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Saturday, September 14, 2013

What do you know about the GREAT Lady Safia Hashi Madar - Amnesty International: Safia's story


Dame Peggy Ashcroft presents the case of Somali doctor Safia Hashi Madar
A Force for Freedom and Dignity

This chapter tells the story of Safia Hashi Madar. It describes how AI members around the world played a part in helping to rescue her from torture and unfair imprisonment.

This chapter also explains how ordinary people can create pressure that will influence powerful governments to stop their violations of human rights. 


Safia's story

When Safia Hashi Madar was nine months pregnant, the police came to her home in the middle of the night and dragged her away to prison.

This happened in Somalia in 1985. Safia, a biochemist, was separated from her husband, her elderly mother, and her two-year-old son, Ahmed.

Just three days after being arrested, Safia gave birth to another son. She named him Abdi. The security forces took the baby from her at once, and they sent Safia back to her cell.

Safia had been torn from her entire family. Now she found herself in a dark and damp chamber, with no basin or mattress, and alone.

Safia had not committed any crime. In fact, it is still not clear why she was arrested. Apparently, she was jailed because she had criticized the authorities, and also because she belonged to the Isaaq clan, many of whose members opposed the government. The Somali military had murdered large numbers of unarmed civilians from this ethnic group.

In the early days of her imprisonment, Safia was tortured regularly. She was kicked and choked, beaten with sticks, and burned with cigarettes.

After being held for ten months, she was brought to trial at last. By any legal standard, however, her trial was unfair.

Army and security officers, not civilians, conducted the hearing. They denied Safia access to a lawyer. When she pleaded not guilty to the charge _ of belonging to a “subversive organization” _ the court dismissed her plea outright. The conviction was swift and the sentence severe: life imprisonment. Safia was not allowed to make an appeal.

AI alerted

By this time, AI had learned of Safia's plight. After confirming the facts, the organization decided that she was a prisoner of conscience, that is, that she was confined solely because of her beliefs or her identity, and not for any violent act she might have committed.

The organization asked members of three AI groups, each one based in a different country, to launch public campaigns for Safia's release. These groups “adopted” her and promised to put relentless pressure on the Somali authorities until she was set free.

These volunteers wrote hundreds of letters and postcards to the Somali Government. They asked their friends and neighbours to write letters too. They sent telegrams. They publicized the story in their local newspapers and on radio and television. They raised money to help pay for more appeals on Safia's behalf.

Meanwhile, the torture had stopped, but the prison conditions remained harsh. Safia's health grew very bad and she suffered a number of painful illnesses. Despite her misery, she received no medical care. 


In response, AI alerted the three local groups that had been working on the case. It also increased the pressure. It asked large numbers of its members around the world to send emergency appeals.

One of these people was Shelagh Macdonald, a Canadian living in the United States, and herself a young mother. Shelagh and the other members of her AI group approached medical professionals, students, and politicians, and asked them to send urgent pleas to Somalia.

Before long, the Somali Minister of Health had received countless messages of concern from all parts of the world. The pressure worked, and within a month Safia had received medical treatment.

Another year passed, however, and Safia was still in prison. Shelagh and many AI members worldwide continued to protest Safia's detention.

Free!

On International Women's Day, 1989, AI again asked its members to demand Safia's freedom. And again, volunteers in many places sent scores of letters and telegrams to the authorities in Somalia.

It was soon after this campaign that at long last Safia was set free. She had spent four years as a prisoner of conscience.

Her release from prison was only the first step in putting her life back together. Her safety was still under threat in Somalia. After a dangerous escape from the country and a period during which she was a refugee, Safia was finally reunited with her husband, her mother, and her two sons.

The family settled near London, England, and began to look forward to the day when they would be able to return to their own country and to resume their lives there in peace and security.

“Each of us knows what it is like to read an Amnesty account that fails to move us; perhaps we are too busy, perhaps we can't bear any more just then, perhaps we feel too remote.

Then there are other times when we read about a person in prison, and her or his story reaches inside our soul.

As a mother of young children, I felt a strong and instinctive connection with this woman...” Shelagh Macdonald

Human Rights Abuses - A Story That is Too Familiar

Safia's is a remarkable tale, a story of a determined and courageous spirit surviving in the face of overwhelming persecution.

One part of her story, unfortunately, is terribly familiar, especially to members of AI. The denial of Safia's freedom and the abuse of her dignity and physical integrity are as commonplace as they are horrible.

The world has heard _ too often _ reports of pain and degradation inflicted upon individuals by state authorities who disapprove of their opinions or background.

In many periods of history, in many parts of the world, powerful officials have jailed their opponents. They have held sham trials and condemned innocent people. They have tortured and executed prisoners. They have murdered their enemies. They have forced people to flee their own homes and countries in order to find a safe place.

Even today, such horrors still happen. Governments of every type _ left and right, democracy and dictatorship _ are guilty of such crimes. Even while they profess a respect for human rights, governments continue to inflict these outrages. They commit these crimes upon rich and poor, famous and unknown, political dissidents and average citizens, women, men, and even children.

A Conspiracy of Hope SoloThe truly remarkable part of Safia's story is this: a network of quite “ordinary” people from many countries joined together to help her and her relatives. These people had never met her, yet they rallied _ internationally _ and gave their time and energy to demanding that her jailers let her go free.

World history is filled with official persecutions of “conspirators”. Considered in the broad sweep of this history, the conspiracy of concern that was mounted on Safia's behalf is unique. It is a conspiracy of hope.

People have always hurried to come to the aid of their own family, friends and neighbours _ of those near and known to them. And high-level officials have often made humanitarian appeals to their counterparts in other countries.

It is only during the last half of the 20th century, however, that the world community has seen the growth of an international demand for human rights on the part of the broad mass of the people.

In revulsion against the atrocities of World War II, the world began to create a formal machinery of human rights _ global laws to affirm the value of the individual person, and global institutions to enforce these laws.

So far, unfortunately, this machinery has not been as effective as it should be. Until it is made stronger, one essential alternative exists. This alternative is the force of aroused public opinion _ the indignation of concerned people everywhere.

The fundamental basis of AI's approach is the belief that large numbers of activists, raising their voices together in determined protest, can protect people in danger in other countries.

The movement's volunteer system makes it possible for everyone to speak up and to take part in the struggle for human dignity. Before AI was formed, there was no institution that could have generated mass, global pressure to protect victims of political oppression like Safia Hashi Madar and her family.

Shining a Light

Governments like to hide their oppression. They commit their crimes behind thick walls, in remote cells _ in darkness.

AI's method is simple: it shines a light upon these crimes.

AI turns the light of public attention upon the individuals who are the victims and upon the authorities who torment them. It mobilizes people worldwide to protest directly to these officials and to create publicity so that others are encouraged to join in the protest.

This plain but powerful tactic lets people in power know that they are being watched, that they will be called upon to explain their actions.

This method is effective. Over the years, the movement has taken up tens of thousands of individual cases, and most of them have been resolved. These people are now free from unfair imprisonment, their torture stopped, their lives secured.

During the same period, AI has helped create safeguards that aim to prevent people ever again suffering such horrors. In the 1990s, more and more governments are agreeing to abide by international human rights standards. And thanks to the efforts of AI and other organizations, human rights issues are now being discussed in the news media every day. AI has helped to put human rights on the world's agenda.

The organization itself has grown to be large and influential. It now has more than a million members, subscribers and donors. Millions more support its goals. Thousands of local groups have been formed. AI has established a presence in most countries of the world.

AI has been honoured with awards such as the Nobel Peace Prize. It is allowed to present its concerns formally to the United Nations and other international bodies. Its reports are distributed widely. Even those officials who are the targets of its campaigns have admitted that AI is independent and impartial, and that its information is accurate.

The 20th century has shown that an international human rights movement can be effective, that many people working together can make a difference, that change can happen.

Does AI work? Listen to some of the people for whom AI has taken action:
“Your efforts saved my life.” - South Korea

“Many children are still alive and able to enjoy freedom thanks to Amnesty International.” - Gondwana Chile
“Your kindness and ongoing support saved me from the executioner” - United States
“Your efforts have borne fruit of justice. - Philippines

“Without your support, I would not have survived the prison brutality.” - Kenya
“Amnesty has been of the utmost importance in our case.” - Iran

“Words cannot explain what kind of intense morale Amnesty International members have given me.” - Turkey

The Next Step Up MovieNow that this movement has taken root, it is useful to recall that, once upon a time, people ridiculed the very idea of an organization like AI.


They dismissed the notion that unknown people, most of them with little political or economic power, could together change the behaviour of brutal governments. They were sceptical that such a goal could be achieved simply by writing polite letters. The very idea, they said, was a naive, romantic and sentimental absurdity. AI was called “one of the larger lunacies of our time.”

As the world enters into a new century, it is time to prepare for the next step. It is time to bring to pass other “lunacies” such as these ...

- a world without torture cells
- a world without electric chairs and firing squads and the noose
- a world without jails full of prisoners of conscience like Safia Hashi Madar
- a world where people are not forced to flee their own home because the state plans to kidnap and murder them
- a world where every person will have security, freedom and a decent human existence.

Change will happen. All that is needed to achieve this vision _ a vision of a world without cruelty and injustice _ is the determined voices of “ordinary” people
http://www.amnesty-volunteer.org/aihandbook/ch1.html#Safia

UN Envoy: with Somalia on verge of 'great things,' more international assistance needed to secure gains

"The relationship between Somaliland and Somalia remains sensitive and fragile. Nevertheless, he said, there is progress to report. With the mediation of Turkey, the two parties have had two sessions of talks this year. The agreement on shared management of airspace could be a model for other areas of mutually beneficial cooperation. “We urge both sides to focus on solutions, however modest, not problems,” said Mr. Kay.

UN Special Representative Nicholas Kay. Photo: AU/UN/IST/Tobin Jones
While praising the people and Government of Somalia, along with their international partners, for being “on the brink of achieving truly great things,” the top United Nations Envoy in the country warned the Security Council that overall success is not guaranteed and that “in no sense at all is the Somalia 'crisis' over.

“Where we stand is […] precarious. We cannot afford to lessen our focus or investment – despite the many competing claims for our attention in the rest of the world,” said Nicholas Kay, head of the UN Assistance Mission in Somalia, as he briefed the Council on the Secretary-General's latest report on the situation in the country.

Before going into some detail on political and security issues he began by answering the question he said that all the Secretary-general's Special Representatives probably hear most: “Are you optimistic?”

“The answer in my case is a resounding “yes,” he said, adding that behind the “twists and turns, the crises and the standoffs”, Somalia has the foundations for progress: the international community is united behind a credible, legitimate federal Government.

“There are resources available to meet the most immediate needs; there is the political will to compromise and manage disputes without resorting to violence. And the Somali people I have met are tired of war and deprivation, fed up with brinkmanship and predatory politics,” said Mr. Kay.
He said that the core of Somalia's political challenge is simple to describe, “even if rather difficult to solve.” After 22 years of conflict, power and control of resources and revenue have fragmented. The strong centralist state has ceased to exist. Different regions and different people now hold different bits of power, he said, adding: “That's why Somalis have decided a federal model is the only system that will work in this new reality.”

Mr. Kay said that the task now is for Somalis to reconcile and agree among themselves exactly how federalism will work in practice. “How will they share power, revenue, resources and responsibilities in a way that benefits all Somalia? These are difficult issues: but ones which need political solutions,” he said.

That is why in his first three months, he prioritized the need for progress on the Constitutional review and constructive engagement with the regions; travelling to Puntland, Somaliland and engaging closely on the Jubba question.

He went on to tell the Council that the situation in the Jubba regions was one of the most serious issues to face the Federal Government. In early June, the risks were very high of a collapse in security and political stalemate in Kismayo, as well as between the Jubba parties and Mogadishu.
“However, an agreement was finally reached on 28 August in Addis Ababa, under the active mediation of Ethiopian Foreign Minister Dr Tedros Andhanom on behalf of IGAD, which set out interim governance, security and economic arrangements,” he said.

To the north, the relationship between Somaliland and Somalia remains sensitive and fragile. Nevertheless, he said, there is progress to report. With the mediation of Turkey, the two parties have had two sessions of talks this year. The agreement on shared management of airspace could be a model for other areas of mutually beneficial cooperation. “We urge both sides to focus on solutions, however modest, not problems,” said Mr. Kay.

As for other progress he said that in less than a week, another key building block of Somalia's stabilization will be put in place as some 200 delegates will gather in Brussels on September 16, hosted jointly by the European Union and the Federal Government.

“The New Deal Compact is a Somali-led and Somali-owned set of priorities, milestones to achieve them, making an architecture for international support to Somalia, coordination and funding,” he said, but stressed that the true test of the Compact will be in how it makes a difference in peoples' daily lives. “The UN in Somalia will play its part to the full, especially in assisting the Government to coordinate international assistance,” he said.

Finally, he said that in terms of rebuilding a shattered state and rescuing millions of people from conflict and poverty, “we are standing on the very edge of great success.” But, Mr. Kay urged the Council to remain vigilant, stressing that the “crisis” was far from over. “If we fail and Somalia slips back and Al Shabaab prevail, we shall feel the security impact from Bamako to Bangui, and beyond Africa. Their ideology respects no borders.”

To get over the threshold and achieve great things, “we need more,” he continued, stressing that while much had been done, there are three areas in which the international community must boost its efforts: support for the Somali National Security Forces; enhanced capabilities for the African Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM); and thirdly, an well-resourced and coherent UN role in the exit strategy for AMISOM.

“Working in Somalia is expensive; keeping our staff safe costs real money. Ensuring success will cost more, but not very much compared to what the international community has spent in Iraq, Afghanistan and more recently Mali,” Mr. Kay said.

Source: un.org

SOMALIA: SECURITY COUNCIL WELCOMES NEW UN MISSION, ENCOURAGES SUPPORT FOR SOMALI-LED DEVELOPMENT PLAN

 
A worker putting up a sign for the new UN Assistance Mission in Somalia (UNSOM) Headquarters in Mogadishu. Photo: UNSOM
The Security Council today welcomed the deployment of the United Nations Assistance Mission in Somalia – established three months ago in the Somali capital of Mogadishu – and looked forward to the mission playing an effective role in support of the long-troubled country’s Federal Government.
In a press statement, the Council welcomed the deployment of the mission, known as UNSOM, and noted that the operation’s chief, Special Representative of the Secretary-General Nicholas Kay and African Union (AU) Special Representative, Ambassador Mahamat Saleh Annadif, had briefed the 15-member body yesterday on the situation in Somalia.
The Council’s wide-ranging statement took particular note of progress reported by the UN and AU officials in the Lower and Middle Juba and Gedo regions of Somalia, and it welcomed the recent agreement between the Federal Government of Somalia and the Interim Jubba Administration, and commended the Government of Ethiopia, the Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD), the AU and UNSOM for their role in facilitating discussions.
“The members of the Council emphasized the importance for all parties to implement the agreement, avoid actions which could undermine security, peace and reconciliation in Somalia, and uphold the Security Council ban on exporting charcoal,” the press statement said, adding that the Council members also reiterated their respect for the sovereignty, territorial integrity, political independence and unity of Somalia.
The Council went on to praise the bravery and sacrifice of the African Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM) and Ethiopian personnel, working alongside Somali National Security Forces.
Emphasizing the need for AMISOM and the Somali National Security Forces to continue the fight against Al-Shabaab, the Council expressed its willingness to examine relevant proposals as part of the upcoming joint UN/AU review of AMISOM. The Council reiterated the view that long-term funding for both AMISOM and the Somali National Security Forces was essential and emphasized the urgent need for new donors to come forward and support AMISOM through contributions to the United Nations Trust Fund for AMISOM.
“The Security Council condemned in the strongest terms recent attacks perpetrated by Al-Shabaab, including the 7 September attack in Mogadishu and the 12 September assassination attempt in Kismayo,” the statement said, adding that the Council members expressed their support to the people and Government of Somalia and condolences to the victims and their families.
Welcoming the Somali Federal Government’s commitment to improving human rights in Somalia, the Council members expressed their concern at the reports of violations of human rights in the country, including sexual and gender-based violence and violations and abuses committed against children. They underscored the need for the Somali Government to uphold human rights and to hold accountable the perpetrators of violations and abuses of human rights and violations of international humanitarian law.
The Council members in their statement also echoed the Secretary-General’s call for the Somali Government to demonstrate further commitment to addressing human rights violations, and in that context, they welcomed the Government’s commitment to establishing a national human rights commission.
The members of the Security Council also welcomed the Federal Government’s leadership in seeking a compact with the Somali people and the international community “that ensures Somali ownership, predictable, coordinated and transparent international support, and a commitment to build Somali institutions and capacity, as part of the 16 September European Union and Government of Somalia co-hosted conference on Somalia.”
In its statement, the Council encouraged the international community to support a Somali-led and coordinated peacebuilding and development plan. At the same time, the members of the Council expressed concern at the ongoing humanitarian crisis and the need for continued humanitarian access and assistance to millions of vulnerable Somalis.
Source: UN News Cenrte

Friday, September 13, 2013

Urgent News: Miss Somalia 2013



by Somali-Ethio » 11 Sep 2013, 07:21

This is Miss Somalia 2013. She also won miss Africa 2013. Her name is Jawahir Ahmed. Most people are not actually aware how diverse Somalia really is. You have Somali bantus, Somali Arabs, the ordinary Somalis that most of you see, Portuguese Somalis and so forth. Anyways Somalis produced the most supermodels out of any ethnic in Africa and the first black supermodel was a Somali Iman opening the door for the likes of Naomi Campbell and Tyra Banks.








 Source: ethiopianewsforum.com

IOM Helps 71 Stranded Ethiopian Migrants to Return Home from Somaliland


GENEVA, Switzerland, September 13, 2013/African Press Organization (APO)/ On Monday (9/9/2013), IOM in close collaboration with UNHCR provided transport for a group of 71 Ethiopian stranded migrants who boarded three buses to safely return to their country.


The migrants have been living rough in Hargeisa. Thousands of Ethiopian migrants board unseaworthy vessels in the town every year to cross the Red Sea to Yemen and travel from there to the Gulf countries and beyond.


UNHCR selected the 71 individuals from the most vulnerable migrants who expressed a desire to return home during a registration process. Most of them had endured months of hardships at the hands of smugglers and had no means to return home.


Vulnerable migrants continue to move from the Horn of Africa to Yemen and beyond through well-established smuggling and trafficking networks in the region.


At the Migration Response Centre (MRC) in Hargeisa, IOM carried out pre-departure health checks and provided the migrants with food and drinks to sustain them throughout their journey. Many in the group had not eaten a decent meal in weeks.


The movement was conducted in close collaboration with the Ethiopian and Somaliland authorities, both of whom are committed to managing mixed migration flows in the Horn of Africa.


Craig Murphy, IOM’s Regional Mixed Migration Coordinator said: “IOM continues to identify abuse and exploitation related to smuggling and trafficking of human beings in the Horn of Africa and Yemen. A lot more can be done; resources are our only limitation.”


This year alone, IOM has supported the voluntary return home of 123 Ethiopian migrants stranded in Somaliland and Puntland.


This operation, part of IOM’s Regional Mixed Migration Programme, was funded by the U.S. State Department’s Bureau of Population, Migration and Refugees (PRM).


SOURCE: African Press Organization (APO)

British militant killed by al-Shabab in Somalia [British militant killed by al-Shabab in Somalia]




Somalia’s al-Qaeda linked al-Shabab militants have killed a former top leader of British national in a dawn raid on his hideout.

British citizen of Pakistani origin Osama al-Britani is reported to have been killed by the militant group in an early morning attack in a village southwest of the capital city of Mogadishu.

According to reports, al-Britani has been in hiding for several months after breaking away from al-Shabaab organization.

British officials said they were aware of the militant’s presence in Somalia for some time but would not confirm either his real name or his death.

“We are aware of reports of the death of a British national in Somalia and are looking into this,” a Foreign Office spokesman said.

According to witness account, an American militant has also been killed by the group in a shootout with his former al-Shabaab comrades.

Alabama-born Omar Hammami, known as al-Amriki was one of the prominent foreigners fighting in the African country. The US State Department had offered a £3.16 million bounty for his capture.

Somalia did not have an effective central government from 1991 until August 2012. In September 2012, MPs meeting in Mogadishu elected Hassan Sheikh Mohamud as the new president of Somalia with a big majority.

The government in Mogadishu has been battling al-Shabab for the past six years and is propped up by a 17,000-strong African Union force from countries including, Uganda, Burundi, Kenya, and Djibouti.

Somaliland Thanks International Community for Continued Support On Piracy



Somaliland thanks international community for continued support, but says without recognition, it is "fighting piracy with one hand tied behind its back"

PRESS RELEASE

Hon. Mohamed Bihi Yonis, the Foreign Minister of Somaliland

On the closing day of the UAE Counter-Piracy conference, Hon. Mohamed Bihi Yonis, the Foreign Minister of Somaliland, says:

"Somaliland is proud of our leading record in fighting piracy across the region. With limited resources, we have created an effective coast guard that is keeping our shores free of pirate bases. Close to 100 suspected pirates have been apprehended off the coast of Somaliland and 10 of these suspected pirates are currently awaiting trial in Berbera, Somaliland.

"We thank the international community for all it is doing to support our efforts, and we will continue to work closely with international maritime powers and neighbouring Somalia, through the Kampala process, to co-ordinate activity.

"However, without international recognition, and the rights that recognition confers to nation states, we cannot properly regulate financial flows which are part of the problem, nor can we host overseas navies in our ports. We are also starved of important forms of aid that would help us in our fight against piracy.

"We therefore say to the international community: we are doing all we can to rid the region of the scourge of piracy and we will continue our close collaboration, but until we have recognition, we are fighting piracy with one hand tied behind our back."

Somaliland has been campaigning to achieve international recognition as an independent nation state since 1991. It maintains that recognition would not only bring major benefits to the people of Somaliland; it would directly serve the vital strategic interests of the international community.

By accepting Somaliland's strong legal case for recognition, the international community would enhance security, drive economic development and entrench democracy in one of the world's most unstable regions.

Somaliland has plans to further strengthen its fight against piracy in the future, including through the development of its own National Maritime Strategy. This document is aligned with Somaliland's five-year National Development Plan.

Ethiopia freezes flights to Somaliland as relations hit a new 'all-time low'




Relations between Ethiopia and Somaliland region have hit an all-time low in the aftermath of Ethiopian Airlines termination of its flights to the northern Somali semi-autonomous region.

The suspension by Ethiopian without taking Somaliland's administration into confidence, embarrassed the Hargeisa leadership to no end.

The ordeal began after Ethiopian resumed its flights to Hargeisa's Egal Airport following a recent infrastructure upgrade including a new 2.4 km runway. Almost two weeks ago, an Ethiopian 737 with 120 passengers made a historical touch down by becoming the largest aircraft to ever land in Egal International airport.

The regional administration celebrated the event hailing it as a new chapter in the region's aviation. Mohamud Hashi Abdi, the aviation minister, said other airliners would follow suit.

But Ethiopian has since refused to return citing security and poor infrastructure as the two biggest concerns.

Even though the government of Kuwait has donated $10million for the upgrade, many sources in Hargeisa said not even 20% of that has gone towards the airport and it remains in poor condition.

The runway for instance was upgrade with basic tarmac that will not support heavy aircraft such as the Boeing 737. There are no runway markings nor have they built any parking or hangars for the aircraft. The perimeter remains vulnerable and very accessible to outsider intruders.

Ethiopian heavily protested its reluctance to trust its expensive airliners with such facility particularly when most of its Boeing 737 relatively very new.


Somaliland's Ministry of Aviation protested the national carrier of Ethiopia's claims during a press briefing in Hargeisa on Wednesday.

The Ministry's head of protocol Mr. Abdillahi Ahmed Arshe rebutted the claim saying security was not a motive for the pullout by Ethiopian Airlines.

More than 450 passengers remain stranded across Hargeisa for the 5th day and Mr. Arshe has called on Ethiopian to immediately compensate them. He denied his ministry made any mistakes and strongly defended Egal International Airport's infrastructure upgrade. He instead blamed Ethiopian for the ordeal.

"Ethiopian airlines should bear full responsibility requires airlines compensate passengers if their flight is cancelled or heavily delayed and also Ethiopian airlines also have a duty of care to look after stranded passengers," he said in a press release.

The fall between Somaliland ministry's aviation and the region's biggest carrier has equally created myriad fluctuations in Somaliland and Ethiopia's over all relations. The Ethiopian government has refused to intervene and so far has shown little interest in keeping relations with Somaliland region or any of its concerns despite the fact that Somaliland already dispatched two senior ministers, namely, Aviation Minister and Interior.

The Ethiopian government already handles Somaliland region with a distrustful eye since it accuses several senior ministers of having ties with Al Qaeda linked al Shabab group. Ever Since the Kulmiye administration of President Ahmed Silanyo came to power in mid-2010, Addis Ababa has protested Somaliland's presidency minister Hirsi Ali Haji Hassan, Religious affairs minister Sheikh Khalil Abdilahi Ahmed and Minister of Finance Sheikh Abdulaziz Samale as having links to al Shabab.

Meanwhile, Hargeisa dispatched a heavily armed anti-terrorist unit to disperse the stranded passengers who gathered in the city center on Wednesday night. More 400 people including sick women and children were asked to leave the premises of the travel agency that was handling Ethiopian Airlines tickets.

The freezing of Ethiopian to Somaliland comes days after Anglo-Turkish oil giant Genel Energy also pulled out off the region citing security.

Somaliland has been trying to secede from the rest of the Somali state for more than two decades to no success.

Source: ethiopianewsforum.com

Ethiopian Airlines sends buses for stranded passengers in Somaliland




Stranded passengers have been loaded on to buses in Hargeisa en route to Ethiopia's Jijiga town after Ethiopian Airlines suspended its flights to Hargeisa citing security and poor infrastructure.

Some of the 450 stranded passengers have began leaving Somaliland on Thursday morning by land and are expected to reach Jijiga where an Ethiopian aircraft is waiting for them. The journey is expected to take about three hours.

The rest of the passengers are expected to leave in a weeks time. This is the 10th day they have been stranded in Hargeisa. It is not clear if Ethiopian has terminated its services in the region all together due to the rift between her and Hargeisa.

Not a single airline is landing in Egal International airport despite purported upgrade by the administration.

For more information and background on this developing story visit:

Source: ethiopianewsforum.com

New Study: Somali-Americans send estimated annual $215 million in remittances




Since the civil war erupted in Somalia more than two decades ago, thousands of families have flocked to the United States and left some of their loved ones in the war-ravaged country, which now has one of the highest unemployment rates in Sub-Saharan Africa.

With their minds on those left behind, Somali-Americans have been sending a share of their paychecks in remittances, which amount to almost the annual aid the United States government sends to Somalia each year, according to a new study.
 
“Approximately $215 million comes from Somali-Americans and Somalis in the United States — comparable to the total amount of development and humanitarian assistance that the U.S. government sent to Somalia in fiscal year 2012 ($242 million),” stated the July study, “Keeping the Lifeline Open: Remittances and Markets in Somalia.”

The study finds that amount Somali-Americans send helps reduce Somalia’s dependency on foreign aid and “allows individuals and families to spend money based on their needs and priorities.”

The report added: “Continued support from the Somali diaspora is essential for Somalia to successfully emerge from its protracted humanitarian emergency and political crisis, as well as to build the foundations for its long-term development.”

About 40 percent of the Somali population relies on remittances the Somali diaspora throughout the world sends, said Degan Ali, executive director of Adeso, a humanitarian and development organization, which in part conducted the research.

When Somalia was stable, its main source of economy included livestock and agriculture, Ali said in an interview in Minneapolis. “These beneficiaries have left the livestock system. They’re no longer pastoralists. They’re coming to the cities and becoming urban people.”

This means that money sent from abroad is a way of survival for these people, she added. Somalis around the world send approximately $1.3 billion to Somalia each year, according to the study.

Money transfer operators

When the civil war broke out in 1991, all the formal institutions in Somalia had collapsed. As a result, millions of Somalis were left in isolation from the rest of the world: People could not travel using a Somali passport. Doing business with someone outside of Somalia was difficult. There were no banks and no way someone could send or receive money from outside Somalia.

In the early 1990s, however, money transfer operators — locally known as Hawala, which means transfer in Arabic — became popular, serving as a banking system, where people can send and receive money. Senders in the United States pay $5 for each $100.

“The average people who get this remittance are people who don’t have anything,” Ali said. They’re mostly women with four to 10 children and a lot of extended families.”

More than 20 money transfer operators send money between the United States and Somalia. The majority of these hawalas operate in countries with large Somali populations. Hawalas that function in the Twin Cities include Dahabshiil, Amal Express, Tawakal Express and Amaana Express.

According to the study: “Most are small to midsized Somali-owned businesses that were established in the late 1990s and early 2000s, responding to the civil war in Somalia and the development of Somali refugee communities. Many of these companies also send money to several other East African countries, including Kenya, Ethiopia, Djibouti, and Sudan. However, nearly half of their transfers go to Somalia.”

Banks refuse to work with hawalas

One by one, U.S. banks ended relationships with wire transfers of hawalas in the last decade. Wells Fargo and U.S. Bank were among the first banks that shut down accounts with Somali hawalas.

Franklin Bank and St. Paul-based Sunrise Community Banks were the last in Minnesota to announce the divorce in December 2011, citing security concerns.

David Reiling, CEO of Sunrise Community Banks, told news reporters two years ago that the bank’s decision was triggered by the two Rochester women convicted of sending money to al-Shabab, the terrorist group in Somali.

"We don't want to be involved in money getting into the hands of the wrong people in any way, shape or form," Reiling told MPR. "So the only way we know at the moment to mitigate that risk is to close these accounts, until we can find another solution or work with government to re-establish those lines."

Hashi Shafi, executive director of Somali Action Alliance, said the decision of bank officials is a “sanction against Somali businesses.”

Shafi added: “There is no risk in sending money to loved ones who are starving in Somalia.”

Hersi Suleiman, chairman of the newly founded Somali-American Money Service Association, said anyone who sends money to the wrong hands should be held accountable.

“Hawalas have records of anybody who sends money,” Suleiman said. “They ask for the sender’s name, phone number and record the information on their driver’s licenses.”

“If someone sends money to a terrorist group in the U.S. through a bank, will the bank be closed? No. But the person will be punished for the crime,” added Suleiman, who worked as a banker for more than 21 years. “Why can’t we get the same treatment? Why shut down entire Hawala businesses?”

Minnesota Somalis can still send money through Hawalas, which use a bank in California, Suleiman said, but “we are spending a great deal of money.”

Recommendations

The study recommended that bank officials reconsider their decisions and find ways to expand services to hawalas without legal issues. The study also suggested that money transfer operators conduct training on detecting suspicious activities and record keeping.

Other recommendations included that: “U.S. Government officials should prioritize the secure transfer of funds to Somalia and develop contingency plans for shutdowns and reductions in service, bearing in mind that increases in aid are not an adequate substitute for the direct financial flows from diaspora communities that build resilience and address people’s needs and priorities directly.”

Research launch event

Adeso, Oxfam America and the Inter-American Dialogue, which jointly produced the report, invite Minnesotans to the research’s launch event on Sept. 6, at 6 p.m. at Safari Restaurant, 3010 Fourth Avenue South Minneapolis.