Monday, December 31, 2007
Africom: The military projection of foreign policy
December 31, 2007
Gen. William “Kip” Ward was named by Bush in July to head Africom.
The recent unveiling of Africom by the Bush administration is the clearest indicator yet of the military establishment’s ascendancy over the State Department in formulation and implementation of foreign policy, a trajectory that began soon after the conclusion of World War II.
The great contradiction within this trajectory is that as modern military establishments become more technological and exert greater political influence, they become less relevant to modern warfare, as can be seen in Iraq, where a $3 million tank proves to be tactically worthless against a $15 IED (Improvised Explosive Devise).
The creation of Africom also reflects contemporary concerns in Washington about this country’s sustained access to what many believe to be dwindling global supplies of oil. Africom is a vital link in the huge military apparatus that provides "national security."
Furthermore, the long running discussion within the Pentagon focused on Africa, most notably within the Army, suggests Africom, among other things, will be used to promote policies of "imperialist assimilation," is predicated upon there being little if any resistance from the Congressional Black Caucus and ultimately envisions reconfiguring the map of Africa in the interests of the U.S.
But during a recent television interview, newly minted four star Gen. William "Kip" Ward, commanding officer of the Africa Command, said none of this. He placated the willingly naive interviewer, Charlie Rose, with the standard public information office nonsense.
Gen. Ward, a man who creates the appearance of someone profoundly ignorant of anything having to do with Africa, portrayed Africom as little more than a Rotary International with guns.
Africom’s role he said, will include working with national armies to "professionalize" their security forces, will help keep the region free of weapons of mass destruction, will promote governance that is humane, managerially competent and accountable, will aid in providing information and warning and will help to maintain an un-threatened natural environment.
The only problem being, these missions already are being carried out through various military organizations, most notably the Africa Center for Strategic Studies, at Fort McNair and various regional alliances, such as the Trans Saharan Counter Terrorism Initiative and the African Contingency Operations Training program.
In addition to this, by the end of 2007 the U.S. will have conducted joint military training exercises with 46 of the 53 countries of Africa.
The Pentagon also operates a military base in Djibouti on the Horn of Africa (from which Army personnel were dispatched earlier this year to aid in the Ethiopian intervention in Somalia). It maintains an extensive military presence in Uganda. From there various military adventures are launched in all directions, including into Central Africa and Sudan.
It was from Uganda that the U.S. aided in the destabilization of Rwanda, which resulted in the 1994 genocide.
These numerous military relationships, designed to shape African militaries into reflections and appendages of the Pentagon, are the source from which notions of imperialist assimilation flow.
This strategy is relevant to Africa in general because colonialism left most sub-Saharan African nations with relatively weak or undeveloped modern social structures in terms of national businesses and student and trade union class sectors of the populations.
The military therefore became the dominant social institution under independence and is seen by the outside world as the class with the most political power - if it chooses to exercise it.
So why Africom and why now?
Two reasons mostly.
In February of 2007, while it apparently escaped the attention of the mainstream media, oil imports to the U.S. from sub-Sahara Africa surpassed imports from the Middle East. Therefore major branches of the Pentagon, whose role is often to act as security guards watching over oil deliveries to the U.S., would have to be reconfigured to focus on Africa, which is now a region of vital importance to national security.
The second issue of fundamental concern to the U.S. is the rise of China as a global economic power, rampaging through Africa, consolidating oil and trade agreements there at a pace heretofore unseen and at prices unseen, allowing some African countries to shed themselves of the draconian International Monetary Fund dictates.
It has long been commonly believed the U.S. would never allow the rise of a true competitor, which it now appears China will certainly become. Economic forecasters predict China’s economy will surpass the U.S. by 2040. Africom must be seen as a major countermeasure designed to impede China’s developing relationships with the African countries.
However, if there is one single reason, almost equal in weight to all the others that can be said to explain Africom’s existence, it has to be the problematic Nigeria, the most prolific provider of Africa’s oil to the U.S. and but also what the Defense Department considers to be the world’s largest failed state.
Nigeria is the keystone of the oil producing countries that border the Gulf of Guinea, which the U.S. now considers to be its private lake. It is that vast expanse of the southern Atlantic off the coast of West Africa that contains some of the world’s largest reservoirs of oil and natural gas.
Nineteen African countries, most of them oil producers, stretching from Liberia in the north to Angola in the south, either border or have immediate access to the Gulf of Guinea. In 2004, California’s Chevron Corp. completed an oil pipeline that stretches from southern Chad through Cameroon to the Gulf, a distance of 1,070 km.
"The Gulf of Guinea offshore is one of the most prolific hydrocarbon provinces in the world, with oil and gas discoveries of more than 10 billion barrels and tremendous potential beyond that," said Dr. Edmund Daukoru, then president of OPEC and currently Nigeria’s Minister of State for Petroleum Resources, speaking at a conference attended by 1,200 oil industry executives and technicians last year.
The clear relationship between the creation of Africom and access to oil, natural gas and other minerals necessary to the energy industry lends credence to the belief by many political analysts that the U.S. is in the midst of a 100-year, and counting, war for energy.
Quiet in regards to these developments is the Congressional Black Caucus, that forum some in the Pentagon consider the most powerful grouping of Black politicians in the world.
In a 1994 research paper written for the Industrial College of the Armed Forces titled "Congressional Black Caucus and American Foreign Policy," U.S. Army Col. Renard Marable noted that the CBC is often criticized for getting involved in foreign affairs only when a crisis arises, as in Haiti and Somalia.
The one exception to this norm is the CBC’s involvement with South Africa, but this exception exists largely because of a common language, Marable noted.
In more recent times, New Jersey Congressman Donald Payne, who chairs the House Subcommittee on Africa and Global Health, and California Congresswoman Barbara Lee have been outspoken on Darfur, but as has been noted extensively elsewhere, suspicions abound as to the true nature of the Darfur issue and to the motives of U.S. policy in Sudan.
Col. Marable also noted the CBC has never employed a foreign policy specialist to advise the caucus as a whole.
Apparently as a result of not having a sustained focus on foreign policy, specifically as it relates to Africa, with the exception of Payne, who made a brief and tepid statement of qualified criticism of Africom to the Voice of America radio, the CBC has not, either individually or as a group, supported the large number of African nations that have rejected and criticized Africom’s formation.
Finally and closely connected to the issues of Darfur and Sudan as well as much of the rest of the African continent, is the notion of military planners that many of Africa’s problems can be solved by re-drawing the map of Africa.
For years, some African scholars, educated in the U.S. and with close ties to the U.S. military, such as the Brookings Institution’s Francis M. Deng, a Sudanese, have long argued that the many of the nations of Africa need to be reconfigured along more logical geographic and ethnic lines.
This flies in the face of long held common wisdom and rejects one of the fundamental underpinnings of the original Organization of African Unity, predecessor of the current African Union. That wisdom held that the national borders at the time of Independence were to be inviolate. With the granting of Independence to Eritrea from Ethiopia in 1993, however, the deep thinkers at the Pentagon andits related think tanks took heart. This was the first time since the dawn of African independence in 1957 that a new state had been torn from an old state.
Would there, could there be more to come?
In 2005, another opportunity developed when the U.S. helped broker the Comprehensive Peace Agreement in Sudan that provides for a referendum to determine whether southern Sudan, which geographically contains the majority of Sudan’s oil, shall secede from Khartoum.
Though the referendum is not scheduled to be held until 2011, already the U.S. extends to the government of Southern Sudan privileges and economic benefits it withholds from the Khartoum, a policy certain to encourage secession from the North.
If Southern Sudan should follow the path of secession, as now seems likely, it is difficult to see how Sudan could not but react militarily to protect its control over the lifeblood of the Sudanese nation, the oilfields.
This then is typical of the long range objectives of Africom, to use military power, whether U.S. or "assimilated," to help enforce the "democratic" restructuring of Africa, as may take place in Sudan and elsewhere, or to help bolster, by force if necessary, such vital oil producing "failed states" as Nigeria - all in the name of national security.
Jean Damu
Jean Damu is the former western regional representative for N’COBRA, National Coalition of Blacks for Reparations in America, a former member of the International Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, taught Black Studies at the University of New Mexico, has traveled and written extensively in Cuba and Africa and currently serves as a member of the Steering Committee of the Black Alliance for Just Immigration. Email him at jdamu2@yahoo.com.This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Kofi Annan Group ploughs $13m to help Africa Farmers
Johannesburg:
A green group headed by former UN chief Kofi Annan has given $13 million in grants to help small businesses in Malawi, Tanzania and Kenya to reduce prices of supplies to farms in a bid to boost farming output.
The small retailers would sell supplies such as seeds, tools and fertiliser to 1.6 million rural households that could benefit 8.8 million farmers and their families in the three countries.
"Lack of access to basic farm supplies has made it virtually impossible for small-scale farmers to increase their yield or incomes, reinforcing widespread poverty," the farm group said in a statement on Thursday.
The group, named Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA), was officially launched in June and is partly bankrolled by Microsoft chairman Bill Gates. It aims to help small-scale farmers across Africa fight poverty and hunger through sustainable increases in farm productivity and incomes.
AGRA, which works in tandem with African governments, said all the three country programmes aim to increase rural smallholder incomes by 30 percent and reduce the price of inputs by 15 percent in three years.
They also intend to halve the average distance farmers need to travel to purchase farm supplies.
Malawi and Tanzania each received $4.3 million, while Kenya was awarded $4.4 million in the grants awarded under AGRA's Agro-dealer Development Program (ADP).
The group said it was common for rural farmers to travel great distances to buy seed or fertiliser, and at the end of their journey they frequently found stores lacked the items they needed or were selling them at unaffordable prices.
More than 200 million Africans are malnourished and hungry, with many of them heavily reliant on farming or some form of agriculture to lift them out of poverty, UN data shows. - Reuters
Sunday, December 30, 2007
Kibaki wins Kenya vote, protests erupt
Kibaki was sworn in immediately at State House, witnesses said, as the announcement of his victory sent his supporters pouring into the streets in celebration, many beeping car horns.
"Honourable Mwai Kibaki is the winner," ECK chairman Samuel Kivuitu told a small group of reporters at the tally centre.
Scuffles and heckling had erupted moments earlier, forcing paramilitary police to escort Kivuitu to safety soon after he began reading final results in the cliffhanger vote.
Party agents, politicians and most journalists were then ejected from the Nairobi conference centre, and the ECK head completed the results announcements in front of a small group.
Chief European Union observer Alexander Graf Lambsdorff said some doubts remained about the accuracy of the final count.
"We believe that, at this time, the ECK, despite the best efforts of its chairman, has not succeeded in establishing the credibility of the tallying process to the satisfaction of all parties and candidates," he said in a statement.
"We regret that it has not been possible to address irregularities about which both the EU (observer mission) and the ECK have evidence ... some doubt remains as to the accuracy of the result of the presidential election as announced today."
GUNSHOTS, ARSON
Odinga had earlier alleged that "doctoring" was taking place at the ECK centre inself. ODM officials were locked in a crisis meeting after the announcement and did not immediately comment.
Delays announcing official results have triggered furious protests and ethnic clashes across the east African nation.
Riots convulsed Kibera -- one of Africa's biggest slums -- after the announcement and residents said opposition supporters were burning houses and kiosks.
"There's a lot of heat over here. People are out in their thousands," Kibera resident Joshua Odutu said against a backdrop of gunshots, whistles and shouting.
Police reinforcements in riot gear had been deployed in large numbers as many Kenyans feared worse violence was to come.
The few supermarkets and food shops that opened were packed with nervous customers. Shelves of meat, milk, beer, bottled water and other provisions emptied fast.
Business leaders said this weekend's tribal clashes were costing more than $30 million a day in lost taxes -- not to mention looting damage -- and threatened investment in Kenya.
The country normally enjoys a reputation as a haven of relative calm in a volatile region of Africa.
One election observer who asked not to be named said they were "in very little doubt" there had been rigging.
Source; Reuters, Dec 30, 2007
Kenya: Tally Halted Amid Protests
Posted to the web 30 December 2007
Nation Team
Nairobi
Chaos and angry protests on Saturday halted the announcement of results from Thursday's General Election with only 38,000 votes separating the two leading presidential candidates.
The delay in the release of the results caused tension and anxiety throughout the country, with one death, various injuries and looting reported.
Bickering between the agents of various presidential candidates, especially ODM and PNU, and confrontations with Electoral Commission of Kenya chairman Samuel Kivuitu, led to the suspension of announcement of results late last evening, according to commission spokesperson Jack Tumwa.
As at 2.30pm, ODM presidential candidate Raila Odinga had 3,880,053 votes against President Kibaki's 3,842,051, according to official figures released by Electoral Commission of Kenya Chairman Samuel Kivuitu.
The chairman did not give the tally for other presidential candidates, including ODM-K's Kalonzo Musyoka, at that briefing.
After a meeting of ECK commissioners, Mr Tumwa announced suspension of the entire exercise to allow a scrutiny of results in all the 210 parliamentary constituencies.
Mr Tumwa said all the 22 commissioners including the chairman had agreed on the suspension.
The centre of disagreements was in constituencies in Nairobi, Eastern and parts of Central provinces where President Kibaki was scoring highly against ODM's Raila Odinga in the presidential race.
ODM has also scored high turnout in its strongholds, with the turnout for Ndhiwa reported as 92.8 per cent, for example.
With results coming in to the national tallying centre at Kenyatta International Conference Centre in Nairobi overnight and early Saturday morning, the gap between President Kibaki and Mr Odinga had closed to only 38,000 from a high of one million on Friday.
At first, ODM chairman Henry Kosgey protested against any other commissioner apart from Mr Kivuitu announcing presidential results.
Then when Mr Kivuitu arrived to read the results, ODM's Najib Balala, Charity Ngilu, Retired Justice Richard Kwach, Joseph Nyagah, William Ruto, James Orengo and Musa Sirma raised numerous complaints about results coming from parts of Eastern Province.
ODM complained about what they termed as the slow progress of releasing results in President Kibaki's strongholds.
On the PNU side, Justice and Constitutional Affairs Minister Martha Karua, assistant minister Danson Mungatana and presidential agent George Nyamweya raised objections to some results from Nyanza province.
ODM Kenya's Mutula Kilonzo asked ECK to stick to the law and announce election results without allowing anyone to distract the process with "sideshows".
Mr Kivuitu then announced that he would stop the exercise for commissioners to hold private consultations before proceeding with the exercise.
As the gap between the candidates started narrowing with President Kibaki making gains against Mr Odinga, violence erupted in Nairobi, Busia, Kisumu, Eldoret, Kericho, Kakamega and Bungoma.
But calm was restored in most of affected areas early in the afternoon.
Mr Kivuitu, ODM, a grouping of major faith groups and representatives of the European Union election observers appealed for peace and respect for the rule of law.
Nation Team
Nairobi
Chaos and angry protests on Saturday halted the announcement of results from Thursday's General Election with only 38,000 votes separating the two leading presidential candidates.
The delay in the release of the results caused tension and anxiety throughout the country, with one death, various injuries and looting reported.
Bickering between the agents of various presidential candidates, especially ODM and PNU, and confrontations with Electoral Commission of Kenya chairman Samuel Kivuitu, led to the suspension of announcement of results late last evening, according to commission spokesperson Jack Tumwa.
As at 2.30pm, ODM presidential candidate Raila Odinga had 3,880,053 votes against President Kibaki's 3,842,051, according to official figures released by Electoral Commission of Kenya Chairman Samuel Kivuitu.
The chairman did not give the tally for other presidential candidates, including ODM-K's Kalonzo Musyoka, at that briefing.
After a meeting of ECK commissioners, Mr Tumwa announced suspension of the entire exercise to allow a scrutiny of results in all the 210 parliamentary constituencies.
Mr Tumwa said all the 22 commissioners including the chairman had agreed on the suspension.
The centre of disagreements was in constituencies in Nairobi, Eastern and parts of Central provinces where President Kibaki was scoring highly against ODM's Raila Odinga in the presidential race.
ODM has also scored high turnout in its strongholds, with the turnout for Ndhiwa reported as 92.8 per cent, for example.
With results coming in to the national tallying centre at Kenyatta International Conference Centre in Nairobi overnight and early Saturday morning, the gap between President Kibaki and Mr Odinga had closed to only 38,000 from a high of one million on Friday.
At first, ODM chairman Henry Kosgey protested against any other commissioner apart from Mr Kivuitu announcing presidential results.
Then when Mr Kivuitu arrived to read the results, ODM's Najib Balala, Charity Ngilu, Retired Justice Richard Kwach, Joseph Nyagah, William Ruto, James Orengo and Musa Sirma raised numerous complaints about results coming from parts of Eastern Province.
ODM complained about what they termed as the slow progress of releasing results in President Kibaki's strongholds.
On the PNU side, Justice and Constitutional Affairs Minister Martha Karua, assistant minister Danson Mungatana and presidential agent George Nyamweya raised objections to some results from Nyanza province.
ODM Kenya's Mutula Kilonzo asked ECK to stick to the law and announce election results without allowing anyone to distract the process with "sideshows".
Mr Kivuitu then announced that he would stop the exercise for commissioners to hold private consultations before proceeding with the exercise.
As the gap between the candidates started narrowing with President Kibaki making gains against Mr Odinga, violence erupted in Nairobi, Busia, Kisumu, Eldoret, Kericho, Kakamega and Bungoma.
But calm was restored in most of affected areas early in the afternoon.
Mr Kivuitu, ODM, a grouping of major faith groups and representatives of the European Union election observers appealed for peace and respect for the rule of law.
Raila calls for vote recount
December, 30,2007
By Stephen Ndegwa
The outcome of Kenya’s presidential elections is headed for a major dispute even before the Electoral Commission of Kenya (ECK) declares the winner. ODM Presidential candidate Mr Raila Odinga called a press conference on Sunday morning demanding the ECK to conduct a national audit and recount of the votes.
Raila said the process of releasing results so far was a “fraud” and ECK had “doctored the results” in favour of incumbent presidents and Party of National Unity candidate, Mwai Kibaki.
Asked whether he would seek the intervention of the courts, Raila responded that Kenya’s courts could not salvage the situation since they are in tight control of the Government. “We will not go to the courts controlled by President Kibaki.”
Raila urged the ECK chairman, Mr Samuel Kivuitu to do justice for Kenya by refusing to announce “cooked” results and further urged him to resign instead of releasing fraudulent figures.
ODM claimed that some constituencies cleverly withheld their results in order to “top up” in the event that they would lose. He mentioned Juja, Nithi, Maragua, Kiambaa, and Gatanga, which are Kibaki strongholds, as having presented different results to ECK other than what was announced at the tallying centres.
Raila alleged that Kibaki had initially garnered 52,000 votes in Juja, but ECK reported he got 78,000. In Nithi, ODM agents claimed Kibaki got 70,000, but totals showed he had 95,000 votes. In Maragua, Raila said the results showed a turnout of more than 100 percent.
He further urged Kibaki, as the “gentleman of Kenyan politics” to honourably accept defeat, in order to leave a legacy of “having made credible contribution to the growth of democracy in Kenya.
Raila observed that it was preposterous in Kenya to win an election from two regions. “ It is not possible to win from two tribes. Kenya is a multi ethnic nation”, he said.
According to ECK records, Raila and Kibaki are in neck-to-neck with 3,880,053 and 3,842,051.
Both parties claim they have won the polls, whose delays have seen chaos tension and rising in the country. Following the chaos that erupted in the country and at ECK KICC offices, security has been tightened.
Saturday, December 29, 2007
SUPPORTIVE LETTER FROM LORD AVEBURY INSISITING ON FULL DEMOCRACY IN SOMALILAND
From Lord Avebury P0726124
020-7274 4617
Saturday, December 29, 2007
To Lord Malloch Brown
Minister Foreign & Commonwealth Office,
London SW1A 2AH
Dear Lord Malloch-Brown,
Further to my letter of November 2 about the situation in Somaliland, ref P0721112, copy attached, (to which I don’t appear to have had a reply), you will have been advised of the conditional release of the three leaders. I attach an article by Mahdi A. Abdi of the East Africa Policy Institute on the questions that arise from this decree by the President, and an article from the Somaliland Times of December 22 on this subject.
I understand that the Somaliland Minister of Finance is in Nairobi, where he was expecting to finalise details of the EU’s funding of the elections, as well as other aid projects. Whilst any humanitarian aid should continue, it would be wrong for the EU to subsidise elections which can’t be free and fair, since important players are still to be excluded from participation. I do hope we shall use our influence in Brussels to ensure that aid for the elections is suspended until the right to campaign and put up candidates, who may include the three leaders who were imprisoned for 144 days, is extended to the Qaran Political Assocation.
Yours sincerely,
Eric Avebury
Source: Qaransomaliland.com
International Election Observers Have appealed to Kenyans to Remain Calm
By Susan Anyangu
International election observers have appealed to Kenyans to remain calm but
expressed concern over the delay in releasing presidential poll results.
The European Union (EU) observers, Commonwealth Observer group and the International Republican Institute (IRI) yesterday issued a joint statement calling on Kenyans to shun violence.
The EU Chief Observer, Mr Alexander Graf Lambsdorff, expressed concern over the delay in releasing presidential poll results from certain constituencies.
He said the delay was causing mistrust that could result in violence and tarnish the otherwise peaceful elections.
"We are issuing this joint statement to send a strong message to Kenyans that they should choose peace and let the Electoral Commission of Kenya (ECK) do its job," Lambsdorff said.
The observers also appealed to politicians to remain calm and desist from declaring premature victory since this could result in further skirmishes.
Election observers tell voters to shun violence
Lambsdorff appealed to politicians and the public to desist from putting pressure on ECK.
"Specifically, we appeal to politicians and the general public to let ECK do its job free from pressure," he said.
He steered clear of attempts to link the delay in releasing results with rigging claims. He said the observers had not received any concrete evidence that there was rigging. He, however, expressed concern over the fact that some constituencies had unusually high voter turnout.
"We have noted some significantly high voter turnout in certain sections and we will definitely look into this," he said.
The observers are now asking ECK to publish presidential election results from all provinces on their official website. They further asked ECK to expedite the tallying process and announce the official results.
Lambsdorff expressed concern over reports that some presiding officers had disappeared with election results.
The IRI delegation leader, Ms Constance Newman, appealed to politicians to keep their supporters calm and accept the verdict issued by ECK. She appealed to the Government to play its role in ensuring that the country is peaceful.
Also present during the press briefing was the chairperson of the Commonwealth observer group, Dr Ahmad Kabbah, who appealed to Kenyans to choose peace over violence.
The EU final report on the elections will be released in February next year.
Latest Presidential Election Results in Kenya
ECK presidential tally from 159 constituencies:
Raila (3,726,247),
Kibaki (3,416,139),
Kalonzo ( 346,214).
The Results will be Announced as the
ECK's Counting Committees Final decition.
Raila (3,726,247),
Kibaki (3,416,139),
Kalonzo ( 346,214).
The Results will be Announced as the
ECK's Counting Committees Final decition.
Friday, December 28, 2007
CANMAX Conditional Request of the Signeture of Cabdillahi Yuusuf
CANMAX oo dalbatey sixiix
Dec, 29, 2007
Warar Garowe Online ka heshay ilo wararkooda lagu kalsoonaan karo ayaa sheegaya in shirkada CANMEX ka dalbatey Range Resource iyo maamulka Puntland saxiixa Madaxweyne Cabdulahi Yusuf oo rasmi ah.
Shirkada CANMAX [ African Oil] ayaa warar aan la xaqiijin sheegayaan in ay bixineyso saxiixa odeyga kadib $20 milyan oo doolar oo 15M oo ka mid ah qadaneyso Range Resource halka $5 milyan oo kale qeybsanyaan TFG iyo Puntland
Consor LTD oo ay gadatey Range Resource ayaa waxaa horey saami ugu lahaa sida la rumeysan yahay madaxda sare ee Puntland ee uu ku jiro Libaan Muse Boqoroo ay qaraabo yihiin Madaxweyne Cadde.
Madaxda shirkada CANMAX ayaa sheegey in heshiiska Range/Puntland la galeen ka baxayaan hadaan la helin saxiixa Madaxweynaha DFKMG ah oo rasmi ah taas oo sida la filayo u sahli doonta howlaha baarista.
Wararka ayaa intaas ku daraya in maalmihii la soo dhaafey magaalada Nirobi u ambabaxeen Maxamad Cali Yusuf "Gaagaab"[Wasiirka maaliyada PL] iyo Libaan Muse Boqor kadib markii wajigabax kala kulmeen shir lacag ay ku weydiisteen ganacsatada reer Puntland ee Dubai halkaas oo ay qorsheynayaan in Madaxweyne Cabdulahi kula kulmaan isla markaana ka raarideen sixiixa heshiiskaan.
Gagaab ayaa warar dambe oo na soo gaarey sheegayaan in sababo aan la cayimin uu ka soo ambabaxey Nairobi uuna dib uga noqdey Puntland halka Liibaan weli ku sugan yahay halkaas.
Lama oga talaabada uu qaadi doono Madaxweyne Cabdulahi Yusuf oo heshiisyada Puntland la gashay shirkadaha shishiyee horey ragadis uga ridey dowladiisa kadib markii Ra'isal Wasarihii hore is-casilaadiisa saldhig uga dhigey khilaafka shidaalka. Ka dhageyso halkan.
Barlamanka DFKMG ah ayaan weli ansaxin sharciga shidaalka Somalia kaas oo sahlaya qeybsiga khayraadka iyo ansaxinta shirkadaha ka howlgalaya dalka madaama dagaalka sokeeye ka hor wadanka baaris uga sameeyeen shirkado kale.
Dhinaca kale maamulka Puntland ayaa waxa haysta dhibatoyin la xiriira musuq-masuq baahey, amaan daro iyo Laascaano oo weli gacanta ugu jirta maamulka Somaliland.
Madaxweynaha DF Cabdulahi Yusuf ah ayaa horey lacago dowladiisa ka heshay wadanka Sucuddiga [$3 milyan] siiyey Puntland taas oo ilaa hada aan la aqoon meel ay ku baxdey.
Xukuumada Cadde ayaan lacagahaan u weecin mashaariicda qabyada ka aheyd Puntland isla markaana Lascaano gacanta lagu dhigey xilli lacgtaas ka soo qaateen magaalada Mudisho.
Waxaa iska leh daabacaada Garowe Online
Raila opens gap against Kibaki in State House race
Story by NATION Team
Publication Date: 2007/12/29
ODM presidential candidate Raila Odinga had Friday evening opened a 900,000 votes lead over President Kibaki as counting of presidential ballots entered the second day.
With about half of the votes tallied, Mr Odinga was leading with 3.3 million against the President’s 2.4 million votes.
Mr Odinga, the son of a Kenya’s first vice-president and opposition leader Jaramogi Oginga Odinga, was ahead of President Kibaki in Nyanza, Western, Coast and Rift Valley provinces.
President Kibaki was leading in Central and Eastern while the two were sharing the votes in Nairobi.
Kenyan law requires a winning presidential candidate to not only score a majority vote but also be elected MP and secure at least 25 per cent of the presidential vote in at least five of the eight provinces. Both President Kibaki and Mr Odinga appeared to satisfy these requirements.
Retired president Daniel arap Moi’s campaign for President Kibaki in Rift Valley Province appeared not to have convinced voters even in his own Baringo backyard, where results from several polling stations showed Mr Odinga leading.
Mr Moi’s sons, Gideon, Jonathan and Raymond, who were running for seats in the Rift Valley lost.
Announcing winners
On Friday, Mr Odinga complained to the ECK about what he described as delays in announcing the winners saying this was causing unnecessary anxiety among Kenyans. ECK commissioner Jack Tumwa explained that the commission had to verify and certify results before making them public.
Protests, incidents of violence and claims of attempts to introduce suspect ballot papers or tamper with the seals of ballot boxes were reported in Dagoretti, Kajiado North, Starehe, Embakasi and Kamukunji constituencies.
In some incidents, police had to use tear gas and shoot in the air to disperse rioting mobs.
NGOs asked the Electoral Commission of Kenya to speed up the release of election results. They said the delay was causing unnecessary anxiety and tension between the presidential, parliamentary and civic candidates and their respective parties.
In a statement, the National Convention Executive Council and Centre for Law and Research International, wondered why the media centre set up by ECK at Kenyatta International Conference Centre, was way behind the media houses in giving the public updates of who was winning where and by what margin.
Era of technology
The statement was also signed by Haki Focus, Citizens Coalition for Constitutional Culture and Community Based Development Services.
“In this era of technology, it is surprising that ECK seems to be moving at a snail’s pace in satisfying public hunger for information. There is no reason why ECK could not release provisional information as they wait to receive final confirmation of those results,” the lobby groups said.
But they commended the commission for a job well done in organising and conducting General Election, saying that despite the anxiety and the high stakes in the polls, Kenyans had displayed a high level of tolerance and maturity throughout the voting period.
And in Kisii, police are seeking to interview outgoing Kitutu Chache MP Jimmy Angwenyi following a shooting incident that left one voter dead and another injured at a polling station Friday.
The police want him to record a statement as they launched investigations into the incident that paralysed tallying of votes in the constituency.
Tallying of votes
The man was shot as a group surrounded Mr Angweny who was leaving Marani polling station where tallying of the votes was underway.
The gunshot sent the crowd fleeing in all directions as the man whose identity could not be immediately established remained writhing on the ground with blood gushing from his stomach.
Seconds later another gunshot rang out outside the gate to the polling station, causing further stampede.
A young man was found crying in pain with a gaping wound in the foot. He was later taken to hospital while the body of the shooting victim was taken to a mortuary.
Following the incident, ECK’s district elections coordinator Naftali Otuke rushed to Marani and personally took charge of the final phase of the exercise as the crowd waited impatiently outside.
The process was yet to be concluded by 5pm.
Mr Angwenyi, a PNU candidate, was one of the leading contenders for the Kitutu Chache seat, but by the time of the incident, his rival Richard Onyonka of the People’s Democratic Party was ahead in the race.
Puntland: The Epicenter of Somalia’s Piracy and Human Trafficking
By: Said Shiiq, Ph.D.
Thursday, December 28, 2007
Some people blame the semi-autonomous region of Puntland for outsourcing President Abdullahi Yusuf to the national scene after he pitted sub-clans against each other, ditched the results of democratic presidential elections, and threatened the stability of the region.
But I disagree with that charge; Insofar as President Yusuf is being foisted to the national scene by tactful Ethiopian hands, he has always espoused an ambition to become Somalia’s president, irrespective of how he gets there.
That said, I think that Yusuf’s bastion, Puntland, is increasingly becoming a poster child for Somalia’s umpteen problems. Earlier this year, I tried to travel to Puntland to investigate the mysterious piracy and the tragic human trafficking business, both of which found a safe-haven in that part of the country.
Everyone I know warned me against entering Puntland’s ethnic territory. For that reason, I retreated to conduct a satellite research, using telephone conversations and first-person accounts, among others. What I found was rather baffling, to say the least.
Piracy in Puntland
Not surprisingly, the official line among Puntland’s government ministers was that “piracy is a global problem that found headway in Somalia’s porous waters in recent years.” One after another, they told me that Puntland isn’t tooled to combat this problem, because pirates are well-armed, well-financed and multi-jurisdictional. (That’s to say that pirates operate in places like Haradheere in central Somalia).
But surprisingly, and below the official line, there’s a wide belief among Puntlanders that “pirates [they don’t even use this word!] are heroes, because they are protecting Somalia’s unguarded resources, looted by international companies.”
Quite the contrary, so many people, including former government officials and journalists told me that pirates have deep connections in the highest ranks in Puntland’s regime. In fact, people could list names of government ministers whose own militia are the pirates.
Few weeks ago, when pirates kidnapped a Japanese vessel outside Somalia’s international waters (which is quite routine, and, remarkably, counter-argument to those who say that pirates are “guarding” our resources), U.S. and French naval ships cornered the pirates near Boosaaso, the business capital of Puntland. The pirates, I was told, were able to disembark from the kidnapped ship every night to chew Khat and hang out with friends and family members, while other “substitute” pirates replaced them!
Eventually, the ordeal ended with the Japanese tanker being released unharmed, and pirates getting away with an undisclosed amount of ransom. The pirates’ front-men are senior government officials, who typically convince kidnapped ships to pay ransom (usually less then than pirates originally demanded). I found that this scenario occurred no less than three dozen times in the last few years.
It’s technically true, I also found, that pirates are “multi-jurisdictional.” But sources confirmed to me that Haradheere-based gangs are no more than “holders” of the ships seized by Puntland pirates, whenever there’s an internal dispute among Puntland ring leaders. As such, only two or three times have pirates actually “held” a ship in Haradheere for the real pirates.
Human Trafficking
In addition to piracy, human trafficking is pandemic in Puntland. More than 35,000 people have perished since 1991 trying to cross the short, but dangerous distance between Boosaaso and Yemen, using makeshift rafts.
Even back in the days when President Yusuf was the president of Puntland, the administration there made a noise that it will crack down on traffickers, whenever the international attention was zeroing on the issue.
However, hardly anything has been done. In fact, human traffickers, who like pirates have deep connections to the corridors of power, have flourished. In Boosaaso and nearby towns, journalists and other sources sent me the photos of the homes of well-known human traffickers and pirates, whose villas and latest-model Land Cruisers have dazzled me.
French journalist Gwen Le Gouil talks with the media at a hotel after his release in Bosasso
Last week, when Gwen Le Gouil, a French journalist tried to do an investigative report on human trafficking, he was kidnapped for nine grueling days. Remarkably, he was seized on his way to Shimbiraale, the infamous village known for its human and weapons traffickers. Insiders told me that his kidnappers were Puntland intelligence officers associated with both human traffickers and pirates.
Here’s the evidence to back that claim:
First, a day after Mr. Le Gouil was kidnapped his captors took his photos, brandishing their AK47’s behind him. The digital photos were distributed to Somali media outlets, to maximize the damage and instill fear on foreign journalists trying to get to the bottom of this murky business. Now, who would believe that everyday kidnappers carry digital cameras and presumably a laptop with them?
I, for one, don’t buy it.
Secondly, instead of handing this as a security issue, the Puntland administration delegated “elders” to the scene. Again, these are “front-men” for the human traffickers, who wouldn’t want their stories to be broadcast globally. The “elders” came back with a rather fascinating verdict: They held an impromptu press conference, in which they told foreign agencies that the French embassy in Nairobi has to compensate the kidnappers before Mr. Le Gouil could be released unharmed.
Left with no options, a diplomat from the French embassy in Kenya precipitously flew to Boosaaso to finalize that unholy deal. God knows how much the kidnappers pocketed, but Le Gouil was released on Christmas Day.
Charge the victim!
If you think that was the end of Mr. Le Gouil’s ordeal, you’re terribly wrong. The Puntland administration actually announced that they “will prosecute Le Gouil for illegally entering [our] sovereign nation!”
This official threat forced the French government to hastily agree to pay an undisclosed ransom to the kidnappers. Furthermore, with the admission of President Adde Musse Hirsi, the kidnappers, driving a Land Cruiser, dropped Mr. Le Gouil at a major hotel in downtown Boosaaso. Conveniently, one Puntland minister told the VOA Somali Service that Mr. Le Gouil was “pardoned for entering the country illegally.”
Also speaking to the VOA Somali Service on Wednesday, President Adde Musse admitted that none of the kidnappers was arrested, let alone be charged. Instead, he unleashed a barrage of attacks against “Puntland enemies” for perpetrating all these problems. Pressed for more reasonable answers, he retreated and blamed his former ally and former Minister of Fisheries, Said Mohamed Raage, for “some of the problems.”
Sadly, President Hirsi didn’t elaborate on whether Mr. Raage is a former minister-pirate-trafficker.
On this same day, two MSF humanitarian workers were again abducted in plain sight and in the middle of Boosaaso. Adde Musse, at it again, said this time the security apparatus would handle the case. The kidnappers, at it again, took the victims to Shimbiraale, the same location they took Mr. Le Gouil, according to media accounts.
So which one would you believe? Some say the two aren’t mutually exclusive!
Adding an insult to the injury, the apocalyptic Transitional Federal Government revoked MSF Belgium’s license to operate in Somalia on the same day when two of its foreign employees were kidnapped. I didn’t know that the TFG could “revoke” a license, per se, but I can draw my own conclusions about the interesting coincidence.
Once again, the TFG is inseparable from Puntland, and the two operate in an often conspicuous fashion. But that’s beside the point. Puntland, for all practical purposes, is translating its relatively stable ethnic enclave to either attack its not-so-ethnic neighbor, Somaliland, or to groom pirates and human traffickers.
That’s on top of claiming an extraordinary power to unilaterally exploiting oil and other national resources at the expense of the nation. One wonders: Is Puntland flying solo to the point of no return?
Thursday, December 28, 2007
Some people blame the semi-autonomous region of Puntland for outsourcing President Abdullahi Yusuf to the national scene after he pitted sub-clans against each other, ditched the results of democratic presidential elections, and threatened the stability of the region.
But I disagree with that charge; Insofar as President Yusuf is being foisted to the national scene by tactful Ethiopian hands, he has always espoused an ambition to become Somalia’s president, irrespective of how he gets there.
That said, I think that Yusuf’s bastion, Puntland, is increasingly becoming a poster child for Somalia’s umpteen problems. Earlier this year, I tried to travel to Puntland to investigate the mysterious piracy and the tragic human trafficking business, both of which found a safe-haven in that part of the country.
Everyone I know warned me against entering Puntland’s ethnic territory. For that reason, I retreated to conduct a satellite research, using telephone conversations and first-person accounts, among others. What I found was rather baffling, to say the least.
Piracy in Puntland
Not surprisingly, the official line among Puntland’s government ministers was that “piracy is a global problem that found headway in Somalia’s porous waters in recent years.” One after another, they told me that Puntland isn’t tooled to combat this problem, because pirates are well-armed, well-financed and multi-jurisdictional. (That’s to say that pirates operate in places like Haradheere in central Somalia).
But surprisingly, and below the official line, there’s a wide belief among Puntlanders that “pirates [they don’t even use this word!] are heroes, because they are protecting Somalia’s unguarded resources, looted by international companies.”
Quite the contrary, so many people, including former government officials and journalists told me that pirates have deep connections in the highest ranks in Puntland’s regime. In fact, people could list names of government ministers whose own militia are the pirates.
Few weeks ago, when pirates kidnapped a Japanese vessel outside Somalia’s international waters (which is quite routine, and, remarkably, counter-argument to those who say that pirates are “guarding” our resources), U.S. and French naval ships cornered the pirates near Boosaaso, the business capital of Puntland. The pirates, I was told, were able to disembark from the kidnapped ship every night to chew Khat and hang out with friends and family members, while other “substitute” pirates replaced them!
Eventually, the ordeal ended with the Japanese tanker being released unharmed, and pirates getting away with an undisclosed amount of ransom. The pirates’ front-men are senior government officials, who typically convince kidnapped ships to pay ransom (usually less then than pirates originally demanded). I found that this scenario occurred no less than three dozen times in the last few years.
It’s technically true, I also found, that pirates are “multi-jurisdictional.” But sources confirmed to me that Haradheere-based gangs are no more than “holders” of the ships seized by Puntland pirates, whenever there’s an internal dispute among Puntland ring leaders. As such, only two or three times have pirates actually “held” a ship in Haradheere for the real pirates.
Human Trafficking
In addition to piracy, human trafficking is pandemic in Puntland. More than 35,000 people have perished since 1991 trying to cross the short, but dangerous distance between Boosaaso and Yemen, using makeshift rafts.
Even back in the days when President Yusuf was the president of Puntland, the administration there made a noise that it will crack down on traffickers, whenever the international attention was zeroing on the issue.
However, hardly anything has been done. In fact, human traffickers, who like pirates have deep connections to the corridors of power, have flourished. In Boosaaso and nearby towns, journalists and other sources sent me the photos of the homes of well-known human traffickers and pirates, whose villas and latest-model Land Cruisers have dazzled me.
French journalist Gwen Le Gouil talks with the media at a hotel after his release in Bosasso
Last week, when Gwen Le Gouil, a French journalist tried to do an investigative report on human trafficking, he was kidnapped for nine grueling days. Remarkably, he was seized on his way to Shimbiraale, the infamous village known for its human and weapons traffickers. Insiders told me that his kidnappers were Puntland intelligence officers associated with both human traffickers and pirates.
Here’s the evidence to back that claim:
First, a day after Mr. Le Gouil was kidnapped his captors took his photos, brandishing their AK47’s behind him. The digital photos were distributed to Somali media outlets, to maximize the damage and instill fear on foreign journalists trying to get to the bottom of this murky business. Now, who would believe that everyday kidnappers carry digital cameras and presumably a laptop with them?
I, for one, don’t buy it.
Secondly, instead of handing this as a security issue, the Puntland administration delegated “elders” to the scene. Again, these are “front-men” for the human traffickers, who wouldn’t want their stories to be broadcast globally. The “elders” came back with a rather fascinating verdict: They held an impromptu press conference, in which they told foreign agencies that the French embassy in Nairobi has to compensate the kidnappers before Mr. Le Gouil could be released unharmed.
Left with no options, a diplomat from the French embassy in Kenya precipitously flew to Boosaaso to finalize that unholy deal. God knows how much the kidnappers pocketed, but Le Gouil was released on Christmas Day.
Charge the victim!
If you think that was the end of Mr. Le Gouil’s ordeal, you’re terribly wrong. The Puntland administration actually announced that they “will prosecute Le Gouil for illegally entering [our] sovereign nation!”
This official threat forced the French government to hastily agree to pay an undisclosed ransom to the kidnappers. Furthermore, with the admission of President Adde Musse Hirsi, the kidnappers, driving a Land Cruiser, dropped Mr. Le Gouil at a major hotel in downtown Boosaaso. Conveniently, one Puntland minister told the VOA Somali Service that Mr. Le Gouil was “pardoned for entering the country illegally.”
Also speaking to the VOA Somali Service on Wednesday, President Adde Musse admitted that none of the kidnappers was arrested, let alone be charged. Instead, he unleashed a barrage of attacks against “Puntland enemies” for perpetrating all these problems. Pressed for more reasonable answers, he retreated and blamed his former ally and former Minister of Fisheries, Said Mohamed Raage, for “some of the problems.”
Sadly, President Hirsi didn’t elaborate on whether Mr. Raage is a former minister-pirate-trafficker.
On this same day, two MSF humanitarian workers were again abducted in plain sight and in the middle of Boosaaso. Adde Musse, at it again, said this time the security apparatus would handle the case. The kidnappers, at it again, took the victims to Shimbiraale, the same location they took Mr. Le Gouil, according to media accounts.
So which one would you believe? Some say the two aren’t mutually exclusive!
Adding an insult to the injury, the apocalyptic Transitional Federal Government revoked MSF Belgium’s license to operate in Somalia on the same day when two of its foreign employees were kidnapped. I didn’t know that the TFG could “revoke” a license, per se, but I can draw my own conclusions about the interesting coincidence.
Once again, the TFG is inseparable from Puntland, and the two operate in an often conspicuous fashion. But that’s beside the point. Puntland, for all practical purposes, is translating its relatively stable ethnic enclave to either attack its not-so-ethnic neighbor, Somaliland, or to groom pirates and human traffickers.
That’s on top of claiming an extraordinary power to unilaterally exploiting oil and other national resources at the expense of the nation. One wonders: Is Puntland flying solo to the point of no return?
America’s Latest African Blunder
Facing on a boundary issue could destabilize an entire region.
Sometimes, authors of tell-all memoirs reveal even more than they realize. One such revelation comes on Page 347 of John Bolton’s Surrender Is Not an Option, published earlier this month.
I doubt most reviewers noticed the line as they leafed through the book in search of the former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations’ famous put downs. But for anyone who follows events in the Horn of Africa, it had all the impact of a small explosion.
Bolton, whose contempt for the United Nations is only matched by his exasperation with the State Department, recounts the position Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs Jendayi Frazer adopted in 2006 toward the "final and binding" ruling an international commission had reached over the Eritrean-Ethiopian border, the cause of a war that claimed some 90,000 lives.
"For reasons I never understood," writes Bolton, "Frazer reversed course, and asked in early February to reopen the 2002 [Eritrea-Ethiopia Boundary Commission] decision, which she had concluded was wrong, and award a major piece of disputed territory to Ethiopia. I was at a loss how to explain that to the Security Council, so I didn’t."
Why should this interest anyone outside the United Nations? Because, at a peculiarly sensitive moment in the Horn’s history, Bolton’s words confirm what those who follow U.S. policy in Africa sensed but could never prove: While presenting itself as a neutral player in a bitter contest between two African regimes, Washington has in fact played the old Cold War game, favoring realpolitik over international law—with disastrous results.
The decision Bolton cites was meant to settle where the fuzzy international frontier between Ethiopia and Eritrea really lay. While the Eritrea-Ethiopia Boundary Commission allotted many areas Eritrea claimed to Ethiopia, the village of Badme, a flashpoint of the 1998-2000 war, went to Eritrea. It was a decision Addis Ababa found impossible to swallow. As Bolton writes, "Ethiopia had agreed on a mechanism to resolve the border dispute in 2000 and was now welching on the deal."
What was at stake was never Badme village itself or its surrounding land. Nor, despite much trumpeting to that effect, was Ethiopia overly preoccupied by the fate of villagers whose settlements the EEBC line cut across. The standoff was all about wounded Ethiopian pride. Demarcation meant implicit recognition that the 1998-2000 war, which the Ethiopian army effectively won, was fought on a faulty premise. In Addis’ eyes, it also meant accepting arrogant Eritrean President Isaias Afewerki’s view of his tiny, strident nation as a significant regional player.
As a witness to the Algiers agreement that ended hostilities and established the EEBC, Washington has always publicly asserted its support for the commission’s ruling. That finding was never Frazer’s to challenge or change. No doubt her legal advisers warned her against the folly of trying to reopen a unanimous decision that took 13 months to reach, hence Washington’s subsequent silence on the matter.
But Washington has, in every other respect, made its bias clear. Having decided Ethiopia was the region’s linchpin state and a key ally in its campaign against Islamic extremism, it failed to pressure or punish Prime Minister Meles Zenawi when he defied international law. Ethiopia remains the biggest African recipient of U.S. aid—$500 million a year—and the strikes Washington launched at retreating Islamist fighters when Ethiopian forces overran Somalia last December illustrated the closeness of the two administrations’ military cooperation.
Bolton’s revelation could not come at a more sensitive time. The EEBC, which once planned to mark the line with cement pillars, says it considers its mission fulfilled at the end of this month. Exhausted by five years of Ethiopian foot-dragging, it intends to disband on Nov. 30, and the border will then be considered officially designated.
The fast-approaching deadline has both regimes in jittery mode. Eritrea accuses Addis of plotting to invade; Ethiopia denies this but has boosted military spending and warns that another war would be fought to the finish. Analysts say neither nation’s forces are in a fit state to reopen hostilities, but a quarter of a million heavily armed troops stand mustered at the border. The International Crisis Group, which regards the possibility of a new war as "very real," has called for the United States to use its influence to rein in Addis and on the U.N. Security Council to reiterate its support for the EEBC ruling.
Washington, the only power that enjoys any effective leverage over Prime Minister Zenawi, appears to believe that in bolstering Ethiopia, it is backing a force for stability, a diplomatic approach that dates back to Emperor Haile Selassie’s era. The opposite is probably true, because the unsettled border issue has acted as a festering sore, infecting the entire region.
Stalemated on the border issue, the two leaders have continued to wage a proxy war in alternative venues, each supporting rebel movements committed to their rival’s downfall. Somalia has been the first major casualty of this cynical game: Eritrea’s arming of the Islamic Courts Union was regarded as intolerable provocation by Addis, which sent its tanks rolling in.
Having boasted last December that it could pacify Somalia within two weeks, Ethiopia is now confronting the same hearts-and-minds problem as U.S. troops in Baghdad. The hundreds of thousands of Somali refugees streaming out of Mogadishu, like the villagers emerging from the Ogaden region with tales of Ethiopian rape and plunder, will provide future Islamist movements with easy recruits.
But the reverberations of the EEBC debacle spread much further. Why, in the future, should any well-connected African state ever agree to obey an international ruling that finds in favor of a smaller, weaker rival?
Washington appears to have learned nothing from the past, when the decision to embrace unsavory African strongmen purely on the basis of their anti-Communist credentials proved the most short-sighted of investments. Now, just as then, such supposed pragmatism is proving counterproductive, turning an already unstable region into a war-torn, refugee-plagued, famine-afflicted recruiting ground for extremism.
By Michela Wrong
Sometimes, authors of tell-all memoirs reveal even more than they realize. One such revelation comes on Page 347 of John Bolton’s Surrender Is Not an Option, published earlier this month.
I doubt most reviewers noticed the line as they leafed through the book in search of the former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations’ famous put downs. But for anyone who follows events in the Horn of Africa, it had all the impact of a small explosion.
Bolton, whose contempt for the United Nations is only matched by his exasperation with the State Department, recounts the position Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs Jendayi Frazer adopted in 2006 toward the "final and binding" ruling an international commission had reached over the Eritrean-Ethiopian border, the cause of a war that claimed some 90,000 lives.
"For reasons I never understood," writes Bolton, "Frazer reversed course, and asked in early February to reopen the 2002 [Eritrea-Ethiopia Boundary Commission] decision, which she had concluded was wrong, and award a major piece of disputed territory to Ethiopia. I was at a loss how to explain that to the Security Council, so I didn’t."
Why should this interest anyone outside the United Nations? Because, at a peculiarly sensitive moment in the Horn’s history, Bolton’s words confirm what those who follow U.S. policy in Africa sensed but could never prove: While presenting itself as a neutral player in a bitter contest between two African regimes, Washington has in fact played the old Cold War game, favoring realpolitik over international law—with disastrous results.
The decision Bolton cites was meant to settle where the fuzzy international frontier between Ethiopia and Eritrea really lay. While the Eritrea-Ethiopia Boundary Commission allotted many areas Eritrea claimed to Ethiopia, the village of Badme, a flashpoint of the 1998-2000 war, went to Eritrea. It was a decision Addis Ababa found impossible to swallow. As Bolton writes, "Ethiopia had agreed on a mechanism to resolve the border dispute in 2000 and was now welching on the deal."
What was at stake was never Badme village itself or its surrounding land. Nor, despite much trumpeting to that effect, was Ethiopia overly preoccupied by the fate of villagers whose settlements the EEBC line cut across. The standoff was all about wounded Ethiopian pride. Demarcation meant implicit recognition that the 1998-2000 war, which the Ethiopian army effectively won, was fought on a faulty premise. In Addis’ eyes, it also meant accepting arrogant Eritrean President Isaias Afewerki’s view of his tiny, strident nation as a significant regional player.
As a witness to the Algiers agreement that ended hostilities and established the EEBC, Washington has always publicly asserted its support for the commission’s ruling. That finding was never Frazer’s to challenge or change. No doubt her legal advisers warned her against the folly of trying to reopen a unanimous decision that took 13 months to reach, hence Washington’s subsequent silence on the matter.
But Washington has, in every other respect, made its bias clear. Having decided Ethiopia was the region’s linchpin state and a key ally in its campaign against Islamic extremism, it failed to pressure or punish Prime Minister Meles Zenawi when he defied international law. Ethiopia remains the biggest African recipient of U.S. aid—$500 million a year—and the strikes Washington launched at retreating Islamist fighters when Ethiopian forces overran Somalia last December illustrated the closeness of the two administrations’ military cooperation.
Bolton’s revelation could not come at a more sensitive time. The EEBC, which once planned to mark the line with cement pillars, says it considers its mission fulfilled at the end of this month. Exhausted by five years of Ethiopian foot-dragging, it intends to disband on Nov. 30, and the border will then be considered officially designated.
The fast-approaching deadline has both regimes in jittery mode. Eritrea accuses Addis of plotting to invade; Ethiopia denies this but has boosted military spending and warns that another war would be fought to the finish. Analysts say neither nation’s forces are in a fit state to reopen hostilities, but a quarter of a million heavily armed troops stand mustered at the border. The International Crisis Group, which regards the possibility of a new war as "very real," has called for the United States to use its influence to rein in Addis and on the U.N. Security Council to reiterate its support for the EEBC ruling.
Washington, the only power that enjoys any effective leverage over Prime Minister Zenawi, appears to believe that in bolstering Ethiopia, it is backing a force for stability, a diplomatic approach that dates back to Emperor Haile Selassie’s era. The opposite is probably true, because the unsettled border issue has acted as a festering sore, infecting the entire region.
Stalemated on the border issue, the two leaders have continued to wage a proxy war in alternative venues, each supporting rebel movements committed to their rival’s downfall. Somalia has been the first major casualty of this cynical game: Eritrea’s arming of the Islamic Courts Union was regarded as intolerable provocation by Addis, which sent its tanks rolling in.
Having boasted last December that it could pacify Somalia within two weeks, Ethiopia is now confronting the same hearts-and-minds problem as U.S. troops in Baghdad. The hundreds of thousands of Somali refugees streaming out of Mogadishu, like the villagers emerging from the Ogaden region with tales of Ethiopian rape and plunder, will provide future Islamist movements with easy recruits.
But the reverberations of the EEBC debacle spread much further. Why, in the future, should any well-connected African state ever agree to obey an international ruling that finds in favor of a smaller, weaker rival?
Washington appears to have learned nothing from the past, when the decision to embrace unsavory African strongmen purely on the basis of their anti-Communist credentials proved the most short-sighted of investments. Now, just as then, such supposed pragmatism is proving counterproductive, turning an already unstable region into a war-torn, refugee-plagued, famine-afflicted recruiting ground for extremism.
By Michela Wrong
Thursday, December 27, 2007
A heavy bomb exploded today in the port city of Bossaso
Somalia: Explosion Rocks Bossaso, Many Wounded
Garowe Online (Garowe)
27 December 2007
Posted to the web 27 December 2007
A heavy bomb exploded today in the port city of Bossaso, in northern Somalia's Puntland enclave, at a house where a group of elders and intellectuals were meeting privately, sources said.
At least seven civilians were wounded in the blast, which occurred Thursday evening.
Puntland police rushed to the scene and setup roadblocks across town, but no suspects have been apprehended so far, police said.
Sources at a hospital in Bossaso told Garowe Online that some of the wounded victims died from their injuries, but they could not provide exact casualty figures.
No group has claimed responsibility for the deadly explosion, which is the first of its kind in this bustling port city.
There was no information about the people meeting at the house or what was being discussed inside.
Bossaso is located 1500km north of the national capital, Mogadishu, where bombings and shootouts are common as insurgents continue their war against the interim government and its foreign military allies.
In recent weeks, Bossaso has been hit hard by a crime wave, including piracy and kidnappings, not to mention common thievery and violent nighttime attacks and robbery upon the city's unarmed civilians, according to residents.
Garowe Online (Garowe)
27 December 2007
Posted to the web 27 December 2007
A heavy bomb exploded today in the port city of Bossaso, in northern Somalia's Puntland enclave, at a house where a group of elders and intellectuals were meeting privately, sources said.
At least seven civilians were wounded in the blast, which occurred Thursday evening.
Puntland police rushed to the scene and setup roadblocks across town, but no suspects have been apprehended so far, police said.
Sources at a hospital in Bossaso told Garowe Online that some of the wounded victims died from their injuries, but they could not provide exact casualty figures.
No group has claimed responsibility for the deadly explosion, which is the first of its kind in this bustling port city.
There was no information about the people meeting at the house or what was being discussed inside.
Bossaso is located 1500km north of the national capital, Mogadishu, where bombings and shootouts are common as insurgents continue their war against the interim government and its foreign military allies.
In recent weeks, Bossaso has been hit hard by a crime wave, including piracy and kidnappings, not to mention common thievery and violent nighttime attacks and robbery upon the city's unarmed civilians, according to residents.
Puntland: Former Minister Responsible for Destabilizing Puntland President
"We have legal agreements with these companies and we will continue our program, for the interest of Puntland. We have done 200 projects in Puntland so far," Muse said.
Thousands of people have streamed into Puntland in recent months, some fleeing the war in Mogadishu and others fleeing persecution in neighboring Ethiopia.
The region's close proximity to the Middle East and its lax laws have made it the ideal ground for migrants seeking to cross the Gulf of Aden into Yemen, and perhaps beyond.The president of Somalia's Puntland administration, Gen. Mohamud "Adde" Muse, linked a series of criminal activities in the region to a former Cabinet minister who resigned earlier this month.
President Muse told the Voice of America's Somali program Tuesday that gunmen who kidnapped two foreign workers in the Gulf of Aden port city of Bossaso earlier today are surrounded and are "facing off" with police somewhere outside city limits.
The female aid workers, one from Spain and the other from Argentina, worked for MSF-Spain in Bossaso, officials said.
The Puntland leader said an increase in criminal activities in the region in recent months is linked to the arrival of many people from different regions, some with sinister intentions.
"The last six months have led to increased number of people into Puntland,"
Muse said... the "enemies of Puntland" pay people to commit acts aimed at destabilizing the region.
"All the kidnappers are mercenaries who were paid off to create instability. We are investigating them," Muse said.
But President Muse also admitted that there are enemies of Puntland from within.
Asked a question whether these criminal acts are linked to his recent Cabinet reshuffle, Muse said: "This is not possible. We chased away a man [Minister Said Mohamed Rage] who is the same clan as the kidnappers. And right now he is the one responsible for many things." [READ: Puntland minister resigns, accuses president of 'power abuse'"]
On exploration, Puntland President Adde Muse defended his policy and said drilling plans with go forward.
Somalia Islamists are more popular now than a year ago
(oodweynenews 26/12/07)The United States occupation of Iraq and all its implications squarely rests on George Bush and the public is informed daily on the casualties of this occupation and its cost to the tax payers and the 2008 election will much be determined on who will bring the troops back home safely.
Today is the first anniversary of occupation of Somalia by "Ethiopian" soldiers and in direct opposite to the occupation of Iraq, let alone the public the so called parliamentarians do not now the number of "Ethiopian" soldiers who died in this adventure and where the money is coming for this war, and how much this occupation has cost so far?
We have not heard debate in the Ethiopian "parliament" similar to the USA Congress to fund the war and this surely proves that this money is not coming from tax payers of Ethiopia and it is probably tied up with the so called counter terrorism agreement with the USA administration.
Do we have the names of the dead ? Is that also a military secret like most things in Somalia? Can anyone tale me how many Somalis were killed? we are hearing sometimes hundreds of dead Islamic fighters and does anyone believe that Somalia is much stable and is free of "terrorists" than it were a year ago?
It is in fact the opposite. After one year of illconceived adventure the Islamists have many Somalis on their side fighting for their "national" pride and one thing this occupation did is to bring all Somalis together.
The impact of this occupation for the future instability is great. Somalia either will go to the 1990s clan fight or Islamists will capitalize on the current Somali nationalism and rally the people and establish an Islamic state hopefully which has no ambition for neighbores territories.
I have no doubt, like the Hamas of Palestine and Hezbollah of Lebanon tested in war times they will also be popular in Somalia. However, the Somali Islamists should not miscalculate and call for Jihad on neighboring countries especially Ethiopia encouraged by outsiders who are now only giving lip service to their resistance.
The "Ethiopian" army unceremonious departure by next year will be filled possibly by India and Muslim countries to stop the killing and Somalis have to be ready to live with the Islamists and the Islamists have to realize their dream in their own territory and declaring "jihad" across the border against Ethiopia will sabotage Ethiopian people struggle for freedom and equality and be an excuse for the dictatorial regime of Melese Zenawi to stay in power.
Ethiopians are true friends of Somalia and the hundred thousands of Somalis displaced by war never felt as foreigner living in Ethiopia and no matter who comes to power in Somalia that should be the foundation of our future relationship.
Source:Merkato
Today is the first anniversary of occupation of Somalia by "Ethiopian" soldiers and in direct opposite to the occupation of Iraq, let alone the public the so called parliamentarians do not now the number of "Ethiopian" soldiers who died in this adventure and where the money is coming for this war, and how much this occupation has cost so far?
We have not heard debate in the Ethiopian "parliament" similar to the USA Congress to fund the war and this surely proves that this money is not coming from tax payers of Ethiopia and it is probably tied up with the so called counter terrorism agreement with the USA administration.
Do we have the names of the dead ? Is that also a military secret like most things in Somalia? Can anyone tale me how many Somalis were killed? we are hearing sometimes hundreds of dead Islamic fighters and does anyone believe that Somalia is much stable and is free of "terrorists" than it were a year ago?
It is in fact the opposite. After one year of illconceived adventure the Islamists have many Somalis on their side fighting for their "national" pride and one thing this occupation did is to bring all Somalis together.
The impact of this occupation for the future instability is great. Somalia either will go to the 1990s clan fight or Islamists will capitalize on the current Somali nationalism and rally the people and establish an Islamic state hopefully which has no ambition for neighbores territories.
I have no doubt, like the Hamas of Palestine and Hezbollah of Lebanon tested in war times they will also be popular in Somalia. However, the Somali Islamists should not miscalculate and call for Jihad on neighboring countries especially Ethiopia encouraged by outsiders who are now only giving lip service to their resistance.
The "Ethiopian" army unceremonious departure by next year will be filled possibly by India and Muslim countries to stop the killing and Somalis have to be ready to live with the Islamists and the Islamists have to realize their dream in their own territory and declaring "jihad" across the border against Ethiopia will sabotage Ethiopian people struggle for freedom and equality and be an excuse for the dictatorial regime of Melese Zenawi to stay in power.
Ethiopians are true friends of Somalia and the hundred thousands of Somalis displaced by war never felt as foreigner living in Ethiopia and no matter who comes to power in Somalia that should be the foundation of our future relationship.
Source:Merkato
RECOGNITION OF SOMALILAND IS GOOD FOR SOMALIA
By Guled Ismail
Thursday,27, 2007
If there is one issue that unites Somalia’s famously quarrelsome politicians, elites and ordinary clansmen it is the issue of Somaliland’s secession: They oppose it to a man, child and warlord.
Members of the ineffectual but secular Transitional Federal Government (TFG) oppose Somaliland’s secession as vehemently as the most fanatical of its Islamist enemies.
What drives this determination to keep Somaliland into Somalia’s death embrace remains unclear. It cannot be patriotism for surely if Somalia’s leaders, elites and clansmen had any of the stuff left they would have spared the Somali people the biblical suffering they have been so cruelly inflicting on them over the last 17 years through their selfish greed and primeval political machinations.
Neither is it driven by obvious economic interests because Somaliland and Somalia were never economically interlinked even during the 30 year-Union and have no economic links today whatsoever.
It cannot be some kind of brotherly goodwill they hold for the people of Somaliland because they harbour indeed venerate war criminals who participated in the pogroms and massacres against Somalilanders in the 1980s. Witness how both the TFG and their nemesis the Islamist Courts welcomed General Mohamed Omar Hirsi Morgan known as the `Butcher of Hargeisa’ throughout Somaliland for his genocidal activities in the late 80s when he was Siyad Barre’s chosen Milatary ruler of Somaliland. The TFG even recently chose him as a member of a high powered delegation to Kuwait.
The Somalia diaspora rallied around another suspected war criminal General Mohamed Ali Samatr who Siyad Barre’s Defense Minister in the 80s after Somaliland refugees in the US tried to have him arrested for War Crimes. This man who is alleged to have ordered the carpet bombing of Hargeisa by Rhodesian mercenaries hired by the Somali Airforce, all of a sudden became a focal point for all Somalis in the US, Canada and beyond. They lobbied and fundraised and held meetings and formed support groups and all to avoid this man investigated by a court of law. These and many other examples amply demonstrate that the elites of Somalia may not have the best interests of Somalilanders at heart.
Yet remarkably Somalia’s venal political classes, discredited elites and mostly disingenuous intelligentsia abroad succeeded in convincing the world that the recognition of Somaliland will somehow `harm’ Somalia itself. The world did not bother questioning this ludicrous assertion because frankly, no one is interested in Somalia, Somaliland or Somalis in general. As far as the international community is concerned, the place(s) and the people are among those the less one hears about the better. Nothing ever comes out of there except wars and refugees and the occasional would-be terrorist.
In other words the world seems to have adopted an `Ignore and Avoid’ policy on the Somaliland vs Somali issue. They are happy to repeat the mantra: We don’t want to recognize Somaliland because it will further complicate the situation in Somalia’.
This is not only morally and ethically dubious; it has no plausible basis in any assessable, measurable reality.
It is like being told to remain tied to your neighbour who is burning his down because if you untie yourself from the inferno the neighbour may get even madder and burn his house down with even more gusto!”.
Surprisingly this `logic’ is not used in Kosovo, Macedonia, Slovakia, Monte-Negro or any of the 20-odd new States who emerged (or about to emerge in the case of Kosovo) in Europe over the last 16 years.
Ironically that is the same number of years Somaliland was one of only two nations in Africa, the other is Southern Sudan, seeking the same freedoms and human dignity given to their European counterparts.
But the idea that Somaliland’s recognition will make things worse for Somalia is equally untenable on factual pragmatic grounds too.
For starters it is hard to foresee how things could get any worse in Somalia. This may sound a little cruel but under the circumstances, it is an apt and valid one to raise and examine.
Secondly, Somaliland and Somalia have been two de facto separate states for the last 17 years. Somaliland was not party to the events and issues that shaped Somalia after the collapse of Siyad Barre regime in 1991.
On its part Somalia occasionally tried to meddle in Somaliland’s affairs, usually in the shape of brotherly attempts to undermine the place or better still, destroy it altogether. But its’ ever bickering politicians soon lost interest in the affairs of distant `Qaldanland’ (The land of he always wrong) as they sometimes call it and concentrated on the important business of creating mayhem and mismanagement at local level.
So a recognition of Somaliland will be an acceptance of an existing reality on the ground and not creating a new one. This means that even in a worse case scenario, a recognition of Somaliland will have a neutral impact on the situation in Somalia.
Indeed it could have a far more positive impact than many people think. It may just make the political groups in Somalia realise that the world rewards those who bring about peace and stability through compromise, the upholding of the rule of law and the establishment of functioning secular democratic systems. The message a recognition will send to Somalia’s political classes is that the world is fed-up with your antics and lack of vision and may indeed `Ignore and avoid’ you from now on and shift its focus and resources to those who better deserve it.
It just might nudge them into taking some action to save their political careers and in the process save their people from further misery.
Guled Ismail
Pakistani opposition leader Benazir Bhutto has been killed by a suicide bomber.
Written by Qarannews
Dec 27, 2007
The attack happened as she left an election rally in Rawalpindi. At least 20 other people died in the attack.
Aides said former prime minister Bhutto underwent emergency surgery but it was too late to save her..
Ms Bhutto had just left a gate in Rawalpindi's Liaqat Bagh when the explosion shook the area.
She had delivered a speech to thousands of supporters, part of her campaign for the January 8 parliamentary elections.
A spokesman for her party said her vehicle was about 50 yards away from blast. "She had just crossed the gate when we heard a deafening sound. We could feel its impact."
Party supporter Chaudry Mohammed Nazir said that two gunshots rang out when Bhutto's vehicle pulled into the main street and then there was a big blast next to her car.
Police cordoned off the street with white and red tape, and rescue workers rushed to put victims in ambulances as people wailed nearby.
Body parts, pieces of clothing and party banners were scattered on the street. The clothing of some of the victims was shredded and people put party flags over their bodies. Police caps and shoes littered the area.
It was the second suicide attack aimed at Ms Bhutto in two months. Her homecoming parade in the southern city of Karachi from an eight-year exile on October 18 was also targeted, killing more than 140 people.
Dec 27, 2007
The attack happened as she left an election rally in Rawalpindi. At least 20 other people died in the attack.
Aides said former prime minister Bhutto underwent emergency surgery but it was too late to save her..
Ms Bhutto had just left a gate in Rawalpindi's Liaqat Bagh when the explosion shook the area.
She had delivered a speech to thousands of supporters, part of her campaign for the January 8 parliamentary elections.
A spokesman for her party said her vehicle was about 50 yards away from blast. "She had just crossed the gate when we heard a deafening sound. We could feel its impact."
Party supporter Chaudry Mohammed Nazir said that two gunshots rang out when Bhutto's vehicle pulled into the main street and then there was a big blast next to her car.
Police cordoned off the street with white and red tape, and rescue workers rushed to put victims in ambulances as people wailed nearby.
Body parts, pieces of clothing and party banners were scattered on the street. The clothing of some of the victims was shredded and people put party flags over their bodies. Police caps and shoes littered the area.
It was the second suicide attack aimed at Ms Bhutto in two months. Her homecoming parade in the southern city of Karachi from an eight-year exile on October 18 was also targeted, killing more than 140 people.
A Sanitation Education & Advice Article For Somaliland Municipal Officials!
December 25, 2007
By Noah Arre
The following article is based on information I had just received from reliable friends who recently came back from Somaliland.
According to them, one major problem they noticed is that Somaliland cities in general and Hargeisa in particular are devastated by a multitude of pollution problems. Observed problems include: poor municipal waste management (both dry and liquid wastes) and lack or scarcity of sanitary clean water supply. Unfortunately, both problems are a recipe for disaster to public health.
So, as a professional in the water and sanitation sector who worked in both areas since 1982 both in the USA and the United Arab Emirates, I find it imperative to post in our website, the following public hygiene educational open letter for municipal as well as for all concerned parties in the country hoping that such information will be of help to them.
In addition, I plan to visit Somaliland in February 2008, I am willingly prepared to make a free public hygiene educational presentation and everyone is invited. So, those of you who are interested are certainly welcome.
Introduction
It is an established fact that providing safe drinking water and sanitation services to the citizens of any nation can improve public health. And certainly improved public health and educational advancement are some of the pillars and primary indicators of national development….a sick community cannot contribute much toward the development of its country. Improved public health for instance reduces or prevents infant and child mortality from diarrheas and dysenteries caused by bacteria or protozoa (both different types of microscopic living organisms)!
According to the World Health Organization, the number of cholera cases …a dirty waterborne disease, during 2006 was 236,896 cases, with 6,311 deaths in just 52 countries, a rise of 79% over the previous year. And an estimated 4 billion cases of diarrheal disease cases occur worldwide every year, killing an estimated 3 million people a year most of whom are children under 5.
However, according to a November 2007 report by a British humanitarian organization, improvements in sanitation can have a dramatic effect on reducing cholera and diarrheal diseases… again both dirty waterborne diseases. And the scientific world therefore today urges communities worldwide to take concrete actions to improve urban sanitation. The same British study also says that one effective way to improve public health in developing countries is by collecting and treating wastes (both solid and dry wastes).
Untreated Garbage In Your Neighborhood Can Harbor Killer Diseases!
Urbanization is one of the most powerful emerging realities of the 21st century and cities are the engines of economic growth. However, urbanization comes with its own problems… production of huge wastes is one of them. And often there is a positive correlation between city population size and the percentage of collected wastes.
Historically, managing wastes and insuring a clean and hygienic living environment has been an enduring challenge facing mankind through the ages. The Greeks were the first to think and map out an arrangement with the city of Athens organizing a municipal dump in 500 BC. Citizens were required to dispose off their wastes a least one mile from the city.
Today, millenniums later, man is still engaged in perfecting the most ideal solution to handle wastes employing newer technologies. But one stark and unwavering lesson learned is that any project that directly touches people’s life needs their active participation. However, in many of them including projects like waste management, it is unfortunate that people’s participation is not forthcoming and people tend to think that it is the sole responsibility of the government.
So, Somaliland cities today face serious solid and liquid waste problems and the authorities responsible for collection and treatment have little resources or have the necessary appropriate infrastructure or educational know-how and expertise. And this usually leads to low collection and disposal. As a result, today it is estimated that up to 80% of the generated wastes remain uncollected. The rest is collected irregularly, dumped in an uncontrolled manner or outside the cities outskirts. Unfortunately, this practice leads to significant health risks for the population and wide degradation of the environment.
However, the unscientific disposal of wastes is risky and residents suffer in areas where there is no proper waste disposal method. Children, waste workers as well as people living close to a waste dump sites or those whose water supply is contaminated either due to waste or leakage from waste landfill sites are affected.
In countries like Somaliland, wastes (both solid and liquid) in general and domestic wastes in particular pose serious threat because they ferment creating conditions favorable to the survival and growth of killer microbes…. a WHO study estimates that 80% of all sicknesses occur due to this!
Waste disposal sites can also create health hazards for the neighborhood. Improperly managed and poorly designed landfills attract all types of insects, birds, animals, etc. which act as vectors or agents that spread diseases.
Moreover, unhygienic use and disposal of plastics and its effects on human health has become a matter of concern. Colored plastics for instance are harmful as their pigment contains heavy metals that are highly toxic.
And hazards associated with wastes include: skin and blood infections resulting from direct contact with waste and from infected wounds, eye and respiratory infections resulting from exposure to infected dust and different diseases that result from bites of animals and insects feeding on the wastes as well as intestinal infections that are transmitted by flies feeding on wastes.
Summary/Remarks
As urbanization continues, management of urban waste (both solid and liquid) is becoming a major public health and environmental concern in many developing countries including Somaliland. That concern is serious, particularly in big cities like Hargeisa.
Although provision of safe drinking water, safe waste disposal and sanitation services to the citizens of any nation can improve public health, it is estimated that up to 80% of the generated wastes in developing countries remain uncollected …safe potable water is scarce or unavailable too. The rest of the waste is collected irregularly, dumped in an uncontrolled manner or outside the cities outskirts. This practice leads to significant health risks to the population and a wide degradation of the environment.
So, if Somaliland has to catch up with the rest of the world community in this field, it is a high time that its authorities as well as its intellectuals sacrifice by initiating and implementing relevant programs… including public education and action in the health and sanitation sector.
It is also a high time for public officials to find a lasting solution in combating those problems and despite scarce resources, they could accomplish a lot. The era of social irresponsibility is long gone!
One way to achieve success would be to privatize all unproductive public sectors since private institutions rarely fail but have instead proven to be efficient and effective in all their endeavors!
Noah Arre
Email: noah.arre@gmail.com
Two Spanish aid workers abducted in Puntland
December,26,2007
Two Spanish aid workers abducted in Puntland
i was driving the two Spanish women to the local hospital, then six men armed with guns approached me, blocking the road
Gunmen kidnapped two Spanish aid workers with the international agency Medecins sans Frontieres (Doctors Without Borders) in the north Somalia region of Puntland on Wednesday, their driver and a local official said.
"I was driving the two Spanish women to the local hospital, then six men armed with guns approached me, blocking the road," the Somali driver, who asked not to be named, told Reuters. "They hit me very badly and kidnapped the women in their car." (Editing by Tim Pearce)
Reuters
A meeting to discuss Women and Family development begins in Hargeisa.
Written by Qarannews
Dec 26, 2007
Hargeisa-(QARAN)-A nationwide meeting to discuss the role women play in the Somaliland society has begin at the main conference centre in Ambassador Hotel in Hargeisa
The meeting which as over 100 delegates from Somaliland's six provinces in will be held over the next three days. The meeting is being held under the umbrella of NEGAAD and other affiliated Women's organisations in Somaliland.
"This is the first meeting that women delegates from all over Somaliland have gathered to discuss their role in our society, family, children and other social issues" stated NAGAAD chairperson Marwo Suad Ibrahim Abdi.
Marwo Suad continued to point out " the main object of this meeting is to exchange ideas and experience in the terms of politics, commerce and social issues facing Women and their families across Somaliland"
The Chairperson of NAGAAD Marwo Suad Ibrahim also highlighted some of the expected outcome of the meeting "such as an agenda that is set and implemented by the women of Somaliland and a strong network across the country"
The Somaliland minister for Agriculture, Mudane Aden Ahmed Ilmi who formally opened the meeting on behalf of the absent minister for Women and Family affairs encouraged the gathered delegates to exchange knowledge and ideas during the meeting. Mudane Aden Ahmed also stated that "the women in Somaliland are the backbone of the nation and the need for them to take a more active role in the leadership of the nation at both grassroots level and also in the political arena"
Also present at the meeting was the Director-general of the Somaliland minister of Health, who paid a glowing tribute to the role women play in Somaliland health sector from "visionaries like Edna Aden to the nurse giving help to a sick person in hospital".
Omar M. Faarah
Qarannews
Hargiesa
Somaliland
Wednesday, December 26, 2007
HURRAH ! Democracy Defeated Dictatorship
Written and Submitted by Yusuf Dayr
December 26, 2007
(Hadhwanaagnews) History begins with writing a simple commenting note.Three things drive a man out of his country. Poverty, bad – ruler, and a broken – love. One generation plants the trees, other generation enjoys the fruit, and another sits under the shades of the trees with empty – stomach. Life is a theater where the worst people of the society sometimes get the best seats. We hang little thieves and take off our hats to greet big ones as a salute and respect. Who avoids temptation avoids sin. Fish and African politicians stinks in three days. I hate to hammer on the past, but the new concert of the bear and the wolves ( House Of Elders )is very fascinating. Fortune is the good man’s prize but the bad man’s bane. Who ever goes backward never goes forward. It is an ill bird that fouls it’s own nest. The dog has four legs, but does not run on four roads. Fraud and cunning are the weapons of the weak. Why you buy a cow if you can get the milk free. The friction of argument of Mr.Riyalle produces more heat than light. Mr.Riyalle, your best friend is your mirror. But you believe that your best friend is your dollar; and your close flatterers. Your weak foundation will destroy your superstructure. A Skunk ( xoor ) does not smell his own stench. Let every nation know, whether they wish us good or ill. Mohamed Hashe is our genuine hero that we found in adversity; and he is worth all the hazards we run to. Because for a good friend, the journey is never too long. Friends must greet where the hills won’t meet. Mr.M.White, though your body was imprisoned, your soul was free. Because a running river never freezes. Your true God and your honesty to your country has set you free. You have to remember always that Mr.Riyalle and his borrowed eyes costs us nothing. Because a friend won with a feather can be lost with a straw. There is a lot of difference between friends and acquaintances. Take a friend for what he does, a wife for what she has, and goods for what they are worth. That is why they say that a reconciled acquaintance is a double enemy. Mr.M.White, Mr.Riyalle’s holy bible is his bank book, but your faith is the holy Quran. That is how you differ in both, the body and soul. But ingratitude is a human nature. Mohamed Hashi is our hero and our friend. Somalilanders, you have to remember that justice always prevails. Planning your future saves you from regretting.
As I am getting older, sleep has become lighter and lighter, and more difficult to get. While sleeping lightly; I often have premonitory bad dreams partly because of the political hiccups of President Riyalle and partly because of my degrading poor health. Although I am not lucky enough to know how to interpret these nightmare dreams, yet it signals in my intuition. The mysterious and unclear narrow vision of our politicians in the political arena. They are desperate for help but shying away from asking; due to their deep ignorance. A relationship of trust in between the political leaders and the public is a missing crucial factor. That is why our political pledges often don’t see the light of the day time. Our politicians have been blinded by the gold – dust. That is why they can read neither our lips nor our hearts. As authority can serve no good purpose unless it is rightly exercised. Offering a construction worker a free neck message after a back – breaking day on the job, could easily induce a quick trip to the hospital as an expression of gratitude.
Our World has come to regard the self – absorbed act of taking, as a worthy quality. Giving without expectation of reward regarded as a slightly eccentric one. That is why our genuine hero was driven illegally to the prison. Who knows where it all might lead to? In a country where all mired in poverty and unemployment, illiteracy and disease. While some of special interest group whom we share nothing in the past, or at the present. Practicing corruption, abuse of power, and jealously hoarding good amount of our fortune. And yet they are baffled by the resentment their ill action generates. Slamming the door on our face in this age and time. It is a bizarre! No jokes from now and then. The thought is too scary rather to be funny. Stay tuned and watch. They are treating us as second citizens and immigrants with immigrant souls. Another seventeen years of slow spinning wheels is a poisonous prescription. A leadership deadly infected with serious greed, subterfuges, deception and out – right lies. Lack of national purpose of direction; or the guts to create political goals, is the symptoms of my killing disease. Good guys have to shoot, so the evil must not win. We need a Messiah with a gimmick stick to intervene. We are not asking for too much. Just an appropriate school for my betrayed child, an affordable electricity, and a healthy water to drink. That is all for my demands right now. Until my favorite hero Mr.Six restores back life and comes back from his self – imposed exile. They are twisting my heart but I am too old to cry. The morning mist on the flowers is my shed tears; and the whispers of the trees is the wailing of my bleeding devastated heart. They are expert only on how to divide families and friends. But we want what binds us, not what divides us. How they are punishing us with our own mistakes is almost unreal to believe. It is not dark yet, but it is getting too late. But what can we do? Nobody is willing to listen.
A cultivated fertile soil without harvest for eighteen years period is a wasted irreversible time; deductible from our life – span. A saga typified the fruitless era of the dark rule of the old vampire, Siyad Bare. You scratch my back, and I scratch your back is void, and no more valid . When the truth that crushed to death, will rise again on the earth? Now they have started to climb every tree and mountain to kill innocent heroes in order to stay in power under any circumstances. Finger pointing at each other and splashing mud at each other on their faces. A marathon of slander and heartbreaking scandals had been released to the media and the public alike. Everyday new tips of Hargeisa – Gate scandals and fishy stories. Millions of defense but not a cent to tribute. Mr.Samale unveiled to the public interweaving nets and ropes of evil deeds that combines assassinations, plots, and slow death scandals that are appearing on the horizon. There is nothing new under the sun of the Mad – Cow – Cashier, and Mr.Riyalle. A typical husband and wife assassin who are clueless about each other’s occupation until each is hired to kill the other. Mr.Riyalle, your star has fallen down and your fate is trembling on the balance. An ugly woman dreads the mirror. Enough is enough. We want the law to speak, not the lawyer. Since the day you held our genuine heroes behind iron – bars. You have set a fire on our hair, and had swept our hearts with forks and knives. We know that your favorite movie is,” Mississippi is burning.” But you can’t push us to the edge and ditch of shame anymore further. Because the people already unveiled your mask of dismay and double standard policy.
Threatening and contempting our heroes is a weed that grows in every soil of your Kingdom. You are treating us as slaves whose limbs are free. We can watch a thief but we can’t watch a liar. Mr.Riyalle, to make enemies, talk; to make friends, listen. Money and man is a mutual friendship show; man makes false money, money makes man so. He that full of himself is empty. If you want to be deemed from your previous sins, lay all your cards of hidden agenda right now on the table. Slavery is too high a price to pay for simple living. It is easy for a man in good health to preach patience to the sick. There are many voices echoed to our ears, but few are true. We must filter all words of pen or tongue. Wolves of the ODUB Empire, you are all angels on top but devils underneath. You are raping our mandate and freedom because you represent nobody. We can’t grow grass on a beaten – track, because domestic fruit will not grow on wild – trees. The vagabond, when rich, is called a tourist. Please Wolves, show us your hands then we can tell your trade. Mr.Riyalle, If at all you have a heart. Send your wolves to the town and let them see by themselves , eye – shopping, in order to discover how the masses are suffering. The road of bye – and- bye leads to the town of never. Before now, you could see the forest, not the trees. Now you can see neither the forest nor the trees. There are three people in this World. Those who have wishbones, those who have funny bones, and those who have backbones. There are waves of bad news from the Spider – web Palace echoed to our ears. Because the pen conveys one’s meaning a thousand miles. A love letter sometimes costs less than three cents stamp. The buyer needs a thousand eyes, the seller wants but one. Always leave a loose thread and a knot, when you stop sewing, and you will never lose the first stitch. The thread follows the needle. The masses are thinking deeply of the rising tide. The bear and the wolves have the same intentions but speaking with different tones. It is only at low tide, we find things worth picking up. Mr.Riyalle, remember that everyday is not a Friday. You must not be in a hurry to tie today, what you can not untie tomorrow. Don’t be the architect of your own grave.
Our future is in a sealed book.
Wolves and deer never stroll together. When the deer is dead, the wolves dance on it’s grave. Today the bear and the wolves seems active but literally dead. Their honey moon is over. It is our turn to roll and dance on their grave tomorrow. Singing the Rap – Style – Music of Abwaan Abdi Qais and Professor Gariye. The true icons of a revolting nation. Mr.Riyalle, Gossiping and lying go together, but gratitude and greed, go not together. We have failed to convince you that tolerance is a two – way – street, and it is the last lesson of the school of wisdom. The blessing of the earth – planet is toil. Honor lies in honest toil. Trash – talk and empty – promise pays no toil. Our sincerity and determination is more stronger than Tomahawks missiles of money – laundering of Mr.Riyale and his wolves. Regardless to their color, creed or faith. Emotions have no room in our plan of tomorrow. Mr.Riyalle, hold your tongue under your teeth until you know, who is who. Because your tongue is in a wet place and it is likely to slip. We will never trade a hero with a sore – toe. We must have iron – cage of nerves to stand your turmoil and brain – torture. The family that prays together, stays together. Today is the tomorrow that we worried about yesterday. Wolves clipping on their claws, never make them lose their taste for blood. He is poor that God hates. Your politics is the mother of graft. Half is false of what we hear.
Taxation without representation is a tyranny, and rebellion to a tyrant is obedience to God. The truth that crushed to death, will rise on the earth again.
Remember, it takes a dictator a lot of time and effort to build an iron – curtain; but it takes seconds for the masses to destroy all his false castles.
Mr.Riyalle, please give us back our mandate; and take back again your wet blanket and go back to sleep.
Mr.Riyale, I hate to say I told you, but I did.
Hurrah! Democracy Defeated Dictatorship.
Yusuf Deyr,
Hargeisa
Italian Somaliland: A Return to the UN Trusteeship System
Written by Mj. Abdirahman A Ali.
Dec 26, 2007 at 11:44 PM
If international community is serious and committed to solving crisis of Somalis, they should re-impose UN Trusteeship System similar of that in 1950 and recognize Republic of Somaliland as independent entity
In much analysis, Transitional Government of Somalia (TGS) failed to restored law and order in southern Somalia, including the vicious Mogadishu that paralyzed the country for about two decades. IGAD and Arab League also failed to install government in Somalia after 14 Peace Conferences in Arab and IGAD territories. It is likely that UN Trusteeship System that worked in the Italian Somaliland for about ten years in 1950’s will again restore law and order in Italian Somaliland.
Effective from January 27th 1950, General Assembly adopted a resolution recommending that Italian Somaliland be placed under an international trusteeship system, and requested the Italian government to be administrator of Italian Somaliland until further recommendations to lift the resolution. The decree worked fine between 1950 to 1960 and established local administration for the Italian Somaliland until the unity of Italian Somaliland with British Somaliland on 1st July 1960. Now, international community has all the legal authority it needs to shape a solution to humanitarian crises and armed conflicts around the world including Italian Somaliland, Mogadishu.
We can say, during trusteeship, Italian Somaliland passed through best of its history and people call it today “Golden era of Italian Somaliland”. A lot of development and basic social services were founded.
Whereas, the General Assembly, after having examined the question at its third and fourth sessions, adopted at its 250th plenary meeting on 21st November 1949 a resolution recommending, with respect to the territory formerly known as Italian Somaliland, that the territory shall be an independent and sovereign state; that its independence shall become effective at the end of the ten years from the date of approval of the Trusteeship Agreement by the General Assembly with Italy as Administrating Authority, aided and advised by an Advisory Council composed of representatives of Colombia, Egypt and the Philippines. Italian Somaliland remained under the trusteeship for ten years of prosperity and peace.
Puntland: Giant Sleeping Cell of Al Qaeda is about to Erupt in the Port city of Bossaso
Source: Puntland Observer
December 27, 2007
In the wake of abductions of Journalists, medical Practitioners, I.N.G.O’s, Maritime Shipping vessels and other agencies in the Puntland State.
The so called State of Puntland is in a question mark. That fabric is shredding to pieces so fast in the eyes of the beholders and the message they are sending is that the Port of Bossaaso is getting out of hands very soon.
Al Qaeda and other Islamic clerics will control the sea port cities of that region in the coming days and not the coming months.
What’s happening in the region?
The answer to this question is that the truth speaks for itself the volcanic activities are about to erupt sooner than expected. In the Port town of Qow, the Strong hold of Al Qaeda is becoming the largest base where the pirates and smugglers are re-grouping to set the strategic movements for all actions.
No U.N. or foreign staff are allowed to work and have bases in that region because the Islamic Courts are coming back to the power and they wouldn’t allow any NGO’s to operate on their fields where activities are immanent.
The rebel soldiers believe that all foreign agency workers are spies working for the Western Governments, but what they don’t know is that medical Doctors and their staff like DOCTORS without Borders are helping Mothers and Children needing basic health care. The miscalculation and premature actions makes them fall ahead of any plans they wanted to execute as they did it many times before.
Now they are repeating the civil war into the region between Puntland militia forces vs. Islamic court forces which isn’t the benefit of the Puntlanders where hundreds of Islamists killed and slaughtered before the late nineties when they fought Col Abdillahi Yusuf.
Will this be the lesson for the authorities to manage the Puntland state accordingly, or this will be an example of failure to govern?
The truth of the matter and the real answer to this question is here:
• The Piracy is a government motivated project to lure money as a ransom fee for all maritime transport ships
• The local businessman sees this as an opportunity to collect wealth faster than any other venture to make quick bucks
• Journalist and other INGO staff are money making machine for local kidnappers who are supported for doing these kind of actions
• The government Ministers and local businessman are acting to be mediators and peace brokers but instead they are the deal makers
• The president of Puntland Adde Muse admitted on the Interview with the BBC Somali Broadcasting ‘that the machines we were forging with the Somali shilling are broken at this time for three months’.
• The smugglers and the government officials know each other very well and make the deals together openly.
Since the transaction and trade of Human smuggling are daily routine in Bossaso then, what kind of government are you running? This is what the French journalist was about to uncover in a televised interviews with unhappy fellow Smugglers, Government officials and Business leaders in the state of Puntland. Until the well orchestrated and organized abduction took place so the Journalist won’t succeed to the quest of finding the truth.
Finally the last remaining question, when the Islamic courts Militia will capture the Port City of Bossaso? We know all kind of evil things are happening right now in that region with the late abduction of the Medical staff yesterday. The Puntland authorities are responsible and allowing the take-over of the Islamic courts to take place and the uprising of the Mad Mullah to capture the economic gate way of Puntland. This is another opportunity as they naively think to make money from the Anti terror Task force of Africa.
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