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facklexm

Somaliland's prosperous refugees return to invest in their country

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facklexm   

Somaliland, Mar 24 (UNHCR) – Ali Abdibihi is a bright, outgoing boy of 16 who is eager to practise his English with any visitor to the shantytown he calls home.

 

He lives in a traditional igloo-shaped home – a tukul – made of rags and flattened tin cans, with his blind father, his mother and six older sisters and brothers, all of whom are unemployed. Yet he sees clearly how he can help them: "I am going to be a professor. I am going to teach computer science."

 

The inspiration for such a precise ambition? A Somali who found refuge in Britain, earned a PhD there, and has come home to the Somaliland capital and set up an internet centre among the squatters' tukuls where he teaches computer science.

 

Hargeisa, the capital of the self-declared (but internationally unrecognised) state of Somaliland is bursting at the seams these days with people like Ali and his family – former refugees who have come back to their country, but have nowhere to live but squalid settlements, often set up without permission on state or private land.

 

At the same time, the city is booming thanks to other returnees like the British-trained professor who are bringing home their skills learned in exile, and quite often their money as well. According to UN figures, Somalis abroad sent home $750 million last year to fuel the region's economy; this year the figure is expected to reach $1 billion. Much of that is fuelling Hargeisa's construction boom.

 

Somaliland, which is also known as north-west Somalia, broke away from the rest of the country and declared itself the independent Republic of Somaliland in 1991. It was devastated by a vicious civil war in the late 1980s under the central government of former dictator Mohamed Siad Barre, followed by outbreaks of anarchic inter-clan fighting after his fall in 1991.

 

"Not only did people come back from refugee camps in neighbouring countries," says Somaliland's foreign minister, Edna Adan Ismail, "but many also came from far afield. We have returnees coming back from Canada, from the U.S., from Britain, from Australia, from Saudi Arabia. These returnees – and I am one of them – are putting Somaliland back on its feet."

 

Across town from the Sheikh Nur settlement where Ali's inspirational internet centre is located, a more formal computer class is under way at Havoyoco (Horn of Africa Voluntary Youth Committee), a local non-governmental organization funded by UNHCR that claims that 90 percent of its graduates find paying jobs. Today a class of about 30 young women is learning how to enter data into a computer to process payments.

 

Elsewhere in Hargeisa, the Somali Women's Development Association (SOWDA) teaches basic literacy to girls and women, and also teaches skills like tailoring, incense-making and soap-making with funding from the UN refugee agency.

 

Ugbad Ibrahim Kahin, 16 years old, dreams of someday becoming a medical doctor. For now, seated behind a treadle sewing machine at the SOWDA centre, she's happy to learn tailoring because "sewing is something that will improve my life."

 

She's one of eight children, their father is dead, and their mother cannot find work, "so I thought I could be the one who could earn money and support the family," the teenager says.

 

Helping Somalilanders acquire skills to support themselves is one of many goals of a $200 million Comprehensive Plan of Action (CPA) – to improve the lives of Somalis in the four main countries of asylum (Djibouti, Ethiopia, Kenya and Yemen) and returnees and displaced within the country.

 

In an area where being rich is defined as eating three meals a day, the regional CPA is designed to help place Somalis on a more stable footing by, among other aims, protecting returnees and displaced people, improving the nutrition of women and children, improving access to clean water, and increasing access to health care and education.

 

With initial backing by the European Commission, Denmark, Netherlands and the United Kingdom, UNHCR and other United Nations agencies plan to present the CPA to donors later this year. This fundraising event will be the first phase of a larger donor appeal that aims to turn an assessment of needs of Somalis into a three-year development plan.

 

Through these joint processes, the returnees in Somaliland should be in a better position to fully reintegrate and, together with other vulnerable groups, including those displaced internally, recover some "normalcy" in their lives.

 

Back at the foreign ministry, Edna (as the foreign minister is affectionately known far and wide) says investing in the future of returnees is a smart move, and that the energy of Somaliland's returnees who have come home from refugee camps and elsewhere can stand as a model to refugees in other countries.

 

"What is happening in Somaliland is encouraging for all refugees," she says, "that they should come home and rebuild their country like Somalilanders have."

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Arawella   

The future looks prosperous for Somaliland with such promising investments in terms of skills and capital from returnees. I can only hope that South Somali follows in Somaliland footsteps and denounce the warmongers.

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Well done to North Somali regions. However, in the

south, there is no hope as long as there are these

warmongers still active and bloting!

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Jaylaani   

^^^^Lol@North Somalia…aren’t you hilarious?

 

According to DUKE and SOO MAAL, Yey is changing all Somalia to the better.

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^^Waxaan ogahay in Maandeeq godlan doonto

goordhow, lagana wada dhergi doono. Haddii

gees ha ubaxdidna waa laaga laysani ogoow :D

 

 

am

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who-me   

Classic somali "Mandeeq ayaa godlan doonta lana maali doona waana lagaa laysan donaa hadii aad banaanka is dhigto"

 

Waa hore ayaa igu dambaysay in aan maqlo luqada somaliga marka sidaa loogu hadlo.... Hal kaas ka sii wada xigmada..

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SOO MAAL   

Originally posted by Jaylaani:

^^^^Lol@North Somalia…aren’t you hilarious?

 

According to DUKE and SOO MAAL, Yey is changing all Somalia to the better.

Jaylaani don't be narrow minded, and clannish only focusing on tribal affiliation of Abdulahi

 

I know that Somalia is a country of 10 million population not one man.

 

Somalia is a great country, Abduqassim was yesterday's president, Abdulahi is today's president, and tomorrow it is another man (it could be Mr Buubaa). Keep in mind that leaders they come and leave, BUT the country stays!

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SOO MAAL   

Originally posted by Allamagan:

Well done to North Somali regions. However, in the

south, there is no hope as long as there are these

warmongers still active and bloting!

Allamagan,

I guess you are referring to Northwest Somalia (so-called Somaliland), because there is other regions in North Somalia, North-Central Somalia (Sool Sanaag andCayn), and Northeast (Bari).

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Ibtisam   

Allamagan

Member: 6696 posted 31 March, 2006 05:01 PM

Well done to North Somali regions. However, in the

south, there is no hope as long as there are these

warmongers still active and bloting!

Allamagan, let me give you a hint, you will find the name of the country by looking at the title of the thread. i can see it pains you greatly. :rolleyes:

 

Soo-Maal don't it get it twisted.

:cool:

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