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Minnesota Media write about puntland pres visit.

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Somalia Leader To Speak In Minn.,

 

The president of a semi-autonomous region of northern Somalia is speaking to a crowd of his fellow Somalis in Minneapolis.

 

President Abdirahman Mohamed Farole of Puntland is scheduled to address a Somali Independence Day celebration Tuesday evening at the Minneapolis Convention Center. Farole also spent time in Washington, where he met with government officials.

 

A local organizer says he expects Farole to talk about the continued political instability in Somalia, the problem of Somali pirates off the country's coast, and concerns in Minnesota about the disappearance in recent years of young Somali men believed to be serving with a militant Islamic terror group in their home country.

 

Farole was democratically elected and took office in January.

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Leading Somali official to speak in Minneapolis

by Elizabeth Baier, Minnesota Public Radio,

Laura Yuen, Minnesota Public Radio

June 30, 2009

 

St. Paul, Minn. — The top official from one of the relatively peaceful regions in wartorn Somalia will give the keynote address at an event tonight in Minneapolis celebrating Somali Independence Day.

 

Abdirahman Farole, the president of Puntland, a semi-autonomous region of Somalia, is visiting the Twin Cities this week after testifying about his country at a Congressional hearing in Washington D.C.

 

He says he sees Puntland playing a central role in bringing stability to the entire country. Farole says the international community should support the relatively peaceful regions in northern Somalia, and deliver humanitarian aid to assist the masses of people fleeing violence in the south.

 

"A huge displacement is occuring place in the south, and people are going across the border into Puntland," he said. Puntland is hosting hundreds of thousands of displaced people currently in need."

 

Farole says his administration is asking religious leaders in Puntland to help prevent new recruitment of pirates through education and what he calls "spiritual healing."

 

"It is not enough to fight them militarily. But it's something you can fight at the community level, by encouraging traditional leaders -- religious and community -- to address the issue."

 

Farole says many people in Puntland condemn piracy because the industry has introduced drugs and alcohol into the area's coastal communities.

 

In Somalia, there are two regional administrations in the northern part of the country -- the self-declared Republic of Somaliland in the northwest, and the semi-autonomous region of Puntland in the northeast.

 

Farole was elected president by the Puntland parliament in January 2009. The area declared itself autonomous, but not independent, in 1998 with its capital at Garowe. Puntland officials said the region would remain autonomous until a federated Somalia state was established.

 

The Obama administration recently moved to increase aid to Somalia's faltering government with weapons to help armies in several neighboring African nations train Somali forces.

 

Minnesota has the largest population of Somali immigrants in the United States, with nearly 35,000 Somali residents.

 

About 1,200 people are expected to attend tonight's event, which begins at 8 p.m. at the Minneapolis Convention Center.

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Elected Somali leader to speak in Minneapolis

 

Associated Press - June 30, 2009 5:14 PM ET

 

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - The president of a semi-autonomous region of northern Somalia is speaking to a crowd of his fellow Somalis in Minneapolis.

 

President Abdirahman (AB-dihr-ah-MON) Mohamed Farole (FAR-rohl) of Puntland is scheduled to address a Somali Independence Day celebration Tuesday evening at the Minneapolis Convention Center. Farole also spent time in Washington, where he met with government officials.

 

A local organizer says he expects Farole to talk about the continued political instability in Somalia, the problem of Somali pirates off the country's coast, and concerns in Minnesota about the disappearance in recent years of young Somali men believed to be serving with a militant Islamic terror group in their home country.

 

Farole was democratically elected and took office in January.

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