha Soomaalida, shardiga ku xidhan xoolaha dalkiisa tagayaa waa in yihiin kuwo buuxiyey shuruudaha iyo sharciyada labada dekedood ee Berbera oo Somaliland ah iyo Bosaso oo ka tirsan deegaanka Puntland. Shardiga kale ee xoolahan ku xidhan ayaa ah in ay yihiin kuwo si toos ah looga soo raray labada maxjar ee ku kala yaalla Berbera iyo Bosaso. Waxa kale oo uu dalka Imaaraadku shardi ka dhigay in xoolaha u soo dhofayaa noqdaan lab keliya ugu yaraanna muddo toddobaad ah lagu soo xannaaneeyo maxjarrada magaalada Berbera iyo Bossaso. Waxa uu wasiirku sheegay in xoolaha la keenayo dalkiisa la weydiin doono waraaq rasmi ah oo ka timid maxjarka Berbera Somaliland ama ka Bossaso Puntland. Ugu dambayntii waxa uu wasiirku ku xusay digreetadiisa in xoolaha la yimaadda shahaado tallaal oo waqtigeeda uu ka soo wareegay wax ka badan 21 maalmood in dib loogu soo celin doono dekeddii laga soo raray. Dawladda Imaaraadka Carabtu waa dawladii labaad ee si rasmi ah ugu dhawaaqda inay xayiraadii ka qaaday xoolaha Somaliland iyo Somaliya ee weliba ku dhawaaqda inay ogoshahay oo keliya xoolaha ka soo dhoofa Berbera iyo Boosaaso. Dawladda Cumaan ayaa hore ugu dhawaaqday inay xoolaha Somaliland iyo Somaliya ka qaaday xayiraadii. Sheekh Saalim Binu Hilaal Cali Al khaliiji oo ah wasiirka beeraha iyo khayraadka nool ee Saldanadda Cummaan ayaa soo saaray digreeto wasiir oo uu ku caddeeyey in xayiraaddii laga qaaday xoolaha nool ee Soomaalidu u dhoofinayso dalkiisa. Sida ay qortay jariiradda Alwatan ee ka soo baxda dalka Cumaan, wasiirku waxa uu Xoolaha Somalida uga imanaya ku xidhay laba shardi oo ay mid ka mid ahi tahay in xoolahaas la soo mariyo dekedda Berbera ee Somaliland iyo dekedda Boosaaso ee maamul goboleedka Puntland.
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loooool ,,, and i finished a long meeting now ,, i hope you're back from Taraawiih then ,,,,
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loooool ,,, and i finished a long meeting now ,, i hope you're back from Taraawiih then ,,,,
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UN Accuses Bugland Leaders on Supporting Pirates
Jacaylbaro replied to Jacaylbaro's topic in Politics
Rayaale is not more than a politician elected by the public and will go by vote. If he goes, there would be a more extremist one that will make you cry even more. why should Punltand? Coz they are part of it .... -
I always did sxb ...... waxba dhiiga ha isku karin. News is always news. Ramadan baa lagu jiraa cuqdada iska saar ...
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Ahmadou Ould Abdalla: Ethiopians to start withdrawing before Ciid
Jacaylbaro replied to Xaq's topic in Politics
9 days ?? ,,, Tolow maxaa ka run ah ?? -
Good morning everyone ,,,,,,, Yaabka, you don't need to sing in the last 10 days of Ramadan. Spare it for some other time. I had Hilib Geel for Suxuur last night ,,,, hehehe
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Ma anaa shaqo keleba leh ,,,