Jacaylbaro

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Everything posted by Jacaylbaro

  1. Wax laga waramo wuu ka fiicnaa ......
  2. ........... Waar niyow maba ogayn ,, shalay uun baan maqlay ,, meel aan xataa idaacad laga dhegeysan baan tegey ,,,
  3. I'm here sxb ..... waan yara maqnaa ,, lakin maalmahaa ha i sugin ma soo jeedee ,,,
  4. Hello my people ,,,,,, maxaa iga dambeeyay bal iiga sheekeeya ,,,,
  5. She deserved to be shot actually if that is the truth ,,,,, why cheating on him bal ? ,, she could simply leave him and do whateva she wants dabadeed.
  6. Waxaan ka odhan lahaaba qaybtii Politics ka ma joogno markaa waan iska aamusi ....... waan fahmi karaa halka ciriqu kaa yara jiidanayo e ,, lakiin waa la dawayn karaa hadaad dhego wax maqla leedahay ,,
  7. The report also emphasised the need for official recognition Somaliland. “Official recognition for Somaliland would send a clear message to all Somalis that peaceful transitions from stability are possible without the need to use overpowering military force, and will be rewarded” said MacDonald. “Up to now, Somaliland has toiled in relative anonymity without any recognition of its extraordinary success in creating the conditions for a viable, stand-alone state, and resisting the spread of extremism found in Somalia.
  8. London, 23 April (AKI) - (By Syed Saleem Shahzad) - The current US-led war on terror has boosted insurgencies in Somalia and Afghanistan, according to a prominent global think-tank. The Senlis Council says the US has helped to create a political situation in which extremists such as the Somali insurgent group, Al-Shabab, and the Taliban in Afghanistan have become legitimate political players. The council revealed its findings in a report entitled, Chronic Failures of the War on Terror: From Afghanistan to Somalia, published in London on Wednesday. In its report, the think-tank accused the Bush administration of several policy failures in Somalia, such as aerial bombings, supporting Ethiopian troops in the country and the ill-timed designation of Al-Shabab as a terrorist organisation. It said these policies had been successfully exploited by the Somali insurgency to boost its support and recruitment bases. “The lack of strategic acumen present in the 'War on Terror' in Somalia and Afghanistan is in fact enabling the spread of the insurgencies present throughout both countries,” said Norine MacDonald, president and lead field researcher of The Senlis Council. "The United States is the common denominator in both countries - instead of containing the extremist elements in Somalia and Afghanistan, US policies have facilitated the expansion of territory that Al-Shabab and the Taliban have psychological control over." "The international community is complicit in Somalia’s troubles, standing idly by as the United States continues with its failed and inflammatory policies,” added Paul Burton, director of policy analysis at The Senlis Council. A critical element of such a fast track solution would be the delivery of immediate humanitarian aid to Somalia, which is suffering from its worst humanitarian crisis since 1993. A brutal guerrilla war, three years of drought, and restricted aid access has once again created an emergency situation in the country. According to Phillippe Lazzarini, the United Nations’ head of humanitarian affairs for Somalia, 2.5 million people are in need of food or other assistance. “The international community has to find a way to provide immediate humanitarian assistance,” said MacDonald. "Not only would this alleviate the suffering, it would starve the militant groups of potential recruits." In its recommendations, The Senlis Council called on President Bush to end bombing operations in Somalia and to back a phased withdrawal of Ethiopian troops with the creation of a UN stabilisation force. It said such a move would neutralise the power of transitional federal government president Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed, who is named as contributor to the increasingly violent situation in Somalia. "President Yusuf has contributed to the escalation of the violent conflict in Somalia and has constantly undermined any attempts at reconciliation, instead opting to use his presidency to advance the interests of his own clan at the expense of his country” said MacDonald. “The United States must end its backing for president Yusuf and instead give unconditional support to prime minister Nur Hassan Hussein and the UN’s special representative to Somalia, Ahmedou Ould Abdallah. Their efforts to bring peace and stability to Somalia provide a small beacon of light in an otherwise dark landscape.” The report also emphasised the need for official recognition Somaliland. “Official recognition for Somaliland would send a clear message to all Somalis that peaceful transitions from stability are possible without the need to use overpowering military force, and will be rewarded” said MacDonald. “Up to now, Somaliland has toiled in relative anonymity without any recognition of its extraordinary success in creating the conditions for a viable, stand-alone state, and resisting the spread of extremism found in Somalia. The Senlis Council is an international policy think-tank with offices in Kabul, London, Ottawa, Rio de Janeiro, Brussels and Paris. web page
  9. Haa waxba isla waayi maynee ,, qunyar uun soco ,,, dhinacna isu badi ilayn haday dabayshu kolba gees kuu riddo waa mushkilade ,,,
  10. Really ?? ,, so that is why i'm not receiving PMs today eh ,, ?? ,,, Lemme see bal ,,,,
  11. We respect the freedom of expression ..... that is what i said. They call him worse than that, and some call the opposition a similar thing.
  12. It is the writers idea and is respectable in this corner of the world. Not necessarily true.
  13. We started to stock up here too ..... it is crazy beryahan.
  14. Then stop asking questions that everybody knows the answer.
  15. Why asking the question if you can't read between the lines , ?? ,
  16. Haye ,,, where are the trollers today ?? ,, why everybody is hiding ?? ,,, I'm glad the week is finally over ,,, i'm off to Berbera and Sheikh tomorrow IA ,,,,,,
  17. Written by guardian.co.uk, Apr 23, 2008 at 07:45 PM The US "war on terror" has backfired, strengthening extremists in Afghanistan and Somalia and turning them into legitimate political actors in the eyes of their local populations, a thinktank said today. The Senlis Council, which has strongly criticised US policy in Afghanistan in the past, is particularly scathing of the Bush administration's "abject policy failures" in Somalia. It said air strikes, support for Ethiopian troops that attacked Somalia last year and the ill-timed designation of a radical Islamist group, al-Shabab, as a terrorist group had been successfully exploited by the insurgency to boost recruitment. "The lack of strategic acumen present in the 'war on terror' in Somalia and Afghanistan is in fact enabling the spread of the insurgencies present throughout both countries," said Norine MacDonald QC, the council president. "The US is the common denominator in both countries – instead of containing the extremist elements in Somalia and Afghanistan, US policies have facilitated the expansion of territory that al-Shabab and the Taliban have psychological control over." Aid groups say Somalia, wracked by anarchy and violence for decades, is suffering its worst humanitarian crisis since 1993. Militias linked to the former Islamic Courts authority, which controlled Mogadishu in the latter half of 2006, are waging a guerrilla war against the occupying Ethiopian troops and the weak central government. With a small African Union peacekeeping force reduced to the role of bystander, several thousand civilians have been killed in the crossfire since early 2007. The UN, which considers a wider peacekeeping mission too dangerous, says 700,000 people fled Mogadishu last year. A 10-mile stretch of road outside the city now hosts more than 200,000 people, humanitarian groups say - perhaps the biggest concentration of displaced people anywhere in the world. According to Phillippe Lazzarini, the UN head of humanitarian affairs for Somalia, 2.5 million people are in need of food or other aid. Against this grim backdrop, the Senlis Council, in its 79-page report, directly accused the US of undermining reconciliation efforts by backing the hardline president, Abdullahi Yusuf, instead of the more moderate prime minister, Nur Hassan Hussein. According to the security thinktank, the US government in February disrupted negotiations with opposition parties - including hardline Islamists - by exerting pressure on the prime minister to exclude certain groups and individuals from a reconciliation process, particularly those on a US list of designated terror suspects. The council urged Bush to end all bombing operations in Somalia, back a phased withdrawal of Ethiopian troops who are shoring up Yusuf, and create a UN stabilisation force to neutralise the power of Yusuf's transitional federal government. "President Bush has the perfect opportunity to adorn the twilight of his final term in office with a success story in his self-proclaimed war on terror – a fast track 'surge for peace' to end the current Somali crisis," the council said. Yusuf personally heard calls to lead a reconciliation effort during a visit to the US. Norm Coleman, a rightwing Republican senator, yesterday urged the Somali leader to reach out to "all stakeholders not associated with terrorism". "The president said he took my words very seriously, and would maintain his commitment to reconciliation," said Coleman, who represents Minnesota, a northern state where more than 10,000 Somalis have settled. Last month, the Bush administration granted Somalis living in the US under temporary protected status an extra 18 months as conditions in Somalia remained "dire". As for Afghanistan, the Senlis Council said the resurgent Taliban provided a bleak example of how the US-led war on terror had failed there as well. It said: "The Taliban and al-Shabab are successfully exploiting policy mistakes such as aerial bombings, ongoing poverty, and aggressive foreign military presence to the extent that they are increasingly viewed by local populations as representatives of their legitimate political grievances."
  18. And what does that work for you ?? "waa lagu qayliyaa" part ??
  19. Taliyaha Ciidanka Booliska Dowladda FKMG ah Jenaral Cabdi Xasan Cawaale Qeybdiid ayaa xoojiyey hadaladii Qaar ka tirsan masuuliyiinta dowlada kasoo yeeray islamrkaana sheegay in dadka masaajidada lagiu leeyey ay yihiin wax la buun buuniyey . Cabdi xasan cawaale qaybdiid ayaa sheegay inay baaritaano sameeyeen islamrkaana aysan jirin Wax Dad ah Oo Lagu xasuuqay Deegaanka Waxara Cade iyadoo uu ku sheegay hadalkaasi xasuuqa ah inay dad dano gaar ah ay buun buuniyeen ee aysan waxba ka jirin. Qaybdiid oo hadalkiisi sii wata ayaa xusay In Deegaanadaasi ay Ku Dhinteen Dad Yar oo dagaal kula jiray ciidamada dowlada iyo kuwa amniga ethiopia oo iyagu wax soo weeraray isagoo gaashaanka ku dhuftay inaysan wax xasuuq oo ay gaysteen uusan jirin ciidamada isku jirka ah ee dowlada iyo Ethiopia . Maalmihii nasoo dhaafay ee asbuucan Horaantiisii ayaa dagaaladii ka dhacay deegaanada suuqa xoolaha iyo waxara cadde ayaa ahaa ku gaystay dhimashada inta la og yahay 82-qofood oo rayid ah oo ay ku jiraan culimo udiin kamid ahaa jameecada tabliiqa oo loogu galay masjidkii ay ku Cibaadaysanayeen iyagoon wax dagaal ah ka qayb qaadan islamarkaana ay qaar ka tirsan masuuliyiinta dowlada KMG ah ay indhaha ka daboolanayaan xasuuqa baahsan ee ay ciidamada ethiopia gaysteen . Maaha markii ugu horaysay ee ciidamada Ethiopia xasuuq noocan oo kala ah ay u gaystaan dadka shacabka ah ee aan waxba galabsan islamrkaana ugu gala goobaha masjidada iyo xaafadaha ay u ku nool yihiin kal hore ayay ahayd markii suuqa xamar jadiid ay ciidamada ethiopia ku gowraceen 23-qofood oo rayid ah oo ay ugu soo galeen guryahooda . Afnugaal.com
  20. Afhayeenka xoogaga al-shabaab sh,muqtaar abu-mansuur Rooboow ayaa shaaca ka qaaday inay Mujaahidiinta islaamka soomaaliyeed meel kasta oo ay joogaan aysan wax wada hadal ah la gelayn dowlada KMG ah islamrkaana ay laba jibaareen dagaaladii ay kula jireen ciidamada ethiopia ee dalka soomaaliya ku sugan. Sh,muqtaar abu mansuur rooboow shir jaraa,id ku qabtay dhinaca telefoonka ayaa gaashaanka ku dhuftay hadalka sheegaya inay kulan la qadan doonaan maxaakiimta islaamka iyo waxii wadaniyadi ku jirto oo dhan kuwa uu ugu yeeray murtadiinta diinta ka hor yimid oo ula jeeday dowlada FKMG ah islamrkaana xusay dadkii culimo udiinka u badnaa ee ay ciidamada Ethiopia ku xasuuqeen Masjidka Al-hidaaya oo ay nuur cadde iyo jengali ku tilmaameen been abuur . Muqtaar rooboow ayaa sheegay in culimo udiinka masjidka al-hidaaya aysan ahayn kuwo weligeed is hubeeyey ama ka qayb qaatay wax dagaal ah islamrkaana carabka ku adkeeyey xataa toorey inaysan laga helin masjidkooda laakiin sheegay in cadowga islaamka oo ula jeeday ciidamada Ethiopia ay ula kac u xasuuqeen iyagoo islaam nacayb ah . Dhinaca kale abu-mansuur ayaa xusay taariikhdii sh,saciid yaxye oo ahaa imaamkii masjidka Al-hidaaya ee ay ciidamada Ethiopia ku dileen masjidka Al-hidaaya islamarkaana ahaa imaamu jameecada tabliiqa xiligaas joogay masjidka al-hidaaya ee magaalada muqdisho oo sheegay inay is barteen 1986-dii islamrkaana uu yaraantiisii tarbiyadiisa qayb laxaad leh kasoo qaatay . Abu-mansuur ayaa sidoo kale sheegay in Ethiopianku ay doonayaan Cid kasta oo muslin ah inay xasuuqaan islamrkaana ay xaqiijin karto Culimada aan hubaysnayn oo masjidkoodii loogu soo galay islamrkaana ku Booriyey inay gaaladu kula dagaalamayso Aadaanka salaada loogana baahan yahay inay Dagaalamaan. Hadalka Rooboow abu-mansuur ayaa kusoo beegmaya xili ay Xoogaga dowlada kasoo horjeedaa isku raaceen inaysan wax kulan ah la yeelan doonin dowlada KMG ah oo Hore ay QM u shaaciyeen inay Horaanta bisha fooda inagu soo haysa lagu kulmi doono dalka jabuuti Afnugaal
  21. ADDIS ABABA, April 24 (Reuters) - Ethiopia criticised Amnesty International on Thursday and said the group's accusations that Ethiopian soldiers killed 21 people at a Mogadishu mosque were "lies" and "propaganda". Amnesty said on Wednesday the soldiers, who are stationed Somalia to bolster the interim government, had also captured dozens of children during a raid on the Al Hidaaya mosque earlier this week during operations against Islamist insurgents. It said an imam and several Islamic scholars were among the dead, and that seven victims had their throats slit. Zemedkun Tekle, spokesman for the Ethiopian Ministry of Information, condemned the report. "Amnesty's allegations are unsubstantiated lies and propaganda that they received from Islamic groups in Somalia. Ethiopia has never been involved in such incidents," he said. "Ethiopia would have been surprised if Amnesty had said something positive about Ethiopia rather than its usual lies." Bereket Simon, President Meles Zenawi's special adviser, also criticised the report, noting that the human rights group has no presence in the Horn of Africa nation. "Amnesty International has no representatives on the ground in Somalia," he told Reuters. "It is gathering hearsay and accusing Ethiopia based on false information." Some moderate Islamist leaders in Somalia have postponed plans to attend U.N.-sponsored peace talks after the report was published, which came as fighting escalates in Mogadishu. Residents said four more corpses were found in the coastal capital bringing the death toll from this weekend's shelling and seizure of small towns by the Islamists' militant al Shabaab wing to 103. The clashes were the worst in recent months. The Islamist insurgents -- remnants of a sharia courts movement ousted from their strongholds in Mogadishu and much of southern Somalia at the end of 2006 -- view the presence of traditional foe Ethiopia in their country as an "occupation". Civilians have borne the conflict, which a local rights group says killed 6,500 people last year. About 1 million of the country's 9 million people have been uprooted from their homes. The government which is struggling to assert its authority in Somalia, deprived of an effective central government since the 1991 toppling of dictator Mohamed Siad Barre, has maintained its right to self-defence against insurgent attacks.
  22. Two influential international think tanks are recommending independence and diplomatic recognition of Somaliland "sooner rather than later". In its latest report, the Senlis Council underlines the need for quick and official recognition of Somaliland. This is echoed by the International Crisis Group, which also supports international recognition of Somaliland’s right to statehood. HARGEISA (Tiraspol Times) - The Republic of Somaliland needs to be officially recognized as an independent country says a prominent global think-tank in its latest report on security and development. The Senlis Council, which was established in 2002 as a European-based organization, reveals its policy recommendations in a report entitled Chronic Failures of the War on Terror: From Afghanistan to Somalia which was published in London on Wednesday. In its report, the think-tank emphasises the need for official recognition of Somaliland. " - Official recognition for Somaliland would send a clear message to all Somalis that peaceful transitions from stability are possible without the need to use overpowering military force, and will be rewarded," said Norine MacDonald, a Canadian lawyer who is president and lead field researcher of The Senlis Council. " - Up to now, Somaliland has toiled in relative anonymity without any recognition of its extraordinary success in creating the conditions for a viable, stand-alone state, and resisting the spread of extremism found in Somalia." The Senlis Council is an international policy think-tank with offices in Brussels, Kabul, Kandahar, Lashkar Gah, London, Ottawa, Paris and Rio de Janeiro. It works in partnership with the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) and the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS), as co-organizer of an international conference held in February with the attendance of General David J. Richards, until last year the overall commander of NATO-ISAF. ICG recommends independence The International Crisis Group also recommends independence as the best way to build a future for the people of Somaliland. The ICG advocates that the African Union leads the way on international recognition of Somaliland’s right to statehood. In a special report, the research and advocacy group makes a clear political and legal case for recognition. ICG’s research suggests that an independent Somaliland would add to regional stability, rather than representing a further cause of instability in the Horn of Africa. The International Crisis Group argues that Somaliland’s case is unique, and would not - as some AU members fear - set a precedent for African secessionist movement. The current internationally recognized state of Somalia is a state in name only. Aside from the briefest of intervals, the last 17 years has been characterised by varying degrees of chaos. In Somalia, elections have not been held since 1969. Whereas in Somaliland, the 2005 Parliamentary elections were regarded as free and fair, and a test of independence. But if Somalia is a state in name only, Somaliland is a state-in-waiting without formal recognition. Of all of the states in the Horn of Africa, it is the self-declared yet internationally unrecognised aspirant state of Somaliland that offers President Bush with his most viable opportunity to claim an African success story. By all rational indicators of a state’s post-conflict development, Somaliland represents impressive progress, and consolidating an area of stability and governance in the Horn of Africa will reduce the vacant space for instability, conflict and extremism to fill. Somaliland case not creating new precedent Somaliland has achieved an extraordinary level of political and physical stability after being raised during the bitter civil war of the early 1990s. An embattled population found the resolve to reconstitute itself, establishing functioning organs of government without little upheaval – a rarity in post-conflict reconstruction. Its drive to create multi-party democracy upon a backdrop of relative peace and security has been impressive, if not without flaw. Somaliland’s considerable achievements must not continue to go unheralded, and the only substantial way to reward it is through full statehood, argues the Senlis Council in its report. Somaliland’s claim for full state independence is distinct from the majority of similar requests of other separatist enclaves/exclaves. Rather than seeking to secede from Somalia, Somaliland is looking to be re-constituted as an independent state. It held this status for five days between 26 June and 1 July 1960 - being recognized by 35 states in the process - before voluntarily uniting with Italian Somalia within the Somali Republic. For most of its time inside Somalia, the territory was ruled by dictator Siad Barre’s regime. Barre fell in 1991, along with the country’s political, economic and administrative institutions and any semblance of central government. On 18 May 1991, Somaliland revoked the 1960 Act of Union, and declared Somaliland independent. No country has officially recognised its statehood yet. According to the report from the Senlis Council, the current policy vacuum needs to be filled by constructive engagement on the issue of Somaliland’s status at every diplomatic level, most notably within the African Union and United Nations. While this dialogue should necessarily be framed by the need for regional stability, the aim of some parties to establish a Somali Federation need not be an immediate focus of such discussions. Somaliland declared independence in 1991, one year after the independence declaration of Pridnestrovie (Transdniestria). Both have been ‘de facto’ independent states for the better part of the past two decades, but neither one of them has yet obtained international diplomatic recognition. A first step towards broader international recognition will be for the two countries’ Foreign Ministries to establish bilateral ties and recognize each other on a mutual basis. By Jason Cooper Published 2006 - 2008 by TIRASPOL TIMES & WEEKLY REVIEW (News Services), a.f.s.
  23. It was unexpected for me runtii ,,,, adigaaba xasuusan kii la soo qoray this time and ka la qoray that time and where ,,,,,, I've just realized i'm doing a great job ,, loooool ,,, Maanta network problemo baa jiree ...... mar dhow way hagaaagaysaa ,,, IA ,,,