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Friday, September 5, 2014

Analysis: Did drones kill Al-Shabaab’s leader, and why does it matter?

Drone strikes aimed at Al-Shabaab leader Ahmed Abdi Godane reportedly hit their target, but no one’s sure if he’s actually dead or not. A lot rides on the outcome – and not just the future of Somalia. SIMON ALLISON looks at what this could mean for east Africa’s most dangerous terrorist organisation, and for the American drone programme designed to contain them.


 
On Monday, American drones struck deep in Somalia. They targeted a convoy of vehicles in the Lower Shabelle region, not too far from Mogadishu. Eight people died.

Travelling in the convoy was Ahmed Abdi Godane, undisputed leader of the radical Islamist group known as Harakat al-Shabaab al-Mujahideen – or more commonly just Al-Shabaab, ‘the youth’. He was the principal target, but no one knows yet if he was among the victims, not even the Americans with their sophisticated eyes-in-the-sky and global eavesdropping capability.

“If he was killed, this is a very significant blow to their network, to their organisation, and, we believe, to their ability to continue to conduct terrorist attacks,” said Pentagon spokesman John Kirby.

A lot rides on that ‘if’.

For one thing, Kirby is right. Godane’s death really would be a huge setback for Al-Shabaab, one that it may struggle to recover from. “If confirmed, the death of Ahmed Godane could deal a major blow to Al-Shabaab and could be the beginning of the end,” said analyst, Abdi Aynte, on Twitter.

For this, Godane only has himself to blame. The Al-Shabaab leader spent much of last year consolidating his position within the organisation. A brutal purge of top lieutenants left him as Al-Shabaab’s undisputed emir. High profile assassinations took out any obvious successors, including Ibrahim al-Afghani and the American Omar Hammami, while others, such as spiritual leader Hassan Dahir Aweys, were forced to escape into government custody. Aweys was the de facto leader of Al-Shabaab’s nationalist faction and his departure was a major victory for Godane and his international jihadists.

But that victory came at a price. By vesting all power within himself, Godane left Al-Shabaab reliant on his own longevity – which, in this part of the world, is impossible to guarantee, especially when you are a man with as many enemies as Godane.

So if Godane is really dead, it is likely to spark a crisis within Al-Shabaab as new leaders jostle for position. Given that the African Union Mission in Somalia is in the middle of a new offensive to reclaim Al-Shabaab-held territory – Al-Shabaab still control most of south central Somalia – this could hardly come at a worse time for the group. But if he has survived, then perhaps the drone strike will serve as a timely reminder that he must redesign his organisation to outlast him.

Monday’s air strike is also a major development for America’s drone programme in Africa. The US has been operating unmanned aerial vehicles in East Africa for several years, mostly from Djibouti’s Camp Lemonnier, but is rapidly expanding its drone capacity in the region and across the continent. Africa’s radical Islamist groups are the principal targets. Earlier this week, the Washington Post reported that the Pentagon was planning to open a second drone base in Niger. “The new base in Agadez will put US drones closer to a desert corridor connecting northern Mali and southern Libya that is a key route for arms traffickers, drug smugglers and Islamist fighters migrating across the Sahara,” the paper said.

So far, Somalia has seen the most action from American drones in Africa.According to the Bureau of Investigative Journalism, there have been six to nine drone strikes in Somalia in the last seven years, killing between 16 and 30 people (mostly militants; only one civilian is suspected to have died). These are still relatively small numbers, however. In Yemen, there have been at least 65 drone strikes from 2002 to 2014, killing at least 339 people (64 civilians); and in Pakistan an astounding 390 strikes from 2004 to 2014, killing at least 2,347 (416 civilians).
Critics argue, with good reason, that drone strikes constitute human rights violations, especially when civilians become collateral damage. But if Monday’s attack on Godane was indeed successful, it may just provide vindication for US policymakers who consider the drone programme to be a primary counter-terrorism tool.

The US has a long history in Somalia, of course, but its darkest moment came in the infamous Black Hawk Down incident in 1993. The plan was to send in special forces to capture the top lieutenants of a warlord that was terrorising Mogadishu. The special forces went in, but the plan failed miserably – an hour-long operation turned into an overnight standoff, killing hundreds of Somalis and 18 Americans. The next day, American corpses were dragged through the streets of Mogadishu, and gung-ho American interventionism took a body blow from which it would take years to recover.

Now, of course, special forces are not necessarily required to take out high value targets. Often, the Americans can simply send in an unmanned drone instead; same result, but without the potential cost in lives and public humiliation. It’s easy to understand why drones are an attractive option for the people making the difficult decisions. And if Godane really is dead, and Al-Shabaab struggles to recover in his absence, then perhaps it’s time to concede that drones do have a role to play in modern counter-terrorism.

It’s a big ‘if’. For now, however, we must wait and see whether reports of the Al-Shabaab leader’s death have been greatly exaggerated – or whether he is the latest casualty in a long-running conflict that has already claimed tens of thousands of lives. DM

Photo: Somali demonstrators hold placards to protest against the country's Islamist insurgents al-Shabab and al-Qaeda during a demonstration in Mogadishu, Somalia, 15 February 2012. In a video released on 09 February by the Site Intelligence group, al-Shabab leader Ahmed Abdi Godane, also known as Mukhtar Abu Zubair, said the group pledged obedience to al-Qaeda chief Ayman al-Zawahiri and the two groups have merged. EPA/ELYAS AHMED

URGENT NEWS: Al Shabaab Officially Announces the Death of Ahmed Godane



twitter which belongs to Alshabaab announced the demise of their overall leader Ahmed Godane. This comes days after drones attacked and stroke the leaders of Alshabaab in Southern Somalia.
Reuters said it is not yet clear whether he is dead or not. However, Godane was not seen in public since the bombardment which took place near Sablale on Monday night. Reuters added that since then he was not talking on media to falsify the claims that he might be dead.
The director of Heritage Institute in Mogadishu said if he is dead that may be a game changer. Alshabaab leaders have not spoken about whether their leader is dead or alive. However, earlier media reports said the overall leader of Alshabaab Ahmed Godane survived the drone attack. They said Ahmed left the scene that was stroke moments before the attack. The drones attacked a forest near Sablaale town which is 170km away from Mogadishu.
Ahmed Godane studied in Afghanistan in 1990s. This is not the first time American planes targeted Alshabaab leader. Last year, they killed two Alshabaab leaders in Southern Somalia. In 2008, Adan Hashi Ayrow who was the leader of Alshabaab at the time was killed in bombardment by US forces in central Somalia.

Unearthing Evidence of Barre-era War Crimes: Apply to Field School in Somaliland= deadline for applications are extended it

 
Unearthing Evidence of Barre-era War Crimes: Apply to Field School in Somaliland 

EPAF has extended its deadline for applications to join the Somaliland Field School.  Applications will now be accepted until September 15, 2014.
Students may be interested to know that the University of Northern British Columbia will provide academic credit.  Additional details are below.

The Peruvian Forensic Anthropology Team (EPAF), in partnership with the government of the self-declared Republic of Somaliland, has opened an international forensic training program in Somaliland. The project began September 24, 2012 and the next phase will run from November 5 to December 4, 2014.  The Center for Justice and Accountability (CJA) is a proud sponsor of this program, which will help determine the universe of missing people through a systematic approach, ante mortem data collection, and research of mass and clandestine graves.  Click here to apply for the next cycle. The deadline to apply is August 31September 15, 2014.
Applicants from all disciplines are welcome. Participation in the field school represents a fundamental experience for anybody interested in post-conflict studies, peace studies, human rights, forensics, transitional justice, memory, gender, or any related subject.
From 1969 to 1991, president and military dictator Siad Barre oversaw a campaign of widespread atrocities that decimated Somali civil society. To quash separatist movements in the 1980s, the Somali Armed Forces targeted civilians in the northwest, modern-day Somaliland, culminating in the bloody 1988 siege of the regional capital Hargeisa, which claimed at least 5,000 civilian lives. In August 2012, U.S. Federal Judge Leonie Brinkema awarded $21 million in compensatory and punitive damages against former Somali General Mohamed Ali Samantar for his role in the slaughter. This judgment marks the first time that any Somali government official has been held accountable for the atrocities perpetrated under that regime.
» For more information and an application, click here.  If you have any questions regarding this field school, please email EPAF at: fieldschool@epafperu.org

About the Center for Justice and Accountability
The Center for Justice and Accountability is an international human rights organization dedicated to deterring torture and other severe human rights abuses around the world and advancing the rights of survivors to seek truth, justice and redress. CJA uses litigation to hold perpetrators individually accountable for human rights abuses, develop human rights law, and advance the rule of law in countries in transition from periods of abuse.  Read more...
About the Peruvian Forensic Anthropology Team
The Peruvian Forensic Anthropology Team (EPAF) is a non-profit organization that promotes the right to truth, justice, and guarantees of non-repetition in cases of forced disappearance and extrajudicial execution. EPAF seeks to contribute to the consolidation of peace and democracy where grave human rights violations have taken place by working alongside the families of the disappeared to find their loved ones, gain access to justice, and improve the conditions affecting their political and economic development.  Read more...

Thursday, September 4, 2014

An inspiring book fair, a raft of challenges


by C.H. | HARGEISA

IN a scruffy hall off the dusty main thoroughfare of Somaliland’s capital, Nuruddin Farah, a Somalia-born novelist, is berating the audience at the Hargeisa International Book Fair over what he sees as the inherent cruelty of Somali society. Somali history, he says, “is a consequence of this cruelty…we can never be a democratic society until we change our behaviour towards those we consider lesser.”
Despite being born in the south of Somalia and living in Cape Town Mr Farah, probably the most well-known Somali writer, feels quite at home in the internationally-unrecognised state in Somalia’s north: “I have come to start a debate with my community”. Debate permeated the fair in August and is now in its seventh year. Jama Muse Jama, formerly an Italy-based academic and businessman and now a Hargeisa-based publisher founded the fair in 2008 as a means to allow Somalilanders “to regain their public space… to sit down and simply debate”.
Alongside authors including Nadifa Mohammed, a much-lauded young British-based author born in Hargeisa, topics including the preservation of Somali heritage, mother and infant mortality, female genital mutilation, Somaliland’s own state-building and western stereotypes of Africa exercised hundreds of attendees. Poets, including the incomparable Hadraaawi, Bob Dylan-like here, declaimed sonorously, dervish-like female sitaad dancers whirled. A delegation of writers from Malawi, the guest country, and a sprinkling from Kenya alongside guests from Europe and America underlined the fair’s international credentials.
Hargeisa itself is buzzing. Roads that for decades had been pockmarked by damage caused by war are now being repaired. Construction is booming too with gaudy McMansions, hotels and malls going up. Many are funded by Somaliland’s wide diaspora. The logos of Dahabshiil, a regional money-transfer giant, and conduit for all those diaspora remittances, and mobile phone companies Telesom and Somtel and private university billboards are everywhere. Petrol stations, often bearing the blue-and-yellow livery of Hass Petroleum, based in Kenya, are springing up. Outdoor stalls and cafes bear handpainted signs and the ubiquitous details of the Zaad mobile-payment system. Earlier this year, the opening of a swimming pool, atop a hotel roof, caused local excitement.
Mohamed Awale, the director of planning at the Ministry of Commerce, lauds Somaliland’s regulatory reform to ease investment, but worries that without foreign recognition, Somaliland may remain stuck in “transitional” phase. He also worries about the plight of Somaliland’s young. Some 75% of the population are reckoned to be under 21, and 80% of them unemployed. Another economic threat is financial. Western banks are clamping down on their dealings with money-transfer agents to limit the risk that they may be implicated in financing terrorist or other illicit activity. That may reduce the flow of funds from Somaliland’s diaspora, exacerbating poverty.
Since declaring independence in 1991, Somaliland has sought international recognition and the funding and foreign investment it would bring. It has held a raft of elections judged reasonably fair by international observers, but is little-noticed.
The international community, with the backing of the African Union, is focused on Somalia, where international forces are trying to curb an Islamist insurgency and shepherd the country through federal elections, which are scheduled for 2016. Somaliland itself has elections scheduled for 2015, although implementation of a voter-registration system could cause delays.
Yet Somaliland may soon attract increased attention. One reason is the widening contrast between Hargeisa, where the streets are relatively safe, and Mogadishu—where on August 15th, at least 10 people were killed in a government-led attack on a militia leader near the city’s airport. Despite its lack of official recognition, Britain and Denmark are collaborating on a “Somaliland Development Fund” worth US$50m, to back the government’s own ambitious infrastructure development plans.
Oil firms are also taking note. A host of companies, including Turkish and Norwegian firms, have been searching for oil and gas in the east of Somaliland. Although commercial potential has yet to materialise, big hydrocarbon discoveries could bring as many challenges as benefits in an economy that is currently reliant on remittances and livestock exports to the Middle East. Some of the sites being explored are disputed between Somaliland and Puntland, a part of Somalia. Some of the clans in the disputed territories do not recognise Hargeisa’s authority. “It scares me what would happen if someone did make a big oil strike,” says Michael Walls, a Somali expert at University College London (whose own in-depth study of Somaliland’s state-building was launched at the fair): A conflict over oil would be a cruel blow indeed.

Somalia accuses Norwegian oil explorer DNO of destabilizing country

Reuters

dnoNorwegian oil company DNO and other small explorers are destabilising Somalia, the African country’s petroleum ministry said on Wednesday, warning it may lodge complaints against these firms to the United Nations Security Council.
DNO has been prospecting for oil in Somaliland, a break-away territory of Somalia. The company did not respond to telephone and email requests for comment but in July a senior official said DNO would not engage in any activities that threaten peace in Somaliland.
Somalia has been riven by conflict for more than two decades as rival warlords and Islamist militants have fought for control of the Horn of Africa country.
The Somali Petroleum ministry said companies signing overlapping oil contracts and striking deals with regional governments were “adding fire to conflicts”.
“These small companies are destabilising the country and destroying the international communThursday, September 4, 2014Thursday, September 4, 2014ity’s effort to build the peace and the security of the country,” it added.
The ministry in a statement singled out DNO, saying the company is “planning to introduce armed militiamen in areas already in conflict and thereby stoking old feuds which resulted in internal displacement and harming the innocent and the most vulnerable people”.
The ministry did not provide further details or any proof for its accusations.
“We are warning those companies that the Somali government will lodge complaints with their respective countries and the United Nations Security Council,” the ministry added.
Around a dozen companies, including many multinational oil and gas majors, had licenses to explore Somalia before 1991, but since then Somaliland and other regional authorities have granted their own licenses for the same blocks.
Somali officials last months met representatives of ExxonMobil, ConocoPhillips, Chevron, and BP for the first time since 1991, the ministry said.
The government said it wanted the oil majors to provide a timeline for their return to Somalia.
East Africa is rapidly emerging as an exciting oil and gas province after discoveries in Uganda, Kenya, Tanzania and Mozambique.
But U.N. monitors in July warned Western commercial oil exploration in disputed areas of Somalia and discrepancies over which authorities can issue licenses to companies could spark further conflict in the African nation. (Writing by Drazen Jorgic; editing by Susan Thomas).
Source: Reuters

Dharaaro Xusuustood:Prof Gees oo soo jeediyey in Guddida Doorashooyinka S/land Xeer Gaar ah loo curiyo


Prof. Maxamed Siciid Gees – Qeybtii 31aad

‘To be or not to be that is the question’

‘Ahow iyo ha ahaan arrinku weeyaane’

William Shakespeare (Hamlet)

Macno maleh aduunyadu

Haddaan magac ka reebayn eh

Maxamuud Ismaaciil Qasim

William Shakespeare oo noolaa sannadihii (1564 – 1616), waxa uu ahaa gabayaa Ingiriis ah oo Riwaayadaha alifa. Tuducan ayaan ka soo qaatay Riwaayaddiisa caanka ah ee la dheho Hamlet. Waxa riwaayadihiisa loo tarjumay 80 af oo dunida lagaga hadlo, balse weli af Soomali looma beddelin ilaa hadda waxa laga dhigaa Riwaayadahaas Adduunyada cidhifyadeeda oo dhan iyaga oo lagu masilayo afaf kala duwan oo dad midabo kala duwan ay jilayaan.

Cidina si sahlan u garanmayso madaxdii xukuumaysay Dalka England markii Shakespeare noolaa! Waar bal day akhristaw!! Guushu madaxnimo ma aha ee meelo kale ayey ku jirtaa. Boqol sanno ka dib cidina ma xasuusan doontu Madaxweyneyaashi soo maray Somaliland. 


Haseyeeshee, waxa la aqoon doonaa oo la akhrisan doonaa oo la dhegaysan doonaa Heesaha iyo Riwaayadaha ay curiyeeen Abwaanndu sida Axmed Saleebaan Bidde ee ay ka mid ahayd Ruwaayaddiila odhan jiray Wejiyaal is-xasuustaa; ee ay Heestani ee ay qaadaan Kinsi Xaaji Aadan iyo Cabdillaahi Cumar Xarago beydkeeda hore iyo kiisa u dembeeya oo ay ka mid ka ahayd;

Wejiyaal is-xasuustaa

Indho aan kala waaban

Laba aan isba waayin

Laba aan kala weecan

Wadnayaal is-jeclaada

Wadku daayo ayaamo

Aan wadeeco astaynin

Ma wadaagno xannaano

Innagaa isku wacnaynee

Maxaad iiga wareegtay?

——————————

Wiyishaa ubadkeeda

Waxa jooga adduunka

Iyadaa ula wanaagsan

Kolka waayuhu liicshee

Dani ay ka wadaaye

haddii aynu is-wayno

Walaac waa ku dilaaye

Waa wareegto adduunkiyo

haddii uu waqti keenay

Nin wax saarleh miyaan ahay? Kuwaas iyo qaar kale oobadan.

Dabayaaqadii sannadkii 2001 ayaa Marxuun Madaxweyne Maxamed Xaaji Ibraahim Cigaal u gudbiyey Golaha Wakiillada magacyada toddoba muwaadin oo uu ugu talagay inay noqdaan Guddiga Qaranka ee Doorashooyinka (NEC), si Goluhu u ansixiyo. Shirguddoonkii Golaha iyo Golihii ayaa wax-ka-beddel ku sameeyey soo-jeedintii Madaxweynaha, oo dhawr qodob oo ka hadlaya Guddiga Qaranka ee Doorashooyinka ku daray Xeerkii Doorashada ee Madaxweynaha iyo Golayaasha Degaanka oo ay ka doodayeen, gacantana ku hayeen waqtigaas.

Awooddii Magcaabidda Guddiga Doorashooyinka ayey u kala qaybsheen sidan: Madaxweynaha (3 xubnood), Guurtida (2 Xubnood) iyo xisbiyada mucaaridka ah (2 xubnood), sidaasna ayey ku ansixiyeen. Marxuun Cigaal oo waqtigaa xannuun la daalaadhacay waa aqbalay. Guddigaas Qaranka ee Doorashooyinka waxa la ansixiyey horantii sannadkii 2002.

Guddigaasi waxay ku guulaystay inay qabto saddex doorasho oo xor ah oo si nabadgelyo ah uga dhacay wadanka, kuwaas oo kala ahaa Doorashadii Golayaasha Degaanka (December 2002), Doorashadii Madaxweynaha iyo Madaxweyne-ku–xigeenkiisa (April 2003), Doorashadii Golaha Wakiilada (September 2005).

Waxa muddadii xilkoodu dhammaaday horraantii 2007, waxa labadii Xisbi ee mucaardka ahaa (UCID iyo KULMIYE) iyo Madaxweyne Daahir Rayaale oo UDUB ahaa ay isla qaateen in Guddiga Qaranka ee Doorashooyinka la kala diro oo mid cusub la soo magcaabo.

Markii hawshii fulinteedii la galay waxa soo baxay muran iyo iska horimaad gilgilay Dalkii oo dhan oo soconayey sannadkii 2007 oo dhan, ayaa Maxkamadda Sare la isla galay, arrintii waxbay kala fudaamisay; haddana halkii ayaa mar kale la iska hor yimi. Madaxtooyada oo dhan ah iyo Golaha Wakiillada oo xisbiyada Mucaaradka ihi ku xoog leeyihiin oo dhan. Golihii Guurtida oo isna daraf ka noqday murankii.

Waxa markaas soo dhexgalay arrintii Guddi Bulshada Rayidka ah oo ka kooban Abwaannu, borofasoorro, Wadaaddo can ah iyo xubno Waxgaradka Bulshada ka mid ah. Guddigaas oo Guddoomiye u doortay Abwaan Maxamed Ibraahim Warsame (Hadraawi).

Waxa guddiga gacan siinayey oo taageero u fidiyey Akaademiyada Nabadda iyo Horumarka oo aan markaasi madax ka ahaa. Bishii Sebtamber ayaa guddigu ku guulaystay in labadii qolo afgarad dhexmaro oo dalku uu yeesho Guddiga Qaranka ee Doorashooyinka.

Guddigii waxa u ahaa mid khilaaf ku dhashay sidii uu khilaafkii ugu jiray ayuu burburay isaga oo laba sanno jiray markii xubnihiisii intiisii badnayd ay istiqaalad keeneen. Sannadkii 2009 aakhirkiisii ayaa mar labaad guddi kale la mgcaabay oo la ansixiyey. Guddigaas ayaa qabtay doorashadii Madaxweynaha iyo Madaxweyne-ku-xigeenkiisa bishii (Jun 2010). Doorashadaas oo si qurux badan u dhacday.

Indhaha Dalalka xiiseeya siyaasadda Geeska Afrikana soo jiidatay markii ay si nabadgelya u dhacday oo laba Madaxweyne ay xilkii isu tiriyeeyn oo mucaardkii ku guulaystay doorashadii, taas oo ahayd arrin dhif ku ah Waddamada dunida saddexaad iyo kuwa Muslinka ah.

Waxa kale oo uu Guddigaasi qabtay doorashadii Golayaasha Degaanka oo dhacday Biishii (December 2012), taas oo buuq iyo dhimasho sababtay iyo muraan waqti dheer qaatay. Waxa dhacdadaas loo aaneeyaa diiwaangelintii sida caadifadda ah Baarlamaanku u laalay iyada oo aan laga fekerin, oo Xisbiyadu dabada ka riixayaan, Xukuumadduna ay ka aamustay.

Markii ololaha laalistu socotay ayaan Wasiir xukuumadda ku jira oo waayo-aragnimo badan u lahaa Doorashooyinka ka warsaday waxa ay u joojin waayeen laalista Diiwaangelinta Codbixiyayaasha. Waxa uu iigu jawaabay si fudud oo ahayd marmarsiinyo lagaga horyimaado Doorashada inay dhacdo ayaannu diidaynaa, sidaas darted ma faragelinayno.

Sharci-yaqaaanno badan ayaa waxay ku doodaan in qaybintii ay qaybsheen awoodda magcaabidda Guddiga Qaranka ee Doorashu ay isku dhex daadisay awoodihii waaxaha Fulinta iyo Sharci-dejinta. Badanaa wixiii magcaabid ah waxa iska leh Madaxweynaha, ansixinta (Ogaalansho ama diidid) waxa iska leh Baarlamaanka.

Hore waxa Mucaaridku uga qaylinay jireen labada xubnood ee Guurtidu magcaawdo, bal hadda fiiri labadii mucaaradku magcaabi jiray waxa ka taagan; ‘Fari tog-dheer ayey kula xushaa.’ Cabdiraxman Maxamed Cabdillaahi (Cirro) waa Guddoomiyaha Xisbiga WADANI isaga ayaa xeerku siiyey inuu soo magcaabo xubin ka mid ah Guddiga Doorashooyinka, isla markaan waa Guddoomiyaha Golaha Wakiillada ee ansixinayaa xubintii uu soo magcaabay. Haye Maxaa kuu baxay boowee!!.

Waxa Sharci-yaaqaanno badani qabaan in Xeer gaar ah oo tafatiran loo curiyo Guddigga Qaranka ee Doorashooyinka. Waayo, guuddigu waxa uu gacanta ku hayaa xasiloonida iyo nabadda dalkan Somaliland, sidaas darteed waa in dib loo eegaa xeerka hadda jira oo ah dhawr qodob oo ku dhex milan Xeerka Doorashada Madaxweynaha iyo Golayaasha Deegaanka.

Finn aims to be first female president of Somalia


A Finn of Somali origin wants to run as a candidate in the Somali presidential election in 2016. Fadumo Dayib is currently studying public administration at Harvard, but she thinks that Somalia is now ready for a female president.

Fadumo Dayib
Fadumo Dayib aims to become the first Somali woman to lead the country. Image: Yle
Fadumo Dayib moved to Finland in the 1990s to escape the civil war in Somalia. She’s now studying at Harvard but planning to return to Somalia—and she thinks she can make quite an impact on the country.

”I want to be Somalia’s president because I believe women have a chance to lead Somalia,” said Dayib. ”Women lead the country economically, manage family budgets and are very visible in society, but they have been kept out of politics. Somalia is now ready for a female president.”

In addition to improving the position of women in Somali society, Dayib’s campaign themes are fighting youth unemployment, protecting minorities and improving education.

”It’s shocking that we have a younger generation that hasn’t experienced anything but war,” said Dayib. ”They can’t even imagine any other kind of future than war and destruction.”

Dayib will go to Somalia next year, when her campaign officially gets off the ground.

”There are Somalis and foreigners from all over the world in my campaign team,” said Dayib. ”Many of them have come voluntarily to support me, which means that they’re of the opinion that a woman can become president of Somalia.”

Clans crucial in Somali elections

Dayib travels to Finland in December to discuss her plans with Somali communities based in Finland. She does not want her campaign to be clan-based, which has been the custom in previous Somali elections.

”In the past, clans have chosen Somalia’s president,” said Dayib. ”Now there’s a hope Somalia can have a democratic election. I hope that people will vote for candidates, not clans.”

Two years ago, another Somali woman based in Finland, Amal Abdi Ibrahim, made an unsuccessful bid to run for president, but was denied because she was just under the minimum age of 40.
Somali democrats hope the 2016 elections could be a watershed in the country’s politics. The ’Vision 2016’ conference hosted by incumbent president Hasan Sheikh Mohamud in 2013 urged Somali political parties to free themselves from clan affiliation, that the 2016 elections be free and fair, and that a new constitution be established before the vote.

That’s a tall order in a country like Somalia, where politicians are at constant risk of violent attacks.
”It’s very dangerous to be a politician or candidate in Somalia,” said Dayib. ”I’ve been warned many times that I could be killed if I run as a candidate.”
Dayib acknowledges that the risk of being killed is indeed high.
”But I’m not scared of dying,” said Dayib. ”We all have to go at some point. If I die because I am defending something that I strongly believe in, then that’s an honour.”

This story was edited on 4 September to correct Dayib's area of study and her plans to meet Somali communities in Finland--and not the Somali Association, as originally stated.

Sources: Yle

Friday, August 29, 2014

Corruption Currents: From Selling Out of UAE to Ransoming Reporters


 

By SAMUEL RUBENFELD - Wall Street Journal

Bribery:
Two former executives at China Mining Resources Group Ltd. were sentenced for bribery in Hong Kong. (Thomson Reuters Corporate Compliance Completesub req)
The FCPAProfessor checks in on Australia andhopes the B20 follows through. The FCPA Blogcatches South Korean businessmen on a bender,continues a series on collective action against corruption, flags an alleged crime ring among Puerto Rican police and finds limiting cash transactions in Indonesia to be a hard sell. Richard Bistrong analyzesthe latest EY Global Fraud survey. Tom Fox triessomething different and starts a series on risk assessments. Alexandra Wrage discusses compliance changes in China. Mike Volkov lists five important traits for a successful chief ethics and compliance officer. Thebriberyact.com runs a guest post about a money-back guarantee for bribe payers.
Money Laundering:
Standard Chartered PLC is aiming to sell part of its business in the United ArabEmirates after it agreed to close some accounts there in an anti-money laundering settlement with U.S. authorities, two sources familiar with the plan said to Reuters. The bank said reviewing accounts is normal and it won’t comment further.
The closing of a Barclays PLC remittance route to Somaliland could open up the possibility for a local industry — if other money-transfer businesses would take the risk. (Foreign Policy)
New Zealand seized assets from a Chinese-born millionaire in a money-laundering probe. A defense lawyer seen meeting the man said he denied the allegations. (Xinhua)
Two principals of a Hong Kong-based company that came close to buying New Zealand’s 22 Crafar farms have been convicted of laundering HK$230 million. (Stuff)
Bangladesh’s anti-corruption commission is preparing a national risk assessmentover concerns about money laundering and terrorism finance. (Financial Express)
Bahrain is seeing a rise in suspicious transactions. (Gulf Daily News)
Brokers are under scrutiny in India for not filing suspicious activity reports to the country’s financial intelligence unit. (PTI)
South Africa’s Julius Malema says he’ll beat fraud, money laundering, corruption and racketeering charges. (The Citizen)
Sanctions:
A Chicago man was sentenced to more than seven months in prison after pleading guilty to a charge that he tried to lobby city officials to press then-President ElectBarack Obama to remove U.S. sanctions on Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe. (Bulawayo, Chicago Sun-Times, Chicago Tribune)
Tehran says it is in the process of completing measures on transparency in its nuclear research that it agreed to with the U.N. atomic agency. Iran is delaying a London oil contracts roadshow to next year to make it possible for Western companies to sign them, an Iranian oil official said. (Reuters, WSJ, Reuters)
Companies are feeling the weight of sanctions on Russia. It’s taking a toll on Germany. The EU explicitly said its sanctions on Russia don’t target loans to Russian companies. A hit list for Russia President Vladimir Putin is here. (Law360,RIA Novosti, Financial Times sub req, Global Capital sub req, Quartz)
Turkey imposed sanctions on six al Qaeda affiliates in line with the U.N. Security Council. (Hurriyet, Haaretz)
Lawmakers sent OFAC and the Treasury’s internal watchdog on a fishing expedition over Jay-Z and Beyonce’s trip to Cuba. (Sanction Law)
OFAC is limiting excessive searches using its sanctions screening tools.
Terrorism Finance:
Dan Rather says he would pay a ransom to free a reporter. Thomas Ricksdisagrees. Washington said it ordered Qatar not to pay a ransom as it brokered the release of a reporter. Should news organizations follow a media blackout on the abductions of their employees? (CNN, Politico, NY Times, Washington Post, WSJ)
The Islamic State now resembles the Taliban — but with oil fields. (Bloomberg)
Whistleblowers:
The case involving Meng-Lin Liu imposed limits on FCPA whistleblowers from overseas. (Forbes)
General Anti-Corruption:
Chinese police are questioning the former audit director of China Resources Holdings Co. Ltd. as part of a broad investigation into suspected corruption in the state-owned company. (Reuters)
Separately, Chinese smartphone maker Coolpad shelved its plan to use a golden casing for its flagship smartphone after being advised by government officials that the color gold could potentially be seen as promoting a luxurious lifestyle.(WSJ China Real Time)
Despite the widespread crackdowns, Xi Jinping is riding a wave of popularity. (NPR)
The number of IRS Criminal Investigation Division agents could drop to the lowest number since the 1970s. (Reuters)
In local politics: Texas Gov. Rick Perry filed a motion to dismiss the indictment against him. A secret campaign donation sent Wisconsin’s governor scrambling. The latest in the corruption trial of a former Virginia governor and his wife is here,here and here. (WSJ, NY Times, The Nation, LA Times, Washington Post, NY Times, Politico)
The SEC’s use of the so-called “rocket docket” is being challenged. (Dealbook)
The Global Ethicist takes questions once a month on risk and compliance issues.
A Transparency International staffer was displaced in Gaza, and the group isfighting corruption in Honduras.=