Polanyi

Nomads
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Everything posted by Polanyi

  1. The last puppet of SOmaliland got searched and humilated by the Ethiopian airline in his own supposed capital city.Such is the wretched life of being a commited and loyal puppet. Thank the lord, we have been estowed with the freedom and honour to be noble men of wisdom.
  2. Colonel David Rose ma Somali bu aha horta?
  3. Born in the Hawd Black and Proud Celebrate loud when the clouds bring rain
  4. Polanyi

    new style

    Hellow, Fergusonow
  5. ^^ I'm just connecting the dots, ya salafi: Originally posted by London2010: To be fair to him. about 80% of what Peacenow said was right. We have had cultural influences from Arabs that has just served us very very badly. It's a miserable life and who is to blame....Arabs.
  6. ^^ ur completely missing the point. Although i was to be the guys biggest supporter, and now one of his biggest critiques, the above comment was not political.
  7. loma bahna complex xalimos, u get me, bruv.
  8. The Average Farax will look this: Andrew Marroid type The average Xalimo will look this: The Obrah Winfroid Type. Bladland Science Department.
  9. Puntland will be liberated by Somali Cushitic people and freed from Abysnian Adoon dictatorship.
  10. Yeah, Somalis, the chosen people. Give it rest will ya!
  11. Polanyi

    My Tribe

    The upper rendille are lost Cushitic Somalis, as some of the elders testified. Inshallah, we will give dawah to them and bring them under bladland.
  12. Originally posted by London2010: Look at these arabs, really they are the sickest of the sick. Look at them and their clothes. It's sick. Wlc BACK, warya. lol@lazie.
  13. Polanyi

    My Tribe

    I recognise that forehead.
  14. Torres is leaving in Jan. La socda, bruv.
  15. Actually, Wiltord was a very good striker and a good squad player. He fitted in well with the that crop of players. Arsenal have been going downhill ever since Arsene thought he could get rid of all the older players and replace them with youth. You need youth plus experience to win the league. I sincerely hope Arsene reliases that before Jack wilshire grows facial hair.
  16. i need to buy the book. ps. i wonder if this lady ever used sol in her past life?
  17. Originally posted by Libaahe*: Despite efforts to isolate the rebels, the SNM continued military operations in northern Somalia. Between July and September 1987, the SNM initiated approximately thirty attacks, including one on the northern capital, Hargeysa; none of these, however, weakened the government's control of northern Somalia. A more dramatic event occurred when a SNM unit kidnapped a Médecins Sans Frontières medical aid team of ten Frenchmen and one Djiboutian to draw the world's attention to Mogadishu's policy of impressing men from refugee camps into the SNA. After ten days, the SNM released the hostages unconditionally. Siad Barre responded to these activities by instituting harsh security measures throughout northern Somalia. The government also evicted suspected pro-SNM nomad communities from the Somali- Ethiopian border region. These measures failed to contain the SNM. By February 1988, the rebels had captured three villages around Togochale, a refugee camp near the northwestern Somali- Ethiopian border. Following the rebel successes of 1987-88, Somali-Ethiopian relations began to improve. On March 19, 1988, Siad Barre and Ethiopian president Mengistu Haile Mariam met in Djibouti to discuss ways of reducing tension between the two countries. Although little was accomplished, the two agreed to hold further talks. At the end of March 1988, the Ethiopian minister of foreign affairs, Berhanu Bayih, arrived in Mogadishu for discussions with a group of Somali officials, headed by General Ahmad Mahamuud Faarah. On April 4, 1988, the two presidents signed a joint communiqué in which they agreed to restore diplomatic relations, exchange prisoners of war, start a mutual withdrawal of troops from the border area, and end subversive activities and hostile propaganda against each other. Faced with a cutoff of Ethiopian military assistance, the SNM had to prove its ability to operate as an independent organization. Therefore, in late May 1988 SNM units moved out of their Ethiopian base camps and launched a major offensive in northern Somalia. The rebels temporarily occupied the provincial capitals of Burao and Hargeysa. These early successes bolstered the SNM's popular support, as thousands of disaffected SNM family members and SNA deserters joined the rebel ranks. Over the next few years, the SNM took control of almost all of northwestern Somalia and extended its area of operations about fifty kilometers east of Erigavo. He was talking about Socotra. The article only talks about the deal in the Ocaden. Socotra was never signed off by any SOmali leader. Truth be told, it belongs to yemen.
  18. Yemen Post Staff Somalia has claimed that the islands of Yemeni Socotra Archipelago are part of it, requesting the United Nations to determine the status of the archipelago, executive director of the Saba Center for Strategic Studies said. The unstable horn of Africa country with a transitional government receiving unlimited support from Yemen said it has the right to administer the archipelago, which lies about 340 km from the Yemeni coast, because it is located within its territory and borders, Ahmed Abdul Karim Saif made clear. 'The Somali claim is an unprecedented and dangerous indicator at a time when local activists and organizations are demanding to give Socotra a suitable status according to its geopolitical and strategic location, boost all services on it and take all necessary measures to keep other countries away from thinking of any part of Yemen.' In response, Yemen submitted a request to the UN saying the archipelago is Yemeni and history and its influence on it prove its claim, he said. Yemen's response came late and helped prevent a dispute over the archipelago, said Saif, as he ruled out that Socotra is currently a matter of dispute between the two countries. The remarks were given at a seminar on Socotra, at which the participants voiced concerns about the situation of the archipelago amid poor basic services and infrastructure. They said the current situation in Socotra could lead to unacceptable security, military and economic consequences that may hamper preparing the investment climate on it and its development as Yemen is seeking to better use its potentials. Moreover, they urged the government to address all issues affecting the interest of the Socotra people and their traditions. http://www.yemenpost.net/Detail123456789.aspx?ID=3&SubID=2698&MainCat=3 Next we will reclaim our lost Cushitic jewels of Oman and Dubai.
  19. I wanna buy a motorbike for me n my xalimo.
  20. am watchin match of the day.