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Rainfall expected to drive food security improvement in Somalia: report

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Saturday June 30, 2018Above average rainfall throughout 2018 is expected to drive food security improvements in Somalia, a donor-funded report released on Saturday says.The Famine Early Warning Systems Network (FEWSNET), an early warning system that monitors food insecurity, says food security has improved considerably in many of the areas worst-affected by the 2016/17 drought, as a result of large-scale humanitarian assistance and improvements in seasonal performance.The report says April to June Gu (main rainy season) rainfall started earlier than normal and was significantly above average."Overall the harvest in July is expected to be average. Flooding increased recession cultivation opportunities and the September off-season Gu harvest is expected to be above average," FewsNet said.The report says large-scale humanitarian assistance throughout 2017 also played a significant role in driving improvements and likely preventing catastrophic outcomes."Despite early indications that the April to June 2018 Gu season would be below average, heavy rainfall during this time has been largely beneficial, and this alongside continued humanitarian assistance has supported further food security improvements across much of Somalia," FEWS Net said.The report warns of an elevated likelihood of an El Niño event occurring in late 2018, driving above-average rainfall during the October to December Deyr season."Deyr rainfall is expected to support average production and normal livestock births and productivity in most areas, though flooding will likely cause crop losses in riverine and lowland areas," said FEWS Net.Ads By Google The Horn of Africa nation experienced a prolonged drought from late 2016 through late 2017 that resulted in significant livestock losses and consecutive seasons of below-average production, causing severe and at times extreme acute food insecurity.According to FEWS Net, the performance of the 2017 Deyr season (October-December) was mixed, but overall rainfall was sufficient to support improved livestock conditions and near normal production, and food security began improving in late 2017.It said most water catchments were fully replenished with Gu rainfall and free water is available through natural sources, causing the price of water to seasonally decline across most reference markets between February and May.
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  • ‘Smiling’ Somali Pirate Says Jailers Have Ruined His Grin - Daily Beast
  • Kenya training a major boon, say Somalia’s South West state MPs - AMISOM
  • Foreign students detained over FETÖ links in Turkey's south - Hurriyet
  • 2 Wajir residents reported missing found dead - Daily Nation
  • Ethiopian police downplays security concerns ahead of mass rally in northern city - Xinhua
  • EU leaders reach migration deal after talks in Brussels - Mail Online
  • Minneapolis cops involved in shooting had prior awards - AP
  • Ten dead as ethnic violence flares in Ethiopia - CGTN
  • US Deports 84 Somalis to Home Country - VOA
  • U.S. intelligence believes N.Korea making more nuclear bomb fuel despite talks: NBC - Reuters
  • CDF Muhoozi Hosts Somali Counterpart Gen Hussein - Kampala Post

XFS Oo shaacisay in Basas gaar ah beri loo diyaariyay shacabka Muqdisho

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Muqdisho ( Sh. M. Network )-Xukuumadda federaalka ah ee Soomaaliya ayaa shaacisay in Basas gaar ah beri loo diyaariyay dadweynaha, maadaama inta badan ay xiran yihiin waddooyinka muhiimka ah ee magaalada Muqdisho
Wasiirka Warfaafinta Soomaaliya Daahir Maxamuud Gelle oo ka mid ah guddiga qaban qaabada munaasabadda maalmaha Xoriyadda ayaa sheegay in laga bilaabo caawa illaa beri caasimadda ay ka shaqeyn doonaan Basas gaar ah oo ay dowladdu leedahay, islamarkaana ay qaadi doonaan dadka shacabka ah ee ku dhaqan M/ Muqdisho.
Sidoo kale wasiir Gelle ayaa ka codsaday dadka shacabka ah in ay dulqaad muujiyaan mudada yar ee ay xiran yihiin waddooyinka magaalada Muqdisho.
Halkan hoose ka dhageyso Codka.
http://radioshabelle.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/Cod-Turki-2.mp3
The post XFS Oo shaacisay in Basas gaar ah beri loo diyaariyay shacabka Muqdisho appeared first on Shabelle.

Xildhibaan Mustaf Dhuxulow Oo gacan ka geystay sii deynta Qalbi Dhagax

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Muqdisho ( Sh. M. Network )-Xildhibaan Mustaf Sheekh Cali Dhuxulow oo ka mid ah Xildhibaanada Ugu fir fircoon Baarlamaanka Soomaaliya ayaa la xaqiijiyay in uu kaalin weyn ka geystay sii deynta Cabdikariin Sheekh Muuse Qalbi dhagax oo dhawaan ay sii deysay dowladda Ethiopia.
Afhayeenka Ururka ONLF Cabdiqaadir Hiirmooge oo la hadlay Idaacadda Shabelle ayaa raali galin ka bixiyay warar Warbaahinta qaar iyo baraha bulshada la isla dhexmarayay ee ku aadan in Xildhibaan Mustaf Dhuxulow uu ku lug lahaa in Ethiopia loo gacan galiyo Cabdikariin Qalbi dhagax waxaana uu hoosta ka xariiqay iska daa in uu ku lug yeeshee waxa uu qeyb libaax leh ka geystay sii deynta muwaadinkaas Soomaaliyeed.
Xildhibaan Mustaf Sheekh Cali Dhuxulow ayaa ku caan baxay Garab Istaaga dadka danta yar.
Waxaana uu ku fir fircoon yahay dhiir galinta Jiilka Cusub ee u heelan in si ay ku dheehan tahay Wadaniyad uga shaqeeyaan Horumarinta dalka Soomaaliyeed.
Halkan hoose ka dhageyso Codka.

http://radioshabelle.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/Afayeenka-Onlf.mp3
The post Xildhibaan Mustaf Dhuxulow Oo gacan ka geystay sii deynta Qalbi Dhagax appeared first on Shabelle.

Barn. Hambalyada iyo Heesaha

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Barnaamijka Hambalyada iyo Heesaha ee toddobaadkan waxaa inala socodsiinaya Ibraahim Xasan Maxamuud iyo Jaamac Buulle Jaamac

‘Smiling’ Somali Pirate Says Jailers Have Ruined His Grin

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Saturday June 30, 2018The lead hijacker of the MV Maersk Alabama off the coast of Somalia nearly 10 years ago has lost nearly half of the teeth in his mouth, according to a federal civil rights lawsuit he filed from prison.Abduwali Abdukhadir Muse, who was portrayed by Oscar-winner Barkhad Abdi in the 2013 blockbuster film Captain Phillips, is a little over seven years into a sentence of 33 years and nine months at the federal prison in Terre Haute, Indiana for his part in the crime.The suit was filed quietly last year by Muse, who became known as the “Smiling Pirate” for the wide grin he wore during his first perp walk in America. He’s seeking $1.15 million in damages from a prison dentist and two other medical personnel, plus their firing. He claims the prison staffers’ “deliberate indifference” to his dental needs has resulted in the loss of at least 15 of his 32 teeth. He says he can no longer “properly chew, eat, or consume vital nutrients,” and describes the pain as “unbearable.” Abduwali Muse shortly after arriving in America to face piracy charges.Muse is the sole surviving hijacker from the taking of the Maersk Alabama in 2009. The hijacking “was a pretty classic piece of piracy,” said retired British Army Colonel John Steed, who headed the UN’s counter-piracy operations in Somalia at one time and now oversees operations in the Horn of Africa for Oceans Beyond Piracy, a U.S.-based NGO. “Two skiffs coming alongside a ship, putting up a ladder, getting onboard, threatening the crew, getting them to phone their company, et cetera. The difference with the Alabama case is how it was resolved—it was one of the most audacious sea hostage rescues we’ve ever seen.”Ads By Google In the course of researching an article on maritime piracy, Muse and I corresponded by mail for a brief period at the end of 2013, and he mentioned his dental woes in a letter he sent to me from FCI Terre Haute. In his first letter, he told me to call him “Musa,” since that’s what everyone else did.The handwriting is his, as it matches court documents that he personally filled out and signed. It is a near-certainty that a native English speaker coached him very heavily for the letters.I asked him about the Alabama hijacking, but Muse insisted he couldn’t say much about it since he had appeals pending. (He has since lost those appeals.) He said his plan had been to work as a fisherman in what he described as a “small village on the ocean,” a place identified in a sentencing memorandum as Garacad, “one of a number of piracy centers” in the semi-autonomous province of Puntland.Muse said he had never seen Captain Phillips, the movie. He said he would probably watch if it was ever shown on the prison TV system.He also asked if I would send him a copy of Capt. Richard Phillips’ memoir of the hijacking, A Captain’s Duty, which he said he hadn’t read, either.Somewhat reluctantly, I sent Muse “the ‘Captain Phillips’ book,” as he called it, via Amazon, as he instructed; federal prisons require that books sent to inmates come directly from the publisher or distributor so nothing can be smuggled inside of it.I was automatically notified by Amazon when Muse got the book. I waited eagerly for his response, regularly checking the P.O. box I had rented to facilitate our correspondence. I wrote to him a few more times, asking what he thought about the story, which parts he considered most accurate, and so forth.I kept the P.O. box months longer than I probably should have, finally canceling it only when it became obvious I would never heard from Muse again.But if Muse was curious about what Richard Phillips had to say about the hijacking in his book, I wondered how Phillips—and other crewmembers that were there—would react to Muse’s take on things in his letters to me.So I asked them.For starters, Muse’s teeth “were terrible to begin with,” Capt. Richard Phillips told me. Nor did he ever once smile during the hijacking, Phillips said.Phillips said Muse, who claimed not to speak any English when he arrived in America, likely understood more than he let on in court.“His English was better than half my crew,” said Phillips. “He may not have all the words, but he has all the curses. That’s one thing [the hijackers] all said, they wanted to come to the U.S. And he got his wish.”Muse is housed in FCI Terre Haute’s Communications Management Unit, or CMU, a highly restrictive wing reserved for some of America’s most notorious criminals and terrorists, including “American Taliban” John Walker Lindh. The CMU is colloquially known as “Guantanamo North,” which Muse noted in his first letter, and contains 55 cells, of which five are used for disciplinary segregation. CMU inmates aren’t allowed contact visits, and everything they say to family or friends must be in English.All letters to and from inmates in the CMU are read by prison officials, all telephone calls are recorded, and audio surveillance picks up all inmate conversation, which is then analyzed by an offsite counterterrorism unit.Muse makes $19 a month working as a prison orderly, though he sees considerably less than that on payday. The judge in his case ordered his wages garnished to pay the $550,000 in restitution he owes for the hijacking, plus a court fee of $600 due upon conviction.A planned documentary by Lesotho-Canadian documentarian Kaizer Matsumunyane about Muse stalled in 2013. Matsumunyane continued to post very occasional updates about Muse on Facebook until they ended abruptly 16 months ago. According to the postings, Muse got his GED in 2016 after struggling with the English portion. He also spent at least one 30-day stretch in solitary for being “a bit disruptive” and lost his phone privileges for a month.Phillips said Muse is still better off in the U.S., even in prison, than he was before.“He didn’t have a chance to sue anybody in Somalia,” he laughed.There were about 45 inmates in the CMU when Muse and I first corresponded. Roughly 25 of them were Muslim, said Muse, who described himself as devoutly Islamic. Without many activities with which to occupy himself, Muse said he spent free time reading, writing, watching television, and talking to “my brothers. We do get along well, the place is quiet and peaceful.”However, Phillips claimed Muse was actually a Christian convert to Islam, something he was told during the four days Muse and his compatriots held him hostage on one of the Alabama’s lifeboats.His time on that boat “was a lot worse than what you saw in the movie,” Phillips told me. “What they did to me was a lot worse than that. They made it very clear to me, had anything come into that lifeboat, a bullet, a person, whatever, the first person who died would be me. They had guns to my head many times.”Muse never broke character, perpetually “coughing, spitting, cussing, belittling me,” Phillips said. Still, he has a grudging respect of sorts for Muse, calling him “a good leader.”“He snapped his three guys up and they followed him explicitly,” Phillips recalled.At one point, Phillips suddenly leapt from the lifeboat and began swimming toward the USS Bainbridge, which was on the scene trying to negotiate an end to the standoff.“The escape bid was witnessed by the U.S. Navy but happened too quickly for them to come to his aid,” the Guardian reported at the time. “It was not clear if the pirates had aimed at Phillips, but he is believed to be unharmed. News of Phillips' daring escape attempt came after the pirates vowed to fight if they are attacked. There were also unconfirmed reports that the hijackers had called in reinforcements.”But Phillips told me he actually wasn’t trying to escape.“It was just so hot” inside the unventilated, covered lifeboat that he simply “wanted to jump in the water.” Phillips’ captors fired shots at him, and he quickly swam back to the boat.Five days later, the lifeboat ran out of gas.As it sat motionless, a Navy launch pulled up to deliver food and water to Phillips and the four hijackers. At this point, Muse stepped aboard and asked to make a phone call. He had also suffered a cut on his hand when the Alabama’s crew rose up against him days earlier, and Muse wanted medical treatment. He was then taken aboard the Bainbridge, which now had the lifeboat under tow.When spotters aboard the Bainbridge saw one of the pirates holding an AK-47 to Phillips’s back and determined his life was in imminent danger, snipers on the ship’s fantail took out all three pirates with single shots to the head.Phillips was unharmed.“I thought I was caught in the crossfire between the three pirates,” he said. “I could see them breaking down with Muse not being there, and that’s one of the things that caused the end to come. I think he knew something was going down, we were getting closer to the coast. But also, I’ll say he was weak—he quit.”In one of his letters, Muse complained of depression and said he was suffering from PTSD—court papers filed by his defense team allege this was at least partly brought on by seeing his cohorts shot in the head with .30-caliber slugs. He said he was held in solitary confinement, with no outside communication except for visits from his court-appointed lawyer, for the first year of his incarceration. In court papers, the government argued this was necessary because Muse allegedly called a pirate crew in Somalia from a prison phone during his pre-trial detention at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in Manhattan, and ordered the captain of another hijacked vessel, the Win Far 161, to be assassinated. Muse’s lawyers argued the government made a translation error.Phillips holds no grudge against Muse, saying he had no opportunities in Somalia and ultimately made bad decisions that led him to where he is today.“Somalia is a lawless country,” said Phillips. “Muse was working for the warlords up north. The only thing that’s going to get rid of piracy, which starts on land and then reaches out to sea, is to do something about that lawlessness.”While he was interested to hear about Muse’s life now, Phillips doesn’t feel a particular need to know much more.“We got our points across very clear in that lifeboat,” he said. “I have no ill will toward the guy, but I have no desire to meet him or talk to him again.”But Captain Phillips’ second-in-command on the Alabama, First Mate Shane Murphy, said he’d actually be kind of interested in sitting down with Muse for a one-on-one.“We were both captains of that ship at one point,” Murphy told me. “I went to school, that’s what got me to that spot in the ocean. He took a different route to get there. Now, it’s ended differently—I’m where I am and he’s where he is. He’s living with the consequences now.”Murphy, who vividly remembers having his hands around Muse’s neck at one point during the hijacking, is now the captain of his own ship, the MV Energy Enterprise. His routes no longer take him to Africa; he now prefers U.S. waters.While Murphy continues his life as a mariner, another crewman that was on the Maersk Alabama when it was hijacked decided to pack it in shortly afterward.“I [later] went back on a ship and after a month I had enough, so I got off and I retired,” said the former crewman, who asked for anonymity.It’s clear that he has mixed feelings about Muse and the other three pirates, expressing dismay that Muse was even given his day in court.“But, who am I to say?” he continued. “I was made to understand that these people were fishermen and when these warlords came into it, they were threatened if they don’t go out and do the pirate thing, their families would be killed.”In his letters (and confirmed in court documents), Muse said he was driven to piracy because he had no other choice.“Throughout [his] early years, Abduwali [Muse] experienced a state of deprivation that is almost inconceivable in the United States,” his lawyers wrote in a sentencing memorandum.

“As a young child, Abduwali survived primarily on camel’s milk, although sometimes he had fruit or nuts. About once a month, he might be given a cooked meal. He vividly remembers the agonizing hunger that he experienced as a young boy. Abduwali’s life was difficult in other ways ... When his father was particularly upset, he would tie Abduwali to a tree and tell him that a lion would come to eat him.”The prosecution acknowledged Muse’s difficult childhood, but explained to the court that the Alabama hijacking was not his first one.“During a five-week period in the spring of 2009, Muse, a Somali citizen, led a gang of pirates on a series of violent attacks against three different ships that were navigating in the Indian Ocean off the coast of Somalia,” the government said in their argument for the maximum sentence of 405 months, which he ultimately received.“By all accounts Muse did not just commit the acts to which he pled guilty; he reveled in them. From boasting about the millions he had made from prior hijackings to laughing after pulling the trigger of his pistol next to a hostage’s head to suggesting that he would cut up a hostage and sell his organs, Muse derived joy from the suffering of his victims. He abused them physically and psychologically in an effort to subdue and control them.”“Fifty-three sailors spread across six countries along with their families have been profoundly affected by Muse’s choices and actions,” the filing said.One of them, Maersk Alabama Third Engineer John Cronan, was unable to go back to work after the hijacking and ultimately lost his home to foreclosure. His wife experienced panic attacks anytime he left the house and she couldn’t reach him. His daughter suffered from nightmares and said she was afraid that Muse would escape from prison and harm her.Four years after the hijacking, Alabama chief engineer Mike Perry, who had ambushed Muse early on and managed to stab him in the hand in an unsuccessful attempt to turn the situation around, sent an email to the rest of the crew:“To all of the Alabama Shipmates, On this anniversary of the Navy freeing Richard [Phillips], I have just received a phone call from Special Agent Steve Sorrells of the FBI. Steve is the agent that came to Mombasa to perform the investigation and collect our statements. Two years ago, he went out of his way to personally return to me the knife that I used to take down Abduwali [Muse] with. They came right to my house to present it to me. Anyway, he called because he wanted us all to know that we have not been forgotten. They remember what we went through and what we did. He is a nice guy, and truly has reached out in respect to all of you. We all did good, we all came home. A job well done. Thank you.”Retired Rear Admiral Terry McKnight was the commander of anti-piracy naval forces off Somalia when the Alabama was hijacked. He calls the pirates he has interacted with “desperate, desperate people.”“When we capture pirates on the ships, that’s the first time in their life some of them have seen toilet paper, or three meals a day, or dental care,” McKnight told me. He said the fishermen who get into piracy are generally coastal fishermen who work the shorelines, and are “terrified” of going to sea. Many of them don’t even know how to swim.The point isn’t to kill anyone, said McKnight. Hijacking operations are in fact “investments” overseen by local warlords, who take the bulk of any ransoms collected for themselves. Someone like Muse might get a few hundred bucks for hijacking a vessel like the Alabama. For someone who regularly struggled to feed himself, as Muse said he did, that’s a big incentive.Unfortunately, the conditions on the ground that created this problem in the first place “haven’t changed one little bit,” said Steed, the former UN counter-piracy head.Yet, pirate attacks off the Horn of Africa have gone down drastically since Muse and his crew seized the Alabama.The drop is due in part to better ship tracking, and transiting risky areas at higher speeds, but more than anything else, it’s the now-standard presence of armed guards on vessels, according to Steed. Since the Alabama incident, “it’s only ships without armed security on board that have been taken.”Accordingly, piracy is no longer a profitable business, and Steed said the number of active pirates in Somalia has dwindled to mere double-digits. He estimates only four pirate groups remain, with eight to 10 members each.The only one that has made it to America now sits in an midwestern penitentiary. He unsuccessfully appealed his conviction in 2016, arguing that he was only 16 at the time of his arrest and shouldn’t have been tried as an adult, something he also mentioned in his letters to me. U.S. investigators testified Muse told them he was between 18 and 19.“Pretty interesting [that] he thinks he was unjustly punished,” said Shane Murphy. “Shooting at us?”Although I haven’t heard from him in five years, Abduwali Muse surely has more to say.As he signed off his last letter to me, “P.S. I’m writing my own book, so someday you may see that!”
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  • Rainfall expected to drive food security improvement in Somalia: report - Xinhua
  • Kenya training a major boon, say Somalia’s South West state MPs - AMISOM
  • Foreign students detained over FETÖ links in Turkey's south - Hurriyet
  • 2 Wajir residents reported missing found dead - Daily Nation
  • Ethiopian police downplays security concerns ahead of mass rally in northern city - Xinhua
  • EU leaders reach migration deal after talks in Brussels - Mail Online
  • Minneapolis cops involved in shooting had prior awards - AP
  • Ten dead as ethnic violence flares in Ethiopia - CGTN
  • US Deports 84 Somalis to Home Country - VOA
  • U.S. intelligence believes N.Korea making more nuclear bomb fuel despite talks: NBC - Reuters
  • CDF Muhoozi Hosts Somali Counterpart Gen Hussein - Kampala Post

Barn. Dhacdooyinka Toddobaadka

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Barnaamijka Dhacdooyinka ee toddobaadkan waxaad ku dhageysan doontaan qoddobo ay ka mid yihiin cusbitaal takhasuse ah, kaas oo lagu sameyn doono qalliinada waaweyn ee markii hore dibadda loo tagi jiray

Cisbitaalka Dayniile oo ay Qeybi Qubatay

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Dab xooggan oo ka kacay Koronto ayaa xalay baabi’iyay qeybo ka mid ah cusbitalka Deyniile ee Magaalada Muqdisho. Isbitalkan oo dadka si lacag la’aan ah ku daaweeya ayaa sameeya qaliimo u badan ahaweenka isku furma.

Gud. Shabeelaha Hoose oo la Dhaawacay

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Gudoomiyaha Gobolka Shabeelaha Hoose Maxamed Ibrahim Barre iyo Gudoomiyaha deegaanka Ceelasha biyaha Ayaan Xassan Xuseen ayaa qaraxaasi ka badbaaday ka dib markii miino gaariga loogu xiray


Somali MP Mustaf Dhuhulow plays magnificent role in ONLF detainee release

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ONLF’s jailed commander, Abdikarim Sheikh Muse, popularly known as “Qalbi-Dhagah” has been released from Ethiopian prison last Thursday with help from Somali lawmaker.
Qalbi Dhagah was arrested in August 2017 by Galmudug authorities in central Somalia for being a member of ONLF rebel group and extradited to Ethiopian government in the following month.
Mustaf Sheikh Ali [Dhuhulow], former Information minister and current member of Somalia’s Lower House Chamber of Federal Parliament played a gigantic role in the efforts that set freed Qalbi-Dhagah.
Speaking to Radio Shabelle in Mogadishu, the ONLF spokesman, Abdulkadir Hirmoge has vehemently denied reports by local media that the MP has taken part the rendition of Qalbi Dhagah to Addis Ababa.
“It’s baseless and bogus that H.E Mustaf Dhuholow has had role in the extradition of the ONLF senior commander, Abdikarim Qalbi Dhagah to Ethiopia last year,” said the separatist group’s spokesman.
Meanwhile, the ONLF spokesman has thanked the MP for his valuable support and taking part in the effort that helped Qalbi Dhagah regain his freedom and walking out of the jail in Ethiopia.
Besides this, Mustaf Dhuholow has been praised for assisting the poor people in the country and encouraging the youngsters to serve for cause of the nation’s development and accomplish their dreams.
The post Somali MP Mustaf Dhuhulow plays magnificent role in ONLF detainee release appeared first on Shabelle.

Mbappe iyo Faransiiska oo Daaqada ka Tuuray Messi iyo Argentine

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Xulka France ayaa u noqday xulki ugu horreeyay ee gaara wareega siddeeda kooxood ee Koobka Aduunka ee sannadkaan 2018-ka, kadib marki ay maanta 4-3 ku garaaceen Argentina.

Martida Makarafoonka: Ifrax Cumar Salad

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Barnaamijka Martida Makarafoonka waxaa todobaadkaan marti innoogu ah Wasiiru-dowlaha Madaxtooyada Maamul Goboleedka Hirshabelle, Ifrax Cumar Salad.

Dhageyso Barnaamijak Caweyska Washington

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Barnaamijka Caweyska Washington waxaa soo diyaarisay soona jeedineysa Sahra Ciidle Nur.

Ethiopia oo ONLF ka Saareysa Liiska Argagixisada

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Golaha wasiiradda dowladda Ethiopia ayaa baarlamaanka dalkaasi u gudbiyay qaraar ururka ONLF iyo ururo kale looga saaryo liiska kooxaha argagixisada.

Journey remains unfinished:

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by Abdiwahid AbdullahiSaturday, June 30, 2018
Part 1.
The current state of our Somalia nation has been severely hampered by the quality of its office holders. We are displeased with it and have even relinquished the possibility of good government. On the contrary, we would sincerely like to have decent and fulfilling lives. Government is an institution that should work for the betterment of its citizen; serving in the government is a means not an end.  Therefore, the nature of the government comes from the character of its people. It is not something that you can borrow, copy, and paste. Since the independent in1960, we have been following unseen pathways which led us down the road to destruction and destitution. Despite our high expectation about the romantic view of the independence and the promise of great future, we have become incapable administering an institution that behaves like a corporation. However, we cannot simple blame the government without reflecting upon our role as individuals. We’ve devoted all of our attention to repairing the external while neglecting the internal and the spiritual components. Therefore, we cannot produce a mature and successful system that has native characteristics. Instead we entertained foreign and cosmetic entity that has failed to fulfill our social expectation.
       I can’t argue with our primitive taste of egalitarian society. This taste might have some negative ingredient about the vertical and horizontal hierarchy in which modern societies has it to thrive and prosper. Moreover, it has become a plausible notion for our deep rooted,  uncontested self-rightness has surfaced as individual promote their own individual interest, which is good for oneself; however, detrimental to overall wellbeing of cohesive society. This would ultimately destroy the individual as a naturally and totally unharmonious with structured system. It warrants full-fledged scientific research. Otherwise we should remain and develop our principal truth of Nomadism. Nations rise and fall not based upon whether or not they face, but based upon how their leaders navigate the dangers that all societies inevitably face.  In the absence of such leaders, the society will crumble as ours has and the result is never pleasant.   
            Ads By Google It remains a constant struggle for many of us to maintain a romantic view of life whilst surrounded by violence and uncertainty.  Furthermore, the poverty which has afflicted our beloved people back home in Somalia has made us even more vulnerable. It saddens me to hear the desperation of family members and respected friends calling to ask for a few dollars to feed their loved ones. That said, it is not their fault since the conditions in our country have made them unfortunate and dependent upon handouts.  This is a disgraceful situation.  Of course, they would like to have economic independence, personal freedom, and social prestige.
            Although our past has been unpleasant since the dawn of the time, the situation has grown exponentially worse in recent years. However, we rejoice as we recount the lost paradise in the beaches of Batalaale in Berbera, the poetic and sensational concert in Hargeisa Theater, the nice view and fresh breeze of Lido beach in Mogadishu and the loving scene of Janaale the war machinery have destroyed. Unfortunately the enjoyment was a blink of eye. Poverty creates uncertainty which in turn causes stress, degrades dignity, and leads people to engage in acts of violence. And yet rather than addressing the epidemic of poverty, we have been content to simply ignore it.  Our post-civil war leaders have never spoken out against this culture of laziness and selfishness.  Instead, they have encouraged a culture of political agnosticism, seeking only empty loyalty.  Under such circumstances, what chance do our children have at anything more than a miserable, dull and defrauded existence?  I felt guilt the appalling atrocities that befallen upon us which led the demise of our society.  As a result, many of us seldom reflect upon the exuberant joy of the lives that we lead. 
Abdiwahid AbdullahiColubmus, OHEmail: [email protected]
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Cavani Scores Twice As Uruguay Beat Portugal To Enter Quarters

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Saturday June 30, 2018

Edinson Cavani scored in either halves as Uruguay knocke header from a perfect Luis Suarez cross gave Uruguay 1-0 lead in the first-half as they remained the better side in the first 45 minutes. Portugal looked to maintain possession on the ball but failed to covert it into threat on their opponents.
Ads By Google Joao Mario for the Portuguese who did most of the work with the ball was the stand-out player for Portugal in the initial half. Earlier, Bernardo Silva and Goncalo Guedes returned to Portugal's starting line-up for Saturday's World Cup last-16 tie against Uruguay in Sochi.
The pair come in along with right-back Ricardo Pereira as coach Fernando Santos makes three changes to the European champions' starting XI from their 1-1 draw with Iran in their final group game. Cedric Soares and Andre Silva drop out along with Ricardo Quaresma, who netted Portugal's goal in that match. (Highlights: Uruguay vs Portugal)

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  • US ambassador to Estonia resigns over Trump comments - AP
  • ‘Smiling’ Somali Pirate Says Jailers Have Ruined His Grin - Daily Beast
  • Rainfall expected to drive food security improvement in Somalia: report - Xinhua
  • Kenya training a major boon, say Somalia’s South West state MPs - AMISOM
  • Foreign students detained over FETÖ links in Turkey's south - Hurriyet
  • 2 Wajir residents reported missing found dead - Daily Nation
  • Ethiopian police downplays security concerns ahead of mass rally in northern city - Xinhua
  • EU leaders reach migration deal after talks in Brussels - Mail Online
  • Minneapolis cops involved in shooting had prior awards - AP
  • Ten dead as ethnic violence flares in Ethiopia - CGTN
  • US Deports 84 Somalis to Home Country - VOA
  • U.S. intelligence believes N.Korea making more nuclear bomb fuel despite talks: NBC - Reuters
  • CDF Muhoozi Hosts Somali Counterpart Gen Hussein - Kampala Post

US ambassador to Estonia resigns over Trump comments

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Jari TannerSaturday June 30, 2018
HELSINKI (AP) — The U.S. ambassador to Estonia has resigned over frustrations with President Donald Trump's comments about the European Union and his treatment of Washington's European allies.
In a private Facebook message posted Friday, James D. Melville wrote: "For the President to say EU was 'set up to take advantage of the United States, to attack our piggy bank,' or that 'NATO is as bad as NAFTA' is not only factually wrong, but proves to me that it's time to go."
Melville was referring to Trump's recent comments at news conferences and on social media.
Ads By Google Melville stressed that a U.S. foreign service officer's "DNA is programmed to support policy and we're schooled right from the start, that if there ever comes a point where one can no longer do so, particularly if one is in a position of leadership, the honorable course is to resign."
Melville is a senior U.S. career diplomat who has served as the American ambassador in the Baltic nation and NATO member of Estonia since 2015. He has served at U.S. Embassies in Berlin, London and Moscow, among other postings.
"Having served under six presidents and 11 secretaries of state, I never really thought it would reach that point for me," he wrote, referring to a career with the State Department that started in the mid-1980s.
The U.S. Embassy in Tallinn confirmed to The Associated Press on Saturday that Melville "announced his intent to retire from the Foreign Service effective July 29 after 33 years of public service." It did not elaborate.
Foreign Policy magazine said Melville is one of the many senior U.S. diplomats who have resigned because of Trump's policies.

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  • Cavani Scores Twice As Uruguay Beat Portugal To Enter Quarters - NDTV_SP
  • ‘Smiling’ Somali Pirate Says Jailers Have Ruined His Grin - Daily Beast
  • Rainfall expected to drive food security improvement in Somalia: report - Xinhua
  • Kenya training a major boon, say Somalia’s South West state MPs - AMISOM
  • Foreign students detained over FETÖ links in Turkey's south - Hurriyet
  • 2 Wajir residents reported missing found dead - Daily Nation
  • Ethiopian police downplays security concerns ahead of mass rally in northern city - Xinhua
  • EU leaders reach migration deal after talks in Brussels - Mail Online
  • Minneapolis cops involved in shooting had prior awards - AP
  • Ten dead as ethnic violence flares in Ethiopia - CGTN
  • US Deports 84 Somalis to Home Country - VOA
  • U.S. intelligence believes N.Korea making more nuclear bomb fuel despite talks: NBC - Reuters
  • CDF Muhoozi Hosts Somali Counterpart Gen Hussein - Kampala Post

Independence Day is a day of myth and hallucination

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by Mohamed Hasan GelyacSunday, July 01, 2018

African countries and its people celebrate annually to mark a day called Independence Day.  It is the day that each African country respectively had established its own statehood-conventional governance.
The question coming into minds of many African independent thinkers is what is the significant of this Day? Should we have to celebrate?  And why?   Is it a day of happiness and achievement or a day of honoring our past colonizers?
No doubt, it has a great meaning for European invaders as it does and will preserve their footprints in African continent.   Not only that,  but the offspring of  west European colonizers of Africa are rejoicing each and every year the legacy and honors  their grand-parents left for them which is Africa was a dark place and  made them  inhabitable place.
Ads By Google On the contrary my fellow African brothers and sisters believe that it is a day of happiness and honoring their great –grand parents who fought for their freedom and dignity.  Well, If it’s not true that European perpetrators don’t joy and consider a day of recognition and thanksgiving, why shouldn’t they be angry at and respond to at least in a diplomatic reaction. 
For example, my home country Somalia, despite the incomprehensible magnitude of human tragedy taking place on a daily basis, people still go to the streets to celebrate this Independence Day.  Not to mention, millions of dollars spend on this occasion while millions of people are dying for hunger and treatable diseases. 
Some people wonder why Africans don’t commemorate days that reflecting their culture, history and religions.  Interestingly, we have our own important days like any nations and societies, eg.  Charismas day, Good Fridays, Eid days and Heritage day but we undervalue them due to relentless bombardment of other peoples’ culture.  Unfortunately, this happened because our incompetent leaders, so call African elites and western indoctrinated who consider themselves academics never taught people  days that have significant and relevant to their culture and beliefs.
In my opinion it shouldn’t be celebrated at least for two good reasons:  firstly, it is acknowledgment of the crimes committed by west Europeans people and thanking the living grand children.   Secondly, it is humiliation to us by admitting –we were nothing before you.  And we could better spend that money on somewhere rather useful such as hospitals, schools and other public infrastructures.  Hence I do believe it is vital to teach students as part of nations’ history.

Mohamed Hasan GelyacEmail: [email protected]
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Former Ethiopian senior official returns home following amnesty call

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Sunday July 1, 2018Kassa Kebede, the foreign policy chief of Ethiopia's former ruling party, returned home on Saturday after close to three decades of exile.Kebede, one of the top leaders of the Ethiopian Workers' Party (EWP) that ruled the East African country for 17 years, has been in exile for about 27 years since the current ruling coalition, the Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF), came into power.Kebede and other senior leaders of EWP, including former president Mengistu Hailemariam, have left the country, while a majority of them were sentenced to long-term imprisonment in absentia by an Ethiopian court.Ads By Google Ethiopia's new prime minister, Abiy Ahmed, recently declared an amnesty invitation for exiled Ethiopian politicians, journalists and human right activists to return home.Ads By Google Kebede, who had also served in different high-level ministerial positions of the previous government, said his return to Ethiopia is due to the ongoing reform and Ahmed's amnesty call.He also on Saturday met and discussed with Ethiopia's deputy prime minister Demeke Mekonnen.According to the Office of the Ethiopian Deputy Prime Minister, Mekonnen, commending Kebede's decision to return home, further called on Ethiopians in exile to follow suit.The Ethiopian government, following Ahmed's premiership in early April, has been implementing various decisions aimed at creating a nationwide reconciliation, which include the release of high-level political prisoners, invitation for Ethiopian rebel groups for talks as well as the decision to normalize relations with its regional arch-rival Eritrea.Meanwhile, Mohammed Ademo, a prominent Ethiopian journalist who is also in exile, revealed on Saturday his decisions to return home saying "my exile and longing for home have come to an end. I am glad that it coincided with this defining and pivotal moment of renewal for Ethiopia. I look forward to both the journey and the challenges."
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  • UN warns of 'catastrophe' as 160,000 flee southern Syria push - Al-Jazeera
  • Thousands march against US immigration policy - AFP
  • Saudi King Congratulates President of Somalia on Independence Day - Saudi Press Agency
  • ONLF Repeats Pledge to Disrupt Ethiopian Oil Production - Ethiopia Oserver
  • DP World to set up facility in Ethiopia - GulfToday
  • Ethiopia to lift terror label on three rebel groups - Xinhua
  • Somali Residents In US To Celebrate Their Homeland’s Independence - Wjon

Thousands march against US immigration policy

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Sunday July 1, 2018People hold placards during a 'Familes Belong Together' march and rally in Los Angeles, California on June 30, 2018 where a thousands turned out to decry the Trump administration's detention of families policy at the US Mexico border. PHOTO | FREDERIC J. BROWN | AFP Thousands of demonstrators marched in cities across the United States on Saturday against President Donald Trump's hard line immigration policy and to demand the immediate reunification of families separated at the border with Mexico.Directly across from the White House, demonstrators filled Lafayette Square park in an atmosphere of both indignation and sadness, before marching toward the Capitol.Boston, Chicago, Los Angeles, New York and Portland also saw crowds of protesters turn out, with celebrities including Alicia Keys and Lin-Manuel Miranda present in Washington and John Legend in Los Angeles.'FAMILIES BELONG TOGETHER'"We don't believe in borders, we don't believe in walls," Sebastian Medina-Tayac, of the Piscataway Indian Nation, declared in English and Spanish at the start of the rally dubbed "Families Belong Together."Loudspeakers broadcast the cries of a child split from relatives, as a Brazilian mother told of being separated from her own son."I missed nine months of his life and it should never have happened," said the woman, who only gave her name as Jocelyn.Her case dates from before the practice of separating families intensified in May."Shame! Shame!" the crowd responded in temperatures above 90 degrees Fahrenheit (33 Celsius).The president could not hear the protesters' shouts, as he spent the day in Bedminster, New Jersey at the Trump National Golf Club.Ads By Google There, too, protesters gathered on his motorcade route, many of them with signs about immigration policy."Asylum seekers are not criminals," said one.TRUMP'S REACTIONTrump took to Twitter to defend his stance on immigration."When people come into our Country illegally, we must IMMEDIATELY escort them back out without going through years of legal manoeuvring," he wrote."Our laws are the dumbest anywhere in the world. Republicans want Strong Borders and no Crime. Dems want Open Borders and are weak on Crime!"Starting in early May, in an attempt to staunch the flow of tens of thousands of migrants to the southern US border every month, Trump ordered the arrest of adults crossing the boundary illegally, including those seeking asylum.'VEILED RACISM'Many trying to cross the US-Mexico frontier are destitute, fleeing gang violence and other turmoil in Central America.As a result of Trump's crackdown, distraught children were separated from their families and, according to widely broadcast pictures, held in chain-link enclosures, a practice that sparked domestic and global outrage.Trump later signed an order ending the separation of families, but immigration lawyers say the process of reuniting children and their parents will be long and chaotic.About 2,000 children remained split from their parents, according to official figures released last weekend."It's thinly-veiled racism," Dorothy Carney, a 59-year-old middle school French and Latin teacher, told AFP at the Washington rally."The way for evil to win is for good people to do nothing. This is doing at least something."CRUELTYRita Montoya, 36, a Washington lawyer, was born in California but has Mexican origins and arrived at the protest with her two sons, aged two and four."We're children of immigrants," she said. "We've been putting in our dues in this country for a long time, and this country needs to start paying us some respect."The mood was similar in New York, where Julia Lam, 58, joined the protest with two friends and their young children in strollers.Lam is a mother and retired fashion designer who emigrated from Hong Kong in the 1980s."I think it's really cruel to separate kids," she said."I am angry. I'm very sad already with what is going on with our country. I just don't see how a human being would do such a thing."Lawyer Courtney Malloy, 34, said it was important to show support for immigrants and that administration policies are "not America.""This is not what we stand for and this is not okay, and we will not stand here and watch our country be torn apart and watch babies be torn from their mothers," she told AFP.Malloy held up a sign that read: "The Only Baby Who Belongs in a Cage is Donald Trump."DISBAND AGENCYFamilies, young people, children and the elderly — both recent arrivals and long-time citizens — all stood under a burning sun as part of a protest that a New York police officer said numbered "a couple of thousand.""Say it loud, say it clear, refugees are welcome here," they chanted, also declaring a welcome for Muslims.A band of drummers whipped up the fervour of a crowd, carrying signs such as "Our New York is Immigrant New York.""Abolish ICE," read another sign, reflecting growing calls by activists for disbanding the country's frontline immigration enforcement agency.BORDER WALLIn the Mexican border city of Ciudad Juarez, about 50 activists marched through downtown and travelled on to an international bridge, holding banners against the border wall Trump wants to build and militarization of the areas alongside it."Parents do not know what is happening with their children, and they are housed in unhealthy areas, in cages like dogs," said protester Jose Luis Castillo.The protests come after the US Supreme Court on Tuesday handed Trump a major victory by upholding his ban on travellers from five primarily Muslim nations.More than 500 women, including a member of Congress, were arrested Thursday in the US Capitol complex protesting Trump's immigration policy.Trump has made fighting immigration — both illegal and legal — a major plank of his "America First" policy agenda.The Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency makes arrests and otherwise enforces the administration's immigration crackdown, but an emerging coalition of politicians, activists and pro-immigrant protesters has begun calling for the agency to be dismantled."Occupy ICE" camps have been set up in several US states.
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  • UN warns of 'catastrophe' as 160,000 flee southern Syria push - Al-Jazeera
  • Former Ethiopian senior official returns home following amnesty call - Xinhua
  • Saudi King Congratulates President of Somalia on Independence Day - Saudi Press Agency
  • ONLF Repeats Pledge to Disrupt Ethiopian Oil Production - Ethiopia Oserver
  • DP World to set up facility in Ethiopia - GulfToday
  • Ethiopia to lift terror label on three rebel groups - Xinhua
  • Somali Residents In US To Celebrate Their Homeland’s Independence - Wjon

Alshabaab oo bacda ka mamnuucday deegaanada ay ka taliyaan

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Alshabaab ayaa ku doodaysa in bacda ay halis ku hayso deegaanka iyo xoolaha, wixii hadda ka dambeeyana ay mamnuuc tahay.

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