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Tuesday, August 20, 2013

Somalia’s Foreign Minister visits China



MOGADISHU(Xinhua) — Somali Foreign Minister Fawzia Yusuf on Monday headed a government delegation to China for an official visit, the first to the East Asian country by a senior official of the current administration of the Horn of Africa nation.

Yusuf, who is also deputy prime minister, was accompanied in the trip to the Chinese capital Beijing by State Minister for the Interior and National Security Mahdi Mohamoud Ali, Deputy Minister for Reconstruction Nadiifa Mohamed Osman and other high-ranking officials, a statement from the Foreign Ministry said.

“The delegation will meet various Chinese government officials on ways of further strengthening the bilateral relations and cooperation between the two countries,” the statement said.
While taking tentative steps to recover from two decades of conflict, Somalia has been working to improve relations with the outside world.

Diplomatic relations between Somalia and China have a long history. In 2006, Somalia’s then president Abdulahi Yusuf Ahmed visited China and revived the bilateral ties after years of hiatus due to the raging conflict in the country.

As the situation has gradually improved, trade between the two nations has seen an increase to broaden prospects for economic cooperation in the future.
Before the civil war broke out in Somalia, China implemented various development projects including a national sports stadium, a theater in the capital Mogadishu and hundreds of km of roads throughout the country.

Officials say the current visit will pave the way for development projects to be built by Chinese companies and the direct investment in the Somali economy.

Source: Xinhua

Prime Minister Hailemariam confers with the UN Special Representative for Somalia


Adiss Ababa - Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn met with the United Nations Special Representative for Somalia, Nicholas Kay, on Friday, to discuss the current situation in Somalia.

During their talks the Prime Minister noted that Ethiopia would continue the support it provides for Somalia's reconstruction and reaffirmed the commitment of the Ethiopian government to support the efforts of the Somali Federal Government to reach agreement with regional states.

He also underlined Ethiopia’s commitment to continue to support Somalia’s efforts to build up the capacity of government bodies as well as security forces. After the discussions, the Special Representative told journalists that the two parties had discussed ways to strengthen Somalia’s government institutes, the police and the defense forces.

He also praised Ethiopia’s efforts to improve the effectiveness and capacity of the Somali police and defense forces.

Source: Government of Ethiopia

Somalia: Dr Tedros Confers With UN Secretary General's Special Representative for Somalia



Adiss Ababa - Foreign Minister Dr Tedros met Nicholas Kay, UN Secretary General's Special Representative for Somalia to discuss recent developments in Somalia and IGAD's effort in assisting the peace talks between the Federal Government and political actors in Southern Somalia. Mr. Kay expressed his condolences for the death of the four crew members in an airforce plane crash in Mogadishu.

Appreciating the peace efforts neighboring countries were exerting in Somalia, Mr. Kay said the UN was ready to support IGAD's effort to start a dialogue between the Federal Government and Jubaland. He expressed the UN's keenness to see all remaining issues resolved and a political deal reached. Regarding assistance from the international community, Mr. Kay said the international community was not doing enough collectively, and he stressed the need to coordinate these efforts as well as the assistance given to Somalia.

Dr. Tedros said Ethiopia believed the positive role taken by Somalia's neighbors would help solve the country's problems and it was in that spirit that IGAD engaged itself in the peace talks between the Government and Jubaland. Ethiopia believed in the Somalia Federal Government's ownership and leadership in solving these problems in accordance with its priorities, he emphasized. Ethiopia's engagement with the Federal Government of Somalia and Jubaland was based on this principle, he emphasized and the two sides were the only ones who should solve their differences. Ethiopia was optimistic that this could be done through peaceful means. Ethiopia would do whatever necessary to help, as agreement among the political leaders in Somalia was vital to consolidate the gains made so far against Al-Shabaab.

Source: Government of Ethiopia (Addis Ababa)

 Dr Tedros Con


Somalia: A Country in Flux


Photo: Ramadan in Somalia: Men pray at a mosque in Mogadishu, Somalia, during the holy month of Ramadan. UN Photo/Ilyas A Abukar
By Jennifer James

Even though there was much fanfare and optimism coming out of Somalia a year ago as a new government was put in place and a new constitution was ushered in , the Horn of Africa country is now mired in an internal fight between the government and the Islamist group, Al Shabab, and is making worldwide headlines again. This time the news isn’t favorable.

Last week Doctors Without Borders announced it had pulled out of Somalia after 22 years working in the country. Vital medical services across Somalia have been halted and Somalian workers who have partnered with Doctors Without Borders throughout the years have lost their jobs. Attacks on its staff was cited as the primary reason for the pullout.

Additionally, another Somalian journalist was killed on Saturday in Mogadishi. Eighteen journalists were killed last year alone in Somalia according to the New York Times based on information from Reporters Without Borders.

Last week the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) also declared an increase in sexual and gender-based violence in Somalia during the first six months of the year. Over 800 cases of sexual and gender-based violence were reported. Many of these cases involved children.

“Rapes continue to be perpetrated by unknown armed men and men wearing military uniform,” OCHA spokesperson Jens Laerke stated in a UN News Center press release. “Sexual and gender-based violence also includes domestic violence, harmful traditional practices such as female genital mutilation, and early and forced marriage, he said, adding that the majority of the survivors were women aged 18 and above.”

Due to the increased violence UNICEF has stepped in to provide help to women and girls such as distributing fuel-efficient stoves because most attacks occur while gathering fire wood for cooking and bathing. UNICEF has also provided socio-economic support as well as psychological services for victims of violence.

And finally and somewhat even more troubling is the recent outbreak in Somalia and neighboring Kenya in a mostly Somali refugee camp, Daddab. 105 polio cases were confirmed on Friday, more than all of the polio cases reported elsewhere in the world.

Monday, August 19, 2013

 
Ethiopia signed an US$800 million contract with ZTE, a Chinese multinational telecommunications equipment and systems company headquartered in Shenzhen, China. The agreement was signed on Sunday, August 18, 2013 to expand Ethiopia's mobile phone infrastructure and introduce a high-speed 4G broadband network in the capital Addis Ababa and a 3G service throughout the rest of the country.

The latest agreement with ZTE is part of a US$1.6 billion project divided between ZTE and Huawei Technologies Co Ltd,, another Chinese telecom equipment maker. Huawei signed the agreement last month.

Both ZTE and Huawei will provide low interest loans to Ethiopia through an arrangement known as vendor financing, according to Ethiopian officials and both companies.

Andualem Admassie, acting chief executive officer of state-run Ethio Telecom, said the agreement would enable Ethiopia to double subscribers to more than 50 million.

"The expansion is vital to attain Ethio Telecom's objective of increasing telecom service access and coverage across the nation, as well as to upgrade existing network to new technology," he said in a speech.

Ethio Telecom is the only mobile operator in Ethiopia with a population of more than 80 million.

Source: Reuters

Ethiopia and Norway Signed a REDD+ Partnership Agreement



Ethiopia and Norway signed a REDD+ Partnership agreement to support Ethiopia's forest sector and Climate Resilient Green Economy (CRGE) Strategy. Agriculture State Minister, Sileshi Getahun and Norwegian Ambassador to Ethiopia Oddlnge Kvalheim signed the agreement on Friday 16 August, 2013.
Sileshi on the occasion said the agreement will contribute to Ethiopia's efforts to build climate resilient green economy. Ambassador Kvalheim on his part said the partnership is to contribute to reduction of greenhouse gas emissions caused by deforestation and forest degradation, thereby supporting the development and implementation of Ethiopia's REDD+ Strategy.

Kvalheim said there is no specific budget for this partnership agreement; it is an agreement with result based payments for verified results that the parties will agree upon along the way.

The agreement is part of Norway's commitment in the Durban Declaration where it has pledged to support US$60 million to agriculture, forestry and energy sectors annually, the Ambassador said.
REDD Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation is an effort to create a financial value for the carbon stored in forests, offering incentives for developing countries to reduce emissions from forested lands and invest in low-carbon paths to sustainable development.

“REDD+” goes beyond deforestation and forest degradation, and includes the role of conservation, sustainable management of forests and enhancement of forest carbon stocks.

Source: Ethiopian News Agency

Somalia: Corruption Scandals in Somali's Ministry of Defense



Mogadishu - increased bribery and misappropriation of funds is causing all sorts of problems in Somalia's defense ministry which has been allocated the largest amount of resources by the federal government.

Top military officials who talked to Shabelle on condition of anonymity said that top government officials were involved in corruption scandals that have halted security in many parts of the country.
Senior government officials were involved in the scandals including the office of the ministry which has been assigned to restore Security in the fragile state.

"According to the contract we signed, we are supposed to be paid USD 175 per month but we have not received anything from the government for 4 to 5 months" said one official.

"We only received USD 250 after a long period of serving the government and the ministry of defense has not explained why" continued the official.

Other officials who testified told Shabelle radio station that food staffs meant for the troops has been corrupted by high ranking officials in the government along with aid meant for government soldiers who lost the lives or got injured while in the line of duty.

The soldiers who work under risky conditions have been denied their rights by the same people who they protect.

This surely defines the corrupt government who have been criticized by man

Source: Shabelle Media Network

Sir Mo Farah? Prime Minister David Cameron would welcome move to reward double Olympic and World champion with a knighthood

David Cameron said he would "warmly welcome" a recommendation for Mo Farah to be knighted.

The 30-year-old athlete achieved an unforgettable double-double in Moscow on Friday night as he added two world titles to the twin Olympic triumphs from last summer.

The feat, completed by racing to 5,000 metres glory at the Luzhniki Stadium, sealed his status as perhaps the best British athlete in history.

The Prime Minister said: "The Olympic and world double-double is one of the great sporting achievements.

"If the honours committee were to recommend Mo for a knighthood, I would warmly welcome it."

Farah was awarded a CBE at the end of last year.

Evening Standard

Mo Farah celebrates winning gold in the men’s 5,000 metres final (Julian Finney)

Somalia: Don't Forget Barclays' Shut Down On Somali Remittance Accounts Will Severe Lifeline for the Country's Refugees Too

By Annisa Omar

A local branch of the Somali money transfer company, Dahabshil, whose services are essential to many Somalis 
in the global diaspora.
Barclays Bank recently decided to withdraw its banking services from 250 UK money transfer companies including my local Dahabshiil - severing the remittance lifeline for millions of Somalis.

This sent shock waves through my local east London Somali community because the Dubai-based International money transfer company was our most effective and reliable method to send money regularly to support our relatives and friends. Remittances amount to an estimated US$2 billion or one-third of the country's GDP, according to Somali authorities.

However, the Somali remittance crisis does not end there, as Somalis also send money to Somali refugees in neighbouring countries such as Kenya, Ethiopia and Yemen.

UNHCR's 2012 survey reported Somalia has produced 1.136 million refugees - the second largest number of refugees in the world after Afghanistan. They can be found everywhere from United States to South Africa, Nepal and Australia. The UN reported "In 2009, Somalis applied for asylum in at least 34 countries."

The majority of them - 942,619 according to the UNHCR - can be found in Kenya, Ethiopia and Yemen. Refugee camps are home to most refugees; over 500,000 reside in the worlds' largest refugee camp 'Dadaab' where theft, murder and rape are commonplace.

Refugees living in the Horn of Africa region are without citizenship. They face difficulty securing housing, welfare or employment. Our remittances enable our relatives to establish businesses and support themselves. Nairobi's Eastleigh district, for example, is not formally integrated into the Kenyan economy but provides income opportunities for thousands of Somalis because of the money the diaspora send to them.

Ultimately, Somalis living in the UK and other countries outside the region support their refugee relatives financially through the process of them seeking and being granted asylum, establishing themselves, and ultimately (if possible) gaining citizenship. It may take years or even decades for refugees to gain full economic independence.

On many occasions I have witnessed a friend receive 5am phone calls from her refugee relatives in Kenya pleading for urgent funds often for medical care. Through one quick fifteen-minute money transfer operation funds are sent to her relatives and confirmed by text message. This simple money transfer acts as a crucial financial safety net for Somali refugees.

I asked Laura Hammond Development Studies lecturer at the School of Oriental African Studies, University of London why the media have focused solely on the remittance crisis effect on people living inside Somalia and not on Somali refugees? She answered, "it is assumed that refugees are wholly dependent upon international aid for support, but clearly this is not the case. If Somali refugees had to rely only on such aid many would perish. The role that remittances play in sustaining refugee communities has been largely overlooked in the current discussion about the impact of the account closures."

Economic opportunities in Dadaab are scarce as international assistance is focused on care of refugees and far less on providing opportunities to become self-sufficient. Plus, they are not allowed to leave the camps without the rare acquisition of movement passes. This approach is related to that fact that the Kenyan government assumes refugees both in the camps and city will return to Somalia very soon.

The idea of large-scale return is largely impractical given camps now host three generations of refugees. Returnees would face immense difficulty re-establishing themselves without government or aid assistance, and many are prevented from returning due to continuing security risks in the south and central regions of the country.

For over fifty years, Somalis have migrated and sought asylum around the world for many reasons including civil war, drought and famine, economic hardship, breakdown of law and order and to find better living conditions.

My grandfather is one of these migrants. He settled in the UK in the 1950's. Most Somalis fled following the civil war and famine in 1991 and the subsequent collapse of the country. For two decades Somalia has been without a central government and it has endured famines and droughts, on-going violence and terrorist attacks.

It is against this backdrop of economic uncertainty that Somali refugees rely on money transfer companies, such as Dahabshiil, to act as the bridge between them and their relatives abroad. They use remittances from relatives abroad to buy food, shelter, and clothes, to pay for education and health care, and to build shops in the camps; ultimately remittances are crucial to helping them regain their dignity.

At least once a month my mother visits her local Dahabshiil branch in east London to send money to relatives and friends in Somalia and Kenya. This is a tradition I thought I would continue but Barclay's decision has put the lives of my relatives and those of my friends at tremendous risk.

Somalia's money transfer companies such as Dahabshiil, which grew in the midst of anarchy, food insecurity, conflict and displacement, have to a large extent upheld the Somali economy. The consequences of Barclays' decision can only spell disaster. Somalia is just getting back on it's feet after 20 years of devastation, so this decision will truly undermine the efforts of millions of Somalis not just in Somalia but worldwide who have put billions of dollars into rebuilding the Somali economy.

With Barclays out of the picture we wait with bated breath to hear how we can best move forward. Will other banks step forward and offer accounts? Can we use alternative remittance companies?

Using alternative companies would be not currently work, as they do not have the same reach and are not used as much by international agencies and charities - over 95% of international agencies and charities use Dahabshiil. Our only alternative would be unofficial channels a route which we do not want and cannot follow.
---
Annisa Omar is a British-Somali who works in International development, specialising in communications.

What Would Dr. Martin Luther King Think of America’s Modern Wars?



By Michael Shank

This month, Washington – and the world – commemorates the 50th Anniversary of Martin Luther King Jr.'s March on Washington. While Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s progressive dreaming of a world where racial and economic equality is commonplace may have been radical then, and still remains out of reach for millions now, his most radical thinking – and what would still get him in trouble with federal authorities to this day – is his messaging on nonviolence and its implications for U.S. foreign policy.

King's message, at the time, was supported by similar messaging about the importance of peace by President John F. Kennedy, at an American University commencement address on June 10, 1963, and by Robert F. Kennedy and his "menace of violence" speech, delivered on April 5, 1968, at the City Club of Cleveland.  If their ideas were implemented today, they would radically reform the way America engages Afghanistan, Pakistan, Yemen, Libya, Iraq, Mali and Somalia, the country from which I returned this week.

A more genuine commemorating of Martin Luther King, Jr., then, would be willing to countenance his core commitment to nonviolence and to carry it forward.   On Saturday, August 24, 2013, the National Action Network and Communities Without Boundaries International will revisit Martin Luther King Jr.'s righteous stomping ground in front of the Lincoln Memorial on the National Mall and call for a National Action to Realize the Dream. The time to act is now.

In light of America's growing militarism, and in light of the fact that we are at war with multiple countries, we must be ready to stand up for what Martin stood for: nonviolence.  He would not support the wars of today, unlike what former Pentagon general counsel Jeh Johnson once claimed, nor would he support the growing militarization of our domestic and foreign policy.

In fact, King called it like it is in his speech "Beyond Vietnam" -- an address delivered to the Clergy and Laymen Concerned about Vietnam, at Riverside Church, on April 4, 1967, New York City -- saying that "the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today [is] my own government" – and that is why he couldn't be silent about the pervasiveness of violence in our society.

Nor can we be silent. That is how one commemorates Martin Luther King, Jr.  The destruction we did to the Vietnamese, as Dr. King so painfully describes, is the same destruction we are doing to Afghans, Iraqis, Yemenis, Somalis, Libyans and Pakistanis – and more.

Moreover, the militarization we are witnessing is evident in all facets of our government.  We are in active war with at least a half-dozen countries, with Special Forces and troops in over half of the world.  We are increasingly militarizing our development and aid approaches, with the Pentagon taking over the reconstruction agenda.  We are militarizing our municipal police forces at home, with cities acquiring military-grade weaponry and machinery. And we are even militarizing our immigration policy, with drones, military-grade weapons, fencing and surveillance.

[See a collection of political cartoons on President Obama's drone policy.]

This is not financially sustainable, morally excusable or legally justifiable.  We must thus ask ourselves, as Robert F. Kennedy asked, "What has violence ever accomplished? What has it ever created?" Whether one is talking about small arms trafficking in America or our drone program in Africa, Robert's words are as poignant as ever:

We seemingly tolerate a rising level of violence that ignores our common humanity and our claims to civilization alike. We glorify killing on movie and television screens and call it entertainment. We make it easy for men of all shades of sanity to acquire whatever weapons and ammunition they desire.

Too often we honor swagger and bluster and wielders of force; too often we excuse those who are willing to build their own lives on the shattered dreams of others. This much is clear: violence breeds violence, repression brings retaliation, and only a cleansing of our whole society can remove this sickness from our soul.

Robert Kennedy, like Dr. King, knew that violence was not only physical, but structural. "For there is another kind of violence," he said, "slower but just as deadly destructive as the shot or the bomb in the night. This is the violence of institutions; indifference and inaction and slow decay. This is the violence that afflicts the poor, that poisons relations between men because their skin has different colors. This is the slow destruction of a child by hunger, and schools without books and homes without heat in the winter."  The moral imperative for America in preventing physical or structural violence was clear: "We must admit in ourselves that our own children's future cannot be built on the misfortunes of others."

President John F. Kennedy was no less categorical than his brother in the AU commencement address: "What kind of peace do we seek? Not a Pax Americana enforced on the world by American weapons of war. I am talking about genuine peace, the kind of peace that makes life on earth worth living, the kind that enables men and nations to grow and to hope and to build a better life for their children -- not merely peace for Americans but peace for all men and women -- not merely peace in our time but peace for all time."

In a rebuke of peace-oriented pessimism, which was as relevant in 1963 as it is in 2013, Kennedy continued: "Too many of us think it is impossible. Too many think it unreal. But that is a dangerous, defeatist belief. It leads to the conclusion that war is inevitable--that mankind is doomed--that we are gripped by forces we cannot control. We need not accept that view. Our problems are manmade--therefore, they can be solved by man."

So what do we do now?  How do we honor Martin, Robert and Jack's progressive peace-oriented policies, a stance which ultimately sacrificed their lives?  Martin's ultimatum is a start:  "America, the richest and most powerful nation in the world, can well lead the way in this revolution of values. There is nothing except a tragic death wish to prevent us from reordering our priorities so that the pursuit of peace will take precedence over the pursuit of war. There is nothing to keep us from molding a recalcitrant status quo with bruised hands until we have fashioned it into a brotherhood. We still have a choice today: nonviolent coexistence or violent coannihilation."

How true. We are at a crossroads, America, and it is about time we took the path less traveled by – the nonviolent one.

Michael Shank, Ph.D., is the director of foreign policy at the Friends Committee on National Legislation.