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Sunday, August 25, 2013

Hadraawi: Somalia’s mild-mannered fierce critic





 
Legendary Somalia poet Haadrawi, real name Mohamed Ibrahim Warsame during a presentation in Hargeisa, Somaliland on August 16, 2013.   NATION MEDIA GROUP
I had heard a lot about Hadraawi, the legendary Somali poet. Even though I didn’t see him when he last came to Nairobi for the last Kwani? Litfest, I got my second chance to see him when I attended his performance at the sixth Hargeysa International Book Fair in Somaliland.

I expected to see a fiery old man with the steely gaze of the Old Testament prophets, a fitting persona for a fearless critic who told the truth to power without fear.

So I was surprised to find a rather mild-mannered old man who acknowledged the applause of his audience with a warm smile, then calmly walked off stage, his papers tucked under his arm, to seemingly melt into the crowd.

You could easily mistake Mr Hadraawi, real name Mohamed Ibrahim Warsame, for just another Somali pastoralist going about his daily business.

And yet this man could as well be the lone reservoir of his people’s rich oratorical culture, not to mention a longtime thorn in the flesh of dictator Siad Barre, who was deposed in 1991.

No doubt the foremost Somali poet, 70-year-old Hadraawi, a recent recipient of the Netherlands’ Prince Klaus Award, has not shied away from engaging the authorities whenever he feels the need.

Imprisoned in 1973 for anti-revolutionary activities after his mysterious song-poem Hal La Qalay Raqdeedaa and the play Aqoon Iyo Afgarad alarmed the ruling junta, Hadraawi preferred to remain in prison for five years rather than betray his cause for a state pardon.

Born towards the end of the Second World War into a nomadic, camel-herding family in the harsh district of Burao in Somaliland, he was nicknamed ‘Hadraawi’, which means ‘the big talker’, by his Koranic teacher because of his ability to regale his classmates at an early age in the teacher’s presence.

A compatriot of early masters of Somali art like Ali Sugulle, Hassan Sheikh Mumin and Ahmed Suleiman Bidde, Hadraawi embarked on an unusual journey in 2004 that has since become known as the ‘Hadraawi Peace March’.

It took him through many of the war-ravaged towns and cities of Somalia from the northeast down to the south, appealing for peace. Despite the perils, hundreds came out to join him.

The essence of good poetry is in the careful choice of words that do not just eliminate any sense of clutter but sing directly to our senses without being ambiguous or condescending.

Listening to the performance of his poem Daalaclan (Clarity) and watching the reaction of his audience — both the educated gentry and the common man — and the way they hung onto every word, I understood why Hadraawi is seen to be the finest.

“Written at a time of appalling bloodshed and political upheaval when the dictator, Siad Barre, still held sway, ‘Clarity’ was Hadraawi’s contribution to the chain of poems, Deellay, begun by the late (and deeply mourned) Maxamed Xaashi Dhamac ‘Gaarriye’, that were inaugurated as a riposte to the ‘baleful malaria’ of tribalism and the endemic corruption of Barre’s misrule,” writes Sarah Maguire, director of the Poetry Translation Centre, London. She acknowledges the cumulative effect of this poem’s “blistering clarity of purpose and the absolute certainty of its moral stance.”

Attempting to dissect the unique Somali poetry and the reason Hadraawi’s poems are held in high esteem, Maguire goes on, “Somali poems have designs on their audience. The best are taut verbal arguments charged with changing your mind. The worst are tired diatribes that reiterate clichés. Hadraawi’s freshness of vision is expressed through his delight in metaphor — and its mastery.”

And yet all who have studied Hadraawi agree that whilst he successfully tackles complex themes, his poems are rendered in simple, clear language that allows him to communicate directly with the masses.

“The universal principle of justice and freedom and the deep human impressions that run through his poems are mainly what win Hadraawi the huge admiration of the Somali people and the merit of recognition… it is the striking use of language, imagery, and metaphor which is at the heart of Hadraawi’s poetry and makes him one of the world’s major living poets,”’ writes Jama Musse Jama, the editor of the translated volume of some of Hadraawi’s works, Maxamed Ibraahin Warsame Hadraawi: The Poet and the Man, Vol 1.

But the translation of this poetry from Somali into English is another story all together. Had you attended his performance before a home audience, you would understand why the poetry is best rendered in the language in which it was created.

But then the rest of the world needed to know what it was about. Which is why to make this possible, a special challenge was placed on the shoulders of Scottish poet William ‘Bill’ Herbert, working alongside Said Jama Hussein, Mohammed Hassan Alto, Martin Orwin and Ahmed I. Yussuf. The translation was overseen and edited by Jama Musse Jama.

“You must translate the spirit of the poem as much as the meaning of the words,” said Herbert of the process of translation. Herbert, who gave a stellar performance of the English version of Daalaclan,  admitted that even though he was an Englishman who did not understand the Somali language, he was able to understand Hadraawi because of the similarities he could identify in the Somali sage’s poetry. “The spirit of attack in Daalacan is similar to what we do in England, and I could understand that,” he said.

“The politics of Daalacan is also very much similar to what is happening today in England, and I could sense that immediately”


Still, he explains, it was clearly never going to be a word-for-word, phrase-for-phrase job.

“In order to translate I had to give up some of the alliterations. The rhythms are so compelling and hypnotic in Hadraawi’s work, but I had to concentrate on bringing out the meaning to English speakers.”

Although in later years Hadraawi drifted towards conservative Somali norms and Islamic religious principles, every single one of his over 200 poems remains as potent today as ever.

stangazemba@yahoo.com

Source: nation.co.ke

Somalia: Car Explosion Targets Puntland State Minister in Garowe


Xarunta Maamulka Puntland


Garowe — A car explosion occurred at a place which is a few metres away from the presidential palace in Garowe town which is the capital of Puntland state last night.

The culprits behind the explosion are not yet known and no one has come out to claim the responsibility of incident which occurred at around 19:30hrs local time.

Government soldiers in the town have started a security operation to hunt down the people believed to be behind the car explosion which did not course any human casualties.

Security officials are still at the site where the explosion occurred to investigate anything that may lead them to to the arrest of the unknown men.

Government officials in Puntland have not released any statement for now about the explosion.
 
Source: Shabelle Media Network

Terrorism, petrol, and international competition: Turkey in Somalia – Analysis




By Fuad Ferhavi

At the start of the month the Turkish Embassy in Mogadishu was the target of a suicide car-bombing. A Turkish policeman lost his life in the attack and three others were wounded. The extremist movement al-Shabaab (The Youth), an off-shoot of al-Qaeda, claimed responsibility for the attack. The attack raised a number of  about why the Turks had been targeted. For several years now, Ankara has played a very important role in attempts to alleviate the human tragedy in Somalia caused by the civil war and drought. So what could have enraged the assailants? What is the message they were trying to send to Turkish decision-makers?

1. Attacks in Somalia and the Turks.
An examination of the security record in Somalia over the past year and a half reveals that this is not the first attack targeting Turks. The recent report of the UN Secretary-General’s office, S/2013/326 issued on 13 May 2013 shows that one of the Turkish aid convoys was attacked by a vehicle driven by a suicide bomber. In October of last year, Mustafa Haşimi, head of Africa operations in TIKA (the Turkish International Aid Agency), was attacked by armed militias in central Somalia near the town of Galkayo and slightly wounded. According to Somali media, there had been fierce clashes between the militia and units attached to the Puntland police escorting the TIKA official. During the clashes one of the militants was killed and three others were wounded. Earlier still, in March 2012, Muhtar Abu Zubayir, the leader of the al-Shabaab movement attacked the Turkish state in a recorded message he sent out via a radio station, accusing Ankara of being the gateway through which Western colonialism enters Somalia. Sheikh Mahmud Ragi (Ali Tayri), the official spokesman for al-Shabaab threatened to carry out more attacks on Turkish diplomats.

These incidents are evidence that Turkey’s Somalia policy has now entered a new stage, and that the turmoil inside the country and its repercussions abroad will have adverse consequences on Turkey’s work in the country. Ever since the Somali state went bankrupt at the start of the 1990s it has experienced a series of complex security challenges. Security, political, tribal, clan, and religious issues are entangled with one another, and a steady rise in foreign involvement has further complicated the picture.

Bearing this complexity in mind enables us to better understand the remarks of Mohammed Mirsel Sheikh, Somalia’s ambassador to Turkey, to the Anatolia Agency in Ankara earlier this month. The Somali ambassador alluded to the confused state of affairs in his country when he remarked that “the machinery of the state is weak in Somalia, including its security apparatus.” The ambassador continued, “the fact that al-Shahaab al-Mujahidin has claimed responsibility for the attack on the Turkish embassy in Mogadishu is not by itself sufficient. It is essential that we work together with the Turkish government to identify those responsible for the attack.”

2. The Turkish-Somali Military Agreement: A Turning Point?
The attacks on Turks appear to have started early in 2012. The attacks have not been continuous but appear to be occurring at intervals and, as such, are reminiscent of the attacks on the African forces in Somalia. In addition to the strategic aspect of Somalia’s relations with Turkey, it’s important to remember that after the war with Kenya and before the recent attack on the Turkish Embassy, al-Shahaab had itself been subject to attacks in the areas of southern Somalia that it controlled. [1]During al-Shabaab’s war with Kenya, the Somali government had also been involved, despite an initial delay. In order to strengthen the combat capabilities of the weak Somali government forces, Ankara and Mogadishu signed a military training agreement on 13 April of last year. It included training programs, exchanges, visits, and discussions between the Turkish and Somali armies. There’s little doubt that the al-Shabaab movement blames its defeats (particularly the loss of Kismayo Harbour in September 2012) on the foreign powers which had fought directly against it and those who were indirectly involved by training Somali government forces. Turkey falls into this latter category.

The war waged against al-Shahaab by Kenya, Africa, and the Somali government forces came onto the international agenda at the same time as the Arab Spring. Libya’s former leader, Muammar Gaddafi devoted a lot of effort in his final years to playing a key role in Somalia and channelling weapons to the various factions and groups there. Eritrea has also been accused of arming various Somali groups, among them al-Shabaab, though it has persistently denied these accusations. Nevertheless, Eritrea’s president Isaias Afewerki lost his biggest ally when Gaddafi was overthrown and now finds himself facing a much bigger challenge.

The clashes taking place in the Middle East have been strikingly reflected in the Horn of Africa, particularly in Somalia. [2] Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Iran, and Israel all regard this region as important to their national security.

There have been a lot of reports published recently which mention a gradual increase in Iran’s presence in the area, in parallel with the crisis in Yemen and escalating Western opposition to Teheran. Indeed, Iran has been accused many times of supplying weaponry to al-Shabaab by sea. Leaving aside the veracity of the accusations, and regardless of whether the Somali government currently appears more stable than it did in previous years, Somalia is a prime candidate for an arena where increasing tensions from regional and international conflicts will be expressed.

3. Oil? Now What?
Somalia has recently witnessed a number of important developments with economic and strategic consequences. From the start of last year, there have been increasing signs that international petroleum and natural gas companies have renewed their interests in Somalia. Reports indicate that Somalia has rich reserves of petroleum, natural gas, and uranium. If this is the case, Somalia could become one of the world’s largest energy producers.

However these developments have led American, Italian, and British companies to compete and jockey for position, much like they did in the 1990s. There are those who argue that this competition was responsible for the failure of “Operation Hope”, the joint U.S.-UN intervention in Somalia of the early 1990s. There are accusations that Italy had supported Muhammed Farah Aidid, the clan leader who was the main enemy of the American military. As Somalia’s former colonial master, Rome  argues that Washington knew nothing about the social fabric and tribal structure of Somalia, claiming that this was the cause of the mission’s failure.

More recently, in October 2012, the government of Somaliland (the territory which unilaterally proclaimed its independence from Somalia in the early 1990s) signed an agreement with General Energy. Turkey has since also joined the line of investors interested in Somalia.

There are other questions which could be asked about the details mentioned above. Is the Turkish government aware of all these complications in Somalia? Does it have the capability to deal with increasing attacks on Turkish targets and interests in the country? In Turkish role, was it only targeted at the need for humanitarian assistance- maybe it was done in way that it worked for a political stability that helped the interests of oil companies and traditional powers be in Somalia or Horn of Africa-? It appears that Turkish decision-makers are feeling the need to review their regional policy, partly with regard to checking the degree of acceptance for their roles in Somalia and partly to further their understanding of tribal and political relations in the country and their impact upon its domestic and foreign policies.

The military forces now being trained for the benefit of the Somali state could quickly turn into an anti-government force if political and tribal interests prevailed over loyalty to the state. They could even also turn against the foreign country training them.  What applies to the Somali government is equally applicable to al-Shabaab:  all these armed groups are either being organized within the government or splitting off from it—depending on their interests and their tribal links. This fact creates potential internal and regional weaknesses which reflect the fluctuations already mentioned. Therefore, Turkish decision-makers determining Somalia policy should take these weaknesses into consideration.

 
The Journal of Turkish Weekly (JTW) - is a respected Turkish news source in English language on international politics. Established in 2004, JTW is published by Ankara-based Turkish think tank International Strategic Research Organization (USAK).

Federal Goverment of Somalia Demands Sanctions End for ‘Chief’ Shebab Financer

Banker and businessman Ahmed Nur Jimale, who was placed on a United Nations Security Council sanction list in February 2012, is accused of being “one of Al-Shebab’s chief financiers”, according to the UN.
Ganacsade Ahmed Nur Jimale
AFP – Somalia’s government has demanded UN sanctions be lifted from a businessman accused of being a chief financier for Al-Qaeda inspired insurgents fighting the internationally-backed authorities, the information minister said Sunday.
Banker and businessman Ali Ahmed Nur Jimale, who was placed on a United Nations Security Council sanction list in February 2012, is accused of being “one of Al-Shebab’s chief financiers”, according to the UN.
But Somali information minister Abdulahi Elmoge Hersi said a government committee had investigated the allegations and found no evidence for maintaining the sanctions.

“After long discussions, the Somali government decided that Ahmed Nur Jimale should have his embargo lifted to get his freedom back,” Hersi told AFP.

“We call on the international community to respect our decision,” he said, adding that a formal request would be submitted to the UN.

According to UN sanctions, Jimale is “ideologically aligned” with the Shebab, who remain dedicated to overthrowing Mogadishu’s government, which is battling the insurgents with the backing of a 17,700-strong African Union (AU) force.

Jimale is accused of the “funding of extremist activities and weapons purchases” specifically targeting self-declared independent Somaliland, as well as allegedly both raising funds for Shebab fighters and helping them conceal their money transfers.

UN sanctions on the 59-year old financier — who holds both Somali and Djiboutian passports — include a travel ban, asset freeze and arms embargo.

Jimale, whose business interests have included charcoal and sugar dealing as well as key stakes in banks and a mobile telephone company, is reported to have close ties to Shebab factions now at odds with top commander Ahmed Abdi Godane.

But in the past two years the AU and government forces have clawed back control of a series of key towns, areas where businessmen like Jimale would previously have paid taxes to the fighters.
UN Monitoring Group reports last month estimated that the Shebab are still some 5,000 strong, and remain the “principal threat to peace and security to Somalia”.

Source: dailynewsegypt.com

Humanitarian groups urge banks to ease remittances to Somalia


In a file photo from December 2011, hundreds of East Africans 
gathered in Peavey Park in Minneapolis to protest the cutoff of 
remittances to family members in Somalia. 
(MPR Photo/Rupa Shenoy)
by Laura Yuen, Minnesota Public Radio
ST. PAUL, Minn. — Humanitarian groups are urging more banks to take on accounts with money-transfer companies that send cash to Somalia.

A recent report illustrates the fragile relationship between the remittance companies and banks that make the money transfers possible.

Scott Paul, a spokesman for the global antipoverty group Oxfam America, said that tighter regulations after the 9/11 terrorist attacks have caused even small banks to refuse to work with Somali remitters.

"One by one, they're getting involved, they're helping transfer money," he said, "and then they're getting out of the business because they decide that the business is too risky for them."

But Paul said those risks can be managed. His group's report also recommends that money-transfer companies improve training to help employees detect suspicious activities.

The remittance companies scrambled to find new partners two years ago after a Minnesota community bank announced it was closing the accounts. The decision came after two Rochester women were convicted of funneling money to a Somali terror group.

Paul said some banks are balking based on preconceived notions.

"What we're asking of banks is to not make indiscriminate decisions, and given all that's stake, to work individually with these money-transfer companies, see if some of them are account-worthy, and for those that aren't, help bring them up to standards so that they can continue to send money back to Somalia," Paul said.
U.S. Bank says it's working closely with a large Somali-American remittance company to facilitate the transactions, but a final agreement is not yet in place.

Remittances have been a lifeline for Somalia's economy. The hundreds of millions of dollars that Somali-Americans send to their homeland every year is comparable to the amount that the U.S. government gives to Somalia in humanitarian and developmental aid.

The report was co-authored by Oxfam America, Adeso and the Intero-American Dialogue.

Source: minnesota.publicradio.org

Soldier accused of massacre of Afghan villagers gets life without parole


AP Photo / Elaine Thompson
Sadiquallah, left, who was shot in the 2012 attack by Staff Sgt. 
Robert Bales, holds the shoulders of a younger boy named Khan 
as other Afghan villagers, some who testified earlier in the week, 
speak through an interpreter with reporters following a sentencing 
hearing for Bales at Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Wash. on Friday, Aug. 23, 2013.
By Elizabeth Chuck, Staff Writer, NBC News

Sgt. Robert Bales, the U.S. soldier who carried out a massacre of Afghan villlagers last year, has been sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole.

A military jury of six handed down the sentence on Friday to Bales, who pleaded guilty in June to avoid the death penalty in last March's attack. Sixteen Afghan civilians were gunned down in their family compounds. Most of the victims were women and children.

Bales took the witness stand on Thursday and apologized for the massacre, which was one of the worst atrocities of the Afghanistan and Iraq wars. The killings represent the worst case of civilian deaths blamed on a U.S. soldier since the Vietnam War.

"I'm truly, truly sorry to those people whose families got taken away," Bales, 40, a father of two, said. "I can't comprehend their loss. I think about it every time I look at my kids."

Bales, from Lake Tapps, Wash., left his outpost at Camp Belambay in Kandahar province in the middle of the night in March 2012 to attack two villages.

Army prosecutors say Bales acted alone and planned the killings, which he carried out with a rifle, a pistol and a grenade launcher, according to Reuters. He left his outpost twice during the night, returning in the middle of the attack to tell a fellow soldier, "I just shot up some people."

Nine Afghans testified over two days about their lives since the brutal rampage, with at least one cursing at Bales, The Associated Press reported.

Haji Mohammad Wazir said he lost 11 relatives, including his mother, wife, and six out of his seven children.

Peter Millett / Reuters
A courtroom sketch shows Army Staff Sergeant 
Robert Bales on the stand on Wednesday. Bales 
pleaded guilty to a massacre of 16 Afghan villagers 
to avoid the death penalty.
"If someone loses one child, you can imagine how devastated their life would be," Wazir said, according to the AP. "If anybody speaks to me about the incident ... I feel the same, like it's happening right now."

Bales served four combat tours in Iraq and Afghanistan. His attorneys suggested post-traumatic stress disorder and traumatic brain injury may have played a role in the killings, but offered no testimony from psychiatrists or doctors.

During the trial, prosecutors highlighted criminal activity from Bales' past, including a fraud investigation, a drunken-driving arrest in 2005 and a driving under the influence crash in 2008, and lies on his re-enlistment documents about his criminal history.

"He wiped out generations and he ruined lives forever," said prosecutor Lt. Col. Jay Morse. "He should be known by one official title from this day until the day he dies: Inmate.''

The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

US: Hasan found guilty of premeditated murder in 2009 Fort Hood rampage


Maj. Nidal Hasan, the Army psychiatrist who shot and killed 13 people in the Fort Hood shootings, was found guilty on all 13 counts of premeditated murder and 32 counts of premeditated attempted murder. NBC's Mark Potter reports

Maj. Nidal Hasan found guilt of Fort Hood murders
By Charles Hadlock and Erin McClam, NBC News

FORT HOOD, Texas — Maj. Nidal Hasan, the Army psychiatrist who admitted to the 2009 shooting rampage at the military base here, was convicted Friday of 13 counts of premeditated murder — and could become the first American soldier to be put to death in half a century.

Hasan was also convicted, by a military jury, of 32 counts of attempted premeditated murder in the attack, the deadliest mass murder on a base in American military history.

Under military law, a conviction on at least two counts of premeditated murder makes Hasan eligible for the death penalty. The penalty phase of the court-martial is to begin Monday.

Hasan, 42, who acted as his own lawyer during the trial, said he had changed sides in what he called an American war against Islam. He presented no witnesses and did not make a closing argument to the jury.

Prosecutors said Hasan committed the attack because he did not want to be deployed to Afghanistan and that he believed he had a jihad duty to kill as many soldiers as possible.

The military lined up 90 witnesses against him. One prosecutor, Army Col. Steve Henricks, told the jury that Hasan turned the Army base into his “personal kill zone” on Nov. 5, 2009.

A police officer ended the rampage by shooting Hasan, leaving him paralyzed from the waist down. He gave an opening statement in the trial and watched the rest of it from his wheelchair.

The prosecutor detailed for jurors how Hasan had asked for advice from Guns Galore, a firearms store near the base, and bought the highest-tech pistol available. He later trained at a range and used laser sights, Henricks said.

Besides the 13 dead, 31 people were hurt in the attack. Hasan shot at a 32nd and missed.

In the punishment phase, 16 witnesses are expected to testify, including one family member from each of the 13 people Hasan killed. He will also be allowed to speak, without restrictions.

According to the Death Penalty Information Center, five men are on the military’s death row at Fort Leavenworth, Kan. The last military execution took place in April 1961, when an Army private was was hanged after being convicted of rape and attempted murder.

Hasan joined the Army in 1988. He became a doctor and later a psychiatrist at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington. He was promoted to major in May 2009, and two months later was transferred to Fort Hood.

Prosecutors presented evidence that he bought a handgun, two laser sights, hundreds of rounds of ammunition and six high-capacity magazines. At the gun range, prosecutors said, he replaced bullseye targets with silhouettes.

Reuters / Bell County Sheriff's Office
Maj. Nidal Hasan, shown in an undated photo, 
was convicted of 13 counts of premeditated murder.
Witnesses said Hasan stood on a chair, yelled, “Allahu Akbar!” and began firing on soldiers in a waiting area, 18 feet by 9 feet. Many were shot in the back, some as they were lying on the floor or crawling away.

Evidence showed some tried to fight back. Spc. Frederick Greene of Mountain City, Tenn., apparently tried to charge Hasan. He was shot 12 times, a forensics expert testified.

A retired chief warrant officer picked up a chair and tried to hit Hasan. He was stopped and killed by three bullets to the neck.

The FBI collected 146 shell casings inside the building and more outside, from a gun battle with Fort Hood police who responded to the shooting.

Erin McClam reported from New York.

Commemorate Martin Luther King Jr.'s legacy with #DreamDay



Martin Luther King Jr. waves from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial to supporters on the Mall in Washington
during the "March on Washington" in 1963.
NBC News is asking all Americans to share their dreams as the nation celebrates the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington and Martin Luther King Jr.'s iconic "I Have a Dream" speech. Beginning today through Wednesday, everyone is invited to take part in #DreamDay by completing the statement "I have a dream that _________." NBC News is spotlighting the messages across its shows and digital platforms, sharing the dreams of the nation with millions.

The video, photo and text messages can be submitted to NBC News using Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and Vine, with the hashtag #DreamDay. A curated collection of the submissions will be featured on “TODAY” and “NBC Nightly News” with thousands of dreams spotlighted on NBCNews.com/DreamDay. NBC's owned and affiliate stations will also be asking local communities to share their dreams.

NBCNews.com/DreamDay launches today with contributions from Martin Luther King III, the Dalai Lama, the Rev. Jesse Jackson, N.J. Gov. Chris Christie, NBC News journalists Matt Lauer, Lester Holt, David Gregory, Al Roker, Natalie Morales, Chuck Todd, Kathie Lee Gifford, Hoda Kotb, Rehema Ellis, Erica Hill, and Ron Mott, among others. In addition, #DreamDay submissions will be featured around NBC's headquarters in New York City.

NBC News will dedicate special coverage in the days leading up to the anniversary, kicking off with “Meet the Press” on Sunday. The program will rebroadcast a rare interview with Martin Luther King, Jr. from 1963 — exactly 50 years ago and just days before the March on Washington. In addition, “Meet the Press” will focus the hour-long program on the theme of the “American Dream” featuring top political leaders telling personal stories unique to the American experience.

Source: nbcnews

More than 200 migrants, mainly Somali, land in Italy


(AFP) ROME — The Italian coast guard said Saturday it had rescued more than 200 migrants off Sicily, swelling the ranks of the thousands of boat people who have made the crossing thanks to calm summer waters.
A group of 116, most of them Somalis, were drifting in the Canal of Sicily on a small rubber dinghy when they were spotted by a navy vessel and taken to the island of Lampedusa by the coastguard.
Another 100 were picked up by a vessel of the European Union border control agency Frontex and handed over to the coastguard, which took them to Portopalo, a Sicilian port south of Syracuse.
Around 1,000 migrants crossing the Mediterranean from North Africa had already landed in Italy this week alone.
Most of the thousands of economic migrants and refugees who have landed in Italy in recent months had arrived in Libya -- only 300 kilometres (185 miles) south of Lampedusa -- from other parts of Africa.
Calmer weather conditions and growing unrest in north Africa have led to a surge in migrant arrivals in recent weeks.
Italy's interior ministry said 24,277 migrants landed in Italy in the 12-month period between August 1, 2012, and August 10, 2013.

AFM TEAM CONTINUES ANTI-PIRACY OPERATION OFF COAST OF SOMALIA


The image shows the AFM team conducting one of a series of anti-piracy missions
The AFM’s Special Duties Enhanced Boarding Team (SDEBT) made up of three Officers and 19 other ranks, deployed off the coast of Somalia late last month, were yesterday involved in anti-piracy operation.

The image shows the AFM team conducting one of a series of anti-piracy missions.

The EU is one of the international actors contributing to the implementation of UN Security Council Resolutions, which urge states to increase and coordinate their efforts to deter acts of piracy and armed robbery off the coast of Somalia.

The role of the EU NAVFOR ATALANTA is to contribute to deter piracy and armed robbery in the region with a view to strengthen the security within the area of operations. Specific roles performed in priority order include the protection of World Food Programme (WFP) vessels delivering aid to displaced persons in Somalia, and the protection of African Union Mission on Somalia (AMISOM) shipping.

In addition, the EU NAVFOR also contributes to the monitoring of fishing activities off the coast of Somalia and the deterrence, prevention and repression of acts of piracy and armed robbery at sea off the Somali coast.

Source: The Malta Independent