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Thursday, August 1, 2013

XOG LA HELAY: Nicholas Kay ” kuma noolaan karo Muqdisho, hala iga raro, ama madaxtooyada aan dago ”



Wakiilka QM u qaabilsan Soomaaliya ee Nicholas Kay
Muqdisho, Somalia - Warbaahinta Xogmaalmedia.com ayaa heshay war sir ah, kaasoo ku saabsan wakiilka QM u qaabilsan Soomaaliya ee Nicholas Kay.

Kadib marki ay sii xumaatay xaalada Magaalada Muqdisho ayaa waxaa soo baxayay qal qal ku yimid shaqaalaha ajaaniibta ah ee ku sugan magaalada, waxaana wakiilka QM u qaabilsan Soomaaliya uu isku aamini waayay xarunta Xalane ee Ciidamada AMISOM ay maamulaan.

Nicholas Kay ayaa la hadlay Xogayaha guud ee QM Ban Ki Moon iyo Ra’isul wasaaraha Ingiriiska David Cameron, isagoo u sheegay in Magaalada Muqdisho aysan ahayn sidi hore xaaladuna faraha ka baxday, wuxuuna Nicholas Kay ka codsaday madaxda uu la hadlay in magaalada uu ka guuro ama uu dago madaxtooyada Villa Soomaaliya oo aad amaankeedu uu u adag yahay.

Intaas kadib warbixinta aan helnay waxa ay sheegeysaa in Telfoono ay isweedaarsadeen madaxweynaha Jamhuuriyada Soomaaliya Mudane Xasan Sheekh Maxamuud iyo Xogayaha guud ee QM Ban Ki Moon iyo Ra’isulw asaaraha Ingiriiska Mr Cameron, waxaana Xasan Sheekh lagu wargaliyay in marka hore uu amaanka magaalada gacanta ku dhigo sida ugu dhaqsaha badan, marka xigtana uu Nicholas Kay kula noolaado xarunta Madaxtooyada Villa Soomaaliya.

Madaxweyne Xasan Sheekh oo aan inkirin amaan xumida Muqdisho ay afka la gashay ayaa codsigaasi aqbalay, wuxuuna si qabow ku yiri ” Nicholas Kay hada ka dambo wuxuu ku shaqeyn doonaa xarunta madaxtooyada Villa Soomaaliya ”.

Si kastaba ha ahaatee Dowlada Xasan Sheekh Maxamuud ayaa hada ka badin la’ amaan soo celinta Muqdisho, iyadoo inti horey u jirtay faraha ka sii bixisay.

Xogtan ayaa sheegeysa in maalmaha soo socda Dowlada ay wax ka qaban doonto amaanka magaalada Muqdisho, hadii kale waxa ay shaqaalaha ajaaniibta wada dalban doonaan inay ku noolaadaan xarunta madaxtooyada Villa Soomaaliya, halkaasoo lagu tilmaamo meesha ugu amaanka wanaagsan Muqdisho, walow iyada xataa Habeenada qaar lagu garaaco madaafiic.

Somalia: Regional heads to meet over Amisom troops

 
Amisom peacekeepers in Somalia. The force is backed by the AU and the UN. FILE | AFRICA REVIEW
By TABU BUTAGIRA

The six presidents of countries contributing troops to Somalia under Amisom are gathering in Kampala this weekend for an emergency session to harmonise ongoing offensives against the militant Al-Shabaab group amid reports of operational cracks among the different armies.

The Sunday meeting to be chaired by Uganda's Yoweri President Museveni, as the convener, comes against a backdrop of Somalia’s new leadership accusing Kenya of meddling in its internal affairs, handpicking local leaders and trying to create an irregular buffer zone in Kismayu, under Kenyan troops.

Uganda, which was the first to deploy soldiers in the then restive Mogadishu in March 2007, has the biggest troop numbers in Somalia. Other countries are Burundi, Kenya, Sierra Leone, Djibouti and Somalia.

Foreign Affairs officials in Kampala confirmed that the first-ever summit of the political chief executives of the contributing countries will be at Imperial Resort Munyonyo, in Kampala.

“We have made significant progress in the security sector, and need an equally supportive progress on the political structure,” Foreign Affairs Permanent Secretary James Mugume said. “What is important is for the countries to harmonise our positions; this is more about cooperation.”

He said the basis of re-organising was to get the “most in terms of operational efficiency from our limited resources”.

Kenya named

Unease and rivalry among foreign actors in Somalia has been manifest for months, according to military sources that preferred anonymity, owing to sensitivity of the subject, and new President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud upped the ante by pointing at Kenya as lately being a spoiler.

In response to a question from the Daily Monitor newspaper last month in Mogadishu, President Mohamud said: “Now the situation in Kismayu is a bit deteriorating; there’s a conflicting outcome of the process; people are going there, nominating their President; as of now, we have three local presidents in Kismayo; it’s unfortunate.”

He said his government had turned to the regional bloc, the Inter-governmental Authority on Government (Igad), to intervene and “we hope things will improve in Kismayu”.

Other reports suggested Somalia had also formally petitioned both the African Union and the UN over the matter.

Kenya government spokesperson Muthui Kariuki did not never replied to our email enquiries sent on Tuesday, even after he promised he would have responded to Mogadishu’ allegations by 10am yesterday.

In last month’s interview, Mr Mohamud said foreign intervention was to help Somalia build a sovereign state and administration.

In Kampala on Tuesday, International Affairs Minister Oryem-Okello said Uganda has never involved itself in local politics in Somalia because doing so could put Ugandan soldiers in harm’s way.

UN helicopter crashes near Ethiopia's capital; injuries reported




Associated Press
 
ADDIS ABABA, ETHIOPIA – Addis Ababa - A helicopter en route to South Sudan for use by the UN World Food Programme crashed in Ethiopia on Wednesday, injuring several people on board, officials said.

The helicopter crashed in the town of Debre Zeit, about 50km outside Addis Ababa, said Dina Mufti, the spokesperson for Ethiopia's Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

Dina said there were multiple injuries but he had no further details.
Ethiopian officials said the UN personnel were on board, but UN officials said it wasn't clear whether any UN staffers were on the helicopter.

UN spokesperson Farhan Haq said the helicopter was en route to South Sudan for use by WFP in Jonglei, which has been the scene of recent fighting. Haq said the helicopter was owned by Russian company PANH Helicopters.

Ethiopia's state-run news agency, citing the Ethiopian Civil Aviation Authority, reported that two Russian-made helicopters were traveling from Djibouti to Addis Ababa on their way to South Sudan.

It said one helicopter crashed with four people on board, including two pilots.

Mysterious Dutch Coast Guard Being Formed



August 1, 2013: The peacekeeping force now consists of 4,040 Kenyan, 6,223 Ugandan, 5,432 Burundian, 850 Sierra Leonean and 999 Djiboutian troops. There are also several thousand Ethiopian troops who constantly move back and forth across the Somali border as needed. There are a few hundred other foreign military and paramilitary personnel in Somalia, but no one will officially admit they are there (despite the occasional photo). In all, al Shabaab remnants now face some foreign peacekeepers and a growing number of fairly reliable local police and soldiers. Al Shabaab has become little more than a terrorist organization, using extortion, kidnapping and theft to survive and finance enough attacks to keep its name and reputation in the news.

The new Somali government is having problems collecting taxes. So far this year five tax collectors have been killed, compared to ten for all of last year. The businesses who are expected to pay taxes have had two decades of unpleasant experience with clan militias, warlords and terrorist groups “collecting taxes” and have developed clever, and sometimes violent ways to avoid paying. The government tax collectors are seen as little different from the criminal groups when it comes to extorting money from merchants. Establishing a fair and acceptable tax system would be a major achievement for the new government.

The UN accused Eritrea of paying some Somali warlords to help keep al Shabaab going. Eritrea was also accused of bribing Somali government officials to obtain information about the government and to maintain some access to government officials. This is believed to have played a part in the government releasing al Shabaab prisoners last year. Eritrea also passes on information obtained from Somali officials to al Shabaab, which has long been supplied with cash and weapons from Eritrea. The UN also continues to release audits of aid money that show Somali officials continuing to steal most of the money they have control over. For this reason as much aid as possible is spent under close supervision by foreign aid officials.

Some Somali pirates, frustrated at over a year of failure (in the face of more effective naval patrols and better security on merchant ships) have switched to providing armed guards for foreign ships fishing illegally off the Somali coast. The payoff is not huge, but it’s steady cash and relatively safe. The main danger is from other pirates attempting to rob the fishing ships or hijack them. Many pirates have returned to smuggling (people to Yemen or goods into Somalia). Many pirates are former fishermen and have returned to that business.

July 30, 2013: The government signed a deal with The Atlantic Marine and Offshore Group (a Dutch company) to organize and run a coast guard to protect ships off the Somali coast and deal with smuggling and other illegal activities. No details on how or when were given.

July 29, 2013: Al Shabaab released two of three Kenyan officials they had kidnapped 18 months ago. This was a negotiated deal and no other details were revealed. It was claimed that no ransom was paid.

July 27, 2013: In Mogadishu a car bomb went off outside the residential compound of the Turkish embassy, killing a Turkish policeman, two other security personnel and a local civilian were killed. Two other terrorist gunmen, who attempted to get into the compound, were shot dead. Al Shabaab took credit for the attack and the Turks said they were staying.

July 24, 2013: In Mogadishu a car bomb went off in a failed attempt to kill a Somali politician. One person died and two were wounded.

July 21, 2013: Ethiopia announced that the recent withdrawal of its troops from Baidoa was carried out because the AU peacekeepers now had control of the town and that security there was good. Other Ethiopian troops in Somalia would stay until they could be replaced by government or peacekeeper forces.

July 20, 2013: In Kismayo a land mine intended for peacekeepers instead killed civilian and wounded two others.

July 18, 2013: In Nairobi, Kenya civilians reported what appeared to be a roadside bomb to police, who came and disarmed it. There are still pro-al Shabaab Somalis living in Kenya to try to carry out terrorist attacks to protest Kenyan peacekeeping efforts in Somalia.

Two Spanish aid workers (both doctors) kidnapped in 2011 while working at a Somali refugee camp in Kenya have been released. This was a negotiated deal and no other details were revealed. It was claimed that no ransom was paid.

July 17, 2013: In Kismayo two journalists were wounded while covering a landmine explosion just outside the city. It is believed that one of the two militias fighting for control of the city were responsible.

July 16, 2013: In Kismayo a roadside bomb wounded three Kenyan peacekeepers.

NSA paid British spy agency $150m in secret funds – new leak



The NSA has made hush-hush payments of at least $150 million to Britain’s GCHQ spying agency over the past three years to influence British intelligence gathering operations. The payouts were revealed in new Snowden leaks published by The Guardian.

The documents illustrate that the NSA expects the UK’s Government Communications Headquarters, known as GCHQ, to act in its interest, expecting a return on the investment, The Guardian said Thursday.

Redevelopments at GCHQ’s site at Bude in southwest England, which alone cost over $20 million, were paid for by the US agency. The facility intercepts information from transatlantic cables carrying Internet and communications information.

The revelations appear to contradict previous denials from British government ministers that GCHQ does the NSA’s “dirty work.” In addition, the latest Snowden dossier details how British surveillance operations could be a “selling point” for the US.

A document from 2010 cited by The Guardian reveals the nature of the relationship between the two organizations, stating that the US “raised a number of issues with regards to meeting NSA's minimum expectations” attesting that GCHQ “still remains short of the full NSA ask.”

DETAILS TO FOLLOW

http://rt.com/news/nsa-pay-british-spy-agency-910/

Exclusive: NSA pays £100m in secret funding for GCHQ

• Secret payments revealed in leaks by Edward Snowden
• GCHQ expected to 'pull its weight' for Americans
• Weaker regulation of British spies 'a selling point' for NSA

    Nick Hopkins and Julian Borger  
    The Guardian, Thursday 1 August 2013 16.04 BST  
    Jump to comments (308


The NSA paid £15.5m towards redevelopments at GCHQ’s site in Bude, north Cornwall, which intercepts communications from the transatlantic cables that carry internet traffic. Photograph: Kieran Doherty/Reuters
The Guardian's Nick Hopkins outlines the questions raised by the latest revelations from US National Security Agency whistleblower Edward Snowden Link to video: What questions are raised by the latest NSA revelations?

Link to video : http://gu.com/p/3hm3h

The US government has paid at least £100m to the UK spy agency GCHQ over the last three years to secure access to and influence over Britain's intelligence gathering programmes.

The top secret payments are set out in documents which make clear that the Americans expect a return on the investment, and that GCHQ has to work hard to meet their demands. "GCHQ must pull its weight and be seen to pull its weight," a GCHQ strategy briefing said.

The funding underlines the closeness of the relationship between GCHQ and its US equivalent, the National Security Agency. But it will raise fears about the hold Washington has over the UK's biggest and most important intelligence agency, and whether Britain's dependency on the NSA has become too great.

In one revealing document from 2010, GCHQ acknowledged that the US had "raised a number of issues with regards to meeting NSA's minimum expectations". It said GCHQ "still remains short of the full NSA ask".

Ministers have denied that GCHQ does the NSA's "dirty work", but in the documents GCHQ describes Britain's surveillance laws and regulatory regime as a "selling point" for the Americans.

The papers are the latest to emerge from the cache leaked by the American whistleblower Edward Snowden, the former NSA contractor who has railed at the reach of the US and UK intelligence agencies.

Snowden warned about the relationship between the NSA and GCHQ, saying the organisations have been jointly responsible for developing techniques that allow the mass harvesting and analysis of internet traffic. "It's not just a US problem," he said. "They are worse than the US."

As well as the payments, the documents seen by the Guardian reveal:

• GCHQ is pouring money into efforts to gather personal information from mobile phones and apps, and has said it wants to be able to "exploit any phone, anywhere, any time".

• Some GCHQ staff working on one sensitive programme expressed concern about "the morality and ethics of their operational work, particularly given the level of deception involved".

• The amount of personal data available to GCHQ from internet and mobile traffic has increased by 7,000% in the past five years – but 60% of all Britain's refined intelligence still appears to come from the NSA.

• GCHQ blames China and Russia for the vast majority of cyber-attacks against the UK and is now working with the NSA to provide the British and US militaries with a cyberwarfare capability.

The details of the NSA payments, and the influence the US has over Britain, are set out in GCHQ's annual "investment portfolios". The papers show that the NSA gave GCHQ £22.9m in 2009. The following year the NSA's contribution increased to £39.9m, which included £4m to support GCHQ's work for Nato forces in Afghanistan, and £17.2m for the agency's Mastering the Internet project, which gathers and stores vast amounts of "raw" information ready for analysis.

The NSA also paid £15.5m towards redevelopments at GCHQ's sister site in Bude, north Cornwall, which intercepts communications from the transatlantic cables that carry internet traffic. "Securing external NSA funding for Bude has protected (GCHQ's core) budget," the paper said.

In 2011/12 the NSA paid another £34.7m to GCHQ.

The papers show the NSA pays half the costs of one of the UK's main eavesdropping capabilities in Cyprus. In turn, GCHQ has to take the American view into account when deciding what to prioritise.

A document setting out GCHQ's spending plans for 2010/11 stated: "The portfolio will spend money supplied by the NSA and UK government departments against agreed requirements."

Other documents say the agency must ensure there has been "an appropriate level of contribution … from the NSA perspective".

The leaked papers reveal that the UK's biggest fear is that "US perceptions of the … partnership diminish, leading to loss of access, and/or reduction in investment … to the UK".

When GCHQ does supply the US with valuable intelligence, the agency boasts about it. In one review, GCHQ boasted that it had supplied "unique contributions" to the NSA during its investigation of the American citizen responsible for an attempted car bomb attack in Times Square, New York City, in 2010.

No other detail is provided – but it raises the possibility that GCHQ might have been spying on an American living in the US. The NSA is prohibited from doing this by US law.

Asked about the payments, a Cabinet Office spokesman said: "In a 60-year alliance it is entirely unsurprising that there are joint projects in which resources and expertise are pooled, but the benefits flow in both directions."

A senior security source in Whitehall added: "The fact is there is a close intelligence relationship between the UK and US and a number of other countries including Australia and Canada. There's no automaticity, not everything is shared. A sentient human being takes decisions."

Although the sums represent only a small percentage of the agencies' budgets, the money has been an important source of income for GCHQ. The cash came during a period of cost-cutting at the agency that led to staff numbers being slashed from 6,485 in 2009 to 6,132 last year.

GCHQ seems desperate to please its American benefactor and the NSA does not hold back when it fails to get what it wants. On one project, GCHQ feared if it failed to deliver it would "diminish NSA's confidence in GCHQ's ability to meet minimum NSA requirements". Another document warned: "The NSA ask is not static and retaining 'equability' will remain a challenge for the near future."

In November 2011, a senior GCHQ manager working in Cyprus bemoaned the lack of staff devoted to one eavesdropping programme, saying: "This is not sustainable if numbers reduce further and reflects badly on our commitments to the NSA."

The overriding necessity to keep on the right side of the US was revealed in a UK government paper that set out the views of GCHQ in the wake of the 2010 strategic defence and security review. The document was called: "GCHQ's international alliances and partnerships: helping to maintain Britain's standing and influence in the world." It said: "Our key partnership is with the US. We need to keep this relationship healthy. The relationship remains strong but is not sentimental. GCHQ must pull its weight and be seen to pull its weight."

Astonishingly, the document admitted that 60% of the UK's high-value intelligence "is based on either NSA end-product or derived from NSA collection". End product means official reports that are distillations of the best raw intelligence.

Another pitch to keep the US happy involves reminding Washington that the UK is less regulated than the US. The British agency described this as one of its key "selling points". This was made explicit two years ago when GCHQ set out its priorities for the coming years.

"We both accept and accommodate NSA's different way of working," the document said. "We are less constrained by NSA's concerns about compliance."

GCHQ said that by 2013 it hoped to have "exploited to the full our unique selling points of geography, partnerships [and] the UK's legal regime".

However, there are indications from within GCHQ that senior staff are not at ease with the rate and pace of change. The head of one of its programmes warned the agency was now receiving so much new intelligence that its "mission management … is no longer fit for purpose".

In June, the government announced that the "single intelligence account" fund that pays for GCHQ, MI5 and MI6 would be increased by 3.4% in 2015/16. This comes after three years in which the SIA has been cut from £1.92bn to £1.88bn. The agencies have also been told to make £220m savings on existing programmes.

The parliamentary intelligence and security committee (ISC) has questioned whether the agencies were making the claimed savings and said their budgets should be more rigorously scrutinised to ensure efficiencies were "independently verifiable and/or sustainable".

The Snowden documents show GCHQ has become increasingly reliant on money from "external" sources. In 2006 it received the vast majority of its funding directly from Whitehall, with only £14m from "external" funding. In 2010 that rose to £118m and by 2011/12 it had reached £151m. Most of this comes from the Home Office.

http://www.theguardian.com/uk

New report: Gitmo costs U.S. $2.7 million per prisoner



Guantanamo Bay detention facility in Cuba
The United States government spends about $2.7 million per prisoner per year to operate the Guantanamo Bay detention facility in Cuba, the Washington Post reports.

That estimate comes from a recent study by the Miami Herald’s Carol Rosenberg, who has covered Gitmo since 2002. According to Rosenberg, the U.S. will spend $454 million this year to maintain the facility and pay troop salaries, among other fees — a little under half a billion dollars.

With only 166 prisoners, that works out to an annual cost of about $2.7 million per detainee. For a point of comparison, California spends an annual $47,000 per prisoner, according to a 2010 study from that state’s government.

According to the Post, Rosenberg’s study serves as a reminder of the tremendous cost and inefficiency of running Gitmo and why the detention facility has been such a thorn in the side of the Obama administration.
In January 2009, President Barack Obama issued an executive order to close the camp, but the process has been stymied at every turn by a veritable Gordian knot of political and legal obstacles as well as national security concerns. Finding a place to put the prisoners if Gitmo were shuttered has been a contentious issue in both domestic politics and international diplomacy.

“I think for a lot of Americans, the notion is out of sight, out of mind,” Obama said at a press conference in April, insisting he would resume efforts to close the prison. “I’m going to go back at it because I think it’s important.”

JOURNEY IN DJIBOUTI: "Bring a Big Knife to School" Day


I bought the Somali knife for my daughter and found a sense of self in my foreign home.
A market in Djibouti
Find big knives or shameful ashtrays
By Rachel Pieh Jones

I wanted to buy a bilaawe, a traditional Somali knife. The shopkeeper wanted me to buy a bowl with two figures carved into ebony. The woman leaned over the edge of the bowl, her back arched, her breasts high and pointed and firm. The man also leaned back and his penis arced up and over, into the woman.
“Buy this, my sister,” the vendor insisted. He cupped the bowl in his hands and shoved it into my face so I could no longer see the man with whom I’d been bargaining for the bilaawe. I blinked, uncertain at first of what was in front of me. Slowly it came into focus. The breasts, the penis, the Djiboutian man holding it. His cheek bulged with khat, green leaves lodged between his teeth.

My long, loose, modest black dress was sweat-plastered to my stomach and back and I puffed at a bead of sweat gathering on the tip of my nose. Stalls of Qurans and tusbahs (Islamic prayer beads) and stiff-topped prayer caps bumped up to this tourist section of the market. Across the road and at the edge of the Hamoudi Mosque, people crowded around a bright red store. Over the roar of buses and the rattle of donkey carts I heard coins ping onto the metal countertop. Men shouted for water and passed a plastic, one-handled cup around the group, each gulping their share. When the cup emptied, more coins hit the counter and the shopkeeper refilled the cup, passed it around again.

The heat, the noise, the shared water cup and the proximity of the vendor’s face, the artistic and out-of-place-in-a-conservative-Muslim-country nude sculpture cocooned me and I felt dizzy.

“Ceeb!” I said and pointed at the naked couple. Shame. I knew that between the Islamic bookstalls, the water store, and the jewelry shops further down I would stumble upon this type of souvenir. I also knew the men would show them to me, offer astronomical prices, pretend to be surprised when I spoke Somali. We had been through this for more than ten years, every time a guest visited me in Djibouti. This time, my guest wanted to purchase a knife.

The bowl was actually an ashtray. I didn’t smoke and didn’t decorate my home with copulating figures. In an effort to be respectful of Islam, I didn’t even decorate with photos of people I loved and instead hung handcrafted, colorful, and sequined Arab tapestries.

I pushed the souvenir away. The man held the ashtray close to his eyes and squinted. He touched the body parts and his expression slowly changed. He waved the bowl over his head. “Ceeb! The foreign lady shamed me for selling naked people.” He spit green khat juice and clapped, cheerful, all the way back to his booth a few doors down.

“How much for the knife?” I asked the knife-seller. I knew the price of a bilaawe but also knew that you always ask, always work the relationship, always try to out-clever the other. This is for laughs, to give a good show to a passersby, and to make the shopping experience interesting and unpredictable. If I was bold enough, I could rub his chin between my right-hand fingers, tweak his nose, or pull his beard. But these were typically gestures used by single women with attractive shopkeepers. I was timid and married. He was unattractive.

The knife vendor slid the blade from the leather pouch. Blue and green beads wrapped around the handle of the rustic knife. He ran a finger along the sharp, curved edge.

“Eight thousand Djibouti francs,” he said.

I laughed, loud to be heard over the steady market rumble, and walked away.

The man followed me down the street, in and out of rickety wooden shops and I continued to laugh at him. Each vendor flashed knives and ashtrays and shouted prices. News of my Somali language ability spread faster than I could walk and small crowds of shoppers, university students, teashop owners, and goat herders met me at each stall to listen. The original vendor shadowed me, so close we kept bumping shoulders.

I didn’t look at the other knives or ashtrays, I simply roamed at a slow pace and feigned interest in chessboards, nomadic wooden headrests, Kenyan masks, amber beads. I was waiting for him to drop his price and as we walked I told him about the last bilaawe I purchased.

I had given it to my daughter for Christmas. Every Thursday was “Bring a Big Knife to School” day. She said she wouldn’t have a chance bring a big knife to school if, or when, we moved back to Minnesota. She said she wanted her knife to be a Somali knife, since she used to live in Somalia. She said only boys brought knives on Thursdays.

No one was certain when the tradition started but her twin brother had a theory. He said everyday, boys brought Leatherman knives and Swiss Army Knives and small blades to class. He speculated that the boys wanted a chance to bring out their larger weapons — maybe to share some of their unique history, like my daughter wanted to do, maybe just to show off. Teachers didn’t want the distraction of big knives on a daily basis and somehow Thursday became the designated day. But still, only boys participated.

“I want to be the first girl to bring a big knife to school,” she said.

On Christmas she unwrapped the knife. She checked the handle, the sheath, the blade, and smiled. The first Thursday back at school, this would be in her backpack. At the end of the story to the shopkeeper, I slipped in a sentence about how much I had paid.

The vendor laughed at the story, harder than I had laughed at him. Not only had I proven I knew the price of a bilaawe but I had done it in front of a crowd, at the end of a long bargaining period, and with a story.

I walked away from the market that day with the bilaawe in a pink plastic bag and without the ashtray. I had paid a fair price, far less than half the original asking price. I walked away with my own, personal, bottle of water from the corner store, not quite ready to share the pass-around-cup.

Some days in Djibouti, I feel clueless and confused, like I will never figure out how to live here. My foreignness seems to glow and be the most fundamental aspect of my identity. But that day I walked away with a fresh realization of how 11 years in the Horn of Africa: Somalia and Kenya and Djibouti, has changed me, and I felt decidedly un-foreign.

I could laugh at a scam attempt and refuse to pay tourist prices. I could shove orgasmic ashtrays and shout teasing shame on the vendor. I could give my daughter a big knife for Christmas and be proud of her for bringing it to school on Thursdays. That day in the market I sensed the slow march of progress toward cultural integration. • 31 July 2013

-----
Rachel Pieh Jones is a writer raised in the Christian west who now lives in the Muslim east. Her work has been published in the Christian Science Monitor, the New York Times, and the Huffington Post among others.

URGENT NEWS: Snowden leaves airport after Russia grants asylum

 
In this image taken from Russia24 TV channel, Russian lawyer Anatoly Kucherena shows Snowden's temporary document while speaking to the media after visiting National Security Agency leaker Edward Snowden at Sheremetyevo airport outside Moscow, Russia, on Thursday, Aug. 1, 2013. National Security Agency leaker Edward Snowden has received asylum in Russia for one year and left the transit zone of Moscow’ airport, his lawyer said Thursday. Kucherena said after meeting with the fugitive at Moscow’s Sheremetyevo airport, where he was stuck since his arrival from Hong Kong on June 23, that he handed him the papers proving his status. Kucherena said that Snowden’s whereabouts will be kept secret for security reasons. (AP Photo/Russia24 via APTN) TV OUT
VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV-Associated Press

MOSCOW (AP) — National Security Agency leaker Edward Snowden left the transit zone of a Moscow airport and officially entered Russia after authorities granted him asylum for a year, his lawyer said Thursday, a move that suggests the Kremlin isn't shying away from further conflict with the United States.

Snowden's whereabouts will be kept a secret for security reasons, lawyer Anatoly Kucherena said, making it even harder to keep track of the former NSA systems analyst, who has been largely hiding out at Moscow's Sheremetyevo airport since his arrival from Hong Kong on June 23.

The move could further strain U.S.-Russian relations already tense amid differences over Syria, U.S. criticism of Russia's human rights record and other disputes.

President Vladimir Putin has said his asylum was contingent on him not hurting U.S. interests, but the Kremlin could have interpreted that to exclude documents he had already leaked to newspapers that continue to trickle out.

The U.S. has demanded that Russia send Snowden home to face prosecution for espionage over his leaks that revealed wide U.S. Internet surveillance practices, but Putin dismissed the request.

In his application for asylum, Snowden said he feared he could face torture or capital punishment if he is returned to the U.S., though the U.S. has promised Russia that is not the case. The U.S. has revoked his passport, and the logistics of him reaching other countries that have offered him asylum, including Venezuela, Nicaragua and Bolivia, are complicated.

"He now is one of the most sought after men in the world," Kucherena told reporters at the airport. "The issue of security is very important for him."

NSA leaker Edward Snowden
Edward Snowden, who worked for the CIA and later as a contractor for the NSA, revealed details about U.S. spy programs that sweep up millions of Americans' telephone records, emails and Internet data in the hunt for terrorists.  (Reuters
The Guardian newspaper on Wednesday published a new report on U.S. intelligence-gathering based on information from Snowden, but Kucherena said the material was provided before Snowden promised to stop leaking.

The one-year asylum can be extended indefinitely, and Snowden also has the right to seek Russian citizenship. According to the rules set by the Russian government, a person who has temporary asylum would lose it if he travels abroad.

Kucherena said it would be up for Snowden to decide whether to travel to any foreign destination, but added that "he now has no such plans."

Snowden's father said in remarks broadcast Wednesday on Russian television that he would like to visit his son. Kucherena said he is arranging the trip.

WikiLeaks, the secret-spilling group that has adopted Snowden's cause, said its legal adviser Sarah Harrison is now with him. The group also praised Russia for providing him shelter.

"We would like to thank the Russian people and all those others who have helped to protect Mr. Snowden," WikiLeaks said on Twitter. "We have won the battle — now the war."

Kucherena said that Snowden spent little time packing and left the airport in a taxi. The lawyer said the fugitive had friends in Russia, including some Americans, who could help ensure his security, but wouldn't elaborate.


"He has got friends, including on Russian territory, American friends, who would be able to ensure his safety for the time being," Kucherena said.

He refused to say whether Snowden would stay in Moscow or move to stay elsewhere in Russia, saying the fugitive would discuss the issue with his family.

Kucherena argued that Russia did the right thing by offering shelter to Snowden despite U.S. pressure. "Russia has fulfilled a humanitarian mission with regard to the U.S. citizen who has found himself in a difficult situation," he said, voicing hope that the U.S. wouldn't try to slam Russia with sanctions.

Putin's foreign affairs aide, Yuri Ushakov, sought Thursday to downplay the impact on relations between the two countries.

"This issue isn't significant enough to have an impact on political relations," he said in remarks carried by Russian news agencies.

He said that the Kremlin hasn't heard any signal from Washington that Obama could cancel his visit to Moscow ahead of next month's G-20 summit in St. Petersburg.

But Sen. Robert Menendez, Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said in a statement that the Russian decision to grant asylum to Snowden would hurt ties.


"Edward Snowden is a fugitive who belongs in a United States courtroom, not a free man deserving of asylum in Russia," the Democratic lawmaker said. "Regardless of the fact that Russia is granting asylum for one year, this action is a setback to U.S.-Russia relations. Edward Snowden will potentially do great damage to U.S. national security interests and the information he is leaking could aid terrorists and others around the world who want to do real harm to our country."

Lyudmila Alexeyeva, a veteran of Russia's human rights movement and head of the respected Moscow Helsinki Group, welcomed the news on asylum for Snowden, but added that his quest for freedom of information has landed him in a country that has little respect for that and other freedoms.

"Having fought for the freedom and rights, Snowden has ended up in a country that cracks down on them," Alexeyeva said, according to the Interfax news agency.

Rachel Denber of Human Rights Watch sounded a similar note. "He cannot but be aware of the unprecedented crackdown on human rights that the government has unleashed in the past 15 months," Denber said in an e-mailed comment.

Putin has launched a wide-ranging crackdown on dissent since his inauguration for a third presidential term in May 2012, with the Kremlin-controlled parliament stamping a series of laws that introduced heavy fines for participants in unsanctioned protests, imposed new tough restrictions on non-government organizations.

A law passed in June bans imposes hefty fines for providing information about the gay community to minors or holding gay pride rallies, a move that has prompted gays in the U.S. and elsewhere to call for boycott of the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi.
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Laura Mills contributed to this report.

AMISOM: Peacekeepers or African Imperialists?




by Aman H.D. Obsiye
Merriam-Webster Dictionary defines imperialism as “the policy, practice, or advocacy of extending the power and dominion of a nation especially by direct territorial acquisitions or by gaining indirect control over the political or economic life of other areas.”  Traditionally, when one hears the word imperialism, European nations come to mind, but it should be noted that Europeans do not have a monopoly on imperialism.  Today, we are currently witnessing the advent of African Imperialism within the confines of South-Central Somalia.

Many believe that AMISOM is solely in Somalia to help the Provisional Federal Government (PFG) establish governance, but their motive is more sinister.  The vanguard of the African armies in Somalia is: (1) Ethiopia [albeit not officially under AMISOM], (2) Kenya, (3) Burundi, and (4) Uganda.  What all four of these nations have in common is that they are all signatories of the Cooperative Framework Agreement (CFA), which seeks to redistribute the Nile River resources.  Yes, AMISOM is in Somalia because of the Nile River dispute.
 
Traditionally, Somalia is seen as an Egyptian ally and the AMISOM nations have implemented a policy of weakening Somalia in order to tilt the balance of power in its favor.  Somalia has been in a state of chaos since 1991, therefore being a non-factor in the Nile River dispute.  This all changed in June 2006.  The entire Somali peninsula was peaceful, stable, and rule of law reigned supreme.  North-west Somalia was, and still is, controlled by the Republic of Somaliland, who is seeking to reassert its sovereignty.  North-east Somalia was, and still is, controlled by the Puntland State, seeking to be a regional state in a federated Somalia.  Lastly, South-Central Somalia, where chaos and instability has ensued endlessly, was finally pacified by the Union of Islamic Courts (UIC).  Somalia’s former Transitional President, Sharif Sheikh Ahmed (2009-12), led the UIC.
 
Ethiopia, witnessing organic Somali governance returning, made a calculated decision to invade South-Central Somalia in December 2006.  This subsequently reintroduced chaos and instability in South-Central Somalia, gave birth to Al-Shabaab, and served as a raison d'être for the two dozen Somali-Americans who left Minnesota to fight what they viewed as a foreign occupation.   Since December 2006, South-Central Somalia has been occupied by various African armies, majority signatories to the CFA. Coincidence?  In addition, Tanzania’s Mahiga, the former UN Special Representative for Somalia (2010-13), was placed in charge of drafting the PFG’s new constitution and helping in the process of selecting the PFG’s members of parliament and president.  If you are wondering, Tanzania is also a signatory to the CFA.  In essence, Somalia’s sovereignty has been outsourced to the CFA nations.
 
Of all the CFA nations, Kenya has made the greatest gains in its imperial project.  A wikileak cable (Dec. 2009) bluntly speaks about Kenya’s desire to form a Jubaland region, which would be its satellite state, in South-Central Somalia.  It should be noted that the US warned Kenya against this “Jubaland Initiative.”  In 2011, Kenya invaded Kismayo (Jubaland’s capital) and on May 15, 2013, Jubaland was officially born.  Currently, the PFG has demanded that Kenya leave Kismayo and inter-clan warfare has been reintroduced there.  Through Jubaland, Kenya now has indirect control over the political or economic life of a vital part of Somalia.
 
The international community, especially the West and non African Imperialist countries, must help Mogadishu regain its sovereignty over South-Central Somalia.  This is the only way Al-Shabaab can be completely defeated and eradicated.  Three main policies must be implemented.
 
First, a PFG Army must be built.  This task is not as difficult as many speculators propagate.  The same policy the international community used to develop the PFG parliament can be used to develop the PFG army. The international community gathered all the chiefs of the various Somali tribes to select the PFG parliament. This was done so all tribes had fair representation via their traditional tribal chiefs.  The international community should gather these exact same tribal chiefs, and host them together again to provide for a PFG army.  Each chief shall delegate a certain number of its men to join the PFG army, so it may be a Somali army proportionally represented.  Secondly, AMISOM must have an exit strategy, no excuses.  Lastly, the polity known as the Republic of Somaliland must be left alone until an authentic-sovereign government is in place in Mogadishu.  The peace, stability, and democratic project taking place in Somaliland must not be derailed.  A “Somaliland-Somalia Truth and Reconciliation” committee should be formed to discuss their future relations.
 
To conclude, Imperialism, whether it is European of African, has never brought dignity to its victims.  If the honor of the Somali People is to be restored, the international community must help eradicate African Imperialism from the Somali territories.

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Aman H.D. Obsiye is a Somali-American law student at the University of Minnesota. He can be reached at aman.obsiye@gmail.com

Russian helicopter crashed in Ethiopia



ENA, ena.gov.et

Addis Ababa July 31/2013 Ethiopian Civil Aviation Authority announced a Russian helicopter had been crashed in East Shoa Zone of Oromia State while preparing to fly to Juba, South Sudan, for United Nations mission.

Authority told ENA that two helicopters have taken flight from Djibouti to Addis Ababa to fill fuel and to undertake technical check ups for the United Nations' mission in South Sudan.

The Authority added that one of the helicopters crashed today at 10: 20 Chefe Dinsa area East Shoa zone Oromia State with undisclosed reason.

Two pilots and four passengers have taken a flight in the helicopter but no death has so far been reported except some injuries, the Authority noted. Ethiopian Air Force has undertaken rescue works in collaboration with the community to help victims.

Special National investigation committee has been organized to find out the reasons behind the accident and will travel to the area, the Authority said.