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Friday, December 14, 2012

Guddoomiyaha Wargeyska Waaheen Oo Madaxtooyaddu U Xidhay Eedaymo Ururada Xuquuqal Iisaanku U Jeediyeen Wiil Madaxwaynuhu Sodog U Yahay




Thursday, December 13th, 2012


Ciidamadda dambi-baadhista ee CID-da ayaa maanta xabsiga u taxaabay Guddoomiyaha Wargeyska Waaheen Maxamuud Cabdi Jaamac (Xuuto).

Editor-in-Chief of Waaheen, Mohamoud Abdi Jama holding his Award

Ciidamadda CID-da ayaa Wariyaha xidhay ka dib markii saraakiil Madaxtooyadda ka tirsani soo gaadhsiiyeen waaran qabasho ah oo ay ka soo samaysteen Maxkamada Gobolka Hargeysa si loo xidho Guddoomiyaha Wargeyska Waaheen.

Wariye Xuuto ayaa la xidhay ka dib markii Taliyaha Ciidamadda CID-da Maxamed Muuse Abraar uu la soo xidhiidhay isla-markaana uu ugu tagay xaruntooda, iyaga oo markaa ka dib u sheegay inuu xidhan yahay, haystaana waaran Maxkamadeed.

Maxamuud Cabdi Jaamac (Xuuto), ayaa ciidamada CID-du u sheegeen in lagu haysto war ku soo baxay Wargeyska Waaheen, kaasi oo ku saabsanaa Wiil Madaxwayne Siilaanyo sodog u yahay oo Guddoomiyaha isku xidhka ururada xuquuqal Iisaanka Somaliland Saleebaan Xuquuq uu ku eedeeyay inuu sanad kasta boqolaal kun oo doolar ka qaato telefiishanka qaranka.

Ciidamadda CID-da ayaa Guddoomiye Xuuto u sheegay in looga baahan yahay inuu soo caddeeyo halka Wiilkaasi uu lacagtaasi kaga qaato telefiishanka iyo musuqmaasuqa uu ku kacay.

Warka baahintiisa lagu haysto Xuuto ayaa waxa uu afkiisa ka soo baxay Guddoomiyaha isku xidhka ururada xuquuqal Iisaanka Somaliland Saleebaan Xuquuq, balse Madaxtooyadda oo waarankan soo goosatay waxay ka warwareegtay inay toos u abaarto masuulkii hadalkaasi ka soo baxay, balse sida cad waxay waaran u soo samaysatay Guddoomiyaha Waaheen.

Short URL: http://waaheen.com/?p=55540


Somaliland Court Orders the Arrest of a Journalist for Covering Human Rights Day Events and Reporting on Corruption Allegations against the President’s Son-in-Law Lodged by Activists


Friday, December 14th, 2012 


Editor-in-Chief of Waaheen, Mohamoud Abdi Jama


The Editor-in-Chief of Waaheen, Mohamoud Abdi Jama, was summoned to the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) and detained on a court warrant issued by the Hargeisa regional court.  CID officials told the editor that the warrant was based on the paper’s coverage of events organized by independent human rights activities commemorating the 2012 Human Rights Day.

At the event the Chairman of the independent human rights activist spoke about rampant corruption by the government of public funds and in particular that funds for the National TV are diverted by the Son-in-Law of the President.  Other speakers made similar corruption allegations.  CID officials told Mr. Jama that he must prove the allegations made by the speakers and that he will be brought in front of a judge on Saturday 15 December.

Transparency has recently included Somaliland as one of the most corrupt countries in the world.
Mr. Jama has been detained many times and served more than a month under a three-year sentence imposed on him in 2010 for covering an interview by the then police commissioner.  He was subsequently awarded the 2011 CNN Africa Freedom of the Press Award.  This will be the second time Somaliland courts find fault for reporting on what officials say at public events. 

Short URL: http://waaheen.com/?p=55543

Abaarso Tech Headmaster calls Halbeegnews article false and misleading


Thursday, December 13, 2012

Abaarso Tech Press Release:

A recent article in Halbeeg News falsely claimed that one of our teachers was the headmaster of Abaarso Tech, and that Halbeeg has proof that this teacher told female students not to wear headscarves.


 I am the Abaarso Tech Headmaster and I can strongly say that Abaarso Tech is a Muslim school that would expel any female student who does not wear a headscarf, and would discipline or fire any teacher who told students not to wear a headscarf.  It is in the Abaarso Tech Student Handbook that all female students must wear head-scarves.  In addition, it is expected that even all female American teachers at Abaarso Tech wear head-scarves in public.  Anyone who has seen the Abaarso Tech female teachers would know that in fact they always respectfully cover themselves in class and when in public.

Unfortunately, this type of misleading story about Abaarso Tech is often told by individuals who try to damage Abaarso Tech for their personal benefit.  These individuals cannot attack Abaarso Tech’s academic success, so instead they try to portray the Americans as corrupting the religion.  Here are the facts:

Abaarso Tech has a large mosque on campus and all teachers sign a document that they will respect Islam and will not teach any other religions.

Abaarso Tech has recently implemented intense measures to keep male and female separation at all times.  Students breaking the rules face harsh punishments including long suspensions and expulsions.

Abaarso Tech has extremely tough policies against cheating and Abaarso Tech teaches Muslim values such as honesty and integrity.  Students who break the cheating policies face suspensions and expulsion.

If anyone has evidence of Abaarso Tech students or teachers acting in an inappropriate manner against Islam, then please bring this evidence to my attention so we can immediately act to correct the situation.  This includes any evidence that Halbeeg News claims to possess.

Finally, anyone who wants to know more about Abaarso Tech’s commitment to Islamic values should come visit the school so they can make their own judgement   Abaarso Tech is committed to becoming a great school that properly respects the Islamic religion.

Sincerely,

Jonathan Starr , Headmaster , Managing Director , Co-Founder 
Abaarso Tech

Thursday, December 13, 2012

Breakaway state to get fast access via microwave and LTE, says Somcable CEO Michael Cothill



12 December 2012
More than 20 years after Somaliland set up a democratic breakaway from troubled Somalia, Somcable is connecting it to Africa’s new submarine cables using microwave downlink and LTE uplink. CEO Michael Cothill talks to Alan Burkitt-Gray

                          
Michael Cothill: I’ve had 25 years of telecommunications
experience in Africa and my goal is to get unprecedented bandwidth
to Africa
                  
                      
Michael Cothill is building a telecoms network in a country that you won’t find on many maps. Somaliland sounds familiar, but it is formed of part of the northern territory of Somalia, from which it declared independence in 1991.
Cothill is CEO of Somcable, backed by a local business group, which is using a mixture of microwave transmission and LTE to deliver broadband to companies and residential subscribers across the emergent nation.
“We were awarded the exclusive licence for a fibre optic cable system for Somaliland, the democratically run portion of the region,” says Cothill — who is working on plans for the owner of the company to expand into neighbouring parts of the Horn of Africa.
The company’s Somaliland network is connected into the world’s telecoms systems via the new submarine cables that land at the bordering country of Djibouti on their way along the Red Sea from northern Egypt and the Mediterranean beyond. The very fact of the new cables means that Somaliland potentially has better voice and data access now than most of sub-Saharan Africa did a few years ago, before the new cables were installed. “There are five fibre optic cables coming into Djibouti, virtually at our front door,” says Cothill.
The country is recognised as a nation by very few others, including France and the UK, but not the US. Somaliland’s democratically elected president, Ahmed Mahamoud Silanyo, visited London in early 2012 for talks with the UK’s foreign minister, William Hague — but Hague’s ministry tells prospective visitors to the region: “We advise against all travel to Somalia, including Somaliland.” Meanwhile the US Central Intelligence Agency’s online world factbook puts “Somaliland” in inverted commas.
Since June 2012 there has been a glimmer of hope that there will be peace between Somalia and a number of breakaway regions, including Somaliland. Talks in London, Istanbul and Dubai have opened the way to cooperation between the warring factions.
“Somaliland has most of the economic value of greater Somalia,” says Cothill, who joined Somcable in January 2012. It is working with three cellular operators in the region, “mainly GSM services, and a little HSDPA, and a limited number of services offering wifi”, to provide backhaul to Djibouti and to a back-up hub in Berbera, Somaliland’s own port on the Red Sea.
                
                
Incumbent provider
                
“The company is essentially the incumbent backhaul provider,” he says, “but with three operators you can’t just survive on backhaul.” Hence the company has diversified to sign up its own customers so it can offer them direct access. The first customers will be connected in January 2013.
Somcable’s parent company is MSG Holdings, owned by businessman Mohamed Said Guedi, “well respected and personally extremely wealthy”, says Cothill. “One of his companies is Independent Tobacco, a huge state-of-the-art fully automated manufacturer located in Dubai.”
Guedi has set up a new telecoms holding company, Independent Holdings, “to manage the new strategy of serving the entire eastern Horn of Africa”, adds Cothill. “This is currently being capitalised and will feature some prominent operators in the region.”
Cothill is group CEO of Independent Holdings, which includes the assets of both Somcable and a separate entity, GlobalReach, whose website says: “Global Reach Communications was formed to offer customers a full turnkey data and telecommunications solution primarily to the emerging markets of the world.”
Cothill, who is a smaller shareholder in the group, notes: “I expect the details to be available in around three months.” MSG has a controlling stake while “all other parties hold minority shares”, he adds. “The aim is to go public in the very near future as we need a large injection of capital to deploy our plan aggressively. We have hired a branding firm to position our entire group and this is actively taking place.”
What other countries is Independent Holdings looking at? Cothill hints at Ethiopia, southern Somalia and South Sudan — which broke away from its northern neighbour in July 2011 — as well as Kenya and Uganda. All of these can be connected to the world’s telecoms networks through Djibouti, he points out.
Within Somaliland, Somcable — based in the capital, Hargeisa — has built a fibre optic network. “We have trenched 700-800 kilometres of cable. We are digging about 1.5 metres deep and installing armoured cable.” The network is connecting to similar cable across the border in Ethiopia “where they are laying cable like crazy”, says Cothill. “It’s landlocked and they reach the ocean through Djibouti or Port Sudan.”
Or, thanks to the connection with Somcable, potentially to Berbera — which is undergoing renovation with the aim of making it “the biggest deepwater port in the region after Djibouti”. There is the sniff of oil in the area, he says: “Our organisation is well positioned to profit from that.”
                
                
Wideband microwave
                
But the fibre isn’t intended to reach the end customers. What Somcable is doing — with the assistance of equipment provider Bluwan — is building a wideband microwave network, operating at 12 gigahertz, as a “last-mile wireless” network to deliver data signals to customers around each base station.
Each base station is divided into four sectors of 90 degrees each, and each sector transmits at up to 2.5 gigabits a second — making 10 gigabits for the whole tower. Signals reach up to five kilometres in the rain, says Bluwan’s chief commercial officer, Shayan Sanyal.
Somcable is using “different types of LTE” for the return path, operating at 700 megahertz with 20 megahertz of spectrum. Each customer can download at up to 100 megabits a second, and uplink speed is 5-6 megabits, with a maximum of 160 megabits a second per sector.
“We’re calling it ‘fibre-through-the-air’,” says Cothill. “We had to find a way to get service for $10-$20 a customer. Working this way allows us to realise bandwidth to customers in abundance at very low prices. We have to have volume. Without LTE we wouldn’t have volume.”
Somcable’s service will potentially transform telecoms access in the region, which today relies on low-bandwidth microwave and satellite connections. “The average throughput is 64 kilobits a second,” says Cothill. “With the access solution we can provide you’ll be able to get full triple-play services.”
Some of Somcable’s customers will be internet providers based in kiosks that will use wifi to connect with their own end customers in the district. “They will have a dish on the roof and integrated LTE, and the wifi will operate in a 600 metre radius of the shop,” he says. “With backhauling at 100 megabits a second the ISPs will be able to share this between 25, 50 or 100 users at any one time.”
                
                
New York switching
                
The systems integrator of the technology is a Nasdaq-listed US company called Globecomm Systems, based just outside New York City at Hauppauge on Long Island, says Cothill. Customers include US and other government agencies. It built a new telecoms network for Afghanistan in a World Bank-backed project.
Globecomm announced its contract with Somcable in September 2012, when it valued the contract at $2.7 million to install “new broadband wireless system technology” in order “to deliver voice, internet, TV and video communication services to [Somcable] subscribers with the goal of developing a framework of a carrier class communications service provider”.
It will install only the radio equipment in Somaliland, says Cothill, using microwave kit from Bluewan with LTE from both Ericsson and ZTE. The core network will be hosted in Hauppage, which means traffic will travel from north-east Africa to be routed and switched in the US. “That gives us economies of scale,” he adds.
One of the biggest challenges to the network installation is the lack of reliable electric power. “We use a mixture of solar power, local generators and the grid. In all the regions we work in we provide power plants and we also work with neighbouring countries to import power.”
Following the planned January 2013 switch-on of customers in Somaliland, Cothill will start looking at the next stage. “We want to replicate this across the eastern seaboard of Africa. I’ve had 25 years of telecommunications experience in Africa and my goal is to get unprecedented bandwidth to Africa.”
The new submarine cables have come to Africa — and more are expected. Now there are serious moves to increase the bandwidth connecting to the rest of the world to 25 terabits by 2015. The next vital step — the inland links from the landing stations to real users — has started. 

Man has been sentenced to nearly 10 years in prison for plotting to travel to Somalia to take up arms with the al-Qaeda linked militant jihadi group the Shebab.


Man gets 10 years for Somalia terror plan

A CHICAGO man has been sentenced to nearly 10 years in prison for plotting to travel to Somalia to take up arms with the al-Qaeda linked militant jihadi group the Shebab.
Shaker Masri, 29, pleaded guilty in July to plotting to provide material support to a designated terrorist group.
He is one of dozens of US citizens arrested in recent years for trying to participate in or support the two-decade long civil war.
Masri was born in Alabama and lived in Chicago's upscale Gold Coast neighbourhood prior to his 2010 arrest, which took place just hours before he was scheduled to travel to Somalia.
He admitted to plotting for months to raise the funds he needed to engage in jihad in either Somalia or Afghanistan and told an FBI informant that he wanted to volunteer for a suicide mission.
"Shaker Masri wanted to take the lives of human beings - including his own - to wreak havoc and advance a terrorist agenda," Gary Shapiro, acting US attorney for the northern district of Illinois, said in a statement on Tuesday.
"Through the hard work and dedication of a team of federal agents and prosecutors, he was stopped, and today's sentence ensures that those who would lend support to terrorist organisations will be punished."

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/breaking-news/man-gets-10-years-for-somalia-terror-plan/story-fn3dxix6-1226534997399

In-depth Somalia report analyses the evolving threat of al-Shabaab



11/12/2012

In-depth Country Risk Report - Somalia

Maplecroft’s Country Risk report on Somalia analyses the evolving threat posed by the al-Shabaab militant group in Somalia. The report evaluates the implications of al-Shabaab being pushed north by increasingly successful military operations in central and southern Somalia, and the risk that the comparatively stable autonomous regions of Somaliland and Puntland will be destabilised as a result.
The report assesses the dynamic threat posed to each region of Somalia by al-Shabaab, charts the group’s history (to inform analysis of its likely future strategies), and examines the government capacity to cope with the militant group in each region of the country. In addition, the report looks at the security and operational implications for companies with interests in Somaliland, Puntland and Mogadishu, before providing four key scenarios for the development of al-Shabaab and the implications for doing business in the country associated with each scenario.
Companies should be aware that al-Shabaab’s insurgency has evolved in scope and focus following significant military defeats during 2011 and 2012 in central and southern Somalia – an area that it once dominated – and the group poses increasing risks to business operations in northern Somalia.
Al-Shabaab’s loss of Kismayo – a key logistical hub and source of revenue for the insurgency – has contributed to elements of the group being pushed northwards towards the autonomous region of Puntland, and, to a lesser extent, Somaliland, in an attempt to regroup and consolidate. Of the two regions, it is likely that Puntland will become a new strategic base for al-Shabaab, given the region’s weak institutional capacity, high levels of corruption, and lack of the rule of law, which together contribute to a poor security environment in which militancy can prosper. Furthermore, Puntland provides an ideal harbouring territory for the group in the remote Golis Mountain region, which is conducive to the guerrilla-style warfare increasingly employed by the group.
Furthermore, the report states that it is likely that al-Shabaab will seek to draw a coastal region under its sphere of influence to replace the logistically important loss of Kismayo. Ports easily accessible from the Golis Mountains, and readily accessible to arms shipments from allied militant groups – such as al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) – operating from ports across the Red Sea in Yemen are at particular risk. Al-Shabaab’s movement northwards could negatively affect foreign direct investment inflows to the region, which could contribute towards an even greater reduction in governmental resilience and capacity to combat the group.

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Somalia: Is General Mohamed Ali Samantar partially responsible the State failure?


 
 By: Omar Mohamud Dholawaa
Who is Mohamed Ali Samantar? Mohamed Ali Samantar was a member of the politburo of the Somali Government from 1969 to 1991. General Samantar was the first vice-president from 1969 up to 1989. He was the longest serving Defense Minister of Somalia from 1970 up to 1987, then the Prime Minister of Somalia from 1987 to 1990 (1st of February 1987 to 3rd of September 1991). Mr. Samantar was a close friend of Mohamed Siad Barre, the former president of Somalia. Mohamed Ali Samantar heads and executed the biggest mission that Somalia ever embarked its history and that was the Ogaden war from 1977 to 1978. During his term, Ali Samantar headed several delegations destined to many foreign countries to sign national treaties or agreements between Somalia and other nations in the world. Ali Samantar’s authority and status had never been questioned. His social stratification had never been examined or overshadowed by any negatively-charged social clouds. His sanity and his personality have never been in doubt. Furthermore, many Somalis use to believe that he was in-charge of the entire nation because of his proximate to the ailing leader and his position as a Minister of Defense and briefly the Prime Minister.
General Samantar and his colleagues had been running the country, from tea boy to president. Late 1969 they took over, and further strengthened, one of the strongest military army in Africa and the most highly trained and highly disciplined police force in the continent. All judicial and other governmental institutions were well established and functional. The masses, the Somali citizens, were desperate to be led and they pose no challenge against this regime. From 1969 to late 1989, Somalia was the focus of the world superpowers and relatively rich Arab neighbours on other side of the red sea. These parts; the West, the East and the rich Arab neighbours, have heavily bombarded with money to the Somali treasury for geopolitical reasons. The Somali government of the time had enormously benefited from these readily available resources in money terms. Nevertheless, how they manage, run, guide and direct their subjects was entirely their choice. They could shape and form socially viable and competitive citizens or help them to head the highway to hell. I believe they choose the later option.
During the regime’s era they have practiced the legitimacy to rule the country in their own terms from south to north. During this time many injustices had been done; many people were killed with no legal ground, many were denied the rights of employment, many citizens’ property or assets were either destroyed or confiscated. Many foreign businesses were nationalized without taking the proper channels. The people’s concern of injustice, the proliferation of tribalism and favoritism had been ignored and allowed to prosper. The freedom of expression had been denied. The basic education had been neglected and abandoned. The wrongs had replaced the rights and the Somali citizens frantically struggled to find alternatives, in most cases, violently.
Ultimately, after years of death and destruction coupled by torturous and traumatic experience and the continuous failure of the leadership in all areas of government, the Somali State automatically promoted itself from failed State to collapsed State in 1991. Then, all imaginable and unimaginable social ills and social evils had officially emerged in Somalia.
Now the Question is who should be held responsible for this State failure and its consequence? Is it Qanyare, Suudi Yallahow, Aideed, or Omar Finish and alike. No. None of these individuals are, in my view, responsible to what happened in Somalia and to the Somalians. Surely, one may argue that those people in the south are lacking the skills to rule and consequently failed to pick themselves up from the ashes and move on. But rationally they should not be blamed for the past failures and the social catastrophe that followed.
Now, to come to the point of the discussion, is General Samantar at least partially responsible to what happened to us and our land?
In short, Ali Samantar, as I said earlier, was a member of the Politburo (the sole decision makers of the nation), first vice-president, and the Minister of Defense. The Ministry of Defense was responsible for the execution of all illegal and evil actions that the Somali government has carried out against its people. Ali Samantar and his apparatus in the army had the implicit mandate to kill, destroy, arrest and carry out all the terrorizing acts that the Somali people had experienced during Samantar’s era in the Ministry. The military machine carried out all the summary executions that took place in Somalia from Hargeisa to Jassira beach and in between. Of course there are others, whether they are still alive or dead, who should share with him these responsibilities, but he is the only living person to answer and may be held responsible to what happened to the Somali people. This is purely because of his status and his position of the government that ruled Somalia from 1969 to 1991.
One may ask and argue about the difference between Ali Samantar and Yallahow, one of the notorious Somali warlords, who is now enjoying his new title, so-called the ‘Member of Parliament’. The simple answer is Ali Samantar was educated, trained, employed, crowned with the Somali flag, empowered and sworn in to serve the Somali people by a Somali Government. In other words, Samantar had statutory authority. In contrary, Suudi Yallahow has emerged from the dust and the debris that Ali Samantar and his colleagues had left behind, and he unskillfully struggled to survive in that mayhem. However, that will not absolve him (Yallahow) from any wrong doing, even though no one has entrusted him any responsibility and he never received a mandate or directive from anyone.
Therefore, legally and rationally General Mohamed Ali Samantar should be held responsible not only the crimes that his lieutenants committed in his Ministry but what happened to Somalia since then. In my view, all evils and human-devils that emerged after 22 years of corrupted, dictatorial, oppressive, aggressive, tyrannical, despotic and cruel regime should be held responsible to Samantar and his colleagues respectively. A Somali baby boy, who was born when Ali Samantar joined the leadership of the Somali Government turned 22 years in 1991 and he (the Somali boy) violently and madly chased the General out of the country. This boy simply took the path that the General and his colleagues had paved for him. Definitely, this boy could be, if he is guided to the right path, a law abiding citizen who can differentiate wrongs from rights and consequently respect and protect the General and his colleagues rather than chasing them.
Confusingly, despite all this empirical evidence, some people are defending Ali Samantar and helping him financially to challenge against the people whose loved ones he (Ali Samantar) has killed. If history has any significance in this context; Milosevic, Pol Pot, Hitler, and the Rwandese perpetrators have not pulled the trigger, but they were legally hunted down purely because of their statutory authority and what their lieutenants had committed in their respective countries. Is General Samantar different from them!!! Or are the defenders just victims of Stockholm syndrome1.
Sadly, this defense exercise, in favor of the General, will have colossal political and social dimensions in Somalia.
The political dimension concerns the facts that the union of the South and the North was based on brotherhood and common interest. If the southerners are so openly defending a man who is seen by the northerners the killer of their children, mums and dads unlawfully, then obviously the northerners will be left nothing but to conclude that this is a conspiracy against northern inhabitants. And it will definitely, in the long term, diminish the trust, if any, between the two parts.
The social dimension, applies the rights of the citizen and what someone can or cannot do in Somalia. Unfortunately, the main argument of General Samantar’s supporters is there are so many other criminals who are not incriminated yet. That may be true, but it is extremely difficulty to comprehend how your neighbor can challenge against you if you want to take to court the man who you believe to be responsible for the death of your loved ones, because some one on the other side of road was not incriminated by his/her victim. What kind of message will this send to the Somali society? I wonder why northerners (Somaliland) are so adamant to secede once and for all. I also wonder why many people are killed by Somalians and no one is held accountable!!!
In conclusion, I sincerely believe, that anyone who has been victimized should have the opportunity to take his alleged villain to the court without any obstruction, where the defendant has the right to respond to the raised allegations. Anything different from this process will surely make us a jungle-society that should apply the law of the jungle.
Omar Mohamud Farah (Dhollawaa)
Dhollawaa@yahoo.com.au
Short URL: http://waaheen.com/?p=10047

NO COMMENT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!


A jolt to the penis may cure impotence



When our penis hydraulics fail, we’ll swallow our pride and the magic pills, and if they fail, we’ll vacuum pump it, tie it up with rubber bands, use a needle and syringe to shoot drugs into it, and, if none of that works, we’ll have the poor guy reamed out and stuffed with plastic tubes we can fill with salt water for woodies on demand.

Now some Israeli doctors have tried yet another technique: shocking the poor thing. Using something they call “low-intensity extracorporeal shock wave therapy,” a team from the Rambam Healthcare Campus in Haifa actually succeeded in giving recalcitrant penises a boost.

A year ago, they announced that a study using both tissue in culture dishes and actual humanerectile dysfunction patients appeared to indicate that applying shockwaves to the tissue sparked the growth of new blood vessels. That’s important because erections are caused by blood rushing into the penile vasculature. Often, as men age, we accumulate vasculature damage. Sometimes as a result of diabetes or cardiovascular disease, the penile blood vessels degrade. E.D. pills like Viagra boost blood flow into the penis to compensate.

Last time, the team tested the idea on patients who responded to PD-5 inhibitors like Viagra. This time, they selected patients, many with complicating diseases like diabetes, who did not, or were no longer, responding to the pills.

In each treatment session, men were given 300 shocks over a period of three minutes, on five points along the shaft of the penis. There were two sessions per week for three weeks, then three weeks off, and then another three-week treatment period. The shocks were tiny, really, and the men didn’t complain of any pain or discomfort.

The goal was to see if the therapy would make the pills any more effective.

Two months after the treatments concluded, erection scores — yes, erections get scores just like Olympic divers — improved in 75 percent of the 29 men in the study. Eight men, nearly 30 percent, had erections in the normal range when they used an E.D. pill. Blood flow improved in all the men. That’s pretty impressive considering seven of the men were already using the injections and two of the men were considering a penile implant — a drastic last resort.

The study authors stress that this was not a placebo-controlled trial of the technique and they plan more tests. Still, it’s pretty big news if this shock therapy really can spark new vessel growth. If so, shocking your boy may well become standard. If, that is, our abused penises don’t rebel first.

- msnbc.com