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Sunday, September 8, 2013

Madaxweynaha Somaliland oo Dhagax Dhigay Dhisme Rugta Kutubta Oo Heer Qaran ah Iyo Dhismayaal Loo Kordhinayo Was. Boosaha + Sawiro






Hargeysa - Madaxweynaha Somaliland Mudane Axmed Maxamed Maxamuud 'Siillanyo' ayaa Maanta Dhagax dhigay Dhisme Cusub oo loogu talogaly in uu noqdo Rugta Kutubt'a Heer Qaran (Somaliland National Library) iyo Dhismayaal  Cusub oo ay Yeelanyso  Wasarada Boosaha iyo Isgaadhsiinta, madaxweynaha ayaa waxa ku wahelinayey dhagaxdhigaasi wasiirka Arrimaha Gudaha, Wasiirka Madaxtooyada, Wasiirka Warfaafinta, Wasiirka Qorshaynta Qaranka iyo Wasiirka Wasaarada Waxbarashada.

Dhanka kale Wasiirka Boosaha iyo isgaadhsiinta Maxmed Abgaal ayaa sheegay in baahi weyn ay u qabeen dhisme cusub, waxaanu madaxweynaha ku aamanay in dhismahaasi ay u dhisaan.





FEMALE GENITAL MUTILATION: ‘MOTHERS NEED TO SAY NO’

Faduma Ali, 86, still remembers the pain of being circumcised at eight. Horrific as it was, she allowed her own daughters to go through the same ordeal. But when it came to her granddaughters, she decided to step in and stop it

By Homa Khaleeli

“As a little girl I would go looking for the cutters and ask them when it was my turn,” Faduma Ali says. “I thought it was exciting. I wish I had known then what I know now.”

It’s almost eight decades since Faduma underwent female genital mutilation (FGM), sometimes known as female circumcision, in Somalia. Today, sitting in her daughter’s lounge in north London, she says it has left her with a lifetime of pain and medical problems. Yet despite her own agony she felt powerless to resist the societal pressure driving the tradition, and insisted her own daughters have it done too.

But when her granddaughters faced the same fate, she knew something had to change. And as an older woman, her voice carried more weight. Faduma told her daughter not to let her granddaughters be cut. “Women can eradicate this,” she says. “Mothers are responsible for refusing the practice.”
Campaigners say that a tangled mix of family pressure, cultural traditions and religious motivations make FGM – illegal for almost 30 years in the UK – hard to eradicate. It has been documented in 28 countries in Africa and in a few countries in Asia and the Middle East.

The practice involves removing all or part of the external female genitalia (including the clitoris, labia minora and labia majora – and in some cases the narrowing of the vagina), and is usually carried out before the age of 15. As well as the risk of bleeding to death or infection, a terrifying array of physical and psychological problems can follow.

Today 30,000 girls in the UK are said to be at risk of this form of mutilation, while 66,000 live with the consequences of it. Yet no one has ever been prosecuted for carrying out or abetting the practice (which carries a maximum prison sentence of 14 years).

This, say campaigners, is because children are unwilling to speak out against their families and communities and that is why Faduma, along with her daughter, Lul Musse, and granddaughter, Samira Hashi, have agreed to explain how – even in a loving and close-knit family such as theirs – such a custom can be perpetuated.

Samira, 22, is translating for her grandmother, who explains that growing up in the suburbs of Galkayo, a city in south Somalia, being “cut” was not just something she looked forward to, but insisted upon. “Everyone had it done,” says Faduma, 86. “If you didn’t, you were shunned. I saw it as something exciting.”

She was under no illusions about how painful it could be, however. “I saw it being carried out – most girls would try and run away. But it was part of our way of life. My grandmother and mother had had it done, so it seemed natural.”

Faduma’s father, who was in the Somali military, was not convinced. “He had a city attitude because of his travels,” says Faduma. He told her grandmother, with whom Faduma lived, that she was not to be cut. But Faduma convinced her grandmother to take her while he was away.

The cutter had no medical qualifications and performed the operation in the open air, without sterilisation or pain relief. Faduma was eight.

“There were four of us,” Faduma recalls. “But because I was the bravest I was told to go first.
“My grandmother and the other girls’ mothers held me down and the woman cut me with a knife. It’s like someone is cutting your finger off without pain relief. My blood was shooting into her face and eyes.”

Next, the wound and her vagina were sewn up, leaving her a hole the size of a match head through which to pass urine and menstrual blood. With no medical equipment, three thorns were used in place of stitches. Yet her ordeal was far from over.

“They gave you milk and waited to see if you could urinate,” she recalls. “If not, they cut you open a little more. For two weeks it is agony.”

Afterwards, she says, she boasted to her friends she had been cut, but never realised it would have such severe complications. “The minute you have it done you have problems,” she says. “When you have your period, it is very painful and when you have children it is very painful.”

Female genital mutilation, says Faduma, was intended to guarantee virginity before marriage by ensuring sex would be frightening and painful for girls. Giving birth, however, was nothing short of torture. Faduma had 10 children, but her first labour lasted five days with midwives forced to “cut me everywhere” to get the baby out.

Yet when her daughters turned seven, Faduma could not shun the custom. “Without it, my daughters would not have been allowed to marry,” she says. “There was not a girl in sight who hadn’t had it done.”
Now 52, Lul agrees: “You couldn’t go to school without it, or people would laugh at you,” she recalls. Her operation was in a hospital under anaesthetic, aged seven. “I tried to run from the operating table, but my mum and her friend held me down.”

The operation, she says, had a devastating effect on her life and affected her marriage. “When you have sex it is very painful and you don’t feel any pleasure. You will never enjoy sex.”

Giving birth was excruciating and complicated for Lul. Yet, amazingly, this did not affect her decision to have her own daughters cut. But her mother stepped in. “I was sick of it,” Faduma says, firmly. “Times had changed. Women were freer and had more power.”

She told her daughter not to do it. Yet Lul says she would have rebelled had they stayed in Somalia. “I would have done it even though my mother said no. All men wanted circumcision. If your daughters weren’t cut they would say they are like hookers.”

She believes it is up to men to take a stand. “This has to be a man’s campaign. Until men say stop, that this is not part of our religion and not part of our culture, it will still go on.”

For Samira, the very idea of this kind of mutilation is incomprehensible. Brought up in London, she was working as a model when she was approached by BBC3 to present a documentary about Somalia. Visiting the war-torn country, she met women who planned to have their daughters cut and saw a six-year-old girl who had been recently subjected to FGM. “I just didn’t understand how a mother who had gone through this pain could have it done to her children. I don’t blame the women, I blame the society that doesn’t stop it.”

Since the film came out last year, Samira has been touring schools with Save the Children to highlight issues facing Somalia. “One thing I have learned is that while people may say we are moving on, it still continues.”

Although Muslim, Jewish and Christian communities carry out FGM, mainstream spiritual leaders from all three religions have denied that the practice stems from religion. Samira believes the desire to control women’s sexuality lies behind it.

“I think women here are scared their daughters will become too westernised and not get married – that they will have boyfriends and go out, and this is why they have it done.”

Yet the subject, she says, is rarely discussed. “I go into schools with a high number of Somali girls, and they always seem shocked that it is part of our history and culture. We need women to talk about their experiences, men to talk about their marital experiences, clerics to explain it is not linked to religion and doctors to talk about the problems it causes. Then things will change – when we discuss what FGM is really doing.”

Source: The Guardian

SOMALIA TO SEND 1 MILLION CHILDREN TO SCHOOL



MOGADISHU (AFP) –  The Somali authorities are launching Sunday a campaign aimed at getting one million children in the war-torn nation into school, the United Nations’ children’s agency said.

The Go 2 School initiative is being launched simultaneously in the capital Mogadishu and in Hargeisa and Garowe, the main cities of the autonomous and semi-autonomous northern states of Somaliland and Puntland respectively.

The campaign, which will run for three years “aims to give a quarter of the young people currently out of the education system a chance to learn,” Unicef said.

At an estimated total cost of $117 million (89 million euros) for the three-year period, the initiative will include construction and renovations of schools, teacher recruitment and training, technical and vocational training for older children and special programmes for pastoralist communities.

Enrolment rates in the Horn of Africa country, which is struggling to emerge from two decades of civil war, are among the lowest in the world, the agency said, noting that only four out of every ten children are in school.

Many children start primary school much later than the recommended school-entry age of six and many more drop out early.

“Go 2 School is very ambitious, but it is an essential and achievable initiative,” said UNICEF Somalia Representative, Sikander Khan. “Education is the key to the future of Somalia — we have already lost at least two generations. An educated youth is one of the best contributions to maintaining peace and security in Somalia.”

Source: AFP

Somaliland’s book fair: A haven of jollity and calm

 

THE still unrecognised republic of Somaliland has been parading its de facto independence from its battered bigger brother, Somalia, with an international book fair in its self-styled capital, Hargeisa. Along with the reopening of a revamped international airport, the fair was intended to show the world that Somaliland is open for business, especially with the West.

At the jamboree, the literary talents of Somaliland were on display. Though Nadifa Mohamed, a novelist listed among Granta’s “Best of Young British Novelists for 2013”, was not there this year, her latest work, “The Orchard of Lost Souls”, recently published in London, was much mentioned. A largely British foreign line-up included Michela Wrong, author of books on Congo, Eritrea and Kenya; Mary Harper, author of “Getting Somalia Wrong”; a Scots poet and translator, W.N. Herbert; a Nigerian, Chuma Nwokolo; and a Kenyan poet, Phyllis Muthoni. Cheers and ululations in a packed auditorium greeted Hadraawi, Somaliland’s national poet.

The fair, now in its sixth year, is the brainchild of two diaspora Somalilanders, Jama Musse Jama, a businessman based in Italy, and Ayan Mahamoud, who lives in London, where she has run an annual Somali Week festival for several years. Prominent among the sponsors of the Hargeisa event were a number of “frontier” private-equity funds interested in oil and mineral rights. One of its unstated aims was to persuade Westerners that Somaliland is safe and stable. Compared with Somalia, whose capital, Mogadishu, is still periodically clobbered by suicide-bombers, dusty, bustling Hargeisa seems a haven of jollity and calm.

Source: economist.com

Saturday, September 7, 2013

SHEBAB CLAIM TWIN BLASTS IN SOMALI CAPITAL THAT KILL 18



MOGADISHU (AFP) – At least 18 people were killed in the Somali capital Mogadishu on Saturday when two blasts ripped through a busy parking lot next to a restaurant, police said, in attacks quickly claimed by Shebab Islamists.
“There were two heavy explosions at a parking lot near the National Theatre,” police officer Mohamed Adan told AFP.
“At least 18 people were killed in the attack,” said Mohamed Dahir, another police officer. An AFP reporter saw 12 bodies at the scene of the attack.
“Successful operations carried out in Hamarweyne,” the Shebab said on their Somali-language Twitter feed, referring to the Mogadishu district where the attacks occurred. The group’s English-language account has been suspended.
The Al-Qaeda-linked Islamists claimed to have killed “key officials”, but witnesses said the casualties they had seen looked like ordinary civilians.
Police and witnesses said the first blast was a car laden with explosives that was parked by the Village, a restaurant close to the theatre that was targeted by suicide bombers in September 2012.

“Minutes after the bomb went off, I saw severed flesh flying past,” said Idris Yusuf, who was in the restaurant at the time of the attack and who sustained slight leg injuries.
Nearby buildings were destroyed, the witness said, and passers-by came running over to help the victims.
The second blast, which followed minutes later, was a “suicide bomber who blew himself up in the crowd of civilians who rushed to the scene of the first blast,” Ahmed Weli Said, a Somali government security official said.
The National Theatre re-opened in 2012 after two decades. Just weeks later, Shebab insurgents struck, with a suicide bomber blowing herself up and killing two of the country’s top sporting officials who were attending an event there.
Somalia’s embattled government, selected in November in a UN-backed process, was hailed at the time by the international community as offering the best chance for peace in Somalia since the collapse of the central government in 1991.
A 17,700-strong African Union force fighting alongside the national army has forced Shebab fighters from several towns in the past two years.
Shebab fighters, who have claimed responsibility for a string of recent attacks aimed at overthrowing the government, remain a potent force, however.
Their most brazen recent attack was a suicide commando assault on a fortified UN compound in the centre of Mogadishu in June that killed 11.
The UN compound attack used similar tactics to those employed in April, when a nine-man suicide commando unit blasted its way into Mogadishu’s main court complex, killing 34 people.
On July 12, just a couple of days into the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, insurgents killed at least five people in multiple attacks in the capital. A suicide bomber rammed an African Union convoy and a grenade was thrown into a hotel.
Shebab fighters claimed members of their suicide brigade carried out the attack, calling it “a martyrdom operation targeting a convoy of crusaders”.
Attacks involving roadside bombs or improvised explosive devices that kill one or two people have become so commonplace in Mogadishu that they barely make the headlines any more.
The Shebab have retained strongholds in parts of rural southern and central Somalia, while another faction has dug into remote and rugged mountains in the northern, semi-autonomous Puntland region.
Source: AFP

Small Talk: Nadifa Mohamed

Interview by Harriet Crawford


What is the strangest thing I’ve done when researching a book? I once tried to climb a mountain in ridiculously impractical sparkly sandals 

Nadifa Mohamed was born in Hargeisa in 1981. Her family moved to London in 1986 for what was intended as a temporary stay but would later be made permanent by the onset of war in Somalia. She read history and politics at Oxford university. Black Mamba Boy (2010), her debut novel, won the 2010 Betty Trask Award. This year, Granta named Mohamed one of its Best of Young British Novelists.

What is the last thing you read that made you laugh out loud?

It was a book by Noo Saro-Wiwa, called Looking for Transwonderland .

What is your daily writing routine?

I don’t have one. I’ve tried to create ones but they never stick. My first book was written between 2am and 5am, when it was quiet.


Where do you write best?

In my bedroom, in bed.

What books are currently on your bedside table?

I’m reading Americanah by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, I’m reading the travel edition of Granta and I’m reading this amazing book by Sven Lundqvist called Terra Nullius, about Australia.

What is the strangest thing you’ve done when researching a book?

I once tried to climb a mountain in ridiculously impractical sparkly sandals and I got stuck at the top and had to be rescued. It was outside of Hargeisa in Somaliland.

How do you relax?

I’m learning how to play the oud, which makes me stop thinking about anything else.

What novel would you give a child to introduce them to literature?

If they were old enough, I would get them to read Middlesex by Jeffrey Eugenides, because it’s fresh and it’s funny and the structure is interesting. I read it in a night, so I’d be interested to see if it had the same effect on them.

Toni Morrison. I could really harass her, I think. I’m a bit of fan so it would be good to trap her somewhere.

Who would you like to be stuck in a lift with?

What is the best piece of advice a parent gave you?

My Dad’s always saying, “Why not?”, and that has become my philosophy.

If you could own any painting, what would it be?

I was in Amsterdam in December and I saw a Chagall for the first time in my life and it made me gasp. I love the size, I love the madness of it. It would be something by Chagall.

Who would you choose to play you in a film about your life?

Cate Blanchett. It’d be interesting to see how she did me.

What does it mean to be a writer?

I think it means to reflect on life, and to reflect on the world ... The writers that I love are the ones that are active ... It’s not enough to sit back and say this is the world, [these are] the inequalities, if you can’t also step in and do whatever you can about them.

-------------------------------------------
Nadifa Mohamed’s latest novel is ‘The Orchard of Lost Souls’ (Simon & Schuster)

Source: ft.com

AMISOM CONDEMNS MOGADISHU TERROR ATTACK

September 7, 2013

For immediate releaseMogadishu, 7 September, 2013-The Special Representative of the Chairperson of the African Union Commission for Somalia Ambassador Mahamat Saleh Annadif has condemned today’s terrorist attack on the residents of the Somali capital, Mogadishu, saying it was an attempt by Al Qaeda affiliated extremists to derail Somalia’s continuing recovery.
The attack, which targeted ordinary civilians frequenting the popular Village restaurant, killed at least 15 people. AMISOM units working with Somali security agencies immediately cordoned off the area and are searching the area for more attackers.
“AMISOM will continue to stand shoulder to shoulder with the Somali people and support them as they rebuild their country,” said Amb Annadif. “We will not allow a violent minority to drag them back to the days of chaos and anarchy,” he added, noting that the attack comes at a time when Somalia continues to witness remarkable improvements in security, reconciliation efforts and in its economy.
He offered his condolences to the families and friends of those killed adding that the AMISOM hospital and doctors had offered to assist local medical facilities with specialized care for the injured.
“It is a sad reminder of the dangers we all face from terror groups and of the need to continue to confront them and degrade their ability to sow chaos and destruction,” Amb Annadif said.
“AMISOM is continuing to train the Somali forces and police so they can cope with the security challenges but needs to be reinforced so it can confront the terrorists in their bases in the Somali countryside where such attacks are planned,” he said.
Recently, the UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, called on countries around the world to provide AMISOM with attack helicopters and armored troop carriers to take the fight to the extremists in the field.
For more information, contact Eloi Yao (+254) 702 155 126 and Col. Ali Houmed (+252) 618 508 181

Somali Diaspora Stories of Marriages Gone Wrong


By Hassan M. Abukar 

I have lived and worked in the United States for a long time now, but just when I think I have seen enough of the life of the Somali in the diaspora, something new comes up.

I was recently driving through the US state of Texas on my way to California when my train of thought was interrupted by a phone call from a female friend.

“Hassan, I will never talk to you again,” she said.

“What did I do?”

“Two years ago, you wrote about my brief marriage.”

“No, I did not.”

“In your piece, ‘Spouses in Crisis,’ you called it a ‘blink-and-you –missed-it’ marriage.”

“Did I mention your name and your former husband’s?”

“No.”

“Then it was not you. It was about a woman who was married to a control freak. Your ex was not a control freak.”

“Never mind, just forget about it,” she said and then changed the topic.

The above call is an example of how prevalent aborted or short term marriages are in the Somali communities in America.

The example of my friend is by no means the exception. There are plenty of examples of similar incidents which I recount below. These are true stories, of neither friends nor foes, relayed to me by people I’ve met in the course of my everyday life. Names and locations have been changed to protect individual privacy of the people involved.

I Object

“Abdi” is a cleric based in Oregon. He has conducted a lot of marriages and is frequently called upon to travel to other states. He has a sense of humor and is quick to remind you that he is a man of religion.

“Would you mind if I name-drop and mention God?” he inquired as I talked to him recently.

I asked him if he had ever conducted a marriage ceremony in which someone objected. He looked at me smiling and paused for a few seconds.

“Well, it happened to me not once, but twice,” he said. “In my line of work, I guess, it is an occupational hazard.”

On both occasions, as Abdi was conducting a marriage ceremony, someone in the audience shouted at him to stop the proceedings. It is not part of Somali culture for an officiating cleric to ask if any of the attendees of a marriage ceremony have an objection, that famous “speak now or forever hold your peace” is unknown.
It turns out the brides were already married and about to make the cleric to commit a sin of betrothing them to someone else.

“In one case, a man said his brother in Kenya was still married to the would-be bride,” the cleric said. This was an embarrassing moment, of course, he added, and he had no choice but to confer with the marrying couple in private to clarify the matter. The ceremony had to be stopped.

Dowry Blues

“Ali,” a young man in his late twenties, lives in Columbus, Ohio. He has attended many weddings, he said. Columbus, after all, has the second largest Somali community in the U.S. after Minneapolis. One marriage ceremony however left a bad taste in his mouth.

“It was the weirdest marriage ceremony that I ever attended,” he said.

Ali explained that it was for a young couple in their twenties, and more than a hundred people were present when the ceremony commenced. The food was ready to be served and he could smell the aroma of the lamb, rice, and samosas. The officiating cleric asked the groom if the agreed-upon dowry of $10,000 was fine.

“$10,000?” the groom screamed.

“Yes, that is how much the bride is asking for,” clarified the cleric.

“No way, I can’t pay $10,000!”

“The dowry can be paid now or at a later date. It is a matter between you and the bride.”

“No, I can’t pay it now or later.”

The audience was shocked. Hadn’t these two young people already discussed how much money the groom would give to the bride? A dowry is the money or the property the bride is entitled to before a marriage can be properly conducted. It can be a little money (sometimes even something symbolic) or a hefty sum, depending on what the bride wants. The groom has the option to decline the offer of course, but then there won’t be a marriage.

In this case, the groom refused to budge, and the bride insisted on the $10,000.

“What happened next was disappointing and heartbreaking,” Ali recounted. “There was no marriage that day or later between the couple.”

Needless to say, according to Ali, nobody ate at that failed ceremony.

One man was heard muttering, “What a waste.” Oddly, when asked what he meant, he mentioned the huge pile of food that was left untouched. The guests were so disgusted with the outcome that they declined to take any of the food.

Ali has a piece advice for those who are planning to get married.

“Do everyone a favor and decide what your dowry will be before you drag us to an event where we will end up not enjoying the ceremony or the food.”

The Qudbo Sireed or Secret Marriage

For “Shamso,” a woman in her forties, it was a different experience. She has four children from two previous marriages. A Somali man approached her and asked her to marry him. She had known him before in her town, and she said he was a respected man who handled himself well.

“The chemistry was instant and powerful,” she said smiling. “In fact, I succumbed to his magnetic personality.”

However, there was a stipulation in the man’s proposed union: It would be what the Somalis call “qudbo sireed” (a secret marriage). He wanted to continue living in his place and Shamso would live in hers until they were ready to officially publicize their marriage and live together. Only five people would know about their matrimony. Shamso agreed.

“I have the benefit of hindsight now, and in hindsight, I realize this was a huge mistake,” she said with irony.

He brought three other men with him, a cleric and two witnesses. The marriage ceremony was short and afterward, Shamso simply drove home. After she reached her house and parked her car, however, she received a call from the officiating cleric. He was in a panic, she said.

“You know, I forgot to ask you about your dowry. How much is it?”

“$10,000,” she replied.

There was an awkward silence.

The cleric asked her if she could lower the amount because the groom was not well-off. She told him she had her reasons for asking for such an exorbitant amount.

“Let me ask the groom,” the cleric replied.

She could hear her new husband mumbling in the background. The cleric kept asking the husband if the sum was fine. The groom finally, and reluctantly, accepted it.

Shamso sensed that both the cleric and her husband were not happy with her.

“The blessed marriage is the one with a reasonable and less cumbersome dowry,” the cleric admonished her.
Well, after a year, Shamso’s new husband told her he wanted to get out of what he wryly called their

“chaotic relationship.” It seemed fate had thrown her a real curve ball.

“I did have a premonition, from day one, that our union would be short-lived even though I cared a lot about the man,” she admitted.

She received no spousal support from him in that year.

Oh, and that controversial dowry?

Shamso did not collect a single dollar. She had a good job, and her husband simply wanted her to take care of herself financially while he collected all the fringe benefits that came with the institution of marriage.

“Unfortunately, I allowed him to do that,” Shamso said.

Ten thousand dollars is not small change. Shamso confessed that it is a tidy sum “that can send any woman on a shopping spree.” However, she had a different reason for requesting that amount.

“I was sending him a message that marriage is a big responsibility and not child’s play,” she said.

Shamso is not the type of a woman that lets bygones be bygones. She decided that her husband had to pay a non-monetary price for his frivolous and laissez- faire attitude toward marriage.

In what she would call “the most deranged vengeful action” she had ever taken, she told all the people in her town that she was married to him. He was so furious that he moved away to Wisconsin. It turned out there were two other victims, just like her, and they also dumped him.

Hassan M. Abukar is a writer and political analyst. He can be reached atabukar60@yahoo.com.
This article was first published SAHAN JOURNAL

SOMALIA: US money laundering laws and banking decisions hurting Somalia families

Money needed for survival blocked due to fear of repercussions



Minneapolis – Adeso invites you to a briefing marking the launch of a new joint research report with Inter American Dialogue and Oxfam America, keeping the Lifeline Open: Remittances and Markets in Somalia. The briefing will take place on September 6th, 2013 at Safari Restaurant 3010 4th Av South, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55408 from 6pm-8pm. The launch will discuss the impact of bank account closures of US-based money transfer operators to the Somali community.

Every year, a $1.3 billion stream of cash that the people of Somalia depend on for food, shelter, clothing and other necessities is under threat according to a new report from Adeso, the Inter-American Dialogue, and Oxfam America released on July 31st 2013. Fear of US anti-terror and money laundering laws is leading banks to close critically needed bank accounts of US-based money transfer operators. With the lack of a formal banking system in Somalia, families now face the possibility of being unable to access funds from friends and relatives that they desperately require for survival.

More money in remittances is sent to Somalia than the amount the country receives in humanitarian assistance, development assistance and foreign direct investment combined. Somalis based in the US send approximately $214 million each year back to their families in Somalia; nearly the same amount the US sends in foreign assistance to Somalia ($242 million). This aid allows individuals and families to spend money based on their specific needs and immediate priorities.

The money is a lifeline for many Somalis, providing them with a means to meet their immediate needs as well as open and sustain small businesses, send children to school, and invest in their communities. Remittances to women, in particular, result in investments in education, health, and nutrition. “More than half the recipients of remittances are women,” said Degan Ali, Executive Director, Adeso. “These are teachers and business owners. The money they receive can account for more than half of their income.”

Somali money transfer operators also play a critical role in cash relief programs, which Adeso, Oxfam, the United Nations, the US Administration for International Development and other humanitarian agencies used to help Somalis buy food and other basic necessities during the 2011 famine.

“These companies don’t just connect Somalis to their relatives; they connect Somalis with humanitarian agencies like ours so we can provide life-saving assistance,” Ali added.

Adeso is an African-founded and led humanitarian and development organization that is changing the way people think about and deliver aid in Africa. We believe that development must come from within, not outside African communities and that it is Africans themselves who must determine their own futures. We work to prevent, manage, and overcome situations that threaten the environmental, social and financial wellbeing of African communities. With this approach, we believe that we can build on the foundations of our great continent and help take Africa forward.

Oxfam America is a global organization working to right the wrongs of poverty, hunger, and injustice. As one of 17 members of the international Oxfam confederation, we work with people in more than 90 countries to create lasting solutions. Oxfam saves lives, develops long-term solutions to poverty, and campaigns for social change.

The Inter-American Dialogue is the leading U.S. center for policy analysis, exchange, and communication on issues in Western Hemisphere affairs. It seeks to build cooperation among nations and advance an agenda of democratic governance, social equity, and economic growth.

Salah Donyale, Minneapolis/MN.