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Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Reverse brain drain: Heading home to Somalia


Tristan McConnellDecember 26, 2012

“There has to be some point in your life when you go back to look after your relatives and contribute to your country."
British-Somali woman Ayan Hussein stands behind the counter at her newly opened Kulan Art Cafe in Hargeisa. (Tristan McConnell/GlobalPost)
HARGEISA, Somalia — The Kulan Art Café is a bright airy place with murals and framed paintings by local artists, potted plants, fresh coffee and ice cream, homemade cakes and a menu featuring Western staples like pizza and hamburgers.

In Hargeisa, the capital of the breakaway state of Somaliland, there is nothing else like it. Nor is there anything like it elsewhere in Somalia, which is attracting increasing numbers of diaspora Somalis as the country gradually emerges from decades of conflict.

Among the returnees is the café’s owner Ayan Hussein, a striking woman in her 40s who decided to return to Somalia two years ago.

Clutching her three young children Hussein fled the capital Mogadishu in 1997. They settled in London, first as refugees then as British citizens. The north London suburb of Hampstead became their home, and her children grew up as Londoners.

With an eye for fashion Hussein worked as a freelance stylist, designing weddings for wealthy clients and advising fashionistas on the right handbags to carry. She often worked at Browns, an uber-trendy boutique in London’s West End.

But after 15 years she decided it was time to return to Somalia. “There has to be some point in your life when you go back to look after your relatives and contribute to your country. It’s a beautiful time to come back,” she told GlobalPost over a cup of Ethiopian coffee at Kulan one recent morning.

The more than 20 years of chaos, warfare and destruction that ripped Somalia apart propelled many of its citizens abroad. Today Somalis constitute one of the largest, most far-flung diaspora communities on the planet, with an estimated 1.5 million in the US, Europe and the Gulf States.

In many cases they were the lucky ones. But although they left they continued to support networks of relatives in Somalia, sending back up to $2 billion a year in remittances according to World Bank estimates.

As Somalia’s war begins to subside, the trickle of returning diaspora Somalis is becoming a tide. The more hardy among them head to the capital Mogadishu, where the beginnings of an investment boom have been discernible since Al Qaeda-aligned militants left in August 2011, but where suicide bombings still threaten.

Others, like Hussein, choose the far safer option of Somaliland — a region that has run its own affairs since declaring independence in 1991, but has yet to be recognized by any foreign state.

“I know Mogadishu is getting better but I have family here and it’s safer,” she said.

Diaspora Somalis often bring with them skills, education, money and new ideas, making them better equipped to profit from Somalia’s fragile peace. But they also face culture shock and resentment from those who stayed behind.

More from GlobalPost: Reverse brain drain, Thais ditch the American rat race

Hussein admitted she finds it easier to identify with others from the diaspora because “they understand the ways of living outside.” Her businesses reflect this.

The inspiration for Kulan Art Café came from watching as her own children struggled to settle into their new home, and wanting to provide something familiar from “our other home,” as she calls London.

“A lot of children from the diaspora, my own included, suffer in the sense that, where do you get pizzas, burgers, ravioli with cheese? There’s no place,” she said.

Hussein’s oldest son Mohamed, 23, refused to leave London but her 26-year-old daughter Sagal, and younger sons Guled, 19, and Gabriel, 5, moved with her.

Sagal and Guled work at the café and also at Hussein’s fashion boutique across the road which stocks imported clothes, accessories, makeup and perfume, but for them the move has not been easy.

“Even though I’m from here I’m also from London so the way things are here, I didn’t expect it. It was a total culture shock,” said Guled, who can understand but cannot speak Somali.

“I tend to make friends with people from abroad,” he said.

In London he was a skater riding the concrete ramps and slopes of Cantelowes Skatepark in Camden, north London. “Here everything is dust. You can’t skate on dust,” he said. The road outside is typical: broken tarmac and dust verges studded with telegraph polls capped by crazy birds’ nests of telephone and electrical wire.

“What I like doing here and what I like doing in London are two completely different things. I had to adapt and change,” said Guled.

Guled misses his skate parks, but for Hussein it’s the green outdoor spaces, running water and reliable electricity that she longs for. And in conservative Somalia she has had to work hard to indulge what she calls “my passions: food and fashion.”

At both her café and shop customers are mostly from the diaspora. They sit at tables chatting in British and American accents drinking $0.50 cappuccinos and sharing $2 slices of homemade carrot cake.

The young women who buy designer jeans from Hussein’s shop have to hide them beneath long abayas.

“It’s difficult because it’s an Islamic country there’s a very thin line and you can easily make a mistake,” she said.

Security Challenges Await Somalia After Historic Year

Gabe Joselow
December 25, 2012

NAIROBI — In the last 12 months, Somalia has approved a new constitution, selected a new parliament, president and prime minister, making way for the first stable government in over 20 years.

In August, members of Somalia's new parliament took the oath of office in a parking lot outside the Mogadishu airport.

The selection of the 275-seat body represented one of the most substantial achievements in ending the country's eight-year political transition and ushering in a new, representative government.

The political progress has inspired confidence in the international community.

Iran reopened its embassy in Somalia this year, Britain appointed an ambassador and the United Nations says it will move more of its staff to Mogadishu. Turkish Airlines began regular flights to the Somalia capital in May as Ankara leads the charge to boost investment in the country.

Abdirahman Aadle, a politician with the Unity party in Mogadishu, says this has been an historic year.

“The government accomplished the most difficult tasks during the period,” he says, “It has changed a lot in our nation’s history,” Aadle said.

As one of its first tasks, the new parliament elected President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud, an educator and civil society leader with few ties to the outgoing, and notoriously corrupt, transitional government.

He has since appointed a new prime minister who has selected  a cabinet that includes the country's first female foreign minister.

However, the government has not been universally well-received in Mogadishu. Somali political analyst Ibrahim Adow says the political newcomers leading the government are unprepared for the job.

"We can say 80 per cent of them don’t know about democracy," he says, "because its not one of the things people have practiced in the country before and the constitution itself is built on the basis of democracy." Abdow says that means it can be problematic for doing things that require political experience.

Security remains the biggest challenge for the new government. Just days after the new president was sworn into office in September, three suicide bombers struck outside a hotel in Mogadishu where he was meeting with a delegation from Kenya.

At the time, he said security would be his first, second and third priorities.

The situation has improved as the African Union peacekeeping force, AMISOM, working with Kenya and Ethiopia, has driven al-Shabab militants out of their strongholds in Mogadishu and south-central Somalia.

But Somali analyst, Abdiwahab Sheikh Abdisamed says Somalia's own national army still remains a remarkably weak institution, divided by internal clan rivalries.

“If today, God forbid, the AMISOM left abruptly, Somalia would go back to the clanism, clan competitions, warlordism, and so on and so forth. So, the current military personnel, mainly they came from the Hawiye clan, those around the Mogadishu areas, so are they loyal to the government? [It] is a question everyone is asking for himself,” Abdisamed said.

Another challenge for the new government is how to administer territory being reclaimed from al-Shabab. The port city of Kismayo in southern Somalia is one of the most economically important claims in the last year.

Clans in the area are competing for control of the city, and trying to establish a new state in the area like the autonomous regions of Puntland and Somaliland in the north, challenging the central government which is trying to establish a stronger presence outside the capital.

The political struggle for control over Kismayo and the Jubaland region highlights the tension between Mogadishu and other regions of Somalia, an issue that could undermine the political progress made in the past year.

source: VOA

16 Facts About “Domestic” Violence and Peace

16 Facts About Violence in Homes around the world

Would you believe it if I said that when a country reduces its rates of violence against girls and women it also lowers its propensity for engaging in military conflict?  There are meaningful, powerful and verifiable connections between violence in the home and a nation’s level of militarization and war. It turns out that the security of girls and women — how safe they are in their homes, in their schools, on their streets — is a measure of the security of the state they live in.

Such is the conclusion of a fascinating book, Sex and World Peace, by M. Hudson, Bonnie Ballif-Spanvill, Mary Caprioli, and Chad F. Emmett. Here is how they put it:

“The very best predictor of a state’s peacefulness is not its level of wealth, its level of democracy, or its ethno-religious identity; the best predictor of a state’s peacefulness is how well its women are treated. What’s more, democracies with higher levels of violence against women are as insecure and unstable as nondemocracies.”

The book’s conclusions are based on studies that spanned 10 years and resulted in the creation of the WomanSTATS database and project, the most comprehensive global source of statistics regarding the status of girls and women.  The database covers virtually every aspect of what might be considered violence from son preference to maternal mortality, female genital mutilation to child marriage

So, it is possible to really study the idea that what happens in the home – domestic violence – and to consider its butterfly effects.  But, how do you define violence?  Sex selection?  Girl malnutrition?  The sale of girl children?

Here are 16 Facts About Violence in Homes around the world:

1.      Number of girls missing from planet due to son preference: 160,000,000

2.      Sex ratio in parts of China: 120 boys to 100 girls

3.      Worldwide, chances that a girl will be malnourished in the home compared to a boy: 3 to 1

4.      Percentage of girls between 11-19 in India, where girls are frequently fed after boys, who are underweight: 47%


6.      Gender gap in developed nations between boys completing secondary education and girls: >10%

7.      Worldwide, estimated number of girls, per day, married before the age of 18: 25,000

8.      Leading cause of death worldwide for girls 15-19: childbirth and pregnancy related death

9.      Number of all women who will be victims of intimate partner abuse worldwide: 1 in 3

10.  Percentage of female homicide victims in the US killed by an intimate partner: 33%

11.  Country where women killed for giving birth to daughters instead of sons: Afghanistan

12.  Number of women worldwide who have had their genitals mutilated, usually before the age of 18: 100 million and 140 million girls and women

13.  Percentage of rape victims under the age of 18 (US): 44%

14.  Percentage of their attackers who were family members (US): 34.2%

15.  Percentage of honor killings in which girl is killed by her own family: 72%

16.  Country in which a man killed his three young daughters by putting a snake in their bed because he finally had a son: Egypt

This list, which barely skims the surface, is a compilation of gender based crimes, all of which take place in homes.  The overwhelming targets of violence in the home are girls and women.  The home is often the seeding ground for violence and the cultural definition of girls and women as property.  The dynamics of this fundamental unit – the family – is then replicated at larger and larger scales: neighborhoods, regions, countries.

The 10 years of research that went into writing Sex and World Peace demonstrates that until girls and women are considered fully human, instead of subservient sub-humans, tradable property or expensive drains on family resources, and treated with respect within their own homes and by their families, we are unlikely to affect transformative changes in militarization at the national, regional and international levels. As the authors put it, “The very best predictor of a state’s peacefulness is not its level of wealth, its level of democracy, or its ethno-religious identity; the best predictor of a state’s peacefulness is how well its women are treated.” 

By Soraya Chemaly
Soraya L. Chemaly writes about feminism, gender and culture. She writes in The Huffington Post, Fem2.0, Alternet, RHRealityCheck among others and has appeared on NPR’s Talk of the Nation, Siriux XM and other radio programs to talk about these topics. Follow her at @schemaly.


Somali girls: Caught between two worlds



Article by: ALLIE SHAH , Star Tribune 

In the wake of prostitution charges involving underage Somali girls, adults are worried about the pressures many girls face in Minneapolis' Somali community.  

A teenage Somali girl talked about the familial pressures facing girls like her and how that sometimes leads to big trouble.
When Mohamed Barre heard the disturbing news about prostitution involving gangs and young Somali girls, his thoughts quickly turned to his daughters.

"They are lovely, American," he said softly of the 5-year-old twins, just starting to venture out into the world. "I'm really so worried."

Prostitution is a worst-case scenario. But in the wake of federal charges against 29 people accused of selling underage girls for sex, Somali parents and youth workers are getting more worried about the pressures facing girls.

Already fighting an internal war to hold on to their cultural identity in a new country, they can face situations at home far more tense than the usual mother-daughter conflicts. Some arrived here without their mothers but in the care of aunts, cousins and older sisters. Some resent the control of their surrogate parents. Others are treated more like servants than daughters. Programs to support Somali girls are so scarce that once away from home, they can quickly find trouble.

"This issue is bigger than that case," said Abdirahman Mukhtar, youth program manager at the Brian Coyle Community Center. "It's a youth crisis within the new immigrants."

Minnesota is home to an estimated 70,000 Somalis -- the largest Somali concentration in the country.

Generally speaking, Somali girls growing up in America are thriving. In the culture, parents often take a more protective attitude toward girls, believing that their reputation upholds the dignity of the family.

"Mothers and fathers keep more of an eye on them than the boys. It means most of them turn out well," said Saeed Fahia, executive director of the Confederation of Somali Community in Minnesota, who noted the large number of girls graduating from high school and attending college. "This parent obsession of preserving the purity of their daughters and the well-being of their daughters helps a lot."

But some girls aren't handling the pressure as well.

Caught between two worlds, they rebel against their household rules. Some cut classes and fall behind in school. Others stay out late, smoking pot and drinking alcohol. All too often, some girls run away.

With no place to stay, they are easy prey for gang members and others willing to give them shelter. The federal case involves young girls who ran away and allegedly were forced into prostitution.

Family secret


Hidden behind many mother-daughter rifts is a family secret dating back to their escape from Somalia's civil war: A girl's "mother" is often not her biological mom.

She may be an aunt or an older sister or a cousin.

As the girls come of age, they resent the strict rules set down by the mother figure and fights ensue.

"A lot of people came to this country with distant relatives," Fahia said. "The kids are not with their proper family. They rebel against their distant family and they might turn to these other young men and women to have that kind of support."

In other cases, the girls are not so much rebelling as escaping. Forced to cook, clean and baby-sit while their friends go to football games or to the mall, they run away.

Lives come undone


Fartun Ahmed, 20, has heard their stories.

The youth director at a local mosque, she was recently approached by a high school counselor about mentoring troubled Somali-American girls.

"She said, 'I'm having a big problem. I'm dealing with Somali girls who are running away, Somali girls who are not wanting to go to their houses. Somali girls whose parents won't let them stay after school,'" Ahmed said.

"She was saying the parents are forcing them to leave because they're basically house maids."

The counselor told her the girls confided that they were not living with their real parents.

It made Ahmed think of one of her dear childhood friends whose life spiraled downward.

When the girl first arrived in America, she was an elementary school kid dressed like an older, married Somali woman -- her body cloaked in an oversized hijab.

She lived with her much older sister, who controlled the girl's every move, Ahmed said. The girl would have to come home from school and take care of her sister's five children. When Ahmed would call the house asking to speak with her friend, the sister would swear into the phone and hang up.

When the girl became a teenager, she started to run away and went down a bad road. She slept at different guys' houses. She started wearing revealing clothes that were indecent by anyone's standards, Ahmed said. By the 10th grade, the girl was failing her classes.

"Being in that kind of life had such a bad impact on her," Ahmed said.

A Somali teen who did not want to be named said she's known several friends who have run away, including one who came to stay with her until she resolved the issues with her mom. Although she is a college-bound high school senior and says she has a good relationship with her own mother, she can relate to the pressures that drive girls to bolt.

Her own mother expects her to be home by 9 p.m. and used to think her after-school activities were a waste of time.

Once they got into an argument and her mother told her to get out.

"Fine, I'll leave," said the girl.

She headed to an aunt's house nearby and stayed there for two days before the two made peace and the girl returned.

Lacking youth programs


To Fatimah Hussein, the problems Somali girls face are a reflection of a larger issue -- a lack of programs for Somali youth, and especially for girls.

"The problem is there are no activities for the girls," said Hussein, the youth and girls program coordinator for the Confederation of Somali Community in Minnesota.

Although as many as 40 percent of the 70,000 Somalis living in Minnesota are 18 years old or younger, there are only a handful of programs for girls, she said.

She takes a group of young women living in the Cedar-Riverside neighborhood of Minneapolis to a nearby gym to play basketball a couple nights a week. A graduate student at St. Mary's University, she also runs an after-school tutoring program.

Hussein dreams of a day when she can add a safe zone or a shelter for Somali girls who are having problems at home. It would be a place where they could just chill for a while, free from the judgment of others.

"Girls who are in the most danger are the ones who run away," she said.

Hussein grew up under the watchful eye of a father who would show up at her school without warning to check up on her and her sister. She said that she could always talk to her parents about issues.

Parents and teens often clash because parents are clinging to old ways of raising children, she said. They need to develop new skills to communicate with their children.

"Instead of just telling the kids this is wrong, they need to ask them how was school and learn to talk to them," she said.

Stories of girls running away from home are known in the community, but the allegations of prostitution with underage girls have left many shaken.

"No one ever thought that things like this could happen," Barre said, his thoughts returning to his daughters. "I hope I live long enough ... until they can say, 'Yes, Daddy, from now on we can defend ourselves. You taught us what's good and bad, and you protected us, and now we continue.'"

War Deg-Deg Ah: Guddida Diwaangelinta Ururada Oo Ku Dhawaaqay Saddexda Xisbi Qaran Ee Ku Soo Baxay Doorashadii Golaha Deegaanka



Hargeisa (HORNWATCH) - Munasibada ku dhawaaqista Saddexda Xisbi Qaran waxay ka dhacday Hotel Maansoor, waxana ka soo qayb galay Madax ka socota Tobada Urur ee ka qayb galay Doorashadii Golayaasha deegaanka, xubno ka mid ah Madaxda dhaqqanka Somaliland, xubno ka mid ah Guddida Doorashooyinka qaranka, Badhasaabka Gobolka Maroodi-jeex, Maayirka iyo Maayir ku-xigeenka cusub ee Caasimada Hargeysa iyo shakhsiyaad metelayay Ururadqa Bulshada Rayidka ah ee Somaliland, Academi-yada Nabad iyo Horumarinta iyo todobada xubnood ee Guddida Diwaan-gelinta Ururada.
NEW UCID

Xafladadaasi waxa lagaga dhawaaqay inay Xisbiyo Qaran u soo gudbeen Saddexda Xisbi ee kala ah Kulmiye, Ucid iyo Wadani, halka aanay soo bixin Ururadda Dalsan, Xaqsoor, Rays iyo Umaddu, sida uu halkaasi kaga dhawaaqay Afhayeenka Guddida Diwaan-gelinta Ururadda iyo Anxisixinta Xisbiyada Qaranka Xasan Macalin oo isagu shaaciyay Natiijada

Doorashada guud ee wadanka iyo Saddexda xisbi ee soo baxay " sidaad wada ogtihiin Jaran-jaro dheer ayaa la soo maray, waxaad ogtihiin jn la diwaan geliyay 18 Urur, jaran jaradii labaad waxa ku soo baxay lix Urur iyo saddexdii Xisbi Qaran ee hore u jiray"ayuu yidhi, waxaanu intaasi ku daray "Xisbiga kulmiye wuxuu ka gudbay natiijadii ahayd 20% ee gobolada wadanka , sidaasinu xisbi Qaran ku noqday, Xisbiga Ucid ayaa isna buuxiyay tirada Boqolayda ee codadka Gobolada wadanka, Ururka wadani ayaa isna u gudbay Marxalada Xisbinimo, sida uu qeeyo Xeerka Doorashada ee Ansixinta Asxaabtu".

 
KULIMYE

Mar shaacinayay Ururada hadhay waxa uu yidhi "Ururrada Umadda, Dalsan, Rays iyo Xaqsoor uma soo gudbin Xisbiyo Qaran, waanay ku mahadsanyihiin tartankii ay ka soo qayb galeen".
Guddoomiyaha Guddida Diwaan-gelinta Ururada Cabdirisaaq Jaamac Cumar (Cabdirisaaq-ciyaale) ayaa isaguna halkaasi ka sheegay inay Doorasho bilaa diwaan gelin ahi khatar badan dalka ku keenayso, loona baahanyahay in Diwaan-gelin rasmiya la sameeyo.

Ugu dambeyn waxa munaasibadaasi shahaadooyinkii Aqoonsiga lagu guddoonsiyay Saddexda Xisbi Qaran ee soo baxay ee UCID, KULMIYE IYO WADANI.
WADANI
Guddoomiyaha Ururka Dalsan Ismaaciil Aadan Cismaan ayaa isagana halkaasi shahaado uu ku mutaystay Maamul wanaaga lagu guddoonsiiyay, iyadoo Guddoomiyaha Ururka Umaddana shahaado uu ku mutaytay Kartida iyo Calool adayga Doorashada uu kaga qayb galay.

WORCESTER — Spend an hour with Jonathan M. Starr, and you might forget the city where you’re sitting. His descriptions of life in Somaliland and the school he founded there are so engrossing and different from life here that he can barely get it all in.
Jonathan M. Starr former  Flagg Street Capital, in Cambridge and now founder of Abaarso Tech, a nonprofit organization that helps prepare the country’s brightest boys and girls for top-tier institutions in the U.S. and U.K.
Mr. Starr, a 34-year-old Worcester native, Worcester Academy alumnus and former investment banker, was in the city last week to visit his mother, to speak at the academy and to help announce a sister school relationship between the academy and his school, Abaarso Tech.

The students at Abaarso Tech are the same age as Worcester Academy’s high school students and they know how to use Facebook and Skype, but there’s also a world of difference between them. All of Abaarso’s students are Arabic, and the girls must cover almost all of their bodies except their faces when they’re in class. During girls’ basketball games, there are always a couple players adjusting their veils, Mr. Starr said.

Abaarso is co-ed, but contact between the genders — even speaking — is strictly limited. On the other hand, the boys and girls treat each other better within their own gender groups than you would typically see in the U.S., Mr. Starr said.

On Friday, he visited John Murnane’s advanced placement world history class and, with Abaarso student Sulekha Hashi Elmi on speakerphone, told the class a little about Somaliland, a section of Somalia that has its own government but which the United States has not recognized as a separate nation. Somaliland has a president but is largely overseen by clans, who are a check on the president, run their own welfare systems and oversee even minor things, such as how Abaarso will replace two of its cooks. They will probably have to hire two others from the same subclan, Mr. Starr said.

“It’s Wild West,” he said.

Mr. Starr, whose uncle is from Somaliland, has a healthy respect for practices that have helped keep the peace in Somaliland, such as dividing top political posts among the clans rather than the president bringing in a full slate of his own people.

The students in Mr. Murnane’s class have been e-mailing students at Abaarso since the beginning of the school year. Libby Y.F. Dimenstein of Worcester said she had never heard of Somaliland before learning of the school. She and friends sent Abaarso students a video tour of Worcester Academy’s campus, and she was surprised they do many of the same activities, like basketball.

“It was interesting how relatable we were to each other,” she said.

The correspondence helps bring Abaarso students up to speed on their English and another culture without creating more work for the school’s teachers, Mr. Starr said. Some students had never met a non-Muslim before the school opened. “They need to learn some degree of tolerance,” Mr. Starr said.

Abaarso’s teachers, who come mostly from the United States and Canada, are busy raising students’ academic prowess from below grade level to competitive enough to get into Western universities. Mr. Starr generally pays his teachers their living expenses plus $3,000 a year, which he said should be enough to attract the right people to the job.

The students are among the best in the country, and their work ethic is amazing, Mr. Starr said. Ideally, they’ll graduate, go to a university outside Somaliland and return to improve their country, he said. “The impact could be massive, but it’s decades away,” he said of the school.

The partnership with Worcester Academy gives academy students a broader view of the world, said Ronald M. Cino, acting head of school. (Head of School Dexter P. Morse is still at the academy but has announced plans to retire next year.)

“They’re not allowed to think myopically,” Mr. Cino said. “This is a total perspective changer.”

The two sets of students could end up at college together, he noted.

Mr. Starr’s talk at the academy is part of the school’s Open Gates Lecture Series and was titled, “The Failure of Aid Work and NGOs in Africa.” He drew from his experience in Somaliland and other research, he said. He was unimpressed by the nongovernmental organization representatives he has met and believes they are paid too much and don’t know enough about what they’re doing.

Attempts to help, Mr. Starr said, should be designed from the ground up and specific to the community they serve. Abaarso, for instance, operates in a Muslim society, so the school is building a mosque on campus, and students have prayer breaks.

His goal is to make the school self-sufficient, something he hopes to accomplish in the next year. He’ll do it both by bringing in higher-paying Somali students from abroad (such as those from expatriate families in Britain) and by beefing up enrollment in the other Abaarso programs: a master of business administration program, an undergraduate school of finance, and tutoring for students in kindergarten through eighth grade.

The students at Abaarso’s secondary school, which is a boarding school, pay $100 a month in theory, but some families contribute in other ways. One brings Mr. Starr a giant amount of fruit each semester.

When asked how people should contribute to international efforts, he suggested creating college scholarships for his students. That way, he said, the school and its students don’t get any money unless they do their jobs.

Source:telegram.com