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Thursday, December 19, 2013

Mandela and the African liberation struggle

Ubuntu and the emancipation of humans everywhere
Those who branded Mandela as a terrorist are now seeking to program the minds of the youth to see him as some sort of messiah, without links to real struggles for peace. But Mandela was very clear that his life was linked to the collective struggles of humans everywhere
by Horace G. Campbell

On Thursday December 5, 2013 the people of South Africa lost one of the foremost freedom fighters and revolutionaries who made his mark on humans everywhere. Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela was born in South Africa in 1918 and matured as Africans in South Africa rose to the challenges posed by the most brutal social and economic system of that moment, the system called apartheid. Mandela has now joined the ancestors and he has left his mark beside those great humans (such as Mahatmas Gandhi, Martin Luther King Jr, Rosa Parks, Umm Kulthum, Che Guevara and Rosa Luxemburg) whose greatness emerged from the movements that created them. The forms of struggle that emerged from South Africa inspired the refinement of the philosophy of Ubuntu. This is a philosophy that says one’s humanity is enriched by another’s and that as humans we are linked to a wider universe and spiritual world. Mandela had said clearly of Ubuntu, “The spirit of Ubuntu – that profound Africa sense that we are human beings only through the humanity of other human beings – is not a parochial phenomenon, but has added globally to our common search for a better world.”

The philosophy of Ubuntu challenged the ideals of individualism, greed, unhealthy competition, obscene self-enrichment and those destructive forms of human association that have brought the planet to the brink of extinction. When the movement elevated Nelson Mandela to the position as president of a politically free South Africa in 1994, after 27 years of incarceration, the political leadership of South Africa sought to give practical meaning to the philosophy of Ubuntu by establishing a Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC). In all parts of the world, the international media remember Mandela and his contributions to peace and reconciliation but the same corporate media seeks to confuse the youth by marketing Mandela as an unusual individual who performed the ‘miracle’ of ending apartheid. In the process of the wall to wall media coverage of the celebration of the life of Nelson Mandela, it is important that the voice of Africa is clear on the meaning of Mandela. Mandela was against racism and the dehumanizing social system that created hierarchies.

As peace activists it is vital that we remember Mandela as a defender of peace and social justice and the fact that he was an extraordinary human being. What is important to remember is that he was a product of a social movement; the extraordinary circumstances of the oppression of apartheid created this Mandela. Mandela joined a social movement, the anti-apartheid movement and for a moment in history, he became the symbol of the struggle against war and apartheid. His freedom came from the sacrifices of millions, especially the youth of Soweto and the workers from the Mass Democratic Movement who laid down a marker for the new tactics of revolution. While he was the President of South Africa, Mandela worked for peace in Burundi and Central Africa and worked hard to end the western manipulation of who can be branded as a terrorist.

Those who branded Mandela as a terrorist are seeking to program the minds of the youth to see him as some sort of visionary leader “dropped from heaven” without links to real struggles for peace. Mandela was very clear that his life was linked to the collective struggles of humans everywhere, and when he was released in February 1990 he said, “Amandla, Amandla ... I greet you all in the name of peace, democracy and freedom for all. I stand here before you not as a prophet but as a humble servant of you, the people.”

This media coverage of Nelson Mandela challenges contemporary freedom fighters to contemplate new tactics, new tools of struggles and new networks for peace in order to complete the tasks of ending global apartheid. The African National Congress in government has been trapped by its inheritance of the social capital of the apartheid state. New forms of organization and new ideas will be needed as humans gird themselves to fight against the nefarious forms of racism, exclusion and oppression that have been refined by global capital as unbridled capitalism seeks to turn our youths into mindless consumers. It is up to the youth to gird themselves for the new phase of internationalism and peace activism so that we can create the conditions for the inspiration presented by the life of Nelson Mandela to be grasped in all corners of the globe. Mandela lived a full life and we want to add to the tributes as we celebrate his life of struggle.

THE SOCIETY THAT CREATED NELSON MANDELA

As soon as it became clear that the most obscene forms of white supremacy could not survive after the massive resistance of peoples in all parts of the globe, international news programmers began to present Nelson Mandela as a visionary leader who single handedly ended apartheid. Books, films, documentaries, blogs and other mainstream media seek to present the changes in South Africa without reference to the reality that Nelson Mandela always represented a liberation movement. Inevitably, as the movement mobilized around the release of Nelson Mandela when he was incarcerated for 27 years, Mandela became a symbol of the anti-apartheid struggle. As the struggle matured in the final phase after his release from jail on February 11, 1990 the myth-making was developed as part of an election campaign. It is this myth-making that ensured the positive and the negative in the representation of Nelson Mandela to a generation that was not yet born when the liberation struggles were at the peak.

When Mandela was born in the village of Qunu, in the province that was called Cape Province, the Union of South Africa had been formed eight years earlier. The Union government had celebrated the crushing of the Bambata rebellions and in the face of the failure of open military rebellions by regional military forces, the African National Congress had been formed in 1912. Mandela grew up in South Africa in the turbulent period of the 1930s capitalist depression. It was in the midst of this depression when the capitalists of South Africa refined the repression of black mine workers and inculcated in white workers the idea that they (whites) were not workers but from a superior race. With the villages of South Africa and the wider region of Southern Africa providing cheap labour for the mines, mining capital reaped super profits at a moment when the instability in the international monetary system required a steady supply of gold from South Africa.

The royal families of the pre –Union society could not escape the effects of the deformities of segregation and dehumanization. Missionaries were deployed to teach sons of chiefs and it was from one of the missionaries that Mandela received the name Nelson because the missionaries had difficulties saying Rolihlahla. After this missionary education Mandela was sent to Fort Hare University and it was where the other famous anti-apartheid and anti-colonial stalwarts were groomed. Z. K. Matthews, Govan Mbeki, Oliver Tambo, Joshua Nkomo, Walter Sisulu, Robert Sobukwe, Desmond Tutu and Robert Mugabe were some of the notable students in the forties at this university. As an activist he was expelled from Fort Hare and he went on to study law at the University of Witwatersrand.

Nelson Mandela joined the African National Congress (ANC) in 1942 and in 1944, along with Walter Sisulu, Robert Sobukwe, and Oliver Tambo, they formed the Youth wing of the ANC. This youth wing joined the hundreds of anti-colonial movements all over the world and when the repressive legal structures of apartheid were formalised to support the social divisions, the peoples responded with a Freedom Charter. The Sharpeville massacres of March 21, 1960 foreclosed all possibilities of a peaceful non –violent opposition to apartheid and in 1962 Mandela was dispatched to the independent states of Africa to gain support for the armed wing of the ANC, Umkhonto we Sizwe (abbreviated as MK, translated as "Spear of the Nation). Mandela was one of the co-founders of MK and he received training in many African countries before he returned to South Africa. Mandela participated in the debates about unity and struggle that were at that time raging in the Pan African Freedom Movement for East and Central Africa (PAFMECA).

SELF ORGANIZATION OF THE YOUTH OF SOWETO

South West Johannesburg (Soweto) was one of those dormitory towns that were a reservoir of cheap labour for the rich and middle class whites in the suburbs of Johannesburg. Mandela was arrested in 1962 for planning “sabotage” of the government and was branded a terrorist by the South African state. The US military and intelligence agencies worked hand in glove with the apartheid military to crush opposition from the African majority. From 1973 the workers of Durban had given notice that there would be new organizational forms to oppose apartheid and the youth of Soweto followed with the massive uprisings of 1976. These rebellions are central to the kind of politics that developed in the period when Mandela was incarcerated after the Rivonia trials in 1964.

The sacrifices of the youth and their determination had created new alliances and these alliances matured in the Mass Democratic Movement and the United Democratic Front (UDF). While Nelson Mandela as a lawyer had been groomed to focus on the legal questions of the apartheid laws, the social questions of health, education, housing, police brutality placed the fight against apartheid on a new terrain as the ANC worked to remain alive in the heat of the conservative push of Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher. The formation of the UDF had provided for an alternative source of political power at the grassroots and strengthened the capacity of the resistance to transform their conception of the long term struggles to create an alternative to the social system.

Forward planners for the investors in the Johannesburg Stock Exchange were sufficiently alarmed when the rebellions of the youth rendered South Africa ungovernable and apartheid unworkable. After the killing of Steve Biko, the planners sought out the brightest from among these rebellious youth to send them to be trained as future leaders in North American and European universities. Those educated in the schools of the West became the experts after return to South Africa to be at the forefront of the negotiations for the form of society to be built after apartheid. Free Mandela Committees were an integral of the global antiapartheid struggles. In response to these local, regional and international alliances to end apartheid the South African Defence Forces (SADF) spread death and destruction in the townships and across the region of Southern Africa. The terrorism of apartheid along with the killing of more than 2 million in the neighboring states did not break the will of the people. If anything, international solidarity intensified with the support of the Cubans assisting the Angolans to fight the apartheid army at Cuito Cuanavale.

THE IMPORTANCE OF CUITO CUANAVALE

One of the many tasks of western propaganda organs has been to downplay the sacrifices of the peoples of the region of Southern Africa for the independence of Namibia 1990, the release of Nelson Mandela, and the negotiations to end apartheid. The epic battles at Cuito Cuanavale between October 1987 and June 1988 changed the history of Africa. The SADF had invaded Angola with the plan to impose Jonas Savimbi in Luanda and to defeat the freedom fighters from Namibia of the South West Africa People’s Organization (SWAPO). The apartheid army became bogged down at the crossroads of two rivers in southern Angola. In order to intimidate the peoples of Africa the SADF had manufactured tactical nuclear weapons with the assistance of the Israeli state. When the South African army became bogged down the President of South Africa, P.W.Botha, flew to the frontlines of the battles in Angola to broker a debate between the generals on whether South Africa should deploy and use its nuclear capabilities.

The international isolation of the white racist regime meant that there was no sympathy for this option, even from the conservative Reagan administration. The racist army had to fight against a confident Angolan military with Cuban reinforcements. After nine months fighting the SADF was roundly defeated with the remnants of the SADF retreating on foot to northern Namibia. In order to rescue the SADF so that the military would not be routed as the French army was routed at Dien Bien Phu in 1954, in stepped the US Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs, Chester Crocker, to broker the decent withdrawal of the SADF from Namibia. This battle was episodic and Fidel Castro rightly asserted that the history of Africa will be written as that of before Cuito Cuanavale and after Cuito Cuanavale.

NELSON MANDELA AND THE SOUTH AFRICAN STRUGGLES AFTER CUITO CUANAVALE

Nelson Mandela’s walk of Freedom out of incarceration in 1990 had represented a major step in the peoples of the world for a new system after apartheid. However, those who owned the banks, the mines, the insurance companies and the land were planning for a post-apartheid society where the capital remained in the hands of the white minority along with new black allies. International capital had grasped the full implications of black partners in societies such as Kenya, Zimbabwe, Cameroons, Algeria and Nigeria. Hence even while the negotiations were on going for the New Society in The Convention for a Democratic South Africa (CODESA,) the more far sighted elements such as the Oppenheimer family of Anglo-American Corporation worked to support those within the movement that believed that the end of Apartheid was for the development of a class of black entrepreneurs under Black Economic Empowerment (BEE).

The nature of the inequalities in South Africa today demonstrates the success of the plan to create black allies. Cyril Ramaphosa is the poster child of a militant trade union leader of the anti-apartheid era who became a mining magnate after apartheid, exploiting the very workers he had vowed to defend. The image of Cyril Ramaphosa who had escorted Nelson Mandela out of Prison in 1990 operating as a multibillionaire was one sign of the class formation in South Africa. In 2012, the political leaders of the ANC oversaw a government that shot 34 Marikana workers who were striking for better conditions at the Platinum Mines in South Africa. It was a proper clarification of the politics of transformation when Ramaphosa, a multibillionaire, emerged as the spokesperson for the owners of the Platinum Mines in rejecting the demands of the workers for better working conditions and better wages. The ANC and its tripartite alliance of the Communist Party, the Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU) had fashioned a theoretical basis for the enrichment of a few by arguing that before South Africa could enter the phase of transformation beyond capitalism there had to be the development of the productive forces. Nelson Mandela was caught in 1994 in the midst of the alliance and within five years sought to extricate himself by stepping down as President of South Africa in 1999 after one term.

Ubuntu in practice, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC)

One of the sterling contributions of the South African struggle was to be able to clarify the differences between restorative justice and retributive justice, based on Ubuntu. In fact, Mandela not only embraced Ubuntu, under his political leadership, there was an attempt to bring the ideas of Ubuntu from its philosophical level to the level of practical politics in ways that helped avert bloodbath to form a better society, however imperfect. And this was in part done through the establishment of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.

In the three years after the release of Mandela, the international media was predicting a bloodbath in South Africa if blacks were to emerge victorious from the first democratic elections in 1994. Those with strategic control over the means of violence sought to make this bloodbath a reality right up to the moment when Mandela was inaugurated in May 1994 as the first black President of a democratic South Africa. One year after Mandela became president, the parliament of South Africa established the Promotion of National Unity and Reconciliation Act No. 34 of 1995. This became the legal framework for the establishment of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission and Mandela threw his international weight behind the process of reconciliation. While the TRC was holding sessions under the chairperson Desmond Tutu, Mandela made a number of public gestures to demonstrate the fact that he supported full reconciliation between the oppressed blacks and the oppressors. Of the two most public of these gestures were the visit to have tea with Mrs Betsie Verwoerd at Oriana in 1995 and donning the jersey of the segregated South African rugby team in the World Cup in South Africa.

Mrs Verwoerd, the widow of the architect of the most brutal apartheid structures, had retreated to the town of Orania in the Cape seeking to establish an all-white town because the whites could not live under a black political leadership. The extreme Afrikaners around Mrs Verwoerd had chosen the small community to set up a laager and the whites in the town did not want any black around, not even black servants. These whites did not recognize Mandela as the legitimate president of a free South Africa. Mandela took the bold step of travelling to this all white town of Orania to demonstrate to Mrs Verwoerd that the new South Africa was based on forgiveness and willingness to share, core principles of Ubuntu. This gesture was relayed all over the world by the local and international media as Mandela sat down to have tea with the people who were responsible for arresting and incarcerating him. Two months earlier Mandela had orchestrated another public act by going to the Rugby World Cup Match and putting on the jersey of the South African team. Sporting activities had been one of the strongest bases for segregation in the society and in all areas of sporting activity Mandela inspired South Africa to rise above the structural violence that had become part and parcel of South Africa.

At the legal level, South Africa’s post-apartheid constitution is one of the most progressive in the world, and it draws on Ubuntu to enshrine equal constitutional rights for all – black, white, colored, women, youths, elderly people and same-gender-loving persons.

This effort at reconciliation at the legal level and at the public level went side by side as the TRC started hearings in Cape Town in 1996. The mandate of the commission had been to bear witness to, record and in some cases grant amnesty to the perpetrators of crimes relating to human rights violations, as well as reparation and rehabilitation. Witnesses who were identified as victims of gross human rights violations were invited to give statements about their experiences, and some were selected for public hearings. Perpetrators of violence could also give testimony and request amnesty from both civil and criminal prosecution.

A new politics was being developed in the context of seeking restorative justice beyond the Nuremberg model of winners’ court. The healing power of the process was manifest in the rituals that emanated from victims and oppressors, creating a space that could be the basis of holding the society together. This ritual of the TRC with the spiritual underpinnings of forgiveness and healing was a powerful antidote to the three hundred years of white racist oppression. Malidoma Some had written a book on the Healing Wisdom of Africa: Finding Life Purpose Through Nature, Ritual, and Community. It was in the TRC where one saw some of the ideas being worked out. During the hearings of the TRC there were public hearings as the narratives of perpetrators and victims moved in a constant motion across time (from present to past and present to future) and space (spiritual, social, physical, emotional) in a movement that may be called recursive.

Here was a profound moment in the history of South Africa as the African people offered a crucible for healing the society. Nelson Mandela and Desmond Tutu will go down in history as individuals who opened up the possibilities for another form of society. This healing process offered by the TRC, despite its imperfections, placed Ubuntu on the philosophical map breaking the ideation baggage of individualism, greed, competition and revenge.

If the black people and the oppressed majority were willing to turn a corner, international capital was not. Plans for the reconstruction and transformation of South Africa were shelved in the face of the timidity of the political leadership in calling for the cancellation of the apartheid incurred debt. The repercussions of managing the neo-liberal programe of international capital cut off the top leadership of the ANC from the rank and file. Questions of the social reconstruction after apartheid had to be shelved until new emancipatory formations arise in South Africa. International capital took the lessons of South Africa to heart and sought to promote a neo-liberal agenda where a small minority collaborated with international capital in the new template for the exploitation of the majority. This form of class rule came to be understood as the globalization of apartheid without its racial baggage.

MANDELA AND UBUNTU OVERSEAS

Mandela was opposed to the western designation of states as sponsoring terrorism and openly supported Fidel Castro of Cuba, Yasser Arafat of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) the Saharwi Arab Democratic Republic and the political leadership in Libya. As one who had been placed on the US list of international terrorist, Mandela in 1992 made a clear statement about the standoff between Libya and the West over the downing of the 1988 Pan American Airways Flight 103. This plane had exploded over Lockerbie, Scotland, and the West accused two Libyans of planting the bomb. This is despite the fact that at the precise moment of the bomb, western media had blamed Iran for planting the bomb.

In 1998 Mandela travelled to Libya three times within one week to mediate between the British government and the Libyan authorities. After travelling back and forth between the western leaders and Muammar Gaddafi, the head of the Libyan state, Mandela struck a deal where Gaddafi handed over the two suspects in return for the lifting of international sanctions against Libya. Gaddafi accepted the offer of Nelson Mandela and offered to pay US $2.7 billion , approximately $10 million for each of the victim’s families. Gaddafi went further to open up his economy to western oil companies and in 2004 dumped his plans for the acquisition of chemical and biological weapons. Despite this opening and the intense investments of the west, international capital was not satisfied and in 2011 orchestrated the invasion, bombing and destruction of Libya under the banner of Responsibility to Protect. Gaddafi was executed and humiliated as the west sought to roll back all ideas of African unification and liberation.

Mandela as a Peace maker

After Nelson Mandela was rid of the responsibility of managing the structures of the apartheid economy, he became even more outspoken against inequalities. He was assertive on the question of the need for health for all and the provision of retroviral medicine for those affected by HIV AIDS even while other leaders of the ANC were equivocal over the response of the government of South Africa to this pandemic. Outside of South Africa Mandela shamed the leaders of the Organization of African Unity (OAU) who had stood by while the fastest genocide unfolded in Rwanda in 1994. After the passing of Julius Nyerere in 1999, Nelson Mandela engaged the peace process in Burundi and threw his considerable international stature behind a tough process of negotiations to end the decades of warfare in Burundi.

Mandela was opposed to the deployment of US military personnel in Africa and he spoke out firmly against the Africa Crisis Response Initiative (ACRI), the forerunner to the current Africa Command. When George W. Bush started his buildup for the war against the peoples of Iraq Mandela offered himself up as a peace maker to be a human shield against US bombs. In an interview with Newsweek magazine in 2002 prior to the invasion, Mandela called the USA a threat to the peace of the world.

“If you look at those matters, you will come to the conclusion that the attitude of the United States of America is a threat to world peace. Because what [America] is saying is that if you are afraid of a veto in the Security Council, you can go outside and take action and violate the sovereignty of other countries. That is the message they are sending to the world. That must be condemned in the strongest terms.”

As a peace activist, Mandela took issues personal with George Bush over the decision to invade Iraq. Addressing the International Women’s Forum in Johannesburg in 2003, a visibly furious Mandela stated unequivocally: “What I am condemning is that one power, with a president [George Bush] who has no foresight, who cannot think properly, is now wanting to plunge the world into a holocaust. ... If there is a country that has committed unspeakable atrocities in the world, it is the United States of America. They don't care.”

THE LEGACIES OF NELSON MANDELA

The differing legacies of the political leadership of Nelson Mandela were on full display at the massive memorial event held in Soweto on December 10, 2013. There the mass of people expressed themselves in the admiration and warmth of Nelson Mandela and at the same time expressing their opposition to the corruption of the top leadership of the ANC. The people booed the current leader of the ANC, Jacob Zuma, every time his face appeared on the giant TV screens in the stadium. Mandela had always remarked that he was a disciplined member of the ANC and his membership of the organization pointed to the differences between the promises of the anti-apartheid struggles and the realities of the enrichment of a new class of African exploiters. It was appropriate that this celebration of the life of Mandela marked a new stage for the corrupt leadership of the ANC.

In the period of the anti-apartheid struggles, funeral ceremonies were occasions for mass mobilization and education. The entire proceedings played out before over 90 heads of state and government reflected the new relationship between the ANC and the mass of the poor. Despite the fact that this occasion represented a huge logistical challenge, one could negatively compare the planning of the leadership on this occasion with the World Cup in 2010. Hence, for one of the most important public events in the history of South Arica, for most of the time the stadium was half empty. The ANC did not provide transportation to the stadium as promised. The poor travelled from near and far by train only to find that there were no buses to take them up to the stadium. Even those who braved the downpour of rain to make it to the stadium was not allowed to celebrate the way South Africans are used to celebrate at such events. Instead they were expected to sit and listen like little children. At such events people would sing and dance. In fact, before each speaker someone would raise a song and people would follow and sing until the speaker was ready to speak. Even Zuma would start a song and dance before he spoke. Jacob Zuma, the leadership and Cyril Ramaphosa wanted the people to forget the kind of mass mobilization that was engineered to end apartheid. They are afraid that this mass mobilization would sweep the billionaires from power.

The political leadership of Nelson Mandela in the anti-apartheid struggle had both focused attention on him as an individual and released the energies of various groups whose task was to clarify the details of the real meaning of transformation beyond apartheid. In this and in many other ways, Nelson Mandela symbolized the dialectic of resistance and transformation. His own life has mirrored the way in which a social movement shaped individuals. Hence, the youth who are hearing the tributes to Mandela are faced with the contradiction between focusing on great leaders and the kind of media coverage that is geared towards the depoliticizaion of the youth. Richard Falk summed up very lucidly the place of Mandela for humans everywhere when he wrote,

“It was above all Mandela’s spiritual presence that created such a strong impression of moral radiance on the part of all of us fortunate enough to be in the room. I was reinforced in my guiding belief that political greatness presupposes a spiritual orientation toward the meaning of life, not necessarily expressed by way of a formal religious commitment, but always implies living with an unconditional dedication to values and faith that transcend the practical, the immediate, and the material.”

In his earthly life, Mandela could not escape this tension between the spiritual and the material. The spiritual energies of the peoples had been unleashed to fashion a non-racial democracy. Liberal conception of democracy could not understand this attempt to transcend the ideas of the Western Enlightenment, which itself is built on human hierarchies that carved a supreme space for the enlightened white man. Nelson Mandela had been reared in these ideas at Fort Hare and as a lawyer but the struggles elevated him to be a special human being among revolutionaries. The world salutes Nelson Mandela and we join with those who are sending tributes to his family.

We will also add that the people should not mourn but organize for the next round of struggle.

* Horace G .Campbell, a veteran peace activist is a Visiting Professor in the School of International Relations, Tsinghua University, Beijing. He is a Professor of African American Studies and Political Science at Syracuse University. He is the author of Global NATO and the Catastrophic Failure in Libya, Monthly Review Press, 2013.

Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Bishop Bertin: we must continue to respond to the tragedies of Somalia


(Vatican Radio) Somalia, on the tip of the horn of Africa, is widely seen as a nation ravaged by drought and conflict, at the top of the global corruption index, home to gangs of warlords who sabotage humanitarian aid efforts and one of the most dangerous places in the world for journalists and aid workers.

But a September conference in Brussels, the third of its kind, aimed to focus the attention of the international community on the progress made in Somalia over the last year as well as mobilize resources for the one-year-old Somali regime and assist it in the country’s reconstruction.

The conference set out a plan for Somalia’s reconstruction and has been successful in receiving over 815 million US dollars in financial pledges.

Meanwhile, Al-Shabaab Islamist militia have abandoned their posts in Mogadishu spurring hope that the new government will guarantee a more efficient management of food aid, with the support of the international community and the protection of African Union forces.

Vatican Radio’s Linda Bordoni asked Bishop Giorgio Bertin of Djibouti, Apostolic Administrator of Somalia’s only Catholic diocese, Mogadishu, if life has improved for ordinary Somalis…

Listen to the interview… RealAudioMP3

Bishop Bertin says that life is returning to Somalia very slowly, however, he says, although there is a sense of hope “the enemies of hope, the enemies of peace, the enemies of reconciliation are still there”.

The Bishop says that “the answer is that we should be more perseverant than the evil forces. Those who opt for life, for hope, for respect should be more determined and persevering than those who are against it”.

Bertin says that Pope Francis’s option for the poor is a great source of inspiration for him. “It reminds of our engagement for the poor, an engagement that should be intelligent in the sense that we should find out the economic, political and not only humanitarian ways to come out of extreme poverty”..

He says it is also about keeping awareness high and points out that Somalia is a forgotten nation, in the news only when a tragic event hits the headlines.

Source: en.radiovaticana.va

If a Drone Strike Hit an American Wedding, We'd Ground Our Fleet


 But after a dozen or more deaths at a Yemeni wedding, don't expect anything to change. 


By Conor Friedersdorf 

On my wedding day, my wife and I hired a couple of shuttle vans to ferry guests between a San Clemente hotel and the nearby site where we held our ceremony and reception. I thought of our friends and family members packed into those vehicles when I read about the latest nightmarish consequence of America's drone war: "A U.S. drone mistakenly targeted a wedding convoy in Yemen's al-Baitha province after intelligence reports identified the vehicles as carrying al Qaeda militants," CNN reported, citing government sources in Yemen. "The officials said that 14 people were killed and 22 others injured, nine in critical condition. The vehicles were traveling near the town of Radda when they were attacked."

Can you imagine the wall-to-wall press coverage, the outrage, and the empathy for the victims that would follow if an American wedding were attacked in this fashion? Or how you'd feel about a foreign power that attacked your wedding in this fashion?

The L.A. Times followed up on the story and found slightly different casualty figures: "The death toll reached 17 overnight, hospital officials in central Bayda province said Friday. Five of those killed were suspected of involvement with Al Qaeda, but the remainder were unconnected with the militancy, Yemeni security officials said."

More than a dozen dead, many more injured, and an unknown number of survivors whose lives have suddenly taken a nightmarish turn the likes of which we cannot imagine, and all for the sake of five people suspected of ties to al-Qaeda. How many actual al-Qaeda terrorists would we have to kill with drones in Yemen to make the benefits of our drone war there outweigh the costs of this single catastrophic strike? If U.S. drone strikes put American wedding parties similarly at risk would we tolerate our targeted-killing program for a single day more? Our policy persists because we put little value on the lives of foreign innocents. Even putting them through the most horrific scene imaginable on their wedding day is but a blip on our media radar, easily eclipsed by a new Beyonce album.

The Obama Administration dishonestly talks of "surgical" drone strikes, as if surgeries ever result in double digit casualties. "Before any strike is taken, there must be near-certainty that no civilians will be killed or injured—the highest standard we can set," President Obama promised back in May. The CNN story about this latest strike says, "The convoy consisted of 11 vehicles, and the officials said that four of the vehicles were targeted in the strikes." Is attempting to pick off alleged militants while in a wedding convoy with innocents the highest standard we can set to avoid civilian deaths? If so, the results speak for themselves.
In that same May speech, Obama said:
Remember that the terrorists we are after target civilians, and the death toll from their acts of terrorism against Muslims dwarfs any estimate of civilian casualties from drone strikes.  So doing nothing is not an option.  Where foreign governments cannot or will not effectively stop terrorism in their territory, the primary alternative to targeted lethal action would be the use of conventional military options. As I’ve already said, even small special operations carry enormous risks. Conventional airpower or missiles are far less precise than drones, and are likely to cause more civilian casualties and more local outrage. 
And invasions of these territories lead us to be viewed as occupying armies, unleash a torrent of unintended consequences, are difficult to contain, result in large numbers of civilian casualties and ultimately empower those who thrive on violent conflict.      
Does anyone believe that, if not for our lethal drone program, the United States would've sent the Air Force or ground troops to fire on this wedding party? The thousands of drone strikes we've carried out in recent years suggest that drones decrease the cost of lethal action so much that the U.S. takes it more often now than we would if we didn't have a drone fleet at the ready—and not, as their defenders sometimes argue, that drones are saving us from air strikes and ground invasions.

Finally, Obama says that drone strikes are ordered only against targets who pose "a continuing, imminent threat to Americans." Is anyone else skeptical that the targets in this wedding convoy would be immenently attacking us right now if not for those Hellfire missiles? (For more on how Obama uses the word imminent in a misleading way see here.)

Even if you disagree with the growing global opposition to America's targeted-killing program, and believe that the frequent use of lethal drone strikes is necessary, reflect on the U.S. reaction to killing more than a dozen people in this wedding convoy, including many innocents. The moral course, if we must have a drone program that puts civilians at risk, would be to apologize for any terrible mistakes that we make, pay reparations to the wronged survivors, and explain what steps will be taken to insure nothing like this will ever happen again. Instead, according to CNN, "U.S. officials declined to comment on the report."

Source: theatlantic.com

SOMALIA: Exclusive: inside an al-Shabaab training camp



Jamal Osman Reporter
by Jamal Osman Reporter

Among the most feared of al-Qaeda's affiliates, al-Shabaab was behind the Westgate shopping mall attack in Kenya. Jamal Osman attended one of its training camps in the Somali bush.



They chant: "We are al-Shabaab! We are al-Qaeda! We are terrorists!" In a secret location, deep in the Somali bush, I met al-Shabaab, one of the most feared al-Qaeda-affiliated organisations in the world.


Around 300 newly trained fighters, who have completed a six-month course, parade in the training camp.

Al-Shabaab is the jihadist group behind the attack at the Westgate shopping mall in Kenya two months ago that left 67 people dead. The terrifying images from that attack showed al-Shabaab fighters casually walking through the mall as they shot civilians. But for al-Shabaab, the Westgate operation was a victory and is now being used to inspire new soldiers.

The latest recruits had the same military training as the Westgate attackers. At their graduation ceremony, they were rewarded with a visit from al-Shabaab's spokesman, Sheikh Ali Dhere.



Speaking to the new recruits, Sheikh Ali Dhere said: "See what the Kenyans are facing today. Men were like you, had the same training as you, gave up their lives for God's cause and brought huge victory for Muslims."

'Stop fighting us'

The men comprise young Muslims from all over the world: Arabs, Kenyans and even, I was told, some from Britain. They chanted in several languages, but I wasn't allowed to speak to them.

The group was one of two fully armed battalions I saw during my stay. They are determined men who want to crush the western-backed Somali government in Mogadishu. The weak government is propped up by African Union troops, including Kenyan forces who invaded southern Somalia two years ago. That is why al-Shabaab regard the Westgate attack as revenge.

We have said to Kenya many times: stay away from us. They refused. So we decided to spill blood to send the message. Sheikh Ali Dhere

Sheikh Ali Dhere, the public face of the group, told me: "We have said to Kenya many times: stay away from us, leave our land, our people and stop fighting us. We warned them again and again. They refused all of that. So we decided to spill blood to send the message.

"Their women are not better than ours. Their sons are not better than ours. Their children are not better than ours. When they kill our people we kill theirs."

Some of the new soldiers at the graduation ceremony showed off their gymnastic skills to impress Sheik Ali Dhere.

Suicide waiting list

Highly organised, these latest additions will soon decide which unit within al-Shabaab to join. They can remain regular fighters, become bomb-makers or work for the Amniyat, al-Shabaab's security network.

But the most popular unit is the Istishhadyin unit, the suicide brigade. And believe it or not, there's a long waiting list of several years. With months of training, only the best recruits will be accepted.

Sheikh Ali Dhere had a message for those wanting to join.

"When we fight and are martyred, we hope to be with God in paradise. What are the infidels hoping for? Nothing."

Alternative government

Al-Shabaab has been designated as a terrorist organisation by several western nations. And after losing control of four major cities, the Islamists were thought to have been defeated. But they still control large parts of the country and see themselves as an alternative government.

I visited Bulo Burte, a key strategic crossing point on the Shabelle river. It's an al-Shabaab stronghold.

When we fight and are martyred, we hope to be with God in paradise. What are the infidels hoping for? Nothing. Sheikh Ali Dhere

It also happens to be the town where one of the Westgate attackers came from. The number and identities of the Westgate attackers still remains a mystery. Kenyans claim they were only four. But locals in the al-Shabaab areas suggest there were more and some are even believed to have returned to Somalia.

The spokesman said Westagte was "something that happened at the heart of their country, and they still don't know whether the men have escaped or not and how many they were. That shows their weakness."

'Victory is close'

Unlike other parts of southern and central Somalia, there's peace under al-Shabaab's strict sharia law. Women do go to school and are allowed to run their own businesses.

I followed the Hizbat, the al-Shabaab police, on their beat. The first stop was a restaurant, where they told the female owner to remove the rubbish from outside. They then made their way to the local hospital, where they checked the pharmacy and the cleanliness of the rooms. They seem satisfied. Our final stop was a mini supermarket where they checked product expiry dates.

But as soon as they heard the call to prayer, everything stopped. People headed to the mosque for midday prayer, whether they liked it or not. The al-Shabaab police made sure that everyone went to the mosque.

Passing vehicles are pulled over.

The mosque quickly fills up, with some having to pray outside in the heat. It's a good opportunity for Sheikh Ali Dhere - this time in civilian clothes - to drum up more support.

"It's you who are meant to deal with the infidels," he tells the congregation. "It's you who should defend Islam. God willing, we'll be victorious. Victory is close. The infidels haven't got much left. They are in the eleventh hour."

Source: channel4.com

South Sudan quashes coup attempt, says President Kiir



Hundreds of people arrived at UN bases in Juba on Monday as reports of violence spread
President Salva Kiir: "The government is in full control of the security situation in Juba"

South Sudan's President Salva Kiir says an attempted coup by soldiers loyal to his former deputy Riek Machar has been put down.

Mr Kiir said the government was in full control of the capital, Juba, after a night of heavy fighting between soldiers in the presidential guard.

A night time curfew has been put in place and a number of arrests have reportedly been made.

Several people were reported injured and hundreds have fled to a US base.

Hilde Johnson, the UN's special representative in the country, said she was "deeply concerned" and urged "all parties in the fighting to cease hostilities immediately and exercise restraint".

"I have been in touch regularly with the key leaders, including at the highest levels to call for calm," she said.

The fighting in Juba broke out overnight, and intensified in the early morning, with reports of continuous gunfire and several explosions.

The city's airport has been closed and the state TV channel SSTV went off air for several hours.

Shortly after it came back on air, SSTV broadcast an address from Mr Kiir, wearing military uniform rather than his usual civilian clothing and flanked by government officials.

He said the violence "was an attempted coup", but that the government was now in full control and the attackers were being chased down.

He said the fighting began when unidentified uniformed personnel opened fire at a meeting of SPLM, followed by an attack on army headquarters near the university carried out "by a group of soldiers allied to the former vice-president Dr Riek Machar and his group".

"I will not allow or tolerate such incidents once again in our new nation. I strongly condemn these criminal actions in the strongest terms possible," he said, vowing those responsible would be have to stand "before the appropriate law institution".

The UN said it would protect civilians and provide basic humanitarian needs, but called for calm
The ruling party, former rebel force the Sudan People's Liberation Movement (SPLM), would never allow power to be transferred by force, he said.

He announced a curfew would be in place every night between 18:00 and 06:00, beginning on Monday.

"Rest assured that the government is doing all it can to make sure that citizens are secured and safe."

Foreign Minister Barnaba Marial Benjamin told the Associated Press that some soldiers had tried to raid the weapons store at the main military based in the capital, but were repulsed.

He said some politicians had since been arrested.

Mr Riek has not commented and his whereabouts are unclear. But his spokesman said he was safe and denied reports he had been arrested.

Civilians flee

South Sudan - the world's youngest country and one of the least developed - has struggled to achieve a stable government since becoming independent from Sudan in 2011. The independence referendum was intended to end a decades-long conflict, led by the SPLM, against the north.

The oil-rich country is ethnically and politically divided, with many armed groups active. Tensions have been particularly high since President Kiir dismissed his entire cabinet, including Mr Machar, in July.

The sackings are believed to have followed a power struggle - Mr Machar has said he plans to contest the presidential elections in 2015. He now leads a dissident faction within the SPLM.

The two men are from rival ethnic groups that have clashed in the past. Mr Kiir is from the Dinka community, the largest in South Sudan, while Mr Machar is from the Nuer, the second-largest. Some Nuer have complained about Dinka political domination.

Juba was reportedly calm by mid-morning with few civilians on the streets, but heavily armed troops were seen patrolling.

Hundreds of people, mainly women and children, have taken shelter at the UN compound near the airport and at a UN house in the city.

A spokesman told Reuters seven people, including a two-year-old boy, had been treated for gunshot wound.

The UN said in a statement: "We hope the security situation in Juba will quickly normalise to enable the civilians to return very soon to their residential areas. To that end, UNMISS (the UN mission in South Sudan) calls on all parties to show continued calm and restraint."

The UN and the US embassy advised their citizens to stay at home. Both denied rumours they were harbouring any political or military figures.
Both Sudan and the South are reliant on their oil revenues, which account for 98% of South Sudan's budget. But the two countries cannot agree how to divide the oil wealth of the former united state. Some 75% of the oil lies in the South but all the pipelines run north. It is feared that disputes over oil could lead the two neighbours to return to war.
Although they were united for many years, the two Sudans were always very different. The great divide is visible even from space, as this Nasa satellite image shows. The northern states are a blanket of desert, broken only by the fertile Nile corridor. South Sudan is covered by green swathes of grassland, swamps and tropical forest.



Sudan's arid north is mainly home to Arabic-speaking Muslims. But in South Sudan there is no dominant culture. The Dinkas and the Nuers are the largest of more than 200 ethnic groups, each with its own languages and traditional beliefs, alongside Christianity and Islam.
The health inequalities in Sudan are illustrated by infant mortality rates. In South Sudan, one in 10 children die before their first birthday. Whereas in the more developed northern states, such as Gezira and White Nile, half of those children would be expected to survive
The gulf in water resources between north and south is stark. In Khartoum, River Nile, and Gezira states, two-thirds of people have access to piped drinking water and pit latrines. In the south, boreholes and unprotected wells are the main drinking sources. More than 80% of southerners have no toilet facilities whatsoever.
Throughout the two Sudans, access to primary school education is strongly linked to household earnings. In the poorest parts of the south, less than 1% of children finish primary school. Whereas in the wealthier north, up to 50% of children complete primary level education


Conflict and poverty are the main causes of food insecurity in both countries. In Sudan, many of the residents of war-affected Darfur and the border states of Blue Nile and South Kordofan, depend on food aid. The UN said about 2.8m people in South Sudan would require food aid in 2013. The northern states tend to be wealthier, more urbanised and less reliant on agriculture.
Source: BBC

Monday, December 16, 2013

UPDATES OF URGENT ALERT:SERIOUS MINORITY RIGHTS VIOLATION IN SOMALILAND - WALAACA DIFAACAYAASHA XUQUUQDA AADAMIGA SOMALILAND EE TACADIYADA LIDKA KU AH QAYBAHA BULSHADA SOMALILAND EE LA HAYB SOOCO



Gudida Ilaalada Xuquuqda Aadamiga Geeska Afrika ee HORNWATCH, waxay si xoogan uga walaacsan yihiin xadgudubyo isa soo taraya kuwaasi oo bilihii ugu dambeeyay lala beegsado qaybaga bulshada Somaliland ugu nugul ee dhaqan ahaan ee la takooro. Gaboodfalada qaylo dhaantani warinayso ayaa isugu jira:

Suleiman Ismail Bolaleh, HORNWATCH Chairman
Qudhgooyo (Xaqa Nolosha); Sinnaan la'aanta Muwaadiniinta Dalka (Kala sarreynta iyo takoorka ku salaysan isirka, abtirsiga); Ka Maanacaad Helitaanka Cadaalad iyo Garsoor Dhex ah (Dambiyo Ciqaab ah oo loogu fuliyo Gabooyaha Somaliland Hab aan Xeerka Waafaqsanayn); Haweenka ka soo jeeda beelaha la takooro ayaa la ogaaday in ay la nool yihiin xadgudubyo ka badan 100% kuwa haleela dhigooda ka soo jeeda beelaha aqlabiyada ah.

Gudida Ilaalada Xuquuqda Aadamiga Geeska Afrika ayaa tan iyo bishii Octobar ee sanadkan 2013 diiwaangaliyay xadgudubyo isa soo taraya oo lala beegsanayo haweenka bulshada Somaliland ee la takooro ee Gabooyaha.

Rabi Naxariistiisa jano haka waraabiyee waxa xaafada Daami ee caasimada Hargeysa 2dii bilood ee u dambeeyay qudha lagaga jaray 2 haween ah oo Gabooye ah kuwaasi oo lagu kala magacaabi jiray Marxuumad Layla Abdi Yusuf 36 sano jir xaaslay ah iyo Muluug Axmed Egeh 28 sano jir  xaasley dhashay afar caruur ah.

Marxuumada 1aad: Layla Abdi Yusuf 36 sano jir xaaslay ah - Jilibka Talaabo-cade qabiilka Muuse Dhariyo ee Beelwaynta Gabooyaha. waxa lagu dilay xaafada Daami taariikh 14 Octobar 2013, abaaro 3:00 a.m     saac,  hubka loo isticmaalay tooray uu ku dhuftay nin ka soo jeeda beelaha aqlabiyada ah ee dega xaafada Daami.

Marxuumada 2aad: Muluug Axmedyasin Egeh - Jilibka Bacaylo oo qabiilka Muse Dhariyo ee Beelwaynta Gabooyaha waxa lagu dilay xaafada Daami taariikh 4 Dec. 2013 abaaro 11:00 aroornimo, hubka loo isticmaalay dhagax, ay ku dhufteen dad ka soo jeeda beelaha aqlabiyada ah ee la dega xaafada Daami.

Wajigabaxa ka dhacay Xusaskii iyo Dabaaldagyadii maalmaha Xuquuqda Aadamiga adduunka oo Somaliland sanadkan si wayn looga xusay ayaan Nasiibdaro mar kali ahna lagu soo hadal qaadin tacadiyada joogtada ah ee qaybaha bulshada Somaliland ee aqlabiyada ahi ku hayana dhibanayaasha la takooro ee laga tirada badan yahay u fiirso Marxuumad Muluug Axmedyasin Egeh  MAYDKEEDU wuxuu u hoyday  9 caano maal (4-12 December 2013) QOLKA MAYDKA ee Cusbitaalka Guud ee caasimada Hargeysa, kadib markii xukuumadu ka baaqsatay in ay soo qabato dadkii sida xaqdarada ah ku dilay oo markaasina Gabooyaha Hargeysa daganina diideen in ay aasaan maydkeeda ilaa inta cidii dilka gaystay dawladu soo qabanayso. Tani waxay ka marag kacaysaa sida aanay qiimo badab u lahayn nafta muwaadinka gabooyaha ah ee dalkiisa Somaliland joogaa.

Mudaharaad Daami 11.12.2013 by vosomwo
Difaacayaasha Xuquuqda Aadamiga Geeska Afrika waxay aad uga walaacsan yihiin dhibaatada ay bulshada la hayb sooco ee Somaliland kala kulmaan dhinaca cadaalada iyo garsoorka dalka Somaliland.  20 kii sano ee Somaliland xoriyadeeda dib ula soo noqotay Gabooyaha Somaliland sida inta badan dhacday mar kasta oo Gabooyaha Somaliland dacwado ay dhan ka yihiin gasho hay'adaha sharcifulinta iyo garsoorka waxa xaalku ku dhamaadaa iyagoo Hay'adaha Sharci-fulinta Somaliland  dhalan gadiya Dacwadaha dhibanayaasha ay ka yihiin beelaha la hayb sooco iyagoo dhibanayaasha Gabooyaha ah ka dhiga dhibgaystayaal.

Mashaqada taasi ka sii daran ayaa ah tacadiyada Gabooyaha Somaliland kala kulmaan Garsoorka iyo Sharicfulinta oo mid la mid ah ay haatan kala kulmeen helitaanka adeegii caafimaad. Dilkii ugu dambeeyay ee loo gaystay Gabadha Gabooyaha ah 4/12/2013 hawlwadeenada sare ee caafimaadka cusbitaalka Guud ee Hargeysa ayaa sheegay in baadhitaan ay ku sameeyeen maydka Muluug Axmedyasin Egeh ay ku ogaadeen in aanay u dhiman dhaawac dhagaxa ah ee ku dhacay balse taasi bedelkeeda waxay dhaqaatiirtani yidhaahdeen in ay u dhimatay xanuun dhinaca xameetida ah iyo wadno xanuun!!!.

Mudaharaad Daami 12.12.2013 by vosomwo
Gudida Ilaalada Xuquuqda Aadamiga Geeska Afrika waxay si cad ugu sheegayaan Masuuliyiinta Sare ee Wasaarada Arimaha Gudaha Somaliland Taliyayaasha Ciidamada Booliska iyo Madaxda Cusbitaalka Guud ee Caasimada in tacadiyada lagu dhalan gadiyayo xaqiiqooyinka dambiyada lidka ku ah xuquuqda aadamiga ee lala beegsado bulshada la hayb soocaa ay yihiin qaar ay ka dhalan karaa dambiyo aadaminimo iyo xadgudubyo Xuquuqda Aadamiga ah oo lagu dacwayn iyaga iyadoo loo marayo maxkamadaha caalamiga ah ee dhagaraha laga galo aadamaha.

BOORAMA OO ISU BEDESHAY CADAABTII IFKA EE GABOOYAHA SOMALILAND

Magaalo Madaxda Gobolka Awdal ee Boorama oo ka mid ahaan jirtay magaalooyinka dhifta ah ee beelaha la takooro ee reer Somaliland ay ku noolaan jireen takoor heerkiisu ka hooseeyo kan magaalooyinka kale ee dalka ayaa iyaduna isku rogtay cadaabtii ifka ee Gabooyaha Somaliland kadib markii 2 sano ka hor wiil beelaha tirada badan ka soo jeedaa oo ALLE haw naxariistee lagu magacaabo Aydiid Cabdiqaadir Cali oo uu dhalay Sarkaal Sare oo ka tirsan dambi Baadhayaasha Booliska Gobolka Awdal oo lagu magacaabo Cabdiqaadir Cali uu jeclaaday gabadh yar oo ka soo jeeda beelaha la takooro ee loo yaqaan Madhibaanka oo lagu magacaabo Malyuun Haybe Jamaac. Markii wiilka qoyskiisu u diideen in uu gabadha Midgaanta ah guursado ayuu isaga laftiisu qudha iska jaray kadib markii uu is qabadsiiyay gaas iyo dab, nasiib daro wiilka aabihii oo ah sarkaal boolis ah waxa uu xabsiga ku guray dad tiro badan oo ka soo jeeda Gabooyaha dega Boorama kuwaasi oo ay ka mid yihin gabartii uu jeclaaday wiilkiisu Malyuun Haybe Jaamac, aabaheed Haybe Jaamac, wiil lagu magacaabo Bedel Cabdi Aaden oo isagu ka soo jeeda qabiil ka mid ah Gabooyaha oo la yiraa Yibir iyo xubno kale oo Gabooye ah.

Xadhigaasi waxa barbar socday weeraro haweenka iyo dhalinyarada qabiilka wiilku ka dhintay ku qaadayeen goobaha ay ka degan yihiin Gabooyuhu magaalada Boorame, gaar ahaan meheradaha ay ku ganacsadaan iyagoo burburinayay miisaska ay hilibka ku iibiyaan, rayiislayaasha, kabotolayaasha iyo meelaha birta ay ku tumaan, taasi oo sababtay in wiigag isxigxiga dadka laga tirada badan yahay ee Gabooyaha Boorama in ay ka soo bixi waayaan guryahooda.

Gudida Ilaalada Xuquuqda Aadamiga Geeska Afrika ayaa xiligaasi diiwaangaliyay in ka badan 150 ruux oo u badan rag iyo dhalinyaro markii ay nafahoodii u baqeen ka cararay magaalada Boorama iyagoo tagay magaalooyinka Hargeysa ilaa Burco qaarkoodna waxay ka talaabeen xadka u dhexeeya Somaliland iyo Itoobiya iyagoo gaadhay xeryahay qaxootiga Somalida ee ku yaal bariga dalka Itoobiya oo ay maamusho Hay'ada UNHCR.

Bilowgiiba dacwada waxa dambi baadhe ka noqday Aabihii dhalay wiilka dhintay Dambi Baadhe Boolis Mr. Cabdiqaadir Cali Gudida Ilaalada Xuquuqda Aadamiga Geeska Afrika ee HornWatch oo si taxadir leh ula socotay geedi socodka dacwada ciqaabta ah ee lidka ku ah 2 wiil ee Gabooyaha ah, ayaa ka marag kacaya in 2-da wiil ee Gabooyaha ahi aanay helin gabi ahaan garsoor dhex ah oo cadaaladeed iyo nidaam baadhiseed oo xaq ku dhisan, Maxkamadayntooda ayaa la xaqiijiyay in ay u dhacday si ka fog nidaamka cadaalada dalka, Xuquuqda Aadamiga, Diinta Islaamka iyo xataa dhaqanka toosan.

Baadhayaasha Xuquuqda Aadamiga HORNWATCH waxay xogogaal u noqdeen in Qareen ka tirsan Ururka Qareenada Somaliland oo caawimi qaanuun oo lacag la'aan ah ku difaacayay Labada eedaysane markii dad cadhaysani soo weerareen fadhiyadii Maxkamada Gobolka Awdal dacwada oo socota isla markaasina ay dhaawaceen xubno ka mid ah eedaysanayaasha iyo eheladooda oo Maxkamada u yimi dhegaysiga dacwada, ayuu Qareenkii naftiisa u baqay waxanu markiiba joojiyay caawimadii qaanuun ee uu siinayay 2 wiil ee eedaysanayaasha ah iyo qoysaskooda.

Sidoo kale Gudida Ilaalada Xuquuqda Aadamiga Geeska Afrika waxay baadhitaanka kiiskan ku ogaadeen in Qareenkii 2aad ee difaacayay eedaysanayaasha Gabooyaha ah oo lagu magacaabo Amiin Sheikh Said Sheikh Hassan uu ku waayay Gunadii uu ka heli jiray adeega caawimada qaanuun ee uu lacag la'aanta uu ku siiyo qoysaska Gabooyaha ah ee eedaysanayaasha kiiskan, Gunadan oo ay siin jireen Ururka Qareenada Somaliland ee Somaliland oo fuliya Mashruuc ay maalgaliso hay'ada Qaramada Midoobay ee UNDP. Gudoomiyihii hore ee ururka Qareenada Somaliland Mr. Maxamed Siciid oo fulinaya codsi aan toos ahayn oo uga yimi Gudoomiyaha Maxkamada Racfaanka Gobolka Awdal oo ay qaraabo dhaw yihiin Abdiqadir Ali oo ah Aabaha dhalay wiilka isdilay, isla markaasina ah Garsooraha haatan gacanta ku haya kiiskan oo maraya maxkamada darajada 2aad ee Racfaanka. 

Maxkamada Gobolka Awdal ee dacwada qaadayay, ciidanka Booliska ee baadhayay kiiskan, dhamaantood waxay la safteen Dambi Baadhaha Booliksa ah ee Wiilkiisu isdilay Mr. Cabdiqaadir Cali maadaama oo ay isku beel ka soo wada jeedaan.

Baadhayaasha xadgudubyada ee HornWatch waxa kale oo ay baadhitaan qoto dheer ku ogaadeen in maragyadii ogaa in wiilka dhintay isagu is dilay oo ay ka mid yihiin dukaankii gaasta uu ka iibsaday, meheradii uu Mobilkiisa u dhiibtay iyo dad arkayay markii uu gaasta iyo dabka is qabadsiiyay dhamaantood waxay u safreen dhinaca Itoobiya oo ay ku maqnaayeen mudadii dacwada socotay difaaca eedaysanayaasha iyadoo horena loo sii siiyay lacagta aya ku noolaan karayeen.

Maxkamadda Gobolka Awdal ayaa iyadoo iska indho tiraysa sharciga iyo qanuunka waxay dil toogasho ah ku xukuntay labo wiil oo arday ah oo ka soojeedaha midgaha reer boorama gaar ahaan MADHIBAAN iyo Yibraha.

Kiiskan ayaa waxa uu si ba'an u saameeyay dhinacyada amaanka iyo nolosha guud ahaan Gabooyaha dega magaalada Boorama iyadoo in ka badan 100 rag ah oo in la dilo ka baqay ay ka qaxeen guryahoodii meheradahoodii oo kala ahaa timojarayaal, hiliblayaal, kabotolayaal iyo tumaalo kuwaasi oo amaan u raadsaday magaalooyinka kale ee Somaliland gaar ahaan Hargeysa iyo Burco, halka qaar kalena ay ka talaabeen xadka u dhexeeya Somaliland iyo Itoobiya iyagoo magangalyo waydiistay Hay'ada Qaxootiga Adduunka ee gacanta ku haysta xeryaha qaxootiga Soomaalida ee ku yaal bariga dalka Itoobiya.

Gabood falada iyo tacadiyada ay la nool yihiin bulshada lagu takooro gudaha dalka Somaliland codkooda cidina ma maqasho iyaguna malaha awoodii ay ku soo bandhigi lahaayeen, faqriga iyo saboolnimada qotada dheer ee haysta awgeed iyo iyagoo aan talo iyo tusaale midna ka odhan karin arimaha saameeya noloshooda iyo mustaqbalkooda toona.

Gudida Ilaalada Xuquuqda Aadamiga Geeska Afrika oo isku dayay in ay ogaadaan sababta ay cid uuni uga hadli wayday tacadiyada baahsan ee ay la nool yihiin qaybaha bulshada Somaliland ee latakooro ayaa waxay ogaadeen xogo naxdin leh,

F Xukuumada Somaliland ayaa magacawday saraakiil sarsare oo ka soo jeeda beelaha la hayb sooco waxa ka mid ah
F hal xubin oo ku jirta golaha Wasiirada, inkastoo magac ahaan mooyee aanu ahayn nin ka war haya waayaha iyo duruufaha adag ee dhaqan dhaqaale oo ay la nool yihiin beelaha uu ka soo jeedo ee la hayb soocaa,
F La taliyaha Gaarka ah ee Madaxwaynaha dhinaca arimaha beelaha laga la hayb sooco yahay,
F Xubin ka mid ah Gudida Komishanka Xuquuqda Aadamiga Somaliland, iyo
F hal sarkaal oo ku jira Ciidamadanka Asluubta
F Sidoo kale waxa Duqa Caasimada Somaliland dhawaan u magacaabay Gudoomiyaha Deg. Axmed Macalin Haruun Mr. Abdilahi Hassan Digaale oo ka hor xilkan ka mid ahaa dadka sida wayn ugu ololeeya Xuquuqda Bulshada Somaliland ee la Takooro.

Saraakiisha ugu jirta bulshada Somaliland ee la takooro dawlada ayaa iyagu sameeya talaabo kasta oo ay ku cabudhinayaan dadkooda dulman waxana ay aaminsan yihiin haddii tacadiyadaasi banaanka u soo baxaan amase iyaguba ka hadlaan in ay waayayaan xilalka sarsare ee ay ku qaataan mushahaarooyin fiican.
Dhinaca kale, habdhaqan fool xun ayaa dishooday badi hogaamiye dhaqameedka beelaha la hayb-sooco, kaasi oo midkastaaba kan kale ka soo horjeedo oo buranayo.

Haweenka Beelaha La takooro haddii aad u dhabo gasho nolosha iyo waayahooda waxad ogaanaysaa in ay boqoljeer ka tacadi iyo xadgubub badan yihin tacadiyada haleela haweenka beelaha aqlabiyada ah oo ah kuwa inta ugu badan laga maqlo warbaahinta .

Daladaha Ururada Bulshada Rayidka ah ee haweenka ugu waawayn dalka dhamaantood waxa iska leh Haweenka ka soo jeeda qaybaha bulshada ee aqlabiyada ah, waxayna ku guuldaraysteen in ay dalahooda samafal ku soo daraan ururada haweenka qaybaha bulshada tusaale ahaan dalada haween ee ugu wayn Somaliland oo lagu magacaabo NAGAAD WOMEN UMBRELLA oo ururada xubnaha ka ahi tirobadan yihiin hadana hal urur oo ka soo jeeda ururada haweenka la takooro ee Somaliland kuma jiro, halka Gabooyaha Somaliland ay leeyihiin kaliya labo (2) urur samafal bulsho oo aad u yaryar (Ubah Social Welfare Organization (USWO) iyo Voice of Somaliland Minority Women (VOSOMWO) isla markaasina aan ka helin wax gacan qabasho ah oo la taaban karo Hay'adaha Samafalka Caalamiga ah, Qaramada Midoobay iyo guud ahaan beesha caalamka. Maadaama Daladaha waawayn ee haweenka Somaliland aanay u war haynin tacadiyada iyo gaboodfalada argagaxa leh ee ay la nool yihiin haweenka ka soo jeeda qaybaha bulshada Somaliland ee la takooraa, had iyo goor kuma soo hadal qaadaan marka ay xusayaan maalmaha caalamiga ah ee Tacadiyada Lidka ku ah Xuquuqda Haweenka.

Gudida Ilaalada Xuquuqda Aadamiga Geeska Afrika ee HornWatch waxay ugu baaqaysaa:

1.      Xukuumada Somaliland in Gudi Heer Qaran ah oo ay xubno ka yihiin Komishanka Xuquuqda Aadamiga Qaranka iyo Difaacyaasha Xuquuqda Dadka Laga Tirada Badan Yahay ee Somaliland ay Saarto Dilalka Soo noqnoqday ee lala bartilmaameedsanayo Haweenka Beelaha la Takooro iyo tacadiyada ka haysta dhinaca garsoorka iyo cadaalada dalka.

2.      Xukuumada Somaliland waxanu si xushmad leh ugu sheegaynaa in la macaamilka falalka tacadiyada lidka ku ah kuwa laga tirada badan yahay ee la takooro ee reer Somaliland ay ka fiican tahay:

a.      in xukuumadu curiso Qorshaha Qaran ee Badbaadada (QQB) muwaadiniinta dhaqan ahaan la takooro, samaynta qorshahaasi waa in lagala tashadaa dadka la takooro laftigooda iyo hay'adaha caalamiga ah ee takhasuska u leh ilaalinta iyo horumarinta bulshooyinka laga tirada badan yahay ee la faquuqo si ay xukuumadeena u siiyaan xeeldheerayaal caalami ah oo waayo aragnimo dheer u leh mawduucan samaynta qorshaha QQB 

3.      Gudoomiyaha Maxkamada Sare iyo Guud ahaan Hay'adaha Garsoorka Somaliland waxanu ugu baaqaynaa in sida ugu dhaqsaha badan xaalado dhinaca garsoorka ah iyo amaanka ah dartood looga soo wareejiyo Maxkamadaynta 2 dhibane ee Gabooyaha ah oo sifo sharci daro ah maxkamada Gobolka Awdal ugu xukuntay Dil Toogasho ah, iyadoo Guud ahaan madaxda Garsoorka, Cadaalada Somaliland iyo sidoo kale Difaacayaasha Xuquuqda Aadamiga Somaliland iyo Ururka Qareenada Somaliland xogogaal u yihiin in aanay suurtogal ahayn in labadaasi dhibane garsoor dhex ah oo cadaalad ah ku heli karin gobolka Awdal sidaasi darteed waxanu ku baaqaynaa in Maxkamadayntooda loo soo wareejiyo Caasimada Dalka si loogu indho bato.

4.      Wasiirka Arimaha Gudaha Somaliland, Taliyaha Booliska iyo Hogaamada Booliska waxa aanu ugu baaqayanaa in ay sida ugu dhaqsaha badan gacanta loogu soo dhigo dadka gaystay dilalka iyo tacadiyada lala bartilmaameedsaday beelaha laga la hayb sooco yahay, Waxa Difaacayaasha Xuquuqda Aadamiga Somaliland ka digayaan in la marin habaabiyo baadhitaanada dadka loo hayo iyo kuwa aan wali loo soo qaban dilalka loo gaystay haweenka Gabooyaha si sharciga loogala baxsado, taasi oo dhacda aalaaba marka hay'adaha sharci fulinta oo 99% ka soo jeeda beelaha tiradabadan

5.      Haddii Madaxda Sare ee Hay'adaha SharciFulinta Somaliland iyo Wasiirka Arimaha Gudaha Somaliland ka baaqsadaan sharci horkeenida dadkii dilay haweenka Gabooyaha Somaliland taasi waxay sababi doontaa in dacwado iyaga lidku ah aanu u gudbino beesha caalamka iyo garsoorka adduunka.

Fiiro Gaar ah:
Waxa xafiiska HornWach aad ka heli kartaa macluumaad ku saabsan labada dhibane taariikh nololeedkoodii iyo iska hor imaado ka dhacay xaafada daami kadib markii dadkii dilay dhiban iyo qabaa'ilkoodu ku weerareen xaafadaha ay degan yihiin dadka Gabooyaha ahi labadii habeen ee 12/13 Dec. 2013. Ciidamada Booliska Somaliland ayaa iska hor imaadadaasi ku xidhxidhay 30 ruux oo ka soo jeeda dadka aqlabiyada ah ee weerarada ku haya Gabooyaha Somaliland iyo 18 ka soo jeeda beelaha Gabooyaha. Xaalada xaafada Daami xalay way deganayd waxana xukuumadu guud ahaan dariiqyada dhex mara xaafadaasi dhigtay ciidamo kuwa amaanka ka tirsan oo aad u hubaysan watana gadiid, talaabadaasi oo ah mid ay difaacayaasha Xuquuqda Aadamiga Somaliland soo dhawaynayaan


Suleiman Ismail Bolalah 
Gudoomiyaha HORNWATCH

Somalia: Another Dispute Among Top Leaders is Possible


In Somalia’s political landscape, there is no doubt and pretty much everyone agrees with everyone that there have been feuds between every Somali president and every prime minister over the years, and this has become self-fulfilling prophecy: so, the question is, after the euphoria wears off, will president Hassan Sheikh Mohamud and the new prime minister Abdiweli Sheikh Ahmed be in a collision course  with the same disagreement and conflict that had plagued the Somali Government realms of the past? Or will they prove to the public that the time of cat and mouse chase by presidents and prime ministers is over in Somalia and it is time to turn a new page in Somali history when it comes to working together in government as a team but not as opponents and rivals? To put it simply, nobody can have at this point complete answers to the above questions. However, if the same feud-causing traits and actions from the past are not abandoned by president and prime minister in office, then the political future of Somalia can be precisely predictable and the same problematic arena will be revisited with severe ramifications.
Why do the usual disputes and bickering befall Somali presidents and prime ministers?  What is it that causes their brouhaha, wrangle and bone of contention? Is it kleptocracy that blights their judgement to the extent that they fall into a quandary of friction coupled with greed and selfishness?
Honestly, the main dispute-causing culprit is the leaders vying with each other for kleptocracy and kleptocracy is a cancerous predicament in Somalia now and it has been there over the years: being in power has become a wherewithal to the green stuff, self-enrichment and swaggering: and its aftereffect has propagated a bad culture at government levels, specially at the top where bad governance rather than good governance springs up all over government institutions: unless those who climb the ladder of power in Somalia create political practice and excellent federal/state polity where good governance becomes possible, kleptocracy will continue to be the sire of disputes among top leaders.

Ahmed Said (Abwaankuluc)
Somali American Writer based in Saint Cloud, MN, USA
abdinassirsomalia@gmail.com

Sunday, December 15, 2013

US official urges Somalia to protect rights

‘Stability requires more than just a security response to the threats posed by terrorists’
Mogadishu: The top US State Department official for Africa is urging Somalia’s government to do more to protect its most vulnerable people, especially women, and to respect the rule of law.

Assistant Secretary of State Linda Thomas-Greenfield, who is visiting Somalia, said in a statement Saturday that Somalia’s long-term stability “requires more than just a security response to the threats posed by terrorists”.

The statement said the US wants to see a Somali government that can protect its people.

Somalia’s government controls only small parts of the country and struggles to provide security and battle corruption, although there are signs of political progress following years of turmoil.

Somali lawmakers recently voted to oust the prime minister and his Cabinet, action seen by some as signalling the growth of Somalia’s institutions.

Gulf News

Kosovo Attains Status (on Facebook) It Has Sought for Years: Nation


Valdrin Xhemaj/European Pressphoto Agency
A square in Pristina, Kosovo’s capital. Kosovo declared independence from Serbia in 2008, but the United Nations has not recognized it as a country

PARIS — Ever since little Kosovo proclaimed itself an independent state five years ago, it has failed to win all the recognition it so craves. Neither the United Nations, which confers legitimacy, nor all the European Union, whose members are divided on the question, much less Serbia, from which Kosovo broke away, recognize the birth of a new European nation.
But after a campaign waged by an army of devoted Kosovars and strategically placed allies, Kosovo is hailing a grant of legitimacy by a new arbiter of national identity: Facebook.

Last month, Kosovo declared victory, after its officials said Facebook approved a number of changes, including giving users registering from the diamond-shaped area on the Balkan Peninsula the option to identify themselves as citizens of Kosovo, rather than the decidedly less attractive option for many there, Serbia. They can also use the Facebook function that allows users to “check in” on the website from locations within Kosovo, like a cinema or a bar.

It is not as if Kosovo has joined NATO. But in an era when accumulating “likes” may top a seat in the General Assembly, at least for many young opinion leaders online, Kosovo’s leadership is hailing a change on a social media site as a diplomatic coup worthy of Talleyrand.

“Facebook has grown to 1.2 billion users in eight years, faster than the growth of Islam, Christianity and the Internet itself,” said Petrit Selimi, Kosovo’s 34-year-old deputy foreign minister and the leader of the government’s digital diplomacy.

He said that having Kosovo fully included on Facebook had been a priority, along with the still-elusive goals of having Kosovo compete in the Eurovision song contest and in the European Champions League in soccer.

“Being recognized on the soccer pitch and online has far greater resonance than some back room in Brussels,” Mr. Selimi said.

Kosovo declared independence from Serbia in 2008. But because Facebook, mirroring the United Nations, did not initially list Kosovo as a state, many among the country’s majority ethnic Albanian population opted to register as being from a country other than Kosovo.

In protest, Prime Minister Hashim Thaci, a former guerrilla leader, said he had identified himself as being from neighboring Albania. Others among Facebook’s more than 200,000 Kosovar users said they had chosen distant Antigua.

Kosovo is recognized by the United States and a majority of European Union members. But five, including Spain, which is battling separatist movements of its own, refuse to recognize it. Serbia is also vehemently against recognizing Kosovo’s independence, and Russia, a staunch Serbian ally and a veto-wielding member of the United Nations Security Council, has blocked Kosovo’s membership in the United Nations, stifling its economic and political development.

So every bit of legitimacy is important to Mr. Thaci’s government.

It rallied citizens to write messages on Twitter and bombard Facebook with thousands of emails. Kosovar ministers said they also lobbied Facebook officials in Pristina, Kosovo’s capital, and enlisted Representative Eliot L. Engel of New York, the ranking Democrat on the Foreign Affairs Committee, whose longstanding support of Kosovo led the country to name a street after him. Mr. Engel said he appealed to Facebook officials in Washington, contending that listing Kosovo as a country was analogous to updating a map.

“I told Facebook that Kosovo was a legitimate country recognized by more than 100 nations, and that they are no longer part of Serbia,” Mr. Engel said in a telephone interview. “It was not a hard sell.”

The Kosovo government said it had also received 500,000 euros, about $690,000, from Britain and Norway to help with its national digital diplomacy strategy, including training editors to update Wikipedia entries about Kosovo.

Online reaction to news of the Facebook changes was swift. “Facebook recognizes Kosovo as a state,” Kosovo’s minister for European Union integration, Vlora Citaku, wrote on Twitter. The American ambassador to Kosovo, Tracey Ann Jacobson, congratulated Kosovo on Twitter.

But some Serbs vowed to protest by deleting their Facebook profiles and posting fake ones; others mocked Kosovo for treating Facebook like a country. “Tomorrow they will say that the Smurfs and hobbits have recognized them,” commented one reader on the online version of Blic, a Serbian daily newspaper. Another reader said Serbia should withdraw its ambassador from Facebook to protest.

Kosovars call the changes a matter of identity and economics. Kosovar businesses have been included on Facebook’s powerful advertising engine, helping companies target Kosovo’s small but growing consumer market.

Although Kosovo has sought to cast the Facebook changes as a diplomatic coup, Facebook characterized them as part of a gradual process and not politically motivated. The company said it found inconsistencies in how it designated locations and indicated that in future cases it would seek to align Facebook with international organizations such as the United Nations.
“Companies have clearly no role to play in the formal recognition of countries, as this is a matter for the international community to decide,” Linda Griffin, a Facebook spokeswoman, said in an email statement. “To ensure that our services meet the needs of other users, locations that are suggested for check-ins or ad targeting are based on information we have received from third-party location databases and user-generated content.”
Gokhan Yucel, a lecturer in digital diplomacy at Bahcesehir University in Istanbul, said recognition on social media helped a new country or aspiring nation to raise its profile, reinforce independence, reach its diaspora and generate investment.
In Spain, the regional governments in Catalonia and the Basque region, which have secessionist movements, have fought to use their own Internet domain names rather than the .es domain name associated with Spain.
In May, Israel’s Foreign Ministry warned Google that it was undermining the peace process with the Palestinians after Google changed the label on its home page in the occupied territories and on all its products, including its maps, from the “Palestinian Territories” to “Palestine.” The Palestinian president, Mahmoud Abbas, lauded the move, through a spokesman, telling Wafa, the Palestinian news agency, that Google “put Palestine on the Internet map, making it a geographical reality.”
Mr. Selimi, the Kosovar deputy foreign minister, said he hoped Facebook’s global reach would bolster Kosovo’s image. The country has a teetering economy and widespread corruption and remains associated with the brutal ethnic wars of the 1990s. The government recently held Instagram boot camps in Pristina to train people how to use social media to upload images of Kosovo such as medieval churches, new highways or its wine country.
“As a prime minister of Kosovo, I found it difficult to accept that I have to declare myself as being from Serbia,” Mr. Thaci said in an interview by telephone and email. “Being listed by Facebook was like being recognized by a global economic superpower. It has enormous impact.”
Source: nytimes.com 

AFRICA OIL PROVIDES OPERATIONAL UPDATE on its activities in Kenya and Ethiopia.



(AOI–TSXV, AOI–NASDAQ OMX) … Africa Oil Corp.(“Africa Oil” or the “Company”) would like to provide the following operational update on its activities in Kenya and Ethiopia.

Drilling operations continue with strong community support in the South Lokichar basin in Northern Kenya which is the site of five consecutive significant oil discoveries by Africa Oil in conjunction with its 50% partner and Operator, Tullow Oil Plc.  The Amosing well has spud and is drilling ahead on schedule.  It is located 7 kilometers southeast of the Ngamia discovery which had over 200 meters of net pay and is a similar basin bounding fault trap in which has been referred to as the “string of pearls” trend.  The well is expected to be completed by the end of January.  The rig which recently completed the Agete discovery with at least 100 meters of net oil pay, is being mobilized to the Ewoi prospect and is expected to spud by the end of the year.  Ewoi is a large faulted structure updip from the recent Etuko discovery on the Rift Flank portion of the basin. The two lightweight rigs in the basin are currently being rigged up for testing on the Etuko and Ekales discoveries and test results for both are expected early in the first quarter of 2014.  The 3D seismic survey over the western flank of the basin is also expected to commence before the end of the year and civils construction on several exploration and appraisal locations has been accelerated to keep pace with the aggressive planned drilling schedule.

In Kenya Block 9, the Africa Oil operated Bahasi well has been drilled to a depth of 2900 meters, encountering metamorphic basement at 2850 meters.  A thick section of Tertiary and Cretaceous interbedded sands and shales were encountered with only minor shows of gas throughout the section and the well is being plugged and abandoned.  The rig will now move to the Sala location on the northeast flank of the basin to test a large prospect in a separate sub-basin updip from the Bogal well drilled in 2010 which appeared to find a significant gas accumulation and also near the Ndovu well drilled in 1988 which had good shows of oil and gas.  This well is expected to be completed by the end of the first quarter of 2014.

In the South Omo block in Ethiopia, the Tutule-1 well has reached a total depth of 2101 meters.  The well encountered a section similar to the nearby Sabisa-1 well in the upper portion of the well but the sands which appeared to be oil saturated in the Sabisa well were not present on the Tutule horst block feature with multiple volcanic units and shales in this section.  There were gas shows in the section which point to a potential hydrocarbon source and the results of these two wells will be analyzed to determine the future exploration program direction in the North Turkana Basin.  The OGEC rig will be moved to the Chew Bahir basin to drill the Shimela prospect in the eastern portion of the South Omo permit where new seismic has delineated a number of new prospects and potential source basins.  Due to the lengthy move and extensive civil works, this well is not expected to spud until the end of the first quarter of 2014. 

In Block 8 in Ethiopia, drilling continues on the El Kuran-3 well with the current depth being 1978 meters.  The well has encountered a 1200 meter section of Jurassic Hamenlei carbonates, with some interbedded sands and anhydrite, with wet gas and oil shows throughout the interval, similar to the results of the El Kuran-1 well drilled by Tenneco in 1972.  These reservoirs appear to be fairly low porosity and permeability and, as expected, will likely require acid or fracture stimulation to produce at commercial levels.  Oil and gas-condensate was recovered from one of sample chambers and is being sent for analysis.  At the base of the well, a flow of gas was encountered and the well has been suspended in order to mobilize test equipment to evaluate this zone.  A decision has also been taken to deepen the well below the planned target depth to evaluate the deeper Gumboro zone which has significant gas condensate potential. With the recent announcement of a Chinese company entering the basin and potentially providing export infrastructure, the economics of the basin could be vastly improved.

Africa Oil CEO Keith Hill stated, “While we are disappointed that the Bahasi and Tutule wells did not find commercial hydrocarbons, we look forward to aggressively pursuing other exploration opportunities in other sub-basins within these two large blocks and in the other 9 new basins yet to be drilled.  The exploration, appraisal and development studies in the proven South Lokichar Basin continue to be our main focus, but we are still confident we will unlock other productive basins on this trend.  This fully funded increased level of activity, with a minimum of six rigs working full time for the foreseeable future, should continue to deliver high potential upside value for shareholders in 2014 and beyond.”

Africa Oil Corp. is a Canadian oil and gas company with assets in Kenya and Ethiopia as well as Puntland (Somalia) through its 45% equity interest in Horn Petroleum Corporation. Africa Oil's East African holdings are within a world-class exploration play fairway with a total gross land package in this prolific region in excess of 250,000 square kilometers. The East African Rift Basin system is one of the last of the great rift basins to be explored. Five new significant discoveries have been announced in the Northern Kenyan basin in which the Company holds a 50% interest along with operator Tullow Oil plc. The Company is listed on the TSX Venture Exchange and on First North at NASDAQ OMX-Stockholm under the symbol "AOI".

ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD

“Keith C. Hill”
President and CEO