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Thursday, August 8, 2013

The African Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM) is today celebrating Eid Mubarak with Muslims in Somalia.


The African Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM) is today celebrating Eid Mubarak with Muslims in Somalia.



This Eid comes two days after Somalis marked the second anniversary of the expulsion of the Al-Shabaab terror group from Mogadishu.

The special representative of the chairperson of the African Union Commission (SRCC) for Somalia, Ambassador Mahamat Saleh Annadif also sent his best wishes to the people of Somalia.

“It gives me great pleasure to congratulate all Somalis on this important day. Today is the culmination of a month of sacrifice, meditation and soul-searching and comes at a momentous period for Somalia,” said Annadif.

Through a press release distributed to newsrooms, the SRCC also recognized the immense contribution that the serving Muslim troops in the different AMISOM contingents have made.

SRCC has also commended the Muslim troops for their efforts in helping to restore peace and stability.

Ambassador Annadif called on Somalis to maintain the momentum witnessed in the last few years and remain steadfast in their quest for peace.

“To the people of Somalia and Muslims around the world, i wish you all a very happy and peaceful celebration, Eid Mubarak,” said Annadif.

By James Kariuki

Somalia: Soldier of Misfortune-Report


David Bax helped save 35 aid workers in a Mogadishu firefight. So why did they turn against him?

BY COLUM LYNCH
The tip came early in the day on June 19. Islamist militants had breached the inner sanctum of the United Nations' humanitarian compound in downtown Mogadishu -- and they were trying to slaughter the relief workers inside.

It wasn't David Bax's job to respond to such an attack; the former South African soldier was hired by the U.N. simply to defuse explosives in and around the restive city.

But Bax wasn't about to sit on his hands while a massacre went down. Within 30 minutes, Bax had mobilized his convoy, consisting of Burundian soldiers, U.N. explosives specialists, and foreign security contractors, into a rescue party.

While the firefight between al-Shabab militants and Somali guards raged inside the U.N. facility, Bax led his team to the outer wall and waited for a lull in the shooting. When the pause came, they rushed into the compound and began loading the terrified U.N. survivors onto Bax's Casspir armored personnel vehicles. Once the vehicles were full, Bax's team sped off and delivered the survivors to safety at the secure U.N. compound at Mogadishu's airport. In the end, one U.N. staffer, two South African contractors, four Somali security guards, a Somali electrician, and several Somali civilians were dead. As many as seven al-Shabab fighters were also killed in the operation. Most of the fighting was carried out by Somali security guards, who suffered the largest number of casualties. While Bax's team didn't engage in the firefight, there was little doubt that he and his team had risked their lives.

But the United Nations didn't award Bax a commendation for his bravery. In fact, days after the attack, Bax, the program manager for the U.N. Mine Action Service (UNMAS) in Somalia, came under fire from some of the very people he tried to save, and his U.N. career may now be on the line. His detractors say he repeatedly overstepped the bounds of his authority and propriety, propositioning female colleagues and exercising undue control over vital necessities for humanitarian workers like a Chicago alderman. Others say that Bax's rescue mission, while noble, may have only put U.N. employees -- and the U.N. mission in Somalia -- in further jeopardy. Bax had no authority to mount a risky extraction operation, some of his U.N. colleagues charge, and the appearance of a U.N.-led convoy -- made up of Western security contractors and armed Burundian soldiers at war with al-Shabab -- might have only reinforced the Somali public's perception of the United Nations as a partisan in the conflict. The appearance of evenhandedness, so necessary for humanitarian work, could be shattered.

The dispute over Bax's actions speaks to a deeper conflict over the U.N.'s global identity today. Is it an impartial humanitarian organization tending to the needs of civilians, regardless of political preferences? Or is it an ally with the world's great powers in the international struggle against militant Islamist extremism?

"The lines can get pretty blurred," said Matthew Bryden, who once headed the U.N. Monitoring Group on Somalia and Eritrea (SEMG), a U.N. Security Council panel that investigates threats to Somalia's democratic transition.

The United Nations, Bryden, explained, is like "a very broad church" whose myriad strains and tendencies can frequently come into conflict in the field. The U.N. humanitarian aid agencies insist that the United Nations must be perceived as "a neutral actor" in order for them to safely carry out their lifesaving work. "The humanitarian agencies don't like to talk to the SEMG or provide it with information because they don't want to be seen collaborating with what they see as an intelligence arm of the United Nations." For people like Bax, whose mandate places him closer to the conflict's front line, "claiming to be neutral when al-Shabab has already decided the U.N. is a target doesn't make sense."

In the wake of the 9/11 attacks, the U.N. Security Council required states to write anti-terrorism laws, and it expanded its black list of suspected Islamist terrorists with links to al Qaeda and the group's affiliates. (Indeed, confronting Islamist extremists is one of a handful of issues that has united the council's five major powers: Britain, China, France, Russia, and the United States.) More recently, the Security Council has thrown its weight behind military missions crafted to thwart the ambitions of Islamist militants across Africa.

In Somalia, the United Nations is on a traditional humanitarian mission: feeding and caring for destitute Somali civilians. But it's also supplying crucial logistical support to the African Union forces who kicked al-Shabab out of Mogadishu -- and it's helping Somalia's new rulers stabilize the country in order to prevent the militants from staging a comeback.

Bax, a lumbering, 6-foot-5-inch former military engineer, has emerged as the embodiment of the hard edge of the United Nations. Bax is operating under a Security Council mandate to train American-backed peacekeepers on how to evade al-Shabab's bombs. That places him squarely on one side of the war there.

But though the U.N. is by no means neutral in Somalia, it is not supposed to be an active combatant. Bax's internal critics say he has crossed that line. His cooperation with American authorities, in particular, has raised eyebrows within the U.N.'s humanitarian's ranks.

***

Bax's troubles began days after the June 19 attack on the U.N. humanitarian compound. Infuriated by Bax's actions, an anonymous source in Mogadishu filed a complaint to Hervé Ladsous, the U.N. undersecretary-general for peacekeeping operations. The source, who also leaked copies of the complaint to Foreign Policy and Inner City Press, suggested that Bax's heroics had actually endangered U.N. personnel by reinforcing al-Shabab's contention that the U.N. is merely an agent of American aims.

"Our colleagues are dead and this is why?" said the anonymous source's complaint, pointing out that Somali authorities and the U.N.-sanctioned African Union peacekeeping force, not the United Nations, bear responsibility for security in Mogadishu. "Why is this HIS job? Why does he have an armed response squad and a convoy as the head of the mine action service.???… Don't we work for the UN? Aren't we neutral? Are we humanitarians or soldiers? He is completely rogue and not in the chain of command."

In response to the complaint, Bax's employer, the U.N. Office for Project Services, dispatched a fact-finding team last week to Nairobi, Kenya to establish whether there is sufficient evidence to launch a full-fledged investigation into wrongdoing, with the team expected to subsequently travel to Mogadishu. Bax was transferred out of Mogadishu after the complaint -- purportedly for his own safety. The investigators, who have already questioned Bax, are likely to clear him of charges of improperly collaborating with American authorities. As of Aug. 4, the investigators had not yet reached out to several women who were identified in the anonymous complaint as having information about alleged sexual harassment. (Bax declined to be interviewed for this article.)

Whatever the investigation's outcome, the case has turned a spotlight on a man who has left an oversized impression on U.N. life in Mogadishu.

***

A 17-year veteran of U.N. peacekeeping missions, Bax arrived in Mogadishu nearly four years ago, a time when al-Shabab held sway over much of the capital and the city was deemed even too dangerous for U.N. peacekeepers to operate.

Bax carved out a swath of land at Mogadishu's airport, inside a broader security compound operated by the African Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM), which had been established two years earlier to defend the country's Western-backed transitional government in its war with al-Shabab.

Bax's unit organized the construction of a network of secure housing units and offices that would accommodate the return of foreign diplomats, U.N. political officers, and relief workers. He organized his own armed convoy, protected by Burundian soldiers, who roamed freely around Mogadishu in a fleet of armored Casspir vehicles. He built a drinking establishment called Little Kruger in a thatched tukul at the heart of the compound. In a city where serving liquor can be a death sentence, Little Kruger -- named in honor of Nols Kruger, a South African diesel mechanic who was killed in a 2011 roadside ambush by al-Shabab -- was one of the rare spots where an expatriate could have a drink of imported Kenyan Tusker beer and relax with friends. It was also one of the city's safest spots.

Bax and his team quickly made common cause with Bancroft Global Development, a private security contractor that provided military training to African Union peacekeepers. Bax's agency hired the American firm to train Somali police and African Union peacekeepers in the handling of explosives. Two Bancroft employees, including an American national, were in Bax's convoy during the June 19 attack. The efforts by Bax's team and Bancroft helped the African peacekeepers improve their fighting skills and their defensive capabilities against al-Shabab.

Bax made other alliances as well.

Following a July 2010 attack by al-Shabab and its allies against Ugandan World Cup viewers, Bax established a relationship with the FBI to provide the Somalis with expertise on maintaining the integrity of the chain of evidence when handling bomb material.

On behalf of Somalia's police, Bax's unit collected fragments of explosives, swabs of blood, and chunks of mobile phones that were possibly used as detonators. The evidence was transferred by a Ugandan military flight to Kampala, the Ugandan capital, where an FBI field agent conducted tests at a local lab or in some cases sent the information back to Washington for further examination.

The arrangement was aimed at helping the Somali police build a case against extremists in the event of future prosecutions.

A senior official at U.N. headquarters insisted that the United Nations does not directly share evidence with the United States or other governments. The Somali government, not the U.N., was responsible for shipping the evidence to Uganda for testing by the FBI, the official claimed. The official also defended Bax's handling of the case, saying his team merely played a supporting role in the transaction. But some U.N. sources said Bax had taken the lead in facilitating the transactions and that in some cases his team had overstepped its authority. These sources, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said that Bax's team complied with an FBI request for blood samples of suspected foreign extremists who died in suicide bombings. In other words, this U.N. squad became an ally in America's war on terror.

***

Two years ago, al-Shabab's forces were largely driven from Mogadishu, opening the door to an influx of European diplomats, U.N. political and humanitarian aid officials, and relief agencies. While statistics are hard to come by, the U.N. helped train AMISOM forces in evasion tactics -- for instance, reducing foot patrols in narrow streets and increasing patrols in armored personnel vehicles. (The number of attacks from improvised explosive devices, however, has spiked in more recent months, climbing from 22 in the last three months of 2012 to 34 in the first three months of 2013.)

But Bax's team, composed of former military officials, did not always mix well with the U.N.'s relief workers, who often resented the enormous power Bax wielded over many of their lives.

It was Bax, for instance, who decided whether you slept in a nice room with a private toilet or shower or whether you were required to walk 100 yards in the dark in the middle of the night to find the outhouse. Bax, according to some U.N. officials, played favorites, assigning nicer rooms to friends.

The humanitarians were also weary of being associated with Bax, who traveled around town with his own heavily armed convoy. In fact, Bax once offered the U.N.'s humanitarian agencies a plot of land on the compound at the airport to build their facilities. They declined the offer, saying they needed to be closer to the government and the Somali people. But the humanitarian agencies -- which lack sufficient accommodations -- continued to rely heavily on Bax for housing, travel, and entertainment. The situation bred an atmosphere of resentment, jealousy, and dependency.

Bax's personality -- he has been described as King David, the Lord of Baxland -- has not helped.

One official compared Bax to Clint Eastwood's character in the movie Heartbreak Ridge - a highly decorated war hero whose hard drinking, rule breaking, and womanizing make him a bad fit for civilian life. A line from the film, according to the official, could apply to Bax: "You should be sealed in a case that reads, 'Break glass only in the event of war.'"

The official added that Bax is the "most action-oriented guy I've ever worked with." But Bax reportedly had personal failings and often behaved inappropriately. Among the accused offenses Bax is now under investigation for: a pattern of allegedly sexually harassing his female colleagues.

"He is very flirtatious, but I just ignored it," said one woman who recalled his advances. "UNMAS has done so much good there, and it would be a shame to see their program, and his career, go down the drain. I think it would be a huge loss for Somalia."

Another woman was less forgiving, saying that Bax frequently made sexually suggestive remarks to women, including her. "He makes constant lewd comments about me when I'm in my running gear," said the woman, a humanitarian worker who frequently stayed in the UNMAS camp. "He made unambiguous sexual advances at most of the women in camp. It's not just that he has a problem with women. I think he has a problem with boundaries of any kind."

A third woman who worked closely with Bax in Mogadishu, however, came to his defense, saying, "Bax is a decent guy." A fourth described him as protective of women in his own staff. "He is far better behaved than a whole raft of people" serving on U.N. missions, one of the women said.

In the end, the U.N. brass in headquarters has rallied behind Bax, saying he was instructed to go to the compound.

"In an extremely difficult and dangerous environment, the UNMAS team contributed to the success of the evacuation of more than 35 staff and allowed important evidence for later inquiry/investigation to be obtained without further casualties from unexploded ordnance," Agnes Marcaillou, director of the U.N. Mine Action Service, said in a statement.
But his position among the rank-and-file humanitarian workers suffered.

Numerous sources said that they resented the fact that Bax had shouted out the name of a particular woman during the rescue operation. That fueled the notion that he had only come to get his own friend out. Later that night, many survivors met at Little Kruger to console one another. Bax, pumped up on adrenaline and sometimes laughing, boisterously regaled his friends with tales of the day's adventure, at one point taking out his smartphone and playing a video he had taken of the siege. Maybe it was a natural act for a man whose job puts him in constant contact with terrorist attacks. But that night, it came across as boorish to some at the bar. "It was pretty bloody insensitive," said one person familiar with the night's events, noting that some survivors were appalled at his glib account of the episode. "If he had not done that I think he would have gotten more credit for his action."

Source: foreignpolicy.com

Mudaharaad Balaadhan Oo Shalay Ruxay Jidka Hormara Guriga Ra'iisal Wasaaraha Ingiriiska Ee No 10 Downstreet Lagagana Soo Horjeedo Xayiraada Adeega Xawaaladdaha + SAWIRO



Mr. Abdirashiid Duale Madaxa Shirkada Dahabshiil oo u waramaya wariye isagoo hortaagan Aqalka Ra'iisal Wasaarha Ingiriiska

London – Badhtamaha caasimada dalka Ingiriiska ee London waxa shalay ruxay dibad bax aad u balaadhan oo ay dhigayeen muwaadiniin Ingriis ah oo asalkoodu ka soo jeedo wadamo farobadan oo ka mid ah dunida seddexaad, dibadbaxan ayaa looga soo horjeeday xayiraada banigaga BARCLAY uu ku soo rogay 250 xawaaladood a oo ay ka mid yihiin kuwa Soomaalidu, go’aankan oo saamayn xun ku yeeshay dadka eheladoodii lacago uga diraya dalka Ingiriiska gudihiisa iyo guud ahaan wadamada yurubta galbeed. 

Orodyahanka Caalamiga ah ee Mo Farah
Boqolaal qof oo go’aanka Bangiga Barclays diidan oo uu horkacayo orodyahanka Caanka ah ee Mo Farah iyo Mudane ka tisan xisbiga Shaqaalaha ee Britain oo lagu magacaabo The Labour MP, Rushanara Ali, ayaa is hortagay guriga Ra’iisal Wasaaraha Ingiriiska ee David David Cameroon, si ay ugu gudbiyaan dalabkooda. 

The Labour MP, Rushanara Ali oo wariyayaal ugu waramaysa Aqalka Ra'iisal Wasaaraha Ingiriiska hortiisa
Dibadbaxayaasha ayaa dareenkooda sida ay uga soo horjeedaan go’aanka  uu qaatay Banigaga Barclays waxay ku muujinayeen Boodhadh ay siteen iyo Qoraal dalab ah (Petition) oo ay saxeexeen dad tiradoodu kor u dhaafayso 25,000 oo ruux, kaasi oo ay ku faahfaahiyeen cawaaqibka xun iyo dhibaatada halaaga ah ee ka dhalanaysa joojinta lacagaha dadka ku sugan ingiriiska iyo guud ahaan Yurub u dirayaan eheladooda baahan ee ay uga soo tageen wadamda colaadaha iyo faqrigu halakeeyay oo ay ka mid tahay Somalia.

Hoos ka fiirso sawiro laga qaaday Dibadbaxayaasha oo ku sugan Aqalka Raiisal Wasaaraha Ingiriiska David Cameroon. 


































HAMBALYADA MADAXWEYNAHA JSL, EE MUNAASIBADDA CIIDAL FIDRIGA AWGEED.



CIID MUBAARIK, CIIDAL CAAFIYA, KULU CAAM WA ANTUM- BIKHAYR.
 
Madaxweynaha Somaliland Mudane, 
Axmed Maxamed Maxamuud (Silaanyo)
Madaxweynaha Somaliland Mudane, Axmed Maxamed Maxamuud (Silaanyo) ayaa Dhamaan Golayaasha Qaranka, Madax-dhaqameedka, Culima-awdiinka, Xisbiyada Qaranka, dhamaan Bulshada reer Somaliland iyo Dhamaan Muslimiintu meel ay joogaanba, wuxuu u soo-jeedinayaa hambalyada Ciid-alfidriga awgeed, waxaanu yidhi madaxweynuhu Ciid-Mubaarik, Ciidal-caafiya, kulicaam wa antum bikhayr. Waxaan illaahay inooga rajaynayaa in uu ciidan ciideeda inagu gaadhsiiyo caafimaad, cibaado, bash-bash iyo barwaaqo.

Aamiin Aamiin Aamiin

Hambalyada ciida dabadeed, waxaan halkan bogaadin uga soo jeedinayaa ciidamada kala duwan ee qaranka oo aan u rajaynayo in dhammaan derajadii iyo gunnooyinka dalacaaduhu kuwada gaadheen ciidan kasta fadhiisinkiisa, Askari kasta waxaa saaran waajibaad, waxaana uu qaranka ku leeyahay xuquuq, derajaduna waxay ka mid tahay xuquuqda ciidamadu ku leeyihiin dawlada, waxaan ku kalsoonahay in ay derajadu soo kordhin doonto kala-danbaynta milgaha iyo haybadda ciidanimo, kor-u-qaadi-doonto muuqaalka iyo karaamada dawladnimo. Munaasabada ciida darteed, waxaan ciidamada caruurtooda iyo xaasaskooda leeyahay Hambalyo, Hambalyo, Hambalyo.

Waxaan jecelahay in aan halkan ka cadeeyo mawqifka dawladda ee ku aadan shirka dunidu noogu baaqday ee Brussels, maadaama ay EU-da iyo Somalia wada marti-gelinayaan (Co-hosting), waxaanu u aragnaa mid dhaawacaya jiritaanka iyo qaranimada Dalkan JSL, kaasoo aan waxba kaga duwanayn shirarkii hore ee aanu diidnay, sidaa darteed kama soo-qayb-gelayno shirkaas.

Gebegebadii, waxaan bulshada Somaliland u dardaarmayaa in ay nabadgelyada illaaliyaan, in ay isku-duubnaadaan, in ay illaaliyaan shuruucda dalka.

Walaalayaal aan ka digtoonaano dhagaraha cadawga oo aan meel uga soo wada jeesano cid kasta oo dalkani hagardaamo u soo maleegaysa, qofkasta oo talo, toosin iyo taageero doonaya waxaanu jecel-nahay in uu noo soo gudbiyo, gacmo furan ayaanu ku soo dhawaynaynaa, laakiinse waa in aanu doc-faruurin nidaamka dawladnimo iyo shuruucda dalka, qofkii doonaya in uu wax dhaliilo, canaanto ama siyaasad u tartamo waxaynu u samaysanay nidaamka Xisbiyada badan, dalkuna waa dal dimuquraadi ah, waxaynu wax ku nahay dawladnimada, qofkastana xil baa ka saaran illaalinta qaranimada, anigana Madaxweyne ahaan, waxaa xil iyo waajib iga saaran-yahay dalka iyo dadkiisa in aan ku illaaliyo xaydaabka sharci, cidna ka yeeli-maayo inay iska gudub marto.

Waxaan illaahay ugu mahad-naqayaa nabadgelyada aynu haysano, waxaanan ku faraxsanahay in la helay dad ajiiba baaqii iyo gogoshii nabada ee aan mudada dheer ku celcelinayay, oo ay garwaaqsadeen in wada-hadalku ka wanaagsan yahay xabadda iyo dagaalka.

Waxaan aaminsanahay in aan xabadi xalkeenin, walaalayaal dhulku guurimaayo, go’inamaayo, dadka geyigan ku dhaqanina waa dad walaalo ah oo aan marnaba kala maarmayn, Dalka Somaliland waa qani hadii laga shaqaysto, waana inagu filan-yahay, wixii laysku maan-dhaafana wada-hadal iyo isu-tanaasul ayaa inoo dhaqan ahaa oo aynu ku soo caano-maalnay. Walaalayaal ku soo dhawaada nidaamka wada-hadalka iyo qalinka horumarka.

CADDAALADDA.

Walaalayaal caddaaladdu waa aasaaska iyo jiritaanka dawladnimo, waxa ay abuurtaa kalsooni, waana astaanta maamul-wanaagga.

Walaalayaal, Dastuurku waxa uu qeexay madax-baanida Garsoorka, aniga oo arrintaas ka shidaal qaadanaya, isla markaana fulinaya balan-qaadkaygii xilligii doorashadda waxaan isbedel ku sameeyey Garsoorka iyo Caddaaladda sida; Maxkamadda sare, Guddiga Caddaaladda iyo Xeer-ilaalinta Guud, waxa aan alkumay Xafiiska Garyaqaanka Guud, si xeerarka loogu sameeyo faafinta rasmiga ah, loona gaar-yeelo kiisaska dawladdu darafka ka tahay ee madaniga ah.

Walaalayaal, si loo xakameeyo xad-gudubyada ka dhanka ah xuquuqda bini’aadamka waxaan samaynay Hay’adda Xuquuqal iinsaanka.

Walaalataal sidaas oo ay tahay xukuumadda aan gadh-wadeenka ka ahay ka daali mayso, kana caajiso mayso dedaalka lagu xaqiijinayo in muwaadiniintu caddaalad dareemaan.

Waxaan dhamaan bulshada reer Somaliland ku bogaadinayaa kaalinta ay ka qaataan nabadgelyada illaalinteeda, waxaan leeyahay is dhawrta, is kaashada oo isku-duubnaada, qofkii xunna meel uga soo wada jeesta.

Anigoo farxada la wadaagaya dadkayga waxaan mar labaad halkan idiinka soo gudbinayaa Hambalyo, bogaadin iyo duco-ba:

·         Inta bukhta een caafimaadku u saamixin inay innala ciidaana waxa aan alle uga baryayaa inuu ka dulqaado Xanuunka, intii inaga baxdayna Alle u naxariisto.
·         Ugu danabyn waxa aan leeyahay Ciid mubaarik, Ciidal-caafiya Kuli-caam wa antum Dayibiin.
Asalaamu Calaykum Waraxmatulaahi Wabarakaatuhu.

Axmed Saleebaan Maxamed (Dhuxul)
Af-hayeenka Madaxtooyada JSL.

Somalia: Rape and injustice: The woman breaking Somalia's wall of silence

Confronting Somalia's rape crisis

African Voices is a weekly show that highlights Africa's most engaging personalities, exploring the lives and passions of people who rarely open themselves up to the camera. Follow the team on Twitter.

Fartuun Adan is a champion for women's rights and the co-founder of Sister Somalia, the East African country's first rape and crisis center 
From Nima Elbagir and Lillian Leposo, CNN

Mogadishu, Somalia (CNN) -- Inside a brightly painted Mogadishu clinic, Salim (not her real name) sits alongside her seven-year-old son, waiting for a check up. Opposite them, a health professional listens to their nightmarish ordeal.

Salim recounts how she was raped and then watched, helpless, as her young son was molested. Too afraid to seek assistance, she did what she thought would help. She washed her son's wounds with hot water and salt for four excruciating days, until they were brought here, the Sister Somalia center.

"There are so many stories; when you hear one, another one is even worse and that makes you think of it all the time," says Fartuun Adan, co-founder of Sister Somalia, the first rape crisis center in the East African country. "I even dream about what I heard during the day."

A champion for women's rights in Somalia, Adan is used to hearing such horror stories. Two years ago, she started Sister Somalia, a group dedicated to supporting survivors of sexual violence with medical services, counseling, education and entrepreneurial advice.
  • A shelter for Somalia's rape victims
  • Somalia's woman of courage
  • Drought victims suffer sexual violence
"Our purpose when they are there (is for them) to feel safe," says Adan. "If you want to cry, if you want to laugh -- support them, (make them) feel at home and that's why we created the center."

'Rape was everywhere'

But in order to provide rape victims with a refuge, Adan had to risk her own safety.

At the Sister Somalia center, women and children are sheltered in safe houses, and provided with emotional support and counseling.
Her mission began in 2007, at the height of a Somali conflict that had been raging for more than 15 years. Until then, Adan was living with her three daughters in Ottawa, having fled to Canada in 1999 three years after the brutal murder of her husband, Somali human rights activist Elman Ali Ahmed.

Read this: Peace concert rocks Mogadishu

But six years ago, Adan took the courageous decision to leave her children behind and return to her motherland to help the Somali women and youth suffering because of the war.

Adan initially focused her efforts on reviving the work of her late husband, a prominent peace activist committed to rescuing young boys from becoming child soldiers. But in 2011, many parts of Somalia suffered from famine, forcing thousands of people to make the grueling trek to Mogadishu where humanitarian organizations were giving out food.

Makeshift camps sprouted all over the capital, providing shelter for the internally displaced. But for many women and children living there, cut off from the protection of their clans, the camps were places of rape and violence.

To deal with the growing crisis, Adan started Sister Somalia, the first organization in the country to come out publicly and talk about the astonishing number of sexual abuse victims.

"Rape was everywhere, Somalia was in denial," she says. "There was a lot of denial and that made it harder."

'Safe place'

Community elders wanted Adan to hide the rapes and Islamist militants and militia men constantly threatened her. But the activist defied the dangers to provide rape victims with a place of healing.

At the Sister Somalia center, women and children receive a holistic approach to care and treatment. Initially, the victims are given short-term anti-retroviral treatment to reduce the likelihood of HIV infection. They also receive drugs to prevent pregnancy or sexually transmitted diseases.

Read this: Chef brings a taste of peace to Mogadishu
"We can talk, we can eat, take tea together, having little fun so they forget most of the times and they share the story." .........Fartuun Adan, co-founder of Sister Somalia
The women and children are sheltered in safe houses, becoming part of a communal setting that provides victims with emotional support as they go through counseling and treatment.

"This is a very safe place," says Adan, who now runs the group with one of her daughters. "We can talk, we can eat, take tea together, having a little fun so they forget most of the times and they share their story."

World recognition
For her work championing human rights and women's rights in Somalia, often in dangerous conditions, Adan was bestowed in March with the U.S. Secretary of State's International Women of Courage Award, an annual prize that pays tribute to emerging women leaders across the world.

"I was happy because of the recognition we got, not only me but all the other women who are doing the job we are doing in Somalia," says Adan, who started Sister Somalia alongside Lisa Shannon, founder of "Run for Congo" and Katy Grant, co-founder of Prism Partnership.

"It's an encouragement for us," adds Adan, who now runs the group with one of her daughters and a few dedicated helpers. An eight-person volunteer support staff based in North America also gives administrative assistance. "I was always thinking how can I help women but I never thought it would be recognized internationally," she adds.
Earlier this year, Adan was honored by American First Lady Michelle Obama and U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry with the International Women of Courage Award
Hope

Rape in Somalia carries huge social stigma, so although an increasing number of women seek help at Adan's crisis center, many more suffer in silence.

"A lot of people know what is going on but they are denying," says Adan. "Even the family, they deny if their girl gets raped because they don't want her to be stigmatized and shamed and that makes it hard."

Read this: Holidays in Somalia, anyone?

But for the first time in a long time, there is a new sense of optimism in Somalia. After more than two decades of war, there is a newly elected president and parliament.

Adan says political leaders now acknowledge rape is a huge issue in the country, and this gives her hope for the future.

"I would like to see peace, justice, development like another country," says Adan. "Just to walk around without worrying and women can go to market and see whatever they want; have education, health, the basic human rights -- that is what I want to see."

Source: CNN

Living on the edge of a forgotten land

THEY call them "Somali flowers".

Disposal companies have dumped tonnes of waste in the Daami neighbourhood of Hargeisa, leaving children to pick their way through the waste, above; Concern Worldwide helped set up community groups so women could start self-sufficiency projects, far right; while many children have suffered severe ailments because their families have no access to basic medical facilities Photographs: David Pratt
David Pratt - Foreign Editor, Sunday Herald

Faded from the searing sun, snagged on bushes, fences, tumbling on the dusty breeze or lying in clusters across waste ground, the turquoise and pink plastic bags so nicknamed by locals litter the city of Hargeisa.

Their presence in Somaliland's capital is no respecter of rich or poor, uptown or downtown life, though inevitably it is the poorest communities where the worst garbage is to be found.

Daami neighbourhood is one such place. In this sprawling slum that is home to some 3500 people, many belong to Somaliland's minority clans, and are among the most marginalised in the region.

"We would like to improve our children's education, improve our houses across Daami village," says Ismail, a local woman summing up the determination that many people feel towards bettering their community despite being dealt a bad hand in the gamble that passes for life here.

To understand the problems that face the people of Daami is to first understand from where they came in Somaliland, a place itself long marginalised as the world's attention over the years has focused on its headline-making, conflict-wracked neighbour, the Republic of Somalia.

A former British Protectorate which received independence from Britain in June 1960, Somaliland initially united with Italian Somalia to become the Republic of Somalia. Under the rule of the military dictatorship of Siad Barre between 1969 and 1991, the people of Somaliland felt increasingly marginalised.

Barre's attempt to undermine the power of the dominant clan in the then northern Somalia led to the formation of the Somali National Movement (SNM).

As the SNM began a guerrilla insurgency against government and military posts inside Somalia, Barre responded with a military onslaught against northern towns and villages that killed tens of thousands of Somali civilians and led to the internal displacement of half a million people, while the same number again became refugees in Ethiopia.

Such atrocities led to the Somali Civil War and ultimately the downfall of Barre, with Somaliland in 1991 declaring its independence from the Republic of Somalia.

Since that time, Somaliland while managing to establish a stable administration, has still not been internationally accepted as an independent nation.

Afflicted in recent years by harsh droughts and its cities packed with myriad rural migrants, landless civil war returnees and families fleeing conflict in neighbouring Somalia, the urban neighbourhood of Daami in Hargeisa has become one of many catchment areas for such people as well as those from marginalised clans often culturally discriminated against. It is impossible to downplay the importance that Somaliland places on its clans as pivotal social units, and the central role clan membership plays in the country's makeup.

This social and cultural discrimination against minority clans means that few take much notice that Daami in recent years has literally become a dumping ground as private refuse disposal companies have taken to mass fly-tipping of stinking waste alongside the slum huts and tents in which thousands eke out their lives.

Outside Daami school I watched as children gingerly tip-toed through the heaps of plastic bags, rotting food scraps and every imaginable kind of solid waste.

Disposal companies have dumped tonnes of waste in the Daami neighbourhood of Hargeisa, leaving children to pick their way through the waste, above; Concern Worldwide helped set up community groups so women could start self-sufficiency projects, far right; while many children have suffered severe ailments because their families have no access to basic medical facilities Photographs: David Pratt
Nearby, in a large stagnant lake growing daily as the seasonal rains fall, other youngsters swim and toddlers are bathed by their mothers, oblivious to the risks they run from disease and infection.

Skin complaints, respiratory conditions, diarrhoea and intestinal problems, cholera, typhoid, as well as the threat from mosquitoes and malaria all stem from this seething pool of garbage saturated effluence. In the main it is the smallest of children under five years old who are the most vulnerable. During my time moving through the neighbourhood, mothers would constantly confront me with their children and the many ailments from which they were suffering.

One toddler, a large lump on her spine, had been unable to sleep on her back almost since birth. Another little girl with a throat and neck infection had been left with her tongue so badly swollen, she had lost her ability to speak. A small boy unable to see properly had never had an examination to determine whether his blindness was permanent or the result of something like cataracts that could be treated.
Disposal companies have dumped tonnes of waste in the Daami neighbourhood of Hargeisa, leaving children to pick their way through the waste, above; Concern Worldwide helped set up community groups so women could start self-sufficiency projects, far right; while many children have suffered severe ailments because their families have no access to basic medical facilities Photographs: David Pratt

None of these mothers had the money or access to the medical care needed for their children.

"In the rainy season our houses collapse or the water and filth rises up into them", explains Ismail, one of five women sitting before me who have become part of a Daami community self-help group set up with the support of humanitarian agency Concern Worldwide.

"In the beginning most of the women here and others in Daami didn't believe this could be done and thought setting up the group would be a waste of time", admits Ismail, looking around at other female group members dressed in colourful hejab headscarfs and nodding in agreement.

In extremely poor communities like Daami, women and the households they come from have no savings and with no micro-credit services available, most are dependent on money-lenders and shop owners for credit.

With the creation of the self help group, that has changed. Ismail says the women are now totally committed to the scheme that helps them generate income collectively to start and support other small livelihood projects selling items or running small stalls providing them with a degree of food security to prevent their families going hungry. It also helps improve the process of social inclusion for those discriminated against.

"Now our morale is good and we are using money from the group. Who knows, we could become big business people in the future," Ismail jokes.

Along with the self-help groups, Concern has also focused attention on the provision of sanitation and clean water. Most households in Daami have no latrines and open defecation is widespread. Even if available, piped water is way beyond what the poorest here can possibly afford.

As we walk past the tiny huts and tents in which most people here cram and on along the shoreline of Daami's garbage-polluted lake, I begin to fully realise the problem the community faces with its shortage of fresh water.
Disposal companies have dumped tonnes of waste in the Daami neighbourhood of Hargeisa, leaving children to pick their way through the waste, above; Concern Worldwide helped set up community groups so women could start self-sufficiency projects, far right; while many children have suffered severe ailments because their families have no access to basic medical facilities Photographs: David Pratt

Most people in Daami survive on $1 a day; water from piped sources would cost at $0.40 per 20 litre jerry can. That means a bill of $36 per month for a family of six using only 60 litres of water a day. Faced with this, the poorest in the community are left with the option of accessing water from an earthen dam. Free, it might be, but being tainted with solid waste means they run the risk of sickness and possibly death.

Many of those who have set up in Daami are of course rural migrants from Somaliland's countryside where water is also a crucial issue for the majority of people there who are agro-pastoralists and farmers.

In this region almost everything depends on rainfall which can be friend and enemy. When not suffering drought, much of the arable land here is often swept away leaving gullies up to 20 feet deep. Not surprisingly, this massive loss of rich farmland has meant that productivity is often low and the community plunged into poverty as a result.

Nasir Abiib was one of those who, as a result of drought and failed crops, was forced to head for the city to make a little money and feed his family.

Five years ago, an exceptional days wages hauling a wheelbarrow with goods in Hargeisa city amounted to $5 a day.

A meal rather than money was often all he was given, leaving nothing to send back to his family still struggling on their small patch of land some hours' drive outside of the capital.

That, however, was rare, and more often than not Nasir made nothing at the hands of unscrupulous hire-and-fire bosses.

"Come back tomorrow and we will pay you, they would tell me and other men from the countryside, but sometimes they never paid up," he recalls.
"You cannot go to the police, you cannot fight back; they have money," Nasir complains with a shrug.

It was one of Concern's agricultural support projects that gave Nasir the chance to rebuild his life in a way he least expected. "I was a casual labourer on one of the projects they had provided for other farmers, but I watched, learned then began to do things for myself," he says proudly as we sit in the shade of a tree on the 1.5 hectares of land on which he now grows, maize, tomatoes and water melon, resulting in him being hailed by locals as the best farmer and an "innovator" in the district.

I asked him what difference this had made to his life and that of his family?

"I have a reputation in the community before that I was in debt, always debt, credit and borrowing," the 48-year-old says glancing in the direction of his family nearby, who were working around their huts and livestock pens.

Most important of all, Nasir explains, is the way Concern's influence and support helped him in the long-term ensure that he had the capacity to feed his family.

"We now have enough food for four or five months," he says.

In such a harsh environment, with farmland vulnerable to the vagaries of nature, including drought, floods, pestilence and soil erosion, that is no mean feat.

In the district around Nasir's land I was to see for myself the water course and small gully dams projects that ensured flooding would have a limited effect on arable land.

In the Gabiley region I met and talked with other agro-pastoralist communities who told how before Concern's involvement, people and livestock were sharing water supplies. The improvement in health and their living environment was considerable, they assured me

In the village of Haji-daahi, locals told how they would like to see more hygiene and wash facilities along with soil bank-building and training to manage the water around which life here in this semi-arid landscape so depends more than most places on the planet.

"Five years from now we will be the people who are supporting the poorer members of our community," insisted village chief Abdi Daahi.

This, of course, is what real aid aims to achieve, enabling people to look after themselves and have the capacity to then support those still at risk within the community.

In Somaliland, such communities have traditionally shown a great deal of resilience and have cared for disadvantaged groups through use of diaspora, religious, community and clan-based coping strategies and systems.

But even with these mechanisms, that perfect storm of crop failure, poor rainfall, and outbreaks of disease regularly test those coping mechanisms to breaking point and beyond.

Somaliland and Somalia hewn from the same land-mass, culture and shared history, are today in some respects quite different places.

The former, fairly stable politically, the latter, increasingly so but still twisting in the winds of a conflict that has lasted decades.

In the two weeks that I spent moving around both regions, I met slum dwellers in Hargeisa and Mogadishu, and subsistence farmers in Gabiley, all with hopes, aspirations and a determination to make their lives better.

If there is a real common denominator in their lives, it is the perpetual threat of crippling poverty. But, as I was also to witness, with the right will and resources, that same poverty can be tackled and overcome.





David Pratt - Foreign Editor, Sunday Herald

Casuumadii Ruuxda: Qalinkii Maxamed Cabdi Ilig



Maxamed Cabdi Ilig
Markaad Casuumad maqasho waxay Naftu Xasuusata Cunto kala duwan, oo leh waxkasta oo ay leedahay Casuumadaha Saxiibada, Madaxda, Ehelka, Ganacsatada ay isku Casuuman.

Casumadu waxay micno ku leedahay Saxiibada kala dheeraday ee isku boholyoobay, muddo dheer War aan kala helin, balse iskugu yimid dalka iyo wadamada qalaad waxaana ka dhacda is xog waraysi nololeed, tariikh hore ,mid imika taagan Qoys, Caruur, Shaqo, Waxbarsho, Masuuliyad iyo waxyaabaga kale ee la hal maala.

Hadaba akhriste Casuumada Ruuxda waxay ahayd, Maalmo kooban, oo leh saamayn Aduunyo iyo Mid Aakhiro, waxay kulmisay Umad badan oo kala duwan, waxay fursad siisay dadwayne aan hore u heli jirin fursada ay ku tagi lahayen Casuumadani, waxay furtay Albaabka Samirka ee aan laga degdegayn, Macaanka ay leedahay, waxa ku dhex jiray Xikmad aan lahayn koobnaan balse lahayd iftiimin balaadhan, waxa intaa dhex socday hadalo kaftan iyo laxan u ah nuxurka ay xambaarsanyd  Casuumadani.

Gadhwadeenka Casuumada, waa nin Ilaahay u dhaliyay xikmad, waa aqoon yahan ku xeel dheer Dastuurka Xaqiiqda Ah ee dunida Ilaahay ka koryeelay, waa Qaari fahan u leh hab nololeedka Aadamaha, waa dhakhtar daweeya laabaha Warwarka iyo walbahaarku daashaday, waa Macalin wax bara Ardayda cilmiga u ooman, waa Mufti leh karaamo iyo Sharaf, Xishood iyo halkarnimo, Sheekh Maxamed Sheekh Cumar Diriri Ilaahay ha ka Abaal mariyo heeganka uu ugu jiro bislaynta ruuxda Bulshada kala duwan ee Somalida meelkasta oo ay joogto.

Waxa waxa uu isku dayay muddo 30 cisho ah oo ay bisha barakasyan ee Ramadaan lagu jiray inuu wax badan ka iftiimiyo fa’idada nololeed ay bishani Xambaarsan tahay, waxa uu malinkasta casharo Xambaarsan Dahirinta Nafta iyo Ka fa’idaysiga bishani ku siinayay Masjidka Rusheeye waxaanu isku dayay inuu bulshada ka dhaadhiciyo habkii ay u noolan lahayeen.

Waxa taasi sii dheera Habeenkasta wakhtiga Tarawixda waxa Cashar socda 15 daqiiqo oo ka hadlaya hadaba Quraanka lagu tukinayo Salada Tarawixda uu siinayay kumananka qof ee helay fursada ay kaga qayb gali lahayeen bixinta Casharada Casuumadu ka koobnayd, Sheekh Maxamed Sheekh Cumar Dirir qodobada aan ka dulmari karno ee ay ka koobnayd Casuumadiisu waxa kamida:-

1-     Faidada Soonka
2-     Axkamta Soonka
3-     Cida loo baneeyay
4-     Ka aan lo banyan
5-     Waxyabaha jabiya
6-     Sababaha u ku jabo
7-     Siyabaha loogu baneyay qofka afuraya
8-     Fa’idada quraanka
9-     Afurka iyo xiliyadiisa
10- Suxuurta faidadeea
11- Barashada quraanka
12- Wakhtiga sakada
13- Fa’idada sadaqada
14- Joogtaynta saladaha
15- Xasilinta nafta
16- Wakhtiga sakada
17- Salatul laylka
18- Danbi dhaafka
19- Nimcooyinka soonka
20- Abaalmarinta soonka
21- Xaaranta iyo soonka
22- Laytul qadriga
23- Sunihii Rasuulka NNKH iyo 10 ka danbe
24- Ciida iyo waxyabaha la ogol yahay
25- Joogtaynta Cibaadada
26- Shaqada la qabto Ramadan kadib.

Dedaalka ka socday Masjidkasi Rusheeye ee uu Sheekh Maxamed khadiibka ka yahay waxay dadku ku diirsadeen Fa’iidada fahanka nolosha ee ay heleen iyo sidii ay u joogtayn lahayeen Camalka wanaagsan ee ay la kulmeen.

Casuumada Arwaaxdu waxay daaran tahay in 360 maalmood gudahood ay timaado bil barakaysan, oo wadata Abaalmarin aan lagu sheegin aduunyada oo ilaahay uu bixinayo oo kaliya Malinta Aakhitiro.

Dardarankii Casuumada.

1-     In Cibadada la joogteyo
2-     In danbi dhaaf laga helayo
3-     In ilaahay la caabudo
4-     In ilaahay ku jeclaado
5-     In yaqiin aad lahaato
6-     In Macaasida ay ka dherayso
7-     In khatumada ilaahay khayr kugu khatimo

Dhaman qodobadaasi waxay ka mid ahayeen Dardarnkii Casuumadii Ruuxda iyo Sheekh maxamed sheikh Cumar Dirir oo muddo ka badan labatan sandood u ban baxay sidii uu bulshada uga badbaadin lahaa khatumo xumada, una tusi lahaa jidka toosan ee lagu gaadhayo Casuumada Ilaahay ee Janatul Fardawsa.

Lasoco qaybta labaad Diblomasiyadii iyo Kalmadihii Sheekhu u adeegsanayay fahanka Nolosha oo ku xikmadaysan kuwa suuqdiga ah ee manta Bulshadeenu isticmaasho.

Maxamed Cabdi Ilig