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Tuesday, June 25, 2013

SOMALIA: Only The Strong Survive


June 25, 2013: Despite the security gains during the last few years, Somalia isn’t safe. It is safer, especially if you are armed or have bodyguards. But if you are unarmed, you are still in danger, especially if you are a foreigner (and seen to have a lot more worth stealing). Too many Somalis are armed and many of those are also deliberately dangerous. It is also dangerous for Somalis, especially if they are journalists or Christians. Al Shabaab gunmen seek out both and often murder them in public. This sort of thing, and the continued presence of some al Shabaab men (and lots more bandits and larceny minded Somali men with guns) is discouraging many of the half million refugees in Kenyan camps from returning home.

The government is pleading with foreign governments (especially Britain and the U.S.) to let up on new banking regulations that cut off cash transfers to Somali money transfer services that will not or cannot comply with new rules meant to halt the use of these firms to move money for terrorists and other criminals. About a quarter of the Somali GDP comes from these transfers from Somalis outside the country.

The piracy problem off Somalia has declined so much in the last two years that in 2012 there was actually more pirate activity off West Africa. Over the last five years Nigeria (and neighboring countries) have seen a steady growth in piracy incidents. Last year ships containing 966 sailors were attacked off West Africa while off Somalia only 851 sailors were threatened. Nigerian pirates rarely try to ransom ships but instead prefer to loot them. This sometimes includes meeting with another (pirate controlled) ship to transfer cargo (bulk or oil) at sea. That sort of thing rarely happens off Somalia.

The fighting in Jubaland continues, with lots of gunfire and few casualties. It is mainly about who will control the port of Kismayo, which is the second largest in Somalia and a cash cow for whoever controls it. Local clans cannot agree on who will get what and that has turned Kismayo into an occasional battleground.

June 23, 2013: The Somali government warned foreign fishing boats that if they don’t apply for, and pay for fishing permits, their boats will be subject to seizure in Somali waters and the crews will be arrested until fines are paid. The government has been trying to create a new coast guard for work like this. Foreigners fear that the new permit system will turn into another extortion scam.

June 22, 2013: In the south (Lower Juba) a new peacekeeper base (manned by Sierra Leone troops) was attacked with RPGs and gunfire. There were no casualties and Al Shabaab took responsibility.

June 21, 2013: Two al Shabaab factions are fighting each other in central Somalia (near the town of Hudur, capital of the Bakool region). Al Shabbab has controlled Hudur on and off for over five years. A local militia was supposed to provide security but these fellows are often intimidated when large groups of heavily armed al Shabaab men roll into town. The government has been working with the militia to improve their effectiveness.  Meanwhile, the local al Shabaab forces have been taking a beating and now different factions are fighting each other.

In northern Kenya two Somali clans have been fighting in and around a refugee camp for the last few days. This has left at least 16 dead and two dozen wounded. The fighting was apparently over a several issues that have caused retaliatory attacks and growing violence between the Garre and Degodia clans over the last few months.

June 20, 2013: In northern Kenya police seized a truck seeking to enter Somalia while carrying 27 tons of chemicals, some of them used in making explosives for terrorists. The shipment had recently arrived in the Kenyan port of Mombasa and may have been legitimate. Police are still investigating.
In Brava (220 kilometers down the coast from Mogadishu) at least six al Shabaab men died as two Islamic terrorist factions fought each other outside the town. Over the last two years al Shabaab has lost control of nearly all towns they once occupied and lived off, forcing the remaining Islamic terrorists out into the countryside where there was a lot less to steal.

June 19, 2013: In Mogadishu al Shabaab gunmen attacked a UN compound, leaving 14 dead and dozens wounded.

June 17, 2013: In the Kenyan port city of Mombasa police raided a house believed to be occupied by Islamic terrorists. Two men found there fired at the cops and were killed during a brief gun battle. The two dead men were believed to be members of al Shabaab and responsible for some recent terrorist activity in the area.

June 15, 2013: In Wanlaweyn (90 kilometers inland from Mogadishu) seven were killed and 12 wounded when a bomb went off in a tea shop popular with soldiers. Most of the casualties were civilians. 
  
June 14, 2013: In the southern port city of Kismayo at least ten people have died from clan violence over the last few days.

Terror financing fears stop transfers to Somalia

More than 100 Somalia-focused researchers and aid workers on Monday also signed a letter urging Britain to work with Barclays to find a way to work with Dahabshiil and other firms.

Barclays (Picture: AFP)
AP - Somali money transfer businesses asked the British government to stop Barclays bank from closing their accounts in Britain, a move Somali officials and bankers said threatens remittances.
 
Diaspora remittances are Somalia's biggest foreign currency earner and many of its 10 million people rely on the $1.2bn or so sent to the nation every year.
A Somali official said on Monday cutting that "lifeline" could hurt fragile efforts to stabilise a nation battling an Islamist insurgency. Somalia analysts said it could encourage the use of illegal and untraceable routes if other channels were blocked.
Barclays said in a statement it was stopping offering banking services to some Somali transfer firms due to fears funds might end up in the hands of "terrorists" in a nation that is slowly emerging from two decades of civil conflict.
"It is recognised that some money service businesses don't have the proper checks in place to spot criminal activity and could therefore unwittingly be facilitating money laundering and terrorist financing," it said without naming the firms.

Somali Central Bank Governor Abdusalam Omer told Reuters in Nairobi that Somalis in Britain sent an estimated $500m a year in remittances, a vital stream of funds now threatened.

"It's a lifeline. Probably one quarter of Somalia's GDP is from remittances," he said. "There are about 2 million people who receive some support from the diaspora and that goes into buying food, shelter, medicine, schooling."

In Mogadishu, where commercial banking disappeared in the early 1990s after the fall of dictator Mohamed Siad Barre, firms such as Dahabshiil fill the gap offering money transfer services used by Somalis and international agencies sending cash.

Wrong signal
Dahabshiil, one of Somalia's best known firms with agents in Britain and offices in Dubai and other African states, said it had been told its Barclays account would be closed.

Dahabshiil Chief Executive Abdirashid Duale told Reuters that stopping remittances "sends the wrong signal about the recovery that the country needs." He called for the US and British authorities to step in to help reverse the decision.

More than 100 Somalia-focused researchers and aid workers on Monday also signed a letter urging Britain to work with Barclays to find a way to work with Dahabshiil and other firms.

"This [cut in service] will only encourage people to send funds through illegal, unsafe, and untraceable channels, thereby potentially making the problem of support to proscribed parties much more serious," said the letter.

The Somali Money Services Association (SOMSA) said 12 of its 17 Britain-based members had lost accounts with major banks in Britain, such as Barclays and London-based HSBC.

HSBC said it was pulling out from offering services to money transfer firms globally, adding this policy began last year.

"We shall not survive if Britain stops the money flowing," said Anab Mire Hussein, a mother of nine with a snack kiosk in Mogadishu. "I live on monthly cash from my son in London."

Madaxweynaha Somaliland Oo Isku shaandheyntii ugu balaadhnayd ku sameeyay Golihiisa Wasiirrada

Madaxweynaha Somaliland Md. Axmed Maxamed Maxamuud (Siilaanyo)
Madaxweynaha Somaliland Md. Axmed Maxamed Maxamuud (Siilaanyo) ayaa isku shaandheyntii u balaadhnayd mudadii uu xilka madaxtooyada Somaliland hayay ku sameeyay Golihiisa Wasiirradda.

Isku shaandhayntan Madaxwaynaha Somaliland wuxuu ku magacaabay ugu yaraan 17 wasiir oo cusub, halka xilalkoodii uu ka qaaday ugu yaraan 6 wasiir iyo wasiir xigeeno.

Wax xusid mudan iyadoo Madaxwayne Siilaanyo oo Golahiisa wasiirada ku soo daray 2 xubnood oo haween ah.
 
War Saxaafadeed uu soo saaray Afhayeenka Madaxtooyadda Somaliland Mudane Axmed Saleebaan 'Dhuxul' oo ku saabsan Digreetada Magacaabis, Isku Bedel iyo Shaqo ka fadhiistinta ah ayaa u  dhignayd sidatan:-

Madaxweynaha JSL, Mudane, Axmed Maxamed Maxamuud (Silaanyo) waxa uu digreetooyin uu caawa soo saaray oo sumadeedu tahay JSL/M/XERM/249-1820/062013 uu ku magacaabay wasiiro cusub, wasiiro xilal kale loo bedelay, iyo kuwo xilalkii ay hayeen lag bedelay.

MADAXWEYNUHU:-

Markuu Arkay:Qodobka 90aad, Faqradiisa 2aad ee Dastuurka Jamhuuriyadda Somaliland;

Markuu Tixgeliyey: Ahmiyadda weyn ay Wasaaraduhu u leeyihiin Dalka iyo dhismaha Qaranka;

Markuu Arkay:In baahi loo qabo buuxinta jagooyinka Wasaaraddahan JSL;

Markuu Ka Fiirsaday: Kartoodad, aqoontooda iyo hufnaantooda shaqo;

Markuu ku Qancay:In ay hanan karaan xilalkan loo magacaabay;

Wuxuu go’aansaday In laga bilaabo taariikhda maanta masuuliyiintan uu Madaxweynuhu u magacaabay xilalkan.

Magacyadda Wasiirrada Cusub

1. Wasiirka Wasaaradda Arrimaha Dibedda Maxamed Biixi Yoonis

2. Wasiirka Wasaaradda Arrimaha Gudaha Cali Maxamed Warancade

3. Wasiirka Wasaaradda Deegaanka Shugri X. Ismaaciil Baandare

4. Wasiirka Wasaaradda Kalluumaysiga iyo Khayraadka Badda Cali Jaamac Faarax (Buureed)

5. Wasiirka Wasaaradda Boosaha iyo Isgaadhsiinta Maxamed Jaamac Abgaal

6. Wasiirka Wasaaradda Dib-u-dejinta Axmed Cabdi Kaahin

7. Wasiirka Wasaaradda Xidhiidhka Goleyaasha, Cilmi Baadhista iyo Technology-yadda Aaden Axmed Warsame

8. Wasiirka Wasaaradda Biyaha Xuseen Maxamed Cabdille

9. Wasiiru-dawlaha Wasaaradda Madaxtooyada Maxamed Muuse Abees

10.Wasiiru-dawlaha Nabadaynta iyo Horumarinta Gobollada Bari ee JSL Cali Maxamuud Axmed (Sandule)

11. Wasiiru-dawlaha Wasaaradda Waxbarashada iyo Tacliinta Sare Axmed Nuur Faahiye

12. Wasiir Ku-xigeenka Wasaaradda Qorshaynta Qaranka iyo Horumarinta Xasan Daahir Dhinbiil

13. Wasiir Ku-xigeenka Wasaaradda Beeraha Aaden Ibraahin Yuusuf Ashqar

14. Wasiir Ku-xigeenka Wasaaradda Shaqada iyo Arrimaha Bulshada Shugri Xariir Ismaaciil

15. Wasiir Ku-xigeenka Wasaaradda Warfaafinta Cabdiwaaxid Cabdiraxmaan Cabdiqaadir

16. Wasiir Ku-xigeenka Wasaaradda Gaashaandhigga Cabdi Daahir Camuud

17. Wasiir Ku-xigeenka Wasaaradda Ganacsiga iyo Maalgashiga Bashiir Cabdi Xariir

18. La-taliyaha Madaxweynaha ee Arrimaha Doorashooyinka iyo Asxaabta (Wasiirkii Hore ee Wasaaradda Hawlaha Guud, Guriyeynta iyo Gaadiidka) Axmed Cabdi Maxamuud (Xaabsade)

19. La-taliyaha Madaxweynaha ee Arrimaha Garsoorka iyo Cadaalada (Wasiirka Hore ee Wasaaradda Deegaanka) Maxamuud Siciid Maxamuud (Gacamey)

WAXA KALE OO UU MADAXWEYNUHU XILALKII AY HAYEEN UU KA BEDELAY XUBNAHAN HOOS KU QORAN ISAGOO U MAGACAABAY XILAL CUSUB:-

1. Wasiirkii hore ee Wasaarada Dib-u-dejinta waxa loo bedelay (Wasaaradda Caafimaadka ) Saleebaan Ciise Axmed (Xagla-toosiye)

2. Wasiirkii hore ee W/Ganacsiga waxa loo bedelay) Wasaaradda Hawlaha Guud, Guriyeynta iyo Gaadiidka Cabdirisaaq Khaliif Axmed

3. Wasiirkii Hore ee Arrimaha Dibeda waxa loo bedelay (Wasaaradda Ganacsiga iyo Maalgashiga) Dr. Maxamed Cabdilaahi Cumar

4. Wasiir ku xigeenkii hore ee W/faafinta waxa loo magacaabay (Wasaaradda Warfaafinta, Dhaqanka iyo Wacyigelinta) Cabdilaahi Maxamed Daahir (Cukuse)

5. Wasiirkii hore ee W/faafinta waxa loo bedelay (Wasaaradda Warshadaha) Abiib Diiriye Nuur (Timacade)

6. Wasiirkii Hore ee Wasaaradda Kalluumaysiga iyo Khayraadka Badda Cabdilaahi Jaamac Cismaan (Geeljire)

7. Wasiirkii Hore ee Wasaaradda Hawlaha Guud, Guriyeynta iyo Gaadiidka waxa loo magacaabay (La-taliyaha Mdaxweynaha ee Arrimaha Doorashooyinka iyo Asxaabta)
Axmed Cabdi Maxamuud (Xaabsade)

8. Wasiirka Hore ee Wasaaradda Deegaanka waxa loo magacaabay (La-taliyaha Arrimaha Garsoorka iyo Cadaalada) Maxamuud Siciid Maxamuud (Gacamey)

SIDOO KALE WAXA MADAXWEYNUHU UU XILALKII AY HAYEEN UU KA NASIYEY WASIIRADAN HOOS KU QORAN:-

1. Wasiirkii Hore Wasaaradda Arrimaha Gudaha Maxamed Nuur Caraale (Duur)

2. Wasiirkii Hore ee Wasaaradda Warshadaha Cabdirisaaq Cali Cismaan

3. Wasiirkii Hore ee Wasaaradda Caafimaadka Dr. Xuseen Muxumed Maxamed (Xoog)

4. Wasiirkii Hore ee Wasaaradda Boosaha iyo Isgaadhsiinta Cali Cilmi Geelle

5.Wasiir Ku-xigeenkii Hore ee Wasaaradda Ganacsiga Aaden Diiriye Cigaal

6. Wasiir Ku-xigeenkii Hore ee Wasaaradda Waxbarashada iyo Tacliinta Sare Cali Xaamud Jibriil

Mudane Axmed Saleebaan 'Dhuxul'
Afhayeenka Madaxtooyadda Somaliland

Qatar's Emir, Sheikh Hamad Bin Khalifa Al Thani, Transfers Power To Crown Prince Sheikh Tamim

Qatar's Emir Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani handed power to his son, Crown Prince Sheikh Tamim, on Tuesday. (Photo by KARIM SAHIB/AFP/Getty Images)
By BRIAN MURPHY

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Qatar's ruler formally handed power Tuesday to his 33-year-old son to cap a carefully crafted transition that puts a younger generation in charge of the Gulf nation's vast energy wealth and rising political influence after the upheavals of the Arab Spring.

The 61-year-old emir, Sheik Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani, used a televised address to note repeatedly the importance of shifting leadership to more youthful hands – an indirect acknowledgment of the demands for reforms opened by the uprisings that have swept the region.

The Western-backed Gulf Arab rulers have managed to remain intact, but have displayed their insecurity by launching crackdowns that have included arrests over alleged anti-state plots and social media posts deemed insulting to the leadership.

"The future lies ahead of you, the children of this homeland, as you usher into a new era where young leadership hoists the banner," the emir said as he announced the anticipated transition to the British-educated crown prince, Sheik Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani.

As part of taking on the mantle, Sheik Tamim will begin the process of putting together a new government that may be in direct contrast to the old guard leaders across the Gulf. Qatar has given no official explanation on the transition – which had been widely expected for weeks – but Sheik Hamad is believed to be suffering from chronic health problems.

Sheik Tamim is not expected to make any immediate policy shifts for Qatar, which has used its riches to become one of the world's most politically ambitious countries. It has served as a powerful player in the Middle East, giving key support to rebels in Libya last year and now in Syria. Qatar also has broken ranks with other Gulf states to offer help to the Muslim Brotherhood, which rose to political dominance in Egypt.

In an important sign of continuity and shared goals, the outgoing emir and Sheik Tamim stood shoulder to shoulder and greeted members of the ruling family and others following the address.

Sheik Tamim has been closely involved in all key decisions since 2003, when Tamim became the next in line to rule after his older brother stepped aside. The outgoing emir is expected to remain a guiding force from the wings.

"Sheik Tamim will be driving his father's car, which is already programmed on where to go," said Mustafa Alani, a political analyst at the Gulf Research Center in Geneva.

But the transition – a rarity in a region where leadership changes are nearly always triggered by deaths or palace coups – also sends a message the wider Middle East. It appears a sweeping response to the Arab Spring upheavals and their emphasis on giving voice to the region's youth, and reinforces Qatar's bold-stroke political policies.

"The time has come to turn a new leaf in the history of our nation," the outgoing emir said in his address, "where a new generation steps forward to shoulder the responsibility with their dynamic potential and creative thoughts."

Under Sheik Hamad, who took power in a bloodless coup in 1995, Qatar has been transformed into a political broker and a center for global investment with a sovereign fund estimated to be worth more than $100 billion. Its portfolio includes landmark real estate, luxury brands and a powerful presence in the sporting world. Tiny Qatar also defeated rivals including the U.S. to win the rights to host the 2022 World Cup.

Qatar has played a role as mediator in conflicts such as Sudan's Darfur region and regional disputes including Palestinian political rifts. Qatar this week hosted a Syrian opposition conference attended by U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and is the venue for possible U.S.-led peace talks with Afghanistan's Taliban.

In another sign of Qatar's risk-taking policies, it allowed an Israeli trade office – effectively a diplomatic outpost – for years before ordering its closure following Israel's incursions into Gaza in late 2008.

But Qatar has faced criticism from rights groups for joining the Gulf-wide crackdowns on perceived dissent since the Arab Spring. In one of the most high-profile cases, Qatari authorities have jailed a poet whose verses included admiration for the uprisings. In February, the sentence for the poet, Muhammad ibn al-Dheeb al-Ajami, was reduced from life to 15 years.

Christopher Davidson, an expert in Gulf affairs at Britain's Durham University, believes some of the tough measures by Qatari officials reflect internal squabbles with hardliners trying to exert their influence. Such groups could be among the first housecleaning targets by the new emir, he predicted.

"Tamim is seen as focused on domestic issues first," said Davidson. "One of the main tasks will be to establish a new social contract with the population ... What kind of opposition is allowed and what is not will be part of that."

In Tehran, Foreign Ministry spokesman Abbas Araghchi told reporters that Iran supports any moves by Qatar that bring "peace and tranquility" for the region. Relations between the two nations have deteriorated over Syria, where Tehran remains strongly on the side of key ally Bashar Assad.
___
Associated Press writer Nasser Karimi in Tehran, Iran, contributed to this report.

URGENT NEWS: Russia rejects US claims it harbored Edward Snowden, fugitive former US spy agency contractor

Russia has called US claims that it harbored Edward Snowden, the fugitive former American spy agency contractor "unfounded and unacceptable."

People look the passenger plane, flight SU 150 to Havana, docking to a boarding bridge at the Moscow Sheremetyevo airport on June 24, 2013. (KIRILL KUDRYAVTSEV/AFP/Getty Images)
Russia has called US claims that it harbored Edward Snowden, the fugitive former American spy agency contractor "unfounded and unacceptable."

Despite media reports that Snowdon had flown to Moscow from Hong Kong on Sunday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov insisted he had not crossed the Russian border, USA Today reported.
Washington believes Snowdon — charged with disclosing secret US surveillance programs  — is in Moscow waiting for news of an asylum request to Ecuador.

Several media outlets have pointed out that the 30-year-old American could be in the transit transit area of Sheremetyevo airport and technically not on Russian territory, though no one has been able to confirm he is there.

Reuters wrote that he indeed flew to Russia on Sunday from Hong Kong but had not been seen in public.

He then failed to board a flight bound for Cuba on Monday afternoon.

BBC cited a source as saying that he was traveling with Wikileaks legal researcher Sarah Harrison.
Julian Assange, the anti-secrecy website's founder, said Monday that Snowden was safe, although "due to the bellicose threats coming from the US administration we cannot go into further detail at this time."

Assange was speaking via teleconference from the Ecuadorean Embassy in London, where Assange is holed up — he says because of US ambitions to extradite and try him for treason.

Assange said:
"We are aware where Mr Snowden is, he is in a safe place and his spirits are high." 
Meanwhile, Lavrov said US attempts to blame Russia for his disappearance were "groundless".
"We are in no way involved with either Mr Snowden, his relations with US justice, nor to his movements around the world."
Washington has already taken China to task over allowing Snowdon to leave Hong Kong, against their wishes that he be detained and handed over to US authorities for extradition.

Secretary of State John Kerry has dubbed Snowden a traitor to his country and warned both Russia and China that their relations with the US might be damaged by their refusal to extradite him.

Afghan Taliban assault in Kabul secure zone

Bilal Sarwary witnessed the attack in Kabul: ''Suddenly there was fire all around us''
Afghan security forces have put down a militant gun and bomb attack near the presidential palace, in one of the most secure areas of Kabul.

Officials say four insurgents and three security guards died. The Taliban say they carried out the attack.

President Hamid Karzai was in the palace, but the target appears to have been the nearby Ariana hotel, which houses a CIA station.

This is the latest in a string of attacks on Kabul in recent months.

Most recently a suicide bomber in the capital targeted a prominent Afghan politician on 18 June, just hours before Nato formally handed security responsibility to the Afghan forces.

With this attack the Taliban infiltrated one of the most heavily-guarded areas of the capital, with several key buildings such as the defence ministry and Nato headquarters located very close by.

The Afghan Taliban have showed no sign of abating their assault on security targets, despite last week's announcement that they had set up an office in the Gulf state of Qatar for peace talks.

In another attack on Tuesday, at least 10 civilians, including eight woman were killed when a roadside bomb hit their vehicle in Afghanistan's southern Kandahar province.

President Karzai raised strong objections to the Taliban office, saying the flag and nameplate initially erected at the building showed they were trying to portray themselves as a government-in-exile.

Officials say the High Peace Council, the Afghan government body set up to lead peace efforts, would not take part unless the talks process was "Afghan-led".

News conference

The attack near the presidential palace, in the central district of Shash Darak, began at about 06:30 local time (02:00 GMT).

The militants initially targeted the palace's eastern gate - a few hundred metres from the actual building - where dozens of journalists had gathered for a news conference with Mr Karzai scheduled for 09:00.
 
Police say the attack was brought to an end just under two hours after the first shots were fired

The BBC's Bilal Sarwary, who was among the crowd of journalists, says they were forced to run for cover as bullets flew overhead.

The journalists heard several explosions, and reports said grenades were being thrown. Tolo TV reported as many as 14 blasts.

Our correspondent says the area around the palace, which is patrolled regularly throughout the day by special forces and intelligence agents, is now under lockdown.

Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid said in a text message: "A number of martyrs attacked the presidential palace, defence ministry and the Ariana Hotel."

The Ariana Hotel is known to house a CIA station.

Kabul's police chief, Ayub Salangi, said the attack was brought to an end just under two hours after the first shots were fired.

Four attackers wearing uniform and carrying fake ID cards began the attack, with one blowing himself up, a defence ministry spokesman told the BBC. They were eventually killed by private security forces attached to the hotel.

The Nato-led International Security Assistance Force, whose headquarters is also not far from the scene of the attack, wrote on Twitter that the Afghan National Security Forces had led "the response efforts".

Last week, Afghan forces assumed security responsibility for the whole of the country for the first time since the Taliban government was ousted in 2001.

International troops will remain in Afghanistan until the end of 2014, providing military back-up when needed.

Are you in the area? Have you been affected? Send us your comments using the form below.

Send your pictures and videos to yourpics@bbc.co.uk or text them to 61124 (UK) or +44 7624 800 100 (International). If you have a large file you can upload here.

Russia: Edward Snowden hasn't "crossed the Russian border," and U.S. extradition demand "unacceptable"

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov. / Getty
MOSCOW Russia's foreign minister has rejected U.S. demands to extradite National Security Agency leaker Edward Snowden, who apparently stopped in Moscow while trying to evade U.S. justice.

Sergey Lavrov said that Snowden hadn't crossed the Russian border and insisted that Russia has nothing to do with him, his relations with U.S. justice or his travel plans.

"He chose his itinerary on his own," Lavrov insisted. "He has not crossed the Russian border."

Speaking at a news conference Tuesday, he angrily lashed out at the U.S. demands for the extradition and warnings of negative consequences if Moscow fails to comply.

Lavrov said that accusing Russia of "violation of U.S. laws and even some sort of conspiracy" with regard to Snowden is "absolutely ungrounded and unacceptable."

He wouldn't specify the location of Snowden, who booked a Havana-bound flight from Moscow Monday but didn't show up on the plane.

As CBS News correspondent Bob Orr reported Monday night, the White House believes the former NSA contract employee facing espionage charges is in Russia, and the United States has mounted huge pressure on the Russians to send him home before he can head into asylum in some other country.

Julian Assange, the founder of the secret-spilling website WikiLeaks who is himself hiding in the Ecuadorian Embassy in London for fear of being extradited to Sweden to face questions over sexual impropriety, said Monday that Snowden was bound eventually for Ecuador, but would not say where he was in the meantime.

Assange said that Snowden was, "in a safe place," but added: "we cannot reveal what country he is in right now."

Ecuador is currently "considering" a request from Snowden for asylum.

Snowden's flight to an unknown refuge appears stalled in Moscow. As of Monday night, seat 17A -- which Snowden had reportedly booked on this Cuba-bound jetliner -- remained empty as the plane took off for Havana, Cuba.

It's not clear if Snowden changed travel plans or if Russian security agents blocked his departure. But, U.S. officials are pressing the Russian government to detain Snowden as a fugitive traveling with a revoked passport. Jay Carney is the White House press secretary.

"We have asked the Russians to look at the options available to them to expel Mr. Snowden back to the United States," White House press secretary Jay Carney told reporters Monday afternoon.

Carney urged Russia not to repeat the actions of Chinese authorities, who allowed Snowden to leave Hong Kong on Sunday.

"This was a deliberate choice by the government to release a fugitive, despite a valid arrest warrant, and that decision unquestionably has a negative impact on the U.S.-China relationship," he said.




























































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































 

Somaliland: Government in Major Cabinet Reshuffle

By: Yusuf M HasanNew Environment Minister Ms Shukri BandareNew Environment Minister Ms Shukri Bandare

HARGEISA - President Ahmed Mahmud Silanyo has revitalized his council of ministers where new faces were introduced, others transferred and one elevated while a few were fired in a major cabinet reshuffle that saw Ms Bandare and Shukri Harir increase the number of women ministers to four.
A presidential decree # JSL/M/XERM/249-1820/062013 released on the 25th June read, "the head of state in conformity with section 2, Article 90 of the Somaliland constitution, and in view of the importance ministerial posts have to national development and after having ascertained the capabilities of the selected individuals to undertake public service and ministerial mandates hereby announce that as from today the named Somaliland citizens are appointed to the council of ministers

New Appointments

Waranade back after hiatus of 3 yearsWaranade back after hiatus of 3 years1. Mohamed Bihi Yonis – Minister of Foreign Affairs
2. Ali Mohamed Waran'ade – Minister of Interior
3. Ms Shukri Haji Ismail Bandare – Minister of Environment
4. Ali Jama Farah 'Bureed' – Minister of Fisheries and Marine Resources
5. Mohamed Jama Abgal – Minister of Posts and Telecommunications
6. Ahmed Abdi Kahin – Minister of Rehabilitation
7. Aden Ahmed Warsame – Minister of Parliament Coordination, Research and Technology
8. Hussein Mohamed Abdile- Minister of Water Development

9. Mohamed Muse Abees – State minister at the Presidency
10. Ali Mahmud Ahmed 'Sandule' State Minister for Eastern Regions Reconciliation and Development
11. Ahmed Nuur Faahiye – State minister for Education
12. Hasan Dahir Dhimbil –Planning and National Coordination Deputy minister
13. Aden Ibrahim Yusuf Ashgar – Agriculture Deputy minister
14. Ms Shukri Harir Ismail-Deputy minister of labour and Social Services
15. Abdiwahid Abdirahman Abdiqadir – Information, Culture and National Guidance Deputy Minister
16. Abdi Dahir Amuud – Defence deputy minister
17. Bashir Abdi Harir – Commerce and International Investment deputy minister
18. Ahmed Abdi Habsade – Presidential Advisor on Elections and :Political Parties
19. Mahmud Saeed Mahmud 'Ga'ameye' – Presidential advisor on Justice

PROMOTED

1. Minister of information, Culture and National Guidance Abdilahi Dahir Mohamed Ukuse, was a deputy minister in the same ministry.

TRANSFERRED

1. Minister of Resettlement and Rehabilitation Dr Suleiman Isse Ahmed Hagaltosie transferred Ministry of HealthHabsade to advisor president on Elections Habsade to advisor president on Elections
2. Minister of Commerce Abdirizaq Khalif Ahmed transferred to Ministry of Public Works and housing
3. Minister of Foreign Affairs Dr Mohamed Abdilahi Omar to Ministry of Commerce and International Investments.
4. Minister of Public Works and housing Ahmed Abdi Habsade becomes new Presidential Advisor on Elections and :Political Parties
5. Minister of environment Mahmud Saeed Mahmud 'Ga'ameye' becomes Presidential advisor on Justice
6. Minister of information, culture and national guidance Abiid Diriye Nuur 'Tima'ade' to Ministry of Industry
7. Minister of fisheries and marine resources Abdilahi Jama Osman 'Geeljire' (New Docket not mentioned)

FIRED
1. Minister of Interior -Mohamed Nuur Arale 'Duur'
2. Minister of Industry – Abdirizaq Ali OsmanInterior Minister Duur Arale AXEDInterior Minister Duur Arale AXED
3. Minister of Health – Dr Hussein Muhumed Mohamed 'Hog'
4. Minister of Posts and Telecommunications – Ali Elmi Gelle
5. Commerce Deputy minister – Aden Diriye Egal
6. Education deputy minister – Ali Hamud Jibril



Strengthened Posts

Education minister Hon Zamzam Abdi, stronger voice Education minister Hon Zamzam Abdi, stronger voice Though the reshuffle creates a number of new ministries hived from others like Water formerly in Mineral resource the inclusion of international investment at the commerce ministry gives the docket a broader dimension while the women voices of education minister Ms Zamzam Abdi and deputy health minister Ms Nimo Qawdan are strengthened by new environment Minister Shukri Haji Bandare and deputy labour and social welfare minister Ms Shukri Harir Ismail.

Somaliland: Where sovereignty means something

by Sarah Phillips

Sarah Phillips, a Senior Lecturer at Sydney University, is in Somaliland conducting research. She is grateful to the Developmental Leadership Program for funding. All photos by Sarah.

Even as a political scientist, sovereignty is not something that captures a lot of my attention in the course of a normal day. But when I spend time in Somaliland, it's inescapable, and what it means to be seen – or not seen – as a state by the rest of the world is heatedly debated by people from all walks of life. Somaliland proclaimed its independence from Somalia in 1991 but has never been officially recognised by any state despite exercising a reasonable level of territorial control and internal political legitimacy.
Sovereign' sign on a building in Hargeisa, Somaliland.
As you enter the terminal at Somaliland's Berbera Airport, the importance of the debate over Somaliland's sovereign status for ordinary people is immediately apparent. Entry for foreigners costs $34, and the Government considers everyone but those carrying a Somaliland passport to be foreign. Somalis from either the south (the capital of which is Mogadishu) and Puntland (an autonomous region that does not seek independence) protest that they should not be considered foreigners because Somaliland is not, in the eyes of the rest of the world, separate from Somalia (Somalilanders are treated as Somali citizens at Mogadishu Airport).

Entry to Berbera International Airport, Somaliland.
Somalilanders are also in a bind when they depart from Berbera Aiport. The Somaliland Government considers it illegal for its 'citizens' to carry a Somali passport, yet a Somaliland passport gets you nowhere except Ethiopia and Malaysia. Djibouti also allows Somaliland officials entry but stamps the visa on a separate piece of paper so as to not to imply that Djibouti recognises the Somaliland passport. One can easily buy a Somali passport on the streets of the capital city (Hargeisa) for $45, which is the only option for most Somalilanders wishing to travel abroad. Those who take this option will have to pay the 'foreigner' fee upon re-entry after having technically violated the law.

As a result of being unrecognised, Somaliland's government has negligible access to external capital, whether through official development assistance, loans from international lending bodies like the IMF, or foreign investment. Private investors cannot access commercial insurance or seek recourse through international commercial law. This serves as a considerable – though not entirely prohibitive – disincentive for non-Somalilanders to invest in the country, and further limits the Government's ability to generate wealth through normal external channels.

Somali passports for sale on the streets of Hargeisa.

These binds get more complicated in Somaliland's international relations. The UN promotes a unified Somalia and does not recognise Somaliland's claim of independence. Yet the UN has a strong presence and its agencies provide money for (and influence over) some of the most fundamental aspects of the Somaliland Government's interface with the population, including its school curricula, taxation, and police force.


In the past, the UN has advocated removing any mention of Somaliland's independence from its school curriculum, causing a heated debate over the international body's legitimacy. More recently, the UN Development Programme (UNDP) insisted that the police uniforms it provided should be identical to those it provides for Puntland and in the south, which was also taken as a slight on Somaliland's claims of statehood, although the Government eventually accepted the uniforms.

The debate over Somaliland's sovereignty has heated up recently. In mid-May, officials from the Somalia Federal Government, the UNDP and the Nairobi-based Civil Aviation Caretaker Authority of Somalia met in Mogadishu and announced that 'Somalia' would take control of the country's airspace at the end of 2013. Somaliland's Aviation Minister quickly countered with an announcement that 'Somaliland will fully manage its airspace from June 5th' and that (most) UN flights were no longer permitted to land in Somaliland. At the time of writing the flights remain grounded.

Meanwhile, when new head of the UN Assistance Mission in Somalia (UNSOM) visited Hargeisa this month, he was informed that UNSOM was not welcome in Somaliland.

As the governments in Mogadishu and Hargeisa struggle to project their authority domestically and internationally, the challenges facing newer states are clear. These high-level machinations affect business, travel, and development in disputed Somaliland, which brings the concept of sovereignty sharply into people's daily lives.

Monday, June 24, 2013

Djibouti: Construction Starts On Djibouti Logistics Hub for Humanitarian Operations in Horn of Africa

Djibouti — In a "ground-breaking" ceremony yesterday, the UN World Food Programme (WFP) - with the generous support of the Government of Djibouti, the Government of Canada and the Government of Finland - officially launched the first phase of building a humanitarian logistics base that will improve storage and transport of humanitarian assistance across the Horn of Africa.

The new hub, which is being built in the vicinity of Djibouti port, will enable WFP and the wider humanitarian community to dispatch humanitarian assistance more quickly, efficiently and cost-effectively in the region. The port is the main gateway for food entering Ethiopia.
The Government of Djibouti graciously provided to WFP 50,000-square-meters of land for the construction of the logistics hub.

"This partnership between WFP, the Governments of Canada and Finland with the involvement of the private sector, national and international, is seen by the Government of Djibouti as positive step toward encouraging private sector engagement," said Ilyas Mousa Dawaleh, Minister of Finance and Industry in Djibouti. The Minister further thanked the Governments of Canada and Finland for their financial support and the WFP offices in Ethiopia and Djibouti.

The Government of Canada contributed more than USD 18 Million to support the establishment of the hub on a 50,000-square-meter piece of land donated by Djibouti. Finland also contributed US$1.3 million towards the facility, which will offer silo storage capacity, allowing cost savings related to sea freight, port handling, storage and transport.

The structure, which should be completed by 2015, will eventually ease the flow of assistance not only to Ethiopia and Djibouti, but also to Sudan, South Sudan, Kenya and Somalia. About one quarter of the people that WFP assists worldwide live in the Horn of Africa.

"The Djibouti Humanitarian Logistics Hub initiative will ensure that Canada's food assistance will reach a larger number of hunger-affected people than before," said Julian Fantino, Canada's Minister of International Cooperation. "This Canadian investment will improve the cost-effectiveness and efficiency of WFP and other humanitarian organizations working in the Horn of Africa."

The new logistics hub also has an important training component in order to help the Djibouti transport sector grow. More than 120 truck and forklift drivers and 30 warehouse managers are being trained this year in Djibouti.

"This logistics hub is not only crucial for rapid humanitarian response across the Horn, it's also an important addition to the region's infrastructure, which in turn leads to sustainable development," said Ramiro Lopes Da Silva, WFP Assistant Executive Director. "This capacity development undertaking benefits Djibouti not only through the reinforcement of its transport infrastructure but more importantly by the transfer of knowledge and expertise to Djiboutian professionals."

The hub is being built and managed by WFP's Ethiopia operation, which moves the majority of its food assistance through the Djibouti port, in partnership with the WFP Djibouti office.

In addition to the funds contributed by Canada and Finland, and the allocation of land by the Government of Djibouti, the humanitarian logistics hub is also being supported by the Caterpillar company.

Caterpillar Inc., the world's leading manufacturer of construction equipment, has provided six forklifts and two generators to the project through its global partnership with WFP.

Source:United Nations World Food Programme (Rome)