Jacaylbaro

Nomads
  • Content Count

    44,142
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    1

Everything posted by Jacaylbaro

  1. Hassan what would you do if Ethiopia leave Somalia ??
  2. geeljire, depends where in Somalia but here in SL people like that Mayonise thing ,,, yukk Malika, Maya waa inaan raadiyaa waa intoo wax ku dheceene. Ballantaanu lahayn baa wax walba ka weyn ,,
  3. Waan iska sii soconayaaye ,,, Dee bal maalin wanaagsan ilaa inta aynu ka kulmayno xilli dambe Insha Allah.
  4. That Jabiso name is funny walaahi ,, it crackes me up each time i see ,,
  5. Dear Editor, I don't understand why all those people are coming on the payday to ask for a shaxaad. Do i work to fund them ?? Yours, Bakhayl Ina Garaaddo-weyne
  6. Ketchup and Mayonaise are disgusting. Yukkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkk
  7. Ma xumee lakin bakhiil baan ahay oo kharashka ku baxayaanan rabin inaan bixiyo ..... Maxaa qayilsiintooda igu wata bal.
  8. Adiga yaa ku yidhi payday ga soo hadal bal ,,, shaxaad doonku ma yara xataa SOL ,,, looooooool
  9. Sheekh Y.M. Siyaad Indhacadde :mad: :mad: :mad:
  10. ,, Walee been maad sheegin ,,, list baan hayaa halkan igu sugaya mar dhow. Maalintaas oo kele telephone ka waaban xidhaa ,, looooooool
  11. why law when you have the Quraan ?? My flag below has the Shada ,,
  12. 3 pieces of loxoox (canjeelo) in the morning ,, and nothing else after that. It is 3:30pm and no sign of me being leaving the office soon. anyway it is the last day of the week and i can sleep the whole freakin' day tomorrow ,,, IA AHHHHHH ,, And it is the PAYDAY ,, Whohoooooooo
  13. That is about 3 months from now sxb ..........
  14. Maya boqol goor baan u sheegay , kor iyo hoosba waan ula hadlay ,,, markan waa inaan public ugu sheego si la iila qabto oo bal gabdhahaa uu jecel yahay ay wax ugu sheegaan waa intoo uu iyaga bal maqlaaye ,,,,,
  15. Four British Muslims from a range of different backgrounds have been visiting Ethiopia and Hargeisa (Somaliland) to forge links with Islamic communities there as part of the latest Projecting British Islam visit to the Muslim World. The main aim of the visit is to build stronger partnerships between British Muslims and the Ethiopian and Somali Muslim leadership – including civil society and youth leaders. The delegation will help showcase UK project work being undertaken in both countries. An important outcome of the visit is to add the voice of British Muslims to join those in Ethiopia and Somalia who are opposed to extremist ideology. The delegates: Sabin Malik: Commissioner for the Women's National Commission, community spokesperson. Fuad Nahdi: Founding editor of Q-News, a leading Muslim magazine. Sheikh Ahmed Babikir: a leading scholar of Sudanese origin with a strong following in the UK Habib Malik: Fundraising Director of Islamic Relief-one of the main British Muslim humanitarian organisations.
  16. When Somalia’s last dictator, Siad Barre, launched a brutal counter-insurgency against rebels in the north-west of the country in the late 1980s, the fight led not only to that region’s declaration of independence as Somaliland in 1991, but also to the fall of Somalia’s last functioning central government. Mohamed Omer Warsama, a nurse and humanitarian aid worker from Somaliland, explains what it was like to survive Barre’s counter-insurgency and to live with the unresolved question of Somaliland’s independenc Being a Somali has special meaning to me because blood is thicker than water – it is my nationality. I am a native of Somalia’s north-west, the former British colony now known as independent Somaliland. To be a Somalilander, as well as a Somali, is an unavoidable political truth. My clan and sub-clan, who come from the north-west along the Djibouti border, where we rely on camel herding and sorghum farming, have a cultural code to protect themselves from others. But personally, I rely on myself. Somaliland’s battle for independence in the late 1980s was a nightmare. Sometimes I had to wake myself up as if from a dream, even though I was already awake. After the government bombed Somaliland’s capital, Hargeisa, I was caught on the road between Hargeisa and the north-west town of Boroma where I worked. Fighting broke out while I was travelling through. I remember there was a tank and bullets fired in my direction, and I had to crawl for cover. Eventually I made it home safely, but I cannot forget that violence. Somalia’s civil war had begun in my home region. By 1991 Somaliland’s clans, including my own, made a pact not to fight with each other and this enabled them to declare independence from the rest of Somalia, which had fallen into an even crueller civil conflict. Our clans, the Gadabursi (also known as the Samaron), the Issa and the Isaak, each with their own sub-groups, finally decided to create Somalia’s first elected parliament. These days, although the Somaliland government functions, there is still hunger and suffering. I was born in 1964 in Zaila, a village on the Aden Gulf coast close to Djibouti, and I was raised in Boon Village in the Awdal region. In childhood my family was very poor. I was one of 10 children. We were displaced from the Rular area near Bonn village during the civil turmoil of 1969. As a young child I had to leave my family and cross the border from Somalia to Djibouti alone because my father couldn’t help us. So I was living on the street in Djibouti for three years. Finally, I met a special man who took me back to Somalia and literally changed my life. He helped me begin school in 1972. After my graduation from the Nursing Institute in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, in 1987, I came back to Somalia to be the best man at my friend’s wedding, and I met my first wife there. She was one of the bridesmaids. I returned to Somaliland and began working at the Boroma Hospital, which soon became home to the well-known Italian nun and aid worker, Annalena Tonelli. Working in Boroma Hospital was the most remarkable time I have ever had. Serving in the vital tuberculosis clinic, which grew with the fundraising help of Ms Tonelli, I felt that I was truly able to help people. That was the time when Somaliland declared independence and the federal government was thrown out. Many refugees [mostly people from the north-western clans] flooded into Somaliland from the parts of Somalia that were at war. In 2003, just as I had taken a trip out of town, gunmen entered our clinic and shot Ms Tonelli to death. They were allegedly paid by al-Qaida, but perhaps they came from another side. My colleagues renamed the clinic in her honour and put up a marble pillar to mark the place where she died. Although she began as a Catholic missionary, she had great respect for Islam and our culture and had simply wanted to help. Since finishing at the Boroma Hospital, I began working with international agencies like Unicef, and began developing my own non-governmental aid agency based in Boroma. Working with the UN agencies and Somali local organisations has been a good experience for me, although there have been some critical obstacles such as transparency and overcoming the difficulties of fundraising. In 2007 I had the rare opportunity to serve Unicef and the UN Development Programme as a researcher on child rights both in Somaliland and Somalia’s north-east. Talking to people from many different clans on both sides of the divide not only required me to risk driving through an area that was an active frontline along Somaliland’s shared border with Somalia proper, but also allowed me to see the debate from different sides. While political actors argue about statehood and alliances, most regular people on both sides of the divide simply need income, healthcare and safety, and in that way they continue to be similar. While political leaders speak about the divisions between our clans, I found that on the ground in north-eastern Somalia, the people I worked with did not have strong feelings about me being an outsider. For most, the conflict is abstract. My personal view on Somaliland’s attempt to become fully independent is complicated. There are many opposing views among the government and the people. But after the terrible events in Somaliland during the time of the dictator Siad Barre, many Somalis here believe in separation. Regardless, I think there will need to be not only a political agreement to stop fighting in the south, but also a north-south settlement to finally bring peace to Somaliland. According to my ideas and experience, we Somalis are one people. We have the same language, religion and nationality. However, geopolitical considerations like former colonialism, foreign aid and new trends in the international Islamic community have caused divisions in our political ideas. The Somaliland people, like other Somalis, have long had their own traditional government – councils of elders, religious leaders and women leaders – who work together separately from the state. The traditional leaders have done much to secure peace in Somaliland and could do the same for the rest of Somalia, but it depends on the politics of each sub-region and the leaders of state government heeding their advice. I believe the political and religious questions are very different and should be kept separate. Solving the conflict between the new Ethiopia-backed Somalia government and Islamic radicals of the Al-Ittihad and Shabab in the south of Somalia is very hard because all sides are fighting for power. There must be a way to halt the fighting and find a way for them to reconcile what is best for people from all sides. Life in Somaliland today is insecure. Job opportunities are very slim or non-existent, so life is very difficult. Without a lasting political solution on independence there will be very little foreign investment here. I worry about my kids' future. The situation has to change soon. • Mohamed Omer Warsama was talking to Daniel J Gerstle. Source Guardian Weekly.co.uk
  17. Hargeysa (Qaran news)- Wasiirka Qorsheynta Qaranka Somaliland, Md Cali Ibraahim Maxamed (San-yare) ayaa maanta ka qayb galay xaflad ay kaga dhawaaqayeen ururka khuburadda farsamo ee Somaliland samaynta web-site cusub oo caalami ah oo uu yeelan doono ururkani. Xafladan oo lagu qabtay hotelka Impriel ee magaalada Hargeysa, waxaa ka soo qaybgalay wasiirada Hawlaha Guud iyo Guryeynta Md Siciid Sulub Maxamed, Arimaha Dibedda Md Cabdilaahi Maxamed Ducaale, Horumarinta Qoyska iyo Arimaha Bulshada Marwo Faadumo Suudi Xasan, Aqoonyahano reer Somaliland ah iyo marti sharaf kale oo lagu macsuumay xaflada. Xafladan ayaa u jeedadeedu waxay ahayd baahinta Web-site cusub oo ay samaysteen ururkani. Kaas oo ay ku baahin doonaan fikiradaha kale duwan ee aqoonyahanka reer Somaliland ee dalka dibediisa iyo gudihiisa ku kala sugan. Waxa ugu horeyn halkaa ka hadlay Gudoomiyaha ururka khuburada farsamada Somaliland Mr Maxamed Saalax X Xasan, waxa uu sheegay ujeedada ka dambaysay samaynta ururka iyo Web-sitekiisaba ay ahayd sidii loo heli lahaa, aqoonyahanka Somaliland “Fikrada abuuritaanka ururkan waa mid ku salaysan baahida lagama maarmaanka ah ee aqoon cilmiyeed amase farsamo, taas oo ku dhaqankeeda dhabta ahi uu si hubaal ahaan ah u horseedi karo horumar dhinac kasta ee danaha bulshaddeena. Gudoomiyuhu wuxu yidhi waa qiraal in Eebe inagu manaystay caqli aynu dannaheena ku maamulano, innaga oo waliba Eebe arintaa maamulka aduunwaynaha ugaga wakiil ah Islaamkuna inna farayo inaynu cilmiga geed dheer iyo mid gaabanba u fuulno, waxa iyana marag ma doon ah sida maanta bulshooyinka aduun waynuhu isku dhaafeen ee tii cilmi iyo farsamada casriga ah raacday ay u gaadheen horumar muuqda iyaga oo intii aan cilmi lahayni noqotay mid baahan oo kaalmo gar-gaar dibedeed ah ku nool” sida oo kale Waxa uu Gudoomiyuhu carabka ku dhuftay in arinta aqoonyahanku marka ay noqotay mid lagama maarmaan ah uu Wasiirka Qorsheyntu horseedka noqday samaynta ururka khuburo farsamo ee Somaliland, “Isaga oo Wasiirku arintaa la soo qaaday dhawr aqoon-yahan oo ragii hore ah, fikradaas uu wasiirku soo jeediyeyna waxa loo arkay mid wax ku ool ah dawona u noqon karta hawl gelinta aqoon yahanka Somaliland oo hada camal la’aan ku dhexmilmay bulsho-weynta” ugu dambaytii waxa uu Gudoomiyuhu sheegay in uu wasiirku magacaabay gudi ka kooban 7 xubnood oo arintaas soo darsa gudidaas oo hogaamiya ka dhabeynta fikradan “ Wasiirku Waxa uu abuuray gudi hogaamiye ka ah ka dhabeynta fikradan”. Sida oo kale waxa isna halkaa ka hadlay oo soo xidhay xaflada Wasiirka Qorsheynta Qaranka Md Cali Ibraahim Maxamed (San-yare) waxana uu wasiirku aad uga hadlay sida loogu baahan yahay in la helo aqoon yahan isku duuban oo reer Somaliland ah kuwaas oo ka taliya ama ka caawiya baahi yahay dalka soo food-saara waxa uu wasiirku xusay in ay jiraan khuburo farsamo oo la soo kiraysto marka loo baahdo kuwaas oo ay ka aqoon badan yihiin aqoonyahanka Somaliland u dhashay ama joogaa. Sida oo kale waxa uu wasiirku xusay si taas looga baxo ay wasaarada qorsheyn ahaan ay sameeyeen ururkan, waxana uu sheegay in uu ururkani yahay mid daaha ka rogay in ay aqoon-yahan ka Somaliland ay kulmaan islamarkaana ay ka wada hawl galaan horumarka dalka uu higsanaayo. Ugu dambanytii waxa uu wasiirka qorsheynta qaranka Somaliland Md Cali san-yare shaaca ka qaaday in ay ururkan ka hadlayaan wixii ay u baahan yihiin ee dhinaca khuburada dhamaan hay’adaha dawlada iyo kuwa caalamiga ahba waxa uu ugu baaqay in ay la soo xidhiidhaan ururkan islamarkaana ay ka daalacan karaan Web-Sitekooda kaas oo laga daalacanayo aalada casriga ah ee Inter-netka WWW. Somaliland Consultancy .Org waxa uu kuu Sahli doonaa sida ugu fudud ee aad ku heli karto shaqooyinka ka bannaanada hay’adaha dawlada iyo kuwa caalamiga ahba iyaga oo ururku kuugu soo bandhigi doono wet-sitekan.
  18. Adigu weligaaba saaxiibbadaa iyo Ila-adeerradaa uun ka sheekee ,,,,
  19. Where is Ibti ?? ,,, ilaa maanta iyadaan sugayaa oo lugihii baa i xanuunay sidaan u taagnaa.