Search This Blog

Thursday, May 8, 2014

The challenge of Islam: David Selbourne

The author was asked by John Kerry to write a briefing paper on the Islamist threat. He explains here what he told the US secretary of state and why he feels progressives have allowed themselves to be silenced by frightened self-censorship and the stifling of debate. Read Mona Siddiqui’s response to the piece, The Arabisation of Islam, here.
Everyday terror: the bomb-making factory set up by 7/7 bombers in a council flat bedroom in Leeds. Photo: July 7 Inquests/PA




The In Anemas gas plant, Algeria, seen from the air. It was attacked by Islamists in January 2013.

 
A beheading in Woolwich, a suicide bomb in Beijing, a blown-up marathon in Boston, a shooting in the head of a young Pakistani girl seeking education, a destroyed shopping mall in Nairobi – and so it continues, in the name of Islam, from south London to Timbuktu. It is time to take stock, especially on the left, since these things are part of the world’s daily round.
Leave aside the parrot-cry of “Islamophobia” for a moment. I will return to it. Leave aside, too, the pretences that it is all beyond comprehension. “Progressives” might ask instead: what do Kabul, Karachi, Kashmir, Kunming and a Kansas airport have in common? Is it that they all begin with “K”? Yes. But all of them have been sites of recent Islamist or, in the case of Kansas, of wannabe-Islamist, attacks; at Wichita Airport planned by a Muslim convert ready to blow himself up, and others, “in support of al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula”. “We cannot stop lone wolves,” a British counterterrorism expert told us after Woolwich. Are they “lone”? Of course not.
A gas facility in southern Algeria, a hospital in Yemen, an Egyptian police convoy in the Sinai – it’s complex all right – a New Year’s party in the southern Philippines, a railway station in the Caucasus, a bus terminal in Nigeria’s capital, and on and on, have all been hit by jihadis, with hostages taken, suicide belts detonated, cars and trucks exploded, and bodies blown to bits. And Flight MH370? Perhaps. In other places – in Red Square and Times Square, in Jakarta and New Delhi, in Amman and who-knows-where in Britain – attacks have been thwarted. But in 2013 some 18 countries got it in the neck (so to speak) from Islam’s holy warriors.
There are battlefields and battlefields in this conflict. Some are theatres of actual or potential civil war, most often when Sunnis and Shias are at each other’s throats on behalf, respectively, of Saudi Arabia and Iran. Other battlefields are in failed or failing Muslim states, others again where the “infidel” has unwisely intruded upon and assaulted Muslim lands. At the same time, weapons and warriors are in constant movement in Islam’s cause across dis­solving national boundaries, many of them of western colonialism’s creation. And in India, with its 175 million Muslims, their mujahedin will be in action soon enough if Hindu nationalists come to power this month.
Jihadist groups, from Pakistan to the Philippines, also fight each other. But for the most part they are consolidating and expanding – often as affiliates of al-Qaeda – in the Arabian Peninsula, in the Maghreb, in Somalia and Kenya, in Iraq and Syria, in Gaza, in Bangladesh and in south-east Asia. There are separatist or secessionist Islamic insurgencies, too, from Russia’s Caucasus to north-west China, in southern Thailand, in Burma, in northern Nigeria and in divided Kashmir.
Warriors for Islam, believing that they are under “infidel” threat, today range an increasingly frontier-less world. That’s “globalisation” too. A car-bombing in New York – which failed – was planned by a Pakistani-American trained in a tribal area of northern Waziristan. Many would-be warriors from western countries learned their skills from Taliban instructors, going on to fight in Iraq as they now fight in Syria. There, ubiquitous “Bearers of the Sword” and “Defenders of the Faith” from Britain and France, Saudi Arabia and Morocco, Indonesia and Kazakhstan, and even Uighurs from Chinese Xinjiang, are to be found armed to the teeth in the battle against Assad while being trained for future combat in their countries of origin.
In the Islamist merry-go-round, jihadis from Libya – after the country’s collapse – went on to Syria, Tunisian holy warriors crossed into Mali, Egyptian and Canadian Muslim fighters were among the attackers on the refinery in Algeria, and Somalis from Minnesota have returned home to join al-Shabab, the al-Qaeda affiliate that carried out the Kenyan mall attack. Ugandan Islamists are in eastern Congo, and a Malaysian army captain was linked to two of the 9/11 hijackers. Beat this? No.
It is not “Islamophobia” that registers these facts. Instead, there is an objective historical need, and duty, to record radical Islam’s many-sided and determined advance upon the “infidel” world. Most still do not know what manner of force – the millions of peaceful Muslims notwithstanding – has struck it. And, with its own arms and ethics, it will continue to do so, perhaps till kingdom come.
Here US and western defeats in Afghanistan and Iraq – what else were they? – weigh heavily in the scale of things. In Afghanistan, despite the loss of many thousands of lives and at a cost of hundreds of billions of dollars, with huge waste and corruption by military contractors and with reliance on unsavoury local satraps, the Taliban remain active throughout the land. Even the US-trained Afghan army is riddled with their supporters. Yet American illusion has seen victory in the coming retreat, and in defeat a “mission accomplished”, in David Cameron’s absurd judgement.
Meanwhile, Afghanistan, set to recover from yet another western incursion into its land, has entered a long-term security pact with Iran. Similarly in Iraq, years of death and destruction and billions in reconstruction grants mostly lost to local and US corruption have left no stable government nor a reliable western ally. Instead, there is an intensifying Shia-Sunni civil war, with thousands of dead in 2013, while al-Qaeda insurgents have reconquered areas in western Iraq previously “captured” – another illusion – by US marines.
The complexities (and double-games) of the Islamic world are a labyrinth for the “infidel”. It is a labyrinth that western reason, such as it now is, has never mastered, and that it cannot master now with hellfire missiles and unmanned drones.
After all, the political wing of Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhood calls itself the “Freedom and Justice” party – well, yes and no, and it certainly offers little freedom or justice to women. Again, some of the Gulf monarchies, Saudi Arabia included, pose as western allies and host US air and naval bases but give covert support to selected jihadist groups. And what does the western illus­ionist make of the fact that 15 of the 19 9/11 hijackers were Saudis, and are said to have had covert financial and logistical support from Saudi diplomats and intelligence officials?
The labyrinth of nuclear-armed Pakistan is denser. Struggling with its own jihadist insurgency in the tribal belt bordering Afghanistan, it is attempting peace talks with the Pakistani Taliban, yet there is growing Islamist radicalism in the ranks of the Pakistani army itself. The Pakistani intelligence agencies also play their own games – and are accused of sheltering some of the Afghan Taliban – while Pakistan’s parliament condemned the US raid that killed Osama Bin Laden. In this labyrinth, there are other elements that will for ever be beyond US and western mastery now; the influence of China – the main source of Pakistan’s nuclear weapons – is growing in the region.
There is little in all this for “progressives” to cheer. Yet the left continues covertly to celebrate US foreign policy blunders and defeats, while the naive see jihadists as a minority of “fanatics”. It is not so simple. To add to the confusion, President Obama’s stances, however well intentioned, have made their own contribution to the Islamic renaissance. Or as he expressed it in a speech in Cairo in June 2009, America and Islam “share common principles . . . of justice and progress, tolerance” – tolerance? – “and the dignity of all human beings”.
Everyday terror: the bomb-making factory set up by 7/7 bombers in a council flat bedroom in Leeds. Photo: July 7 Inquests/PA

The west and the US, frightened by their defeats in Afghanistan and Iraq, have lost their way in Assad’s Syria. Here the Muslim labyrinth is particularly dense. For Syria is an Iranian client state, backed by Russia and even North Korea, which is trying to fight off al-Qaeda-linked holy warriors from every corner of the Muslim (and non-Muslim) world, while a political alliance opposed to Bashar al-Assad tries to make its voice heard amid the carnage.
All the while, less-than-notable “world statesmen” have dithered over what aid to give to the anti-Assad forces, and wavered over whether to launch a military strike against Syria’s ruler. Between them, they have surrendered influence (as in Egypt) to Russia, able by skilful manoeuvre simultaneously to support Assad while moving to relieve him of his chemical weapons. As the Syrian civil war deepens, with over 150,000 dead and more than two million refugees, there have even been incoherent western attempts to treat secretly both with Assad over security co-operation and with the jihadist gangs, as heads roll in radical Islamic style and peace talks fail.
Wearied or sickened by all this? Yes. But it is the fate of the impotent western powers that is being determined by it. For the “jihad” is advancing in Syria to the eastern Mediterranean seaboard, while the muez­zin’s call to an increasingly ardent faith grows more insistent throughout the Islamic world.
In Shia Iran, memories of the historic Persian empire are quickening as Tehran’s foes flail around in the face of its ayatollahs’ ambitions and wiles. Above all, Iran has got the west on the ropes with its nuclear programme. The interim “freeze” to its uranium enrichment activities was not what it seemed; on Iranian TV on 21 February Behrouz Kamalvandi, of the national Atomic Energy Organisation, declared that the country’s nuclear commitments were “temporary and non-obligatory”. Iran still has a stockpile of enriched uranium, and still has tens of thousands of centrifuges, with nuclear research continuing, including on new advanced centrifuges. A “freeze” on further enrichment up to weapons grade, and a “downgrading” of some of its existing stockpile to less potent levels, were more tokens than substance. It left Iran usefully on the cusp of producing a nuclear weapon within a very short time, if (or when) it chooses, while it can continue to develop and test ballistic missiles.
It was also, yet again, a “deal” obtained from western weakness, not strength. After all, the alternative was an attack on Iran’s nuclear installations, some now buried too deep for aerial assault, and a new war to be lost after those in Afghanistan and Iraq.
In Iran, the “deal” was rightly hailed by the regime as “a victory over the west”. Or as Iran’s “moderate” president, Hassan Rowhani put it on Twitter on 14 January, “the world powers surrendered to the Iranian nation’s will”. Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the country’s “supreme leader”, did not hide the Iranian position. “I am in favour of showing a champion’s leniency,” he declared of the western willingness to compromise with Iran as the Pax Americana wanes in the world.
Nothing could have been lamer than US Secretary of State John Kerry’s assertion during the negotiations that the Iranians had a “choice”: to treat with the world, or to “leave themselves more isolated”. Instead, the US was once more acting in fear and in the impotent name of “outreach” to a foe. But Iran will never be the “strategic partner”of the US as some wishful thinkers hope.
With more than 500 executions, including for “waging war on God”, since the “moderate” Rowhani came to office – more per capita, one might say, than any other country – with its new pact with Afghanistan, its joint naval manoeuvres with Pakistan, its growing influence in Iraq, its behind-the-scenes accords with Russia, its improving relations with Islamising Turkey (and even with Jordan and Morocco), its dominance over Damascus, its ambitions to rule the Gulf and with two warships despatched in January to the Atlantic, Iran’s present course is clear. Moreover, the true secret of the nuclear “deal” was that Iran does not yet need a nuclear weapon, but it did urgently need sanctions relief. With its Revolutionary Guard shipping arms to Hezbollah in Lebanon and to Hamas in Gaza, it will move on to nuclear weapons in its own good time.
As for Israel, its mere existence, threatened by both Shia and Sunni jihadists, is ready-made to serve radical Islam’s cause. Neither Israel’s belligerence on the one hand nor its seeming desire for a political settlement on the other can abate the proclaimed intent of Hamas, which is funded not only by Iran but also by Turkey and others, to “eliminate” it. Such intransigence is matched by insensate Israeli colonisation, giving further aid to the jihadis’ cause. At the same time, the truth of the Jews’ multi-millennial association – long pre-dating the existence of Islam – with Jerusalem and the “land of Israel” is flatly denied, with Palestinian militants laying claim to the same land as “our land by right”.
Nothing, it seems, can halt the will among some for the extinction of Israel, while Iran’s Khamenei could describe it in November 2013 as the “rabid dog” of the region.
A “Jewish state” is also seen by the holy warrior (and others) as by definition “racist”; with some reason in the case of Jewish zealots. Yet some of us take the notion of a theocratic “Muslim state” governed by Islamic sharia – there are many such states – in our stride. With Israeli security and Palestinian aspiration seemingly irreconcilable, this conflict appears beyond resolution, whether by John Kerry or by any other representative of America’s fading imperium.
After the publication in the US in 2005 of my book The Losing Battle With Islam, Kerry rang me to discuss the arguments in it. When he became secretary of state I told him (with some presumption) that the non-Muslim world is too unaware of what is afoot, hobbled by its wishful thinking and lack of knowledge, and whistling in the dark. In a position paper I wrote for him, I set out a list of the failures that the west, and especially the US, has on its hands. Among them are the failure to recognise the ambition of radical Islam; the failure to condemn the silence of most Muslims at the crimes committed in their names; the failure to respond adequately to the persecution of Christians in many Muslim lands; the failure to grasp the nature of the non-military skills that are being deployed against the non-Muslim world – skills of manoeuvre, skills in deceiving the gullible, skills in making temporary truces in order to gain time (as in Iran); and, perhaps above all, the failure to realise the scale and speed of Islam’s advance.
“If things continue like this,” I told friend Kerry, “the history of our age may one day be written under a caliphate’s supervision.” I added brashly: “Get your aides to read the Quran. Keep political correctors at bay,” and “stop looking for the emergence of Jeffersonian democracies in Muslim lands”. “It has gotten me thinking,” he replied; and after further exchanges, “I agree with a great deal of what you’ve said.”
But in the rising swirl of events, the secretary of state can no more control the incoming tide than could Canute. In perpetual motion, Kerry is disabled by the chaos of indecision and interference in Obama’s White House. He is handicapped by having to make near-simultaneous moves on dozens of Muslim chessboards against generally more cunning opponents.
In the chaos, and like others in the US administration, Kerry called for Egypt’s Hosni Mubarak to step down and thus helped open the way for the Muslim Brotherhood before complaining that it had “stolen” the Egyptian election (by ballot-rigging and intimidation). Naivety, masquerading as diplomacy, also led him to compliment Pakistan for its help in tracking down al-Qaeda’s leader. Yet Bin Laden had been protected for years by Pakistan’s own security apparatus. Kerry even “pleaded” with the Iranians to sign up to a nuclear deal.
The word “plead” tells us all we need to know about America’s failing powers. But Kerry has also been buffeted to and fro by vacillation in the White House, excluded from its inner councils – an alternative state department of the mediocre whom Obama prefers to have around him – and has been briefed against to the US press.
His is an unenviable position, despite appearances. For the US to be without a coherent foreign policy strategy in the face of the complexities of the Islamic world’s advance is no surprise. But for it to be quite so disabled points to an unusual degree of confusion in high places.
In August 2013 a White House spokesman declared that al-Qaeda was “severely diminished”. A mere two months later, the director of the FBI announced that “the threat posed by al-Qaeda has become hydra-headed”. Which? And as the Pax Americana recedes into the past, there is always an ostrich – in this case, Obama’s lightweight national security adviser, Susan Rice – to tell the American public that “US leadership”, as it grows frailer and as cuts to its military bite deeper, will “continue to be unrivalled”, and that the US “will remain the most influential, powerful and important country in the world”. Really?
But at the heart of US weakness is Obama himself. In foreign fields, his strategies – in so far as they can be identified – have been dithering, improvised and uncertain. He deserves a measure of sympathy: today’s Islam is the most redoubtable adversary to the American imperium it has ever faced, the challenge of the Comintern included.
In many of its theatres, the complexities, skills and deceits of the Muslim world would have bewildered a Machiavelli. In others, American wishful thinking can reach comic levels. When Bin Laden was killed in May 2011 al-Qaeda, declared Obama, was now a “shadow of its former self”, near “decapacitated”. In May 2012, similar illusions told him that the Taliban’s momentum had been “broken”; in November last year, that Iran’s “most likely paths to a bomb” had been “cut off” or (in faux-macho style) “rolled back”. And so on.
It is the wishful thinking of a man who is a non-belligerent at heart. In normal times this is a virtue. But these are not normal times: the US is playing a decreasingly significant role in the world’s conflicts, even as Islamist ambition and reach – despite the internecine hatreds in Muslim ranks – break new bounds.
This ambition grows more confident by the day, taking reverses in its stride. In the face of Obama’s risk-aversion (or idleness), Islamists make no bones about their aspiration for “mastership of the world”, as Mohamed Badie, the Muslim Brotherhood leader, put it in December 2011. Muslim (and not merely Islamist) disdain for “the west” is also growing; in July 2012, the speaker of the Iranian parliament des­cribed it as a “dark spot in the present era”.
Such confidence, or arrogance, is easily understood. For these are times in which conversions to Islam in western countries are accelerating. Today, one-quarter of humanity is Muslim. It is a proportion that is rising steadily, making possible a Muslim majority in Russia, for example, by the century’s end. To the marginalised and lost in free societies, Islam increasingly offers an identity, an ethic, and a home. In the eyes of the Muslim Brotherhood, America “does not champion moral and human values” and “cannot lead humanity”. Agree or not, it is clear that “freedom ’n’ liberty”, especially in the form of the “free market” with its crazed impulse to endless “growth”, will turn out one day to have been no match for the faith. Tony Blair’s anxious speech to Bloomberg the other day suggests that the big corporate interests that he represents are beginning to be aware of it.
To the aid of Islam has also come the betrayal by much of today’s left of its notionally humane principles, as Christians are assaulted and murdered (shades of what was done to the Jews in the 1930s) and their churches desecrated and destroyed from Egypt to the Central African Republic, from Iran to Indonesia, and from Pakistan to Nigeria. Islam can kill its own apostates, too; in many Muslim countries denies reciprocity to other faiths in rights of worship; and seeks to prevent reasoned discussion about its beliefs by attempted resort to blasphemy laws.
So where is the old left’s centuries-long espousal of free speech and free thought? Where is the spirit of Tom Paine? The answer is simple. It has been curbed by frightened self-censorship and by the stifling of debate, in a betrayal of the principles for which “progressives” were once prepared to go to the stake. And just as some Jews are too quick to call anti-Zionists “anti-Semites”,
so some leftists are too quick to tar critics of Islam as “Islamophobes”.
To add to such falsehoods come the illusionists of every stripe, with their unknowing, simplistic or false descriptions of Islam as a “religion of peace”. Even today’s Pope – as the Christian faithful were being harried, persecuted or put to the sword in Nigeria, Syria, Iraq and beyond – told the world in November 2013 that “authentic Islam and the proper reading of the Quran are opposed to every form of violence”. But read the text yourself, and you will see that jihadists can find plenty justification for the acts they commit, even if most Muslims are pacific.
Karl Marx was wiser than the Pope. In March 1854, he wrote that for “Islamism” – the word was already in use – “the Infidel is the enemy” and that the Quran “treats all foreigners as foes”.
The present renaissance of Islam, additionally provoked, as ever, by western aggressions against its lands, is an old story of swift movement and conquest, as in the 7th century. Is something like it stirring again? Perhaps; you decide. In 50 years’ time the world will know for sure.
David Selbourne is a political philosopher and commentator. “The Losing Battle With Islam” is published by Prometheus Books
Source: newstatesman.com

Putin Request Ignored, Starving Somalis, Cruelest Cabbie


More than 50,000 Somali malnourished children are facing death.

PUTIN REFERENDUM REQUEST IGNORED

Pro-Russian activists in the region of Donetsk announced that a referendum on the region’s status would go ahead as planned on Sunday, despite yesterday’s call from Russian President Vladimir Putin to postpone it, RT reports. Earlier Ukraine officials had said that the military operation in Eastern Ukrainewould continue regardless of whether the referendum, which the Kiev government regards as illegal, was delayed.
  • The decision from Donetsk is a blow to Putin’s step towards de-escalation yesterday, with one of the favorites in the Ukrainian presidential race, Petro Poroshenko, saying he “welcomed” the initiative “with cautious optimism.” German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said that Putin’s “constructive tone” could mark “a decisive point” in the Ukrainian crisis.
  • Moscow and NATO, however, had a heated exchange, with the Russian Foreign Ministry saying that NATO’s Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen was “blind” after he wrote on Twitter that, contrary to what Putin had announced, he had seen no sign that Russian troops had withdrawn from the Ukrainian border. “I have very good vision, but while we've noted Russia’s statement so far we haven't seen any — any — indication of troops pulling back,” he posted later.
  • A poll conducted by the Washington-based Pew Research Center found that 70% of the population in Eastern Ukraine want their country to keep its current borders. Even 58% of Russian speakers agree. Read more from AP.

VERBATIM

More than 50,000 malnourished children are “at death’s door” in Somalia, according to a new report from a group of aid agencies. “The problem with Somalia is that it has been a crisis for over 20 years,” says Oxfam’s Ed Pomfret. “People more or less roll their eyes and think: 'Pirates, terrorists, hunger and death. What can I do about that?”

REWARD ON MISSING NIGERIAN GIRLS

The hunt for abducted Nigerian schoolgirls continues as the U.S., the UK and France join forces with local authorities. Nigerian police are offering a reward of $300,000 to anybody providing information leading to the rescue of the 276 schoolgirls abducted by Boko Haram three weeks ago, Vanguard reports. This came after news yesterday that the Islamist group had killedat least 336 people when it attacked a town in Nigeria’s northeastern region.

HUGE EXPLOSION IN ALEPPO

A hotel used by Syrian troops as a military base in the northern city of Aleppo was completely destroyed by what local media have described as a “huge explosion” with a high number of casualties among the troops likely. The London-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said that rebels from the Islamic Front had “planted a huge amount of explosives in a tunnel they dug below the Carlton hotel,” which they detonated remotely. Read the full story from AP.

MY GRAND-PÈRE'S WORLD

FERRY COMPANY OFFICIAL ARRESTED

South Korean police have arrested the head of the sunken ferry’s operator, and charges against him include “manslaughter and a violation of the act on vessel safety,” Yonhap news agency reports. This comes amid mounting fears for the safety of diverssearching the wreckage after one of them died Tuesday. There are still 35 people missing, and 269 bodies have been recovered, but the searches are being hampered by poor weather conditions and high waves.

MERS DISEASE SPREADS IN SAUDI ARABIA

Eighteen more cases of Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) have been identified in Saudi Arabia, after four people died from the disease yesterday, Reuters reports. A total of 449 people in the country have now been infected with MERS, a form ofcoronavirus, causing 121 deaths since it was identified two years ago. The United States detected its first case last week, and Slate explains in a very detailed piece that the virus will be very difficult to stop.
For more on the subject, we offer this CFR/Worldcrunch article, Why A Saudi Virus Is Spreading Alarm.

ANC LEADING GENERAL ELECTION

South Africa’s African National Congress party has taken an early lead in yesterday’s general election with almost half of the votes counted. According to the Mail & Guardian, incumbent President Jacob Zuma’s party has just about 60% of the vote, while the opposition party Democratic Alliance is in second place with 23%. Although the ANC is expected to win the elections, theBBC explains that any result under 60% will be seen “as a major upset.”

CRUELEST TAXI DRIVER EVER?

The Japanese police have arrested a cab driver who nourished a bizarre sexual thrill by routinely offering his female passengers snacks laced with diuretics so he could watch and film them as they grew desperate to go to the toilet. Tip for tourists in Osaka: Don’t accept food in taxis!

source: worldcrunch.com

Kenyan teacher killed in Somalia


(Picture: AFP)
Mogadishu - Gunmen in Somalia shot dead a Kenyan teacher, police and witnesses said on Thursday, in the latest attack to target foreigners in the restive central Galkayo region.

Witnesses said two men armed with pistols shot the teacher inside a college compound late Wednesday in Galkayo, a town straddling the border between the autonomous Puntland and Galmadug regions.

"A Kenyan teacher was shot dead inside the school building last night, the police are investigating," local police officer Osman Mohamed told AFP.

"I heard gunshots inside the building, then two men came out running," said Sudi Hassan, a nearby resident. "I saw the dead body of the teacher lying on the floor in a pool of blood."

No one has claimed responsibility for the attack, and the motive for the killing was not clear.

"He was a very polite and nice teacher, I cannot imagine why anyone kills someone like him," said Ahmed Nur Isa, a student at the college.

"This was an appalling and unjustifiable act."

The lawless region is awash with guns and riven by multiple rival armed gangs.

Foreigners are particular targets. In April, two United Nations workers were executed in Galkayo.

Somalia's al-Qaeda linked Shabaab operate in the region, although unlike much of southern Somalia, it is not under their direct control.

Somalia Facing Crisis Relapse



A truck passing a partial roadblock setup by residents as a protest against the Islamist Al-Shabab insurgent group, in Tobanka Buundo in the lower Shabelle region, near the Somalian capital Mogadishu, March 6, 2014.

Joe DeCapua

According to a new report, despite improvements in recent years in Somalia, the country remains in severe crisis. A coalition of more than 20 aid groups says many Somali communities are one shock away from disaster.
 

The report -- Risk of Relapse: Somalia Crisis Update --said better conditions are not the same as success. It described “most aspects of everyday life as falling far below acceptable living standards.”

The report said nearly three-million Somalis are in humanitarian crisis – 50,000 children are severely malnourished – and more than one-million people are displaced. Those figures are actually better than they used to be. But the report warned “progress should not be measured against minimum standards.”

Scott Paul is a senior humanitarian advisor for Oxfam, one of the coalition members. He said, “Somalia is in a long-term crisis and it’s been forgotten a lot in the face of new emergencies, in particular, emergencies in Syria and South Sudan, Central African Republic. But it’s still in a very, very deep crisis. It’s really one of the worst places in the world for a newborn baby or a woman.”

Paul said that when providing assistance to Somalia, it’s important to learn from the past.

“We learned in 2011that responding late to early warnings is a bad idea. 260,000 people died in the famine in 2011and we’re trying to sound the alarm so another terrible emergency doesn’t take place again.”

While conditions are better than in 2011, the Oxfam advisor said it’s not enough.

“Things have improved marginally over the past couple of years, but most of the country is still experiencing really, really high rates of humanitarian emergency and crisis. Fewer than one in four people have access to adequate sanitation facilities and one city in the south, in Kismayo, less than 10-percent of the entire population has access to adequate facilities. Across the country about 30-percent of the people have access to clean drinking water.”

He said that there are a number of reasons why Somalia continues to be in crisis year after year.

It’s been a long, long protracted emergency. It’s been a consequence of a crisis in governance. It’s been conflict. It’s been cyclical droughts. And the international community has not done enough to really help Somalia provide the sort of long-term flexible funding that Somali communities need to build community-level resilience and work themselves out of this protracted crisis,” he said.

The Risk of Relapse report said only 12-percent of Somalia ’s humanitarian funding requirements have been met, adding that $822-million is still needed.

The report highlighted numerous areas of concern, including health and gender based violence. In the first half of 2013, the there were at least 800 cases of sexual violence.
Paul said, “The actual figure is probably much higher than what’s been reported because gender-based violence is actually very taboo in Somalia. And many women who are attacked are afraid to come forward. Either because they’re afraid of legal repercussions for what it will mean for them within their own communities.”

The livelihoods of many Somalis depend on the flow of remittances. They’re estimated to range from $750-million to two-billion dollars a year.

However, the September 11th, 2001 terrorist attacks in the U.S. have led to much tighter money transfer rules. It’s feared remittances could help fund terrorist groups. Banks in the U.S. and Britain have closed numerous accounts handling remittance transfers.

“A lot of people in the United States – Somali Americans – and members of the Diaspora have been regularly supporting people. About 40-percent of the country now relies on money sent from abroad. And the only really legal and transparent way to send money from the U.S. to Somalia are having a ton of trouble getting bank accounts both here and in the United Kingdom. The possibility of pushing these remittances underground where the flows will be reduced and where it’s more vulnerable to diversion by criminal networks is really very frightening,” said Paul.

In related news, the U.S. House of Representatives this week passed the Money Remittances Improvement Act. Supporters say the bill would make it easer for “well-regulated nonbank institutions…to provide remittances to their customers across the globe.” They describe it as a “cause for celebration for all diaspora communities.” The legislation now goes to the Senate.

The aid group coalition called for immediate action on Somalia’s humanitarian and development needs. Otherwise, it says, the world is “at risk of failing Somalis once more.”


Listern to De Capua report on risk of relapse in Somalia

HEES CUSUB OO HADDA DAAWAHA LAGA SOO QAADAY: SANADA GUURO 18 MAY - HEESTU DAREEMADA WADANIYADA DALKA SOMALILAND AYAY KICINAYSAA

Afkaga caano lugu qabay fanaanada sanadka dheh ,,waa saacadii faraxadi inoo sugnaatay sebi iyo barbaraa saqiir iyo kabiir wada sara kaca Viva somaliland



 



Wednesday, May 7, 2014

Al-Qaeda and Other Terrorist Groups Increasing in Africa



A Kenyan policeman stands in front of the wreckage of a bus at the site of a bomb blast in Nairobi on May 4, 2014. (Photo: CARL DE SOUZA/AFP/Getty Images/Newscom)
Terrorism is on the rise across Africa as global terror groups, including al-Qaeda affiliates, continue to overtake local insurgent organizations and transform them into regional and international threats.
The National Movement for the Liberation of Azawad began as a local movement in Northern Mali, but was successfully overtaken by The National Movement for Unity and Jihad in West Africa and  al-Qaeda In the Islamic Maghreb, threatening countries and even entire regions. . Last year, the situation became so dire in Mali that the French led a military intervention from which the country continues to recover.
According to the State Department’s recently released “Country Reports on Terrorism 2013,” al-Shabaab, a Somali-based and now al-Qaida-linked group, continues to carry out attacks and threaten governments in Somalia and in countries, such as Kenya and Uganda, that support AMISOM – the African Union’s anti-terror military force. Last Fall al-Shabaab carried out a deadly attack on the Westgate mall in Nairobi, Kenya, and demanded Kenya withdraw its defense forces from Somalia. Because of al-Shabaab’s increased regional focus, East African governments are enhancing “domestic and regional efforts to bolster border security and create integrated and dedicated counterterrorism strategies” – efforts  the United States should continue to support.
The United States needs to take seriously the rising levels of extremism and terrorist activity in Africa. The State Department’s recently released “Country Reports on Terrorism 2013”  highlighted the  “significant levels of terrorist activity” Africa experienced in 2013”  and emphasized the increased aggressiveness of al-Qaida affiliates and like-minded groups in Northwest Africa and Somalia.
Across the continent in West Africa, Boko Haram “maintained a high operational tempo in 2013 and carried out kidnappings, killings, bombings and attacks on civilian and military targets in northern Nigeria, resulting in numerous deaths, injuries and destruction of property in 2013.” As recently as last week, this group staged a car bomb attack in the capital, Abuja. Spillover violence in Chad, Niger and Cameroon is equally disturbing given the porous borders and large swathes of ungoverned space in the region.
Ungoverned space also enables al-Qaeda-linked groups in North Africa and the Sahel, such as Ansar al-Sharia and AQIM to operate freely, causing problems for the governments of Morocco, Tunisia, and Algeria.
This year likely will see an even greater increase in terrorism in Africa as vulnerable Muslim refugees flee the Central African Republic because of violent sectarian conflict. As the situation in CAR continues to break down, ungoverned and lawless space also will increase terrorist operating space. The breakdown of South Sudan ensures even more weapons will spread across the region.
Given the evolving threat of al-Qaeda and the new wave of global terrorism, U.S. security partnerships and engagement with African governments will become even more important in the fight against global terrorism.

The making of American foreign policy in the post-9/11 world


Source: http://www.costaricantimes.com/tag/global-war-on-terror
Source: http://www.costaricantimes.com/tag/global-war-on-terror
Let’s be honest, foreign policy making has never been democratic. The label of national security has offered governments around the world the power to hide information from their citizens. Aside from this statement, the making of American foreign policy has completely shifted since 9/11. Not only this shift was abrupt and made under intense emotional stress, but it has also created a precedent in the way the U.S. engages in the world. Additionally, American foreign policy has become much more militarized than in the past. A series of recent articles (here and here), documentaries (here and here), and radio show (here) have been produced looking back at the way the U.S. has conducted itself these last 13 years on the international stage.
Since 9/11, the U.S. has been fighting “evil” – to adopt a very Bushian expression – with evil. The U.S. has used a wide array of instruments considered by international law as illegal such as: rendition, torture — known as an “enhanced interrogation technique” — use of force against countries without legal jurisdiction, drone strikes in countries wherein the U.S. is not at war, mass snooping on American and world citizens, cover-up operations, and so forth. The “Global War on Terror” has been the longest war in American history. Since 2001, the U.S. has invaded two countries – Iraq and Afghanistan – launched an undisclosed numbers of drone strikes in countries with which the U.S. is not at war – Yemen, Pakistan, and Somalia (here are the numbers of drones strikes as of April 2014) – and all this in complete impunity.
The real question is: Has it made America safer? It is a very difficult subject to answer in all impartiality. Members of American intelligence community and other departments of the U.S. government would most likely say yes. Not only, I would tend to answer, not really, but I would also argue that American democracy has progressively been the main collateral damage of this endless war.
The starting point in the shifting in decision-making in American foreign policy was the approval of the Authorization for Use of Military Force, of what is known as the AUMF. The famous sentence, as reported by Gregory E. Johnsen and which inspired the Radiolab podcast posted below, that changed it all were these 60 words from the AUMF drafted on Sept. 12, 2001:
That the President is authorized to use all necessary and appropriate force against those nations, organization, or persons he determines planned, authorized, committed, or aided the terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2011, or harbored such organizations or persons in order to prevent any future acts of international terrorism against the United States by such nations, organizations or person.

In French, we would say that the president has now carte blanche, meaning unlimited power. This sentence taken from AUMF pretty much gives unlimited power to the executive branch without any supervision by the Congress, as it gave it up soon after 9/11. Such legal piece was approved by Congress on Sept. 13, 2001 at the exception of only one elected official, the California Representative Barbara Lee, opposing it. In the excellent podcast of Radiolad, Barbara Lee takes us throughout her reflection process about taking
such decision. At the time she was under intense pressure, and was even called unpatriotic, a terrorist, and so forth. Today, she seems like a visionary as she not only understood the consequences of taking swift decisions under stress and emotions, but also foresaw the legal implications embedded in these words.
For instance, during a 2013 Senate Armed Service committee hearing chaired by Carl Levin – as reported in the Radiolab podcast – about the use of military force, DOD officials argued in favor of the continued use of the AUMF. Throughout the hearing the officials never named one enemy, but only referred to “associated forces.” Senator Angus King responded to these statements by DOD officials, saying: “you guys have essentially rewritten the Constitution here today.” King’s argument is that the DOD is using the concept of associated forces, not present in the AUMF, in order to justify the use of force against pretty much anyone. The AUMF has in fact changed the entire institutional design of use of force. “The Declaration of War is kind of a dead instrument of national law,” argued Ben Wittes, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution in the Radiolab podcast. “But the modern incarnation of the Declaration of War is the Authorization for Use of Military Force (AUMF).”
Such comments fall under the fact that the list of American enemies and the people that the U.S. is in war against is secret. American citizens do not have and cannot have the information about the enemies. The absolute lack of supervision by one branch of the government over the other will undeniably lead to extreme decisions and situations. The Gulf of Tonkin Resolution is the perfect example, as it led the U.S. to a lengthy and costly war in Vietnam. Additionally, without a clear enemy, it implies that the U.S. could be at war indefinitely. At the distinction with Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan, this war seems foreign, remote, distant, and impersonal, making it even more dangerous to American democracy and political system.
Two core problems are at the heart of this nonexistent debate in America. One of the most worrisome dimensions is not the degree of secrecy, but rather that American public opinion simply does not care about the way the two most recent presidents have used forces and extended the power of the executive branch. The lack of interest by American public opinion is worrisome as they do not ask for accountability. In the case of the U.S., the latest numbers illustrates the progressive desire by American citizens for a more isolationist foreign policy. After the 2007 financial crisis, Western public opinion, and principally American public opinion, has started to believe in the “end of foreign policy,” a concept utilized by Richard Youngs in his 2014 book The Uncertain Legacy of Crisis. European Foreign Policy faces the Future, considering the lack of discussions and reflections on foreign policy. Such statement materialized public opinion feelings towards foreign policy making.
PEW-isolationism
Second, with the polarization of American democracy and political system, the making of foreign policy is now more about avoiding a political crisis triggered by a failure to stop an attack than actually making the homeland safer. How can foreign policy be made given that, in the case that an attack occurs after restricting the power of the intelligence community and cutting the defense and intelligence budgets, there could be serious consequences for the political legitimacy and the future of a party and/or individual politicians. When politicians base their foreign policy and national security choices on the fear of losing an election, the overall democratic machine and political system are seriously broken. For instance, the politicization of the Benghazi bombing by the Republican party in order to attack Hillary Clinton and other high level Democrats is quite shameful. Unlimited power and budget without democratic supervision do not translate into greater security.
How can such a problem be solved? First, American foreign policy shall be understood as what it is, a policy. Emotions must be removed from decision-making. The decisions made right after 9/11 were irrational, considering the trauma caused by such a horrific event. Americans must reflect on the policies and rules implemented soon after 9/11 and decide on their future and their application and implementation.
Second, American citizens ought to start understanding that foreign policy matters more than before. In a globalized environment, a policy decision undertaken by a group of experts ought to be discussed. When the U.S. deploys drones against countries to kill alleged terrorist, the image of the U.S. is tarnished. How would American citizens react if China were to use drone strikes over the Silicon Valley in order to limit the power and influence of corporations advancing the freedom of social media? In the last political debates – both for presidential and legislative elections – foreign policy suffered from a lack of interest by voters. Furthermore, most American politicians have a weak understanding international relations.
Third, 13 years later, it is time to de-securitized the global war on terrorism. The U.S. cannot perpetually wage war. Neither the “Global War on Terror” or the drug war have solved their respective problems. Terrorism and drugs still exist and will continue to exist. Believing that both can be eliminated is quite foolish.
Last but not least, the AUMF is one among many current shifts in American democracy caused by a progressive implementation of laws removing transparency and accountability. National security, campaign financing, and other important segment of American politics are being striped away of transparency. This is a slippery slope for American democracy.
Source: foreignpolicyblogs.com

HALKAN KA AKHRISO KHUDBAD SANADEEDKII MADAXWAYNAHA SOMALILAND SIILAANYO KA HORJEEDIYEY GOLAYAASHA WAKIILADDA IYO GUURTIDA KANA DAAWO SAWIRADII MUNAASIBADAASI MAANTA






Waxaana hubaal ah in maanta Somaliland marayso meel aan indhaha laga qarsan-karin, iyadoo buuxisay shuruudihii looga baahnaa. Waxaase jirta in cadawga Somaliland ku hawlanyahay hagardaamooyin uu ku waxyeelaynayo himilada

Bismilaahi Raxmaani Raxiim Al-xamdu-lilaah, Ilaahaybaa mahad leh, Shirgudoonka Baarlamaanka, Mudanayaasha Labada Gole, Wasiirada, Xisbiyada Qaranka,

Marti sharafta, dadweynaha iyo saxaafadda, waxan idinku salaamaya salaanta islaamka:“Assalaamu calaykum waraxmatullaahi wa barakaatuhu”.

Ugu horeyn, waxan salaan iyo mahadnaq u dirayaa dhamman shacbiga Somaliland gudo iyo dibedba, meelkasta oo ay joogaan.

Mudanayaal iyo Marwooyin,

Waxa sharaf iyo maamuus ii ah in aan sannadkii 4aad hor imaado aqalka Baarlamaanka Somaliland ee Guurtida iyo Wakiiladda, taas oo aan ka hor jeedinayo khudbad sannadeedka uu Dastuurkeenu igu waajibiyay, waxaanan khudbadayda kaga hadlayaa warbixinta sannadkii tegey iyo Qorshaha Xukuumadda ee sannadka cusub, iyada oo aan si gaar ahna ugu tilmaamo wixii xaalad daruuri ah in laga waramo.

Somaliland waa qaran saddex iyo labaatan jirsaday oo qaangaadh ah, waa qaran ay dadkiisa iyo dawladdiisuba mar kasta iyo goorkastaba u soo jeedaan. Labaatankaa sannadood ee ay Somaliland jirtayna shacbi iyo dawladba, Somaliland, waxay halgan ugu jirtay, dadaal ay ku xaqiijinayso qaranannimadeeda, adkaynta nabadgalyada, kor u qaadidda adeegyada aasaasiga ah ee waxbarashada, caafimaadka, biyaha iyo horumarinta kaabayaasha dhaqaalaha.

Waxaan jecelahay in aan sannadkan warbixintayda ku saleeyo heerka aynu ka joogno dhinacyada kala duwan ee Nabadgelyada, Siyaasadda iyo adeegyada bulshada.

Waxaana hubaal ah in maanta Somaliland marayso meel aan indhaha laga qarsan-karin, iyadoo buuxisay shuruudihii looga baahnaa. Waxaase jirta in cadawga Somaliland ku hawlanyahay hagardaamooyin uu ku waxyeelaynayo himilada umadeena oo ah Dawladnimo iyo Qaran cagihiisa ku taagan oo beesha caalamka ka mid ah.

Warbixinta Xukuumada

Ballanqaadkayagii iyo Barnaamijkii Siyaasadeed fulintooda waxaanu u soo kala horreeysiinay sidii ay u kala muhiimsanaayeen ee ay baahida dalku ahayd, isla-markaa ay awoodda dhaqaale inoo saamaxaysay. Waxaanan idiin sheegayaa in balanqadayadaa qiyaas ahaan %85 ka mid ahi qabsoomeen, oo ay sidii loogu talo galay u fuleen, halka %12 gacanta lagu hayo oo aanu ku rajo weynnahay inay maalmaha soo socda dhammaadaan, %3 keliya ayaan filaynaa waxa aan noo qabsoomin ku talogalkayagii.

1. Nabadgelyada:

Nabadgelyadu waa aasaaska nolosha aadamaha, waana halbawlaha dal ku tamariyo ee aanu la’aanteed jiri-karin amase aanu horumar higsan-karin, haddii aan nabadgelyo jirin. Waa wax Ilaahay loogu mahad naqo inuu dalkeenu maanta ku sugan yahay nabadgelyo aad u heer saraysa oo aynu ka mid nahay dalalka Africa ugu nabad gelyada fiican.

Waxaanay nabadgelyadu ku dhisantahay dedaalka Ciidamada ammaanka, soo jeedka iyo feejignaanta bulshada iyo tacabka iyo joogtaynta ay ciidammada qaranku ugu jiraan heeganka illaalinta dalka iyo dadka.

Sida aad wada dareensan-tihiin, waxa jira cadow badan, oo u quudhiwaa iyo xiqdi dartii, doonaya inay wiiqaan degenaanshaha, dimoqraadiyadda iyo horumarka aynu ku talaabsanay, iyagoo adeegsanaya tabo iyo xeelado qarsoon. Waxa hubaal ah in aanu cadawgu kelidii waxyeelo inoo gaysan karin, haddii aanu helin qaar inaga mid ah oo dhagaraha cadawgu inala beegsanayo gacan ka geysanaya.

Anagoo ku dedaalayna sidii aan kor ugu qaadi lahayn tayada, tababarka, dhaqaalaha iyo mooraalka Ciidanka, waxaanu kordhinay mushaharooyinkii, waxaanu siinay Derajooyinkii, waxaanu u samaynay Kulliyado iyo Dugsiyo-tababar oo aqoontooda kor loogu qaado. Sidoo kale, waxaanu idiin soo gudbinay shuruucdii ay ku shaqayn lahayeen (Xeerka Sirdoonka Qaraka, Xeerka Booliiska iyo Xeerka La-dagaalanka Argagixisada). Waxaanan idinka codsanayaa in aad gacan naga siisaan.

2. Siyaasadda Arrimaha Dibedda iyo Ictiraaf Raadinta:

Waxaanu u guntanay xaqiijinta iyo taabo-gelinta madax-bannaanida Jamhuuriyadda Somaliland, sidii ay uga mid noqon lahayd bulshada caalamka, una heli lahayd aqoonsi buuxa.

Illaahay mahaddii, Somaliland waa Dawlad ku timi rabitaanka bulshada, dadkeedu aqoonsanyahay, dadkeedu illaashanayo, buuxisay dhamaan shuruudihii dawladnimo, waa hubaal dunidu way inala macaamishaa, waanay ina ixtiraamtaa balse inama aqoonsan weli.

Siyaasadda Arrimaha Dibedda ee Somaliland waa mid cad oo haysata jidkii loogu talo galay. Waxa dunidu si aan mugdi ku jirin u qirtay, marar badan iyo goobo badan kaalinta aan la dafiri karin ee JSL kaga jirto mandaqadda Geeska Afrika iyo beesha caalamkaba.

Wada-hadaladii inoo dhexeeyey inaka iyo Somalia way socdaan, waxaanay ku xusan yihiin nuxurkii ka soo baxay buugtaa laydiin qaybiyey, waxaanan soo jeedinayaa in goluhu ka doodo wixii dan-qaran loo arko la ansixiyo, si joogto ahna warbixinteeda waan idiinla wadaagi jiray oo waxaaba markasta Guddiga Wada-hadalada idiinku jiray xildhibaano iyo shirgudoonka golayaasha.

Waxaan maalmahan iyo maalin horeba warbaahinta kala socday Madaxweynaha Somalia Xasan Sheekh oo sheeganaya xidhiidh noo dhexeeya iyo waraaqo aanu is waydaarsanay, waxaan leeyahay Madaxweynuhu wuxuu ku cusubyahay saaxada siyaasadda waana dhalinyaro, waa nasiib daro haddii uu sheegto oo wax-qabad ka dhigto waraaqdii tahniyada madaxtinimada aan ugu diray.

Ma jirto wax aan ka waydiinayo Xasan Sheekh dalkayga iyo xuduudihiisa-toona, waxaa noo dhexeeya wada hadal dunidu inoo golaysay ee si nabadgelyo ah ma u kala boqoolaa ayaan leeyahaya. Qaranimada Somaliland waa mid ku timi codka shacabka waanu difaacaynaa, waa u dagaalamaynaa, waana u dhimanaynaa.

3. Waxbarashada iyo Caafimaadka:

Waxbarashada iyo caafimaadku waa labo shay oo aan kala maarmin kuwaas oo saldhig u ah nolosheena, waa waxa bulshooyinka dunidu ku kala horeeyo ama isku dhaafo taas oo eynu la’aantood qiimo yeelan karin.

Waxbarashadu waa xuquuq aasaasiga ah oo ay leeyihiin dhammaan muwaaddiniinta Somaliland, angoo ogsoon in dhammaan muwaadiniintu xaq u leeyihiin inay helaan waxbarasho lacag la'aan ah, tayo leh ayaan tacab badan gelinay waxbarashada.

Dawladdaydu waxay mudnaan siinaysaa horumarinta, baahinta iyo fidinta waxbarashada dadweynaha. Waxay dhiirigelineysaa sare-u-qaadidda cilmi-baadhista, hal-abuurka iyo farshaxanka, horumarinta ciyaaraha hiddaha iyo dhaqanka, isboortiga iyo dhaqanka suuban ee dadka Somaliland. Waxaana xaqiiqo ah in maanta waxbarashadu ay marayso meel fiican oo aynu ka horayno dalal badan oo Africa ku yaalla.

Waxaad wada ogtihiin muhiimada caafimaadka iyo fayadhawrku dadka u leeyahay, anagoo ogsoon xilka iyo waajibaadka naga saaran umaddayada, waxaanu caafimaadka ka qabanay waxyaabo muuqda, haddii ay noqon lahayd dhinaca dhismayaasha xarumaha caafimaadka, hadday tahay qalabka caafimaadka iyo kor u qaadidda aqoonta hawl-wadeenada caafimaadka iyo hadday tahay ololeyaasha lagu cidhibtirayo cudurada dilaaga ah iyo kuwa faafa.

Iyadoo aanu dedaal badan gelinay caafimaadka guud ahaan, waxaan si gaar ah ula tacaalay xanuunka HIV/AIDs oo dunida faro-xun ku haya, “dabcan inakuna dunida ayuun baynu ka mid nahay”.

Xukuumadaydu waxay xil weyn iska saartay si walba oo xanuunkan wax looga qaban karo, Somaliland ahaan si aynaan u gaadhin heerka loo yaqaan "marxaladda uu xanuunkani baahsanyahay" iyadoo nasiib wanaag aynu joogno marxalad aanu baahin oo wax laga qaban karo, waxaanu si buuxda isu barbar-taagnay Komishanka qaranka u qaabilsan hawshan. Markii aan ogaaday in uu jiro culays maaliyadeed oo ku soo kordhay Global-Fund-ka oo ah Hay’addii Somaliland iyo waddamo badan oo dunida ka mid ah ka caawin-jirtay dhinaca dhaqaalaha; waxaan Miisaaniyada qaranka ugu daray taageero maaliyadeed anigoo baaqna u diray bulshada Somaliland iyo Beesha Caalamka guud ahaan kaas oo ku wajahan sidii aynnu gacan buuxda u siin lahayn Komishanka Qaranka ee Xakamaynta AIDs-ka sidii loogu horjoogi lahaa shanta sano ee soo socota heerka ugu hooseeya ee aynnu gaadhsiin karno, intaa wixii ka danbeeyana aynu u cidhibtiri-lahayn xanuunkan.

4. Xoolaha iyo Illaalinta Deegaanka:

Xooluhu waa laf-dhabarta dhaqaalaha dalka, sidaa darteed waxa lagama maarmaan ah in lagu dadaalo caafimaadkooda iyo daryeelka iyo deegaanka ay ku nool yihiin.

Waxaana Wasaaradda iyo hawl-wadeenadeedu dedaal badan geliyeen caafimaadinta Xoolaha, waxaana la daweeyey in ka badan 12,000,000 oo adhiya 1,500,000 oo Geel ah iyo 1,500,000 ka badan Lo’ ah. In kastoo tacabkaa la geliyey, haddana waxaa jirtay labo markab oo geel ah oo laynagu soo celiyey kuwaas oo markii la baadhay laga helay %2, dhibtuna waxay noqotay 40 neef oo geel ah.

Iyadoo xooluhu muhiimadaas leeyihiin ayaa waxaa ka muuqda dayac iyo dedaal la’aan taasoo deegaanadii xooluhu daaqayeen weerar badan lagu hayo iyadoo aad maqasheen tuulooyin, Oodo iyo xidhmooyin dhulkii xooluhu daaqayeen lagu xayiray. Waxaan labada gole ka codsanayaa in aad arrintaa gacan naga siiyaan, xeerka hortiina yaala ee Illaalinta Deegaanka idinkoo waajibkiina sharci ka gudanaya aad dedejisaan si ay noogu suurtagasho illaalinta iyo xakamaynta deegaanka.

5. Waddooyinka:

Wadooyinku waxay muhiim u yihiin dhinacyada kala duwan ee nabadgelyada, dhaqaalaha, isku xidhka gobolada iyo Degmooyinka, waana lafdhabarta horumarka, anagoo arrintaa ka shidaal qaadanayna waxaanu dayactir balaadhan ku samaynay waddada Hargaysa–Berbera, waxaa la dhameeyey Wadada Boorama, waxaanu dhawaan xadhiga ka jaray Waddada Wajaale, sidoo kale waxaa la bilaabay waddadii Ceerigaabo.

Sanduuqa Somaliland Development Fund waxaa laga bixinayaa kharashka dhamaystirka Wadada Berbera ee Xamaas illaa Sheekh oo ay ku bixi doonto $4 Million oo U.S Dollar iyo Waddada Kala-baydh illaa Dilla oo loo qorsheeyey $2 Million oo U.S Dollar.

6. Horumarinta Madaarada iyo Dekedaha:

Maddaarada iyo dekeduhu waa albaaka laga soo galo dalka, waana xidhiidhka waddamada iyo dariiqa ganacsi ee sahla macaamilka nololeed ee ina dhexmaraya dalalka caalamka, anagoo arrintaa ka shidaal qaadanayna, waxaan u hawl-galay sidii loo dhisi lahaa Madaarada Caasimada Hargeysa iyo Berbera, waxaana socota dhismaha lagu dheeraynayo Dhabaha diyaaaradaha ee Caasimada, kaasoo marka uu dhamaado noqon doona Madaar ay nooc-kasta oo diyaaradeed kasoo degi karto.

Dekedda Berbera oo ah marsada ugu muhiimsan dekedaha geeska taasoo leh waxyaalo dabiici ah oo ay dheertahay dekedo badan, waxaanu muddo ku hawlanayn sidii loogu heli lahaa maalgelin iyo dhaqaale lagu horumariyo si ay u noqoto deked soo jiidata, qayb-libaaxna ka qaadato xarakada ganacsi ee mandaqada (World Class Facility). Waxaa wada hadallo noo socdaan shirkado badan oo ay ugu mudantahay shirkad Faransiis ah oo lagu magacaabo Bollore.

Horumar-badan ayaa dalka ka socda, “Cudurku waa soo boodaa, Caafimaadkuna aayar aayar ayuu u yimaadaa”, waxyaalaha badan ee la qabtay iyo inta socotaa cayaar kuma iman ee waxaa la geliyey deddaal iyo tacab. Haddii aynu yara milicsano maanta iyo maalintii aan xukunka la wareegay waxaa kuu soo baxaya faraq aad u badan, tusaale:

• Askarigu wuxuu qaadan jiray mushahar: SL.SH/=265,200 taasoo u dhiganta ($44)

• Maanta wuxuu qaataa mushahar: SL.SH/=636,000 + Gunnada Derjada taasoo u dhiganta ($106 + Gunnada Derajada)

• Wasiirku wuxuu qaadanayey: SL.SH/=4,800,000 taasoo u dhiganta ($800)

• Maantana wuxuu qaataa: SL.SH/=14,100,000 taasoo u dhiganta $2,350

• Garsooruhu wuxuu qaadanayey: SL.SH/=2,097800 taasoo u dhiganta $349.6

• Maantana wuxuu qaataa: SL.SH/=8,100,000 taasoo u dhiganta $1,350

• Xildhibaanada Golayaashani waxay qaadanayeen: $421 (SL.SH/=2,526,000)

• Maantana waxay qaataan: (SL.SH/=8,125,000) taasoo u dhiganta $1,354


Waxaan shaki ku jirin in Xukuumadani tahay Xukuumadii Horumarka iyadoo aanu qabanay wax badan, balse qabyada iyo baahida dalka ka jirta ayaa ka badan, waxbase kala hadhimayno intii awoodi noo saamaxdo.

Waxaa Sannadkan 2014-ka noo qorshaysan dhamaystirka mashaariicda faraha badan ee socota, Xoojinta Ammaanka iyo Fidinta maamulka, Diwaangelinta Muwaadinka, Kor u qaadidada Adeegyada Caddaalada iyo Horumarinta Xeebaha iyo khayraadka badda.

Ammaanka iyo Fidinta Maamulka: Waa ogtihiin oo Ciidamadu waxay joogaan duleedka Taleex oo u dhow xuduudka Somaliland, Wasiirkii Caafimaadku wuxu joogaa Buuhoodle, waxaanu ka wadaa horumar iyo maamul fidin. Xagga Laasqoray iyo Barina waxa ka socdaa dedaallo.

Horumar kasta waxaa aasaas u ah nabadgelyada, waxa aan shacbiga JSL ku boorinayaa in ay nabadgelyadooda ilaaliyaan, kana fogaadaan wax kasta oo dhaawici kara xasilloonida aynu muddadaa badan ku soo caano-maallay.

Diwaangelinta muwaadinku: waxay salka ku haysaa in la sugo muwaadinkasta oo xaq u yeeshay muwaadinimo, laguna yeeshay waajibaadka iyo xuquuqda ka laasimaysa muwaadin Somaliland u dhashay, waxaana saldhig u ah Dastuurka JSL iyo xeerarkii golayaashani ay dejiyeen oo ay ka mid yihiin Xeerka Jinsiyadda iyo Xeerka Diiwaangelinta Codbixiyayaasha, iyo Xeer-nidaamiyayaasha Diiwaangelinta muwaadinka ee aan Xeer Madaxweyne ku soo saaray.

Cadaaladda iyo Garsoorka: Waxaanu hore u qaadanay tallaabooyin badan oo aanu ku taageerayno, dhiirigelinayno kuna kobcinayno bahda garsoorka iyo cadaaladda. Waxaan mar labaad iyo mar sadexaadba xooga saaridoonaa xoojinta iyo ka midhadhalinta garsoorka iyo cadaaladda, kana daalimayno illaa inta bulshadu helayso adeegii loo baahnaa.

Horumarinta Xeebaha: Waxaad dhamaan ka warhaysaan safarkii dheeraa ee aan ku soo maray dhamaan xeebaha Somaliland si aan u ogaado duruufaha nololeed ee bulshada, si aan ugu kuurgalo waxna uga ogaanno qaabkii loo horumarin-lahaa loogana faa’iidaysan lahaa xeebaheena iyo khayraadka ku duugan. Sannadkan waxaanu samayn doonaa daraasad dhamaystiran oo ku wajahan horumarinta xeebaha iyo khayraadka badda. Waxaanan hay’adaha dawliga ah iyo kuwa maxaliga-ahba ugu baaqayaa in xooga la saaro horumarina xeebaha.

Gebogebadii

Culimada

Maadaama aynu 100% dad muslima nahay, waxa culimada door weyn iyo masuuliyadi ka saarantahay ilaalinta Diinta Islaamka, dhaqanka suuban iyo ammaanka. Waxaa lagama maarmaan ah in aynu ka midowno iskana kaashano duruufaha jira si aan da’yarteena loogu marin-habaabin fikrado xag jir ah oo aan diinteena waafaqsanayn.

Anigoo xoojinaya doorka culimadu ku leedahay bulshada iyo illaalinta dawladnimada, anigoo ogsoon in culimadu yihiin birma-gaydo, isla markaana ka shidaal-qaadanaya Dastuurka Qodobkiisa 115 illaa 121, waxaan soo saari-doonaa Guddiga Culimada ee Dastuuriga ah.

Beesha Caalamka

Waxaanu diyaar u nahay in aanu kala shaqayno beesha caalamka danaha guud ee la wadaago, sida ammaanka, la dagaalanka budhcad-badeeda, argagaxisada iyo deegaan-dhawrista. Waxaanu u soo jeedinaynaa dawladaha caalamka in ay garwaaqsadaan rabintaanka iyo xaqqa ay u leeyihiin shacbiga Somaliland aayo ka tashiga madax-banaanidooda. Sidoo kale, waxaanu ka codsanaynaa Qaramada Midoowbey, dalalka deeq bixiye-yaasha iyo hay’adaha samafalka in ay si mug leh noogala qayb-qaataan dib u dhiska iyo horumarinta dalka.

Haweenka: Waxaan hore labo-jeer idiinku soo gudbiyey kootadii haweenka, anigoo qadarinaya qiimaha ay haweenku bulshada u leeyihiin iyo kaalinta ay kaga jiraan horumarka dalka, waxaan mar saddexaad idinka codsanayaa in golaha la horkeeno oo aad ka gudataan waajibkiina dastuuriga ah.

Dhamaan Golayaasha Qaranka, Qurbajooga Somaliland iyo guud ahaanba bulshda reer Somaliland waxaan ugu baaqayaa in si mug leh loogu diyaargaroobo xuska maalinta qarannimada Somaliland ee 18-ka May.

Aad baa u mahadsantihiin,

Wassalaama calaykum wa raxmatulaahi wa barakaatuhu.