Sunday, March 3, 2013

Somalia Asks US to Grant Immunity for Former PM


By MATTHEW BARAKAT Associated Press 
McLEAN, Va. March 2, 2013 (AP)


 Somalia's newly recognized government is asking the State Department to grant immunity to a former prime minister who was found responsible in a U.S. court for human-rights abuses.

 The letter issued this week by the Federal Republic of Somalia's prime minister, Abdi Farah Shirdon, seeks immunity for Mohamed Ali Samantar, who now lives in Fairfax but was a top official in dictator Siad Barre's regime in the 1980s and early 1990s.

 Last year, a federal judge in Alexandria awarded seven Somali victims a $21 million judgment against Samantar for orchestrating a campaign of torture and killings against members of the Isaaq clan. Samantar fought the case for years, arguing that U.S. courts had no right to pass judgment on internal Somali affairs. On the eve of trial, he declared bankruptcy and entered a default judgment while continuing to pursue his immunity claim in an appeals court. While he accepted legal liability for the killings, he denied wrongdoing.

 At the time, Samantar was denied immunity in large part because there was no functioning government to claim immunity on his behalf. After Barre's regime collapsed in 1991 the country lacked a true central government for more than 20 years. But in January, the U.S. formally recognized the new Somali government.

 Samantar's attorney, Joseph Peter Drennan, said he expects the U.S. to honor Somalia's request and the case to be dismissed. The 4th U.S. Circuit of Appeals rejected an appeal filed by Samantar last year, but Drennan said Friday he will file papers with the U.S. Supreme Court on Monday to have the case tossed out.

 "We fully expect the U.S. will honor this request for immunity," Drennan said. "To do otherwise would represent an affront to the government of Somalia."

 State Department press officers did not respond to questions about the case Friday.

 The fact that the Somali prime minister, who was himself an official in the Barre regime, requested the immunity so soon after receiving U.S. recognition reflects the importance of the case to the Somali government, Drennan said. He said the new government is seeking to move beyond the old score-settling of clan-based grievances, and lawsuits like the one brought in Virginia by members of the Isaaq clan "represent a threat to efforts to promote peace and reconciliation."

 Kathy Roberts, a lawyer for the San Francisco-based Center for Justice and Accountability, said Somalia's immunity request for Samantar is disappointing.

 "In his meeting with Secretary of State Clinton in January, (Somali) President (Hassan Sheikh Mohamoud) made a commitment to restore faith in governance and the rule of law. Embracing impunity for war criminals is a disappointing beginning," she said in a statement.

 The Somali prime minister's request for immunity for Samantar goes to the State Department. If the State Department decides to honor it, it would be up to a court to dismiss the case.

 In rejecting Samantar's immunity claim last year, the appeals court said the executive branch's recommendation is a big factor in determining immunity, but not the only one. It also said abuses such as torture and extrajudicial killings, like those Samantar was accused of, may never be eligible for protection.

 The case against Samantar was initially filed in 2004 and has already been heard once by the U.S. Supreme Court. Initially the district court judge granted immunity to Samantar but the Supreme Court reinstated the case.

Saturday, March 2, 2013

Somalia, newly recognized by US, seeks immunity for former minister Samantar in civil case

McLEAN, Va. — Somalia’s newly recognized government is asking the State Department to grant immunity to a former prime minister who was found responsible in a U.S. court for human-rights abuses.

The letter issued this week by the Federal Republic of Somalia’s prime minister, Abdi Farah Shirdon, seeks immunity for Mohamed Ali Samantar, who now lives in Fairfax but was a top official in dictator Siad Barre’s regime in the 1980s and early 1990s.

Last year, a federal judge in Alexandria awarded seven Somali victims a $21 million judgment against Samantar for orchestrating a campaign of torture and killings against members of the Isaaq clan. Samantar fought the case for years, arguing that U.S. courts had no right to pass judgment on internal Somali affairs. On the eve of trial, he declared bankruptcy and entered a default judgment while continuing to pursue his immunity claim in an appeals court. While he accepted legal liability for the killings, he denied wrongdoing.

At the time, Samantar was denied immunity in large part because there was no functioning government to claim immunity on his behalf. After Barre’s regime collapsed in 1991 the country lacked a true central government for more than 20 years. But in January, the U.S. formally recognized the new Somali government.


Samantar’s attorney, Joseph Peter Drennan, said he expects the U.S. to honor Somalia’s request and the case to be dismissed. The 4th U.S. Circuit of Appeals rejected an appeal filed by Samantar last year, but Drennan said Friday he will file papers with the U.S. Supreme Court on Monday to have the case tossed out.

“We fully expect the U.S. will honor this request for immunity,” Drennan said. “To do otherwise would represent an affront to the government of Somalia.”

State Department press officers did not respond to questions about the case Friday.

The fact that the Somali prime minister, who was himself an official in the Barre regime, requested the immunity so soon after receiving U.S. recognition reflects the importance of the case to the Somali government, Drennan said. He said the new government is seeking to move beyond the old score-settling of clan-based grievances, and lawsuits like the one brought in Virginia by members of the Isaaq clan “represent a threat to efforts to promote peace and reconciliation.”

Kathy Jackson, a lawyer for the San Francisco-based Center for Justice and Accountability, said Somalia’s immunity request for Samantar is disappointing.

“In his meeting with Secretary of State Clinton in January, (Somali) President (Hassan Sheikh Mohamoud) made a commitment to restore faith in governance and the rule of law. Embracing impunity for war criminals is a disappointing beginning,” she said in a statement.

The Somali prime minister’s request for immunity for Samantar goes to the State Department. If the State Department decides to honor it, it would be up to a court to dismiss the case.
In rejecting Samantar’s immunity claim last year, the appeals court said the executive branch’s recommendation is a big factor in determining immunity, but not the only one. It also said abuses such as torture and extrajudicial killings, like those Samantar was accused of, may never be eligible for protection.

The case against Samantar was initially filed in 2004 and has already been heard once by the U.S. Supreme Court. Initially the district court judge granted immunity to Samantar but the Supreme Court reinstated the case.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

WAR DEGDEG AH OO DHIILO LEH: Madaxwayne Xasan Sheikh Maxamuud oo Xukuumada Maraykanka ka Codsaday in ay Joojiso Dacwada Dambiyada Aadaminimo ee ku socota General Maxamed Cali Samantar


Sida ay maanta uu baahiyay Wargayska WashingtoPost Raiisal Wasaaraha Somalia Abdi Farah Shirdon taasi oo uu u diray Wasaarada Arimaha Dibada Dalka Maraykanka, kuna waydiisanayo DAMBI KA DHAWRSANAAN in  la siiyo ra'iisal wasaarihii hore ee Somalia isla markaasina ahaa wasiirkii gaashaandhiga ee xukuumadii kali taliyihii Siyaad Barre, kaasi oo dacwad la xidhiidha masuuliyadii hogaamineed ee uu ku lahaa dambiyo lid ku ah aadaminimada oo ay ka mid ahaayeen jidhdil qudhgooyo iyo gumaad uu u gaystay shacabka ku dhaqnaa  Somaliland sanadihii sideetamaadkii (1980s)


Sanadkii tagay ayaa Garsoore ka tirsan Federaalka Gobolka Virginia ku xukuntay General Maxamed Cali Samantar magdhow gaadhaya $21 million taasi oo ah doorkii hogaamineed ee uu ku lahaa olole baahsan oo jidhdil iyo qudhgoyn gumaad ah oo uu la bartilmaameedsaday shacabka reer Somaliland sanadihii sideetamaadkii. Magadhowgan ayay maxkamadu u xukuntay 7 dhibane oo u dhashay dalka Somaliland.



Xiligaasi Xukunku dhacay, Xukuumada Maraykanku way u diiday General Maxamed Cali Samantar Dambi ka dhawrsanaantii uu codsaday sababtoo ah maadaama aanay Somalia lahayn dawlad shaqaynaysa oo u dalbata General Samantar Dambi-ka-dhawrsanaanta. Bishii January, ee sanadkan ayaa Xukuumada Maraykanku si rasmi ah u aqoonsantay dalkii hore la isugu odhan jiray Somalia

Qareenka Dambiilaha Dagaal (General Samantar) ayaa warbaahinta u sheegay in uu rajaynayo in Xukuumada Maraykanku aqbali doonto codsiga uga yimi dawlada Somalia kadibna sidaasi lagu tirtiri doono dacwada dhagaraha dagaal ee ku socota General Maxamed Cali Samantar.

 Saacado yar uun kadib markii Xukuumada Obama sheegtay in ay aqoonsi u fidisay dalka Somalia. Afhayeenka Difaacayaasha Madaxabanaan ee Xuquuqda Aadamiga Somaliland Mr. Suleiman Ismail Bolaleh ayaa warbaahinta u sheegay  in Cida ugu horaysa ee uu rajaynayo in ay ka faaiidaysan doonto Aqoonsiga Maraykanku u fidiyay Soomaaliya ay yihiin Dambiilayaasha iyo Dhagar Qabayaasha ay ka mid yihiin General Maxamed Cali Samantar, Colenel Magan iyo Colenel Tuke oo dhamaantood dacwado la xidhiidha dambiyo dagaal, gumaad iyo dilal qorshaysan oo baahsan ay u gaysteen shacabka Somaliland.


Mr. Bolaleh ayaa ku macneeyay qaabka ay dhagarqabyaaashu uga faa'iidaysan doonaan aqoonsiga Maraykanka ee Somalia "Sidii ay sameeyeen xukuumadihii Ku-meel-gaadhka ahaa ee Cabdilaahi Yuusuf iyo Sheikh Shariif waxa ay u diri doonaan wasaarada arimaha dibada Maraykanka ay kaga dalbanayaan in dambiyada laga dhaafo oo gabi ahaana la laalo eedaha dambiyada aadaminimo iyo damiyada dagaal ee loo haysto General Maxamed Cali Samantar, Xukuumada Federaalka Somalia ee uu hogaamiyo Xasan Sheikh iyo Raiisal wasaare Shirdoona waxba kama duwan xukuumadihii ka horeeyay ee ku meel gaadhka ahaa, waayo aragnimada aan u leehay siyaasiyiinta Somalia dhawaan waxaynu arki doonaa qoraalo xukuumada Somalia u dirayso dhigooda Maraykanka oo dambi ka dhaafid (immunity) Gacan ku dhiiglaha Cali Samantar ay ugu hiilanayaan.

Si kastaba ha ahaatee, Haddiiba Xukuumada Washington ay aqbasho codsiga hogaamiyayaasha Muqdisho oo aan wakiil sharci ah ka ahayn shacabka dalka Somaliland taasi waxay caalamka u iftiimin doontaa in dalka Maraykanku aanu rabin xasilooni iyo nabadgalyo ay hesho mandaqada Geeska Afrika.

Dhinaca kale arintan ayaa noqonaysa fariin Madaxwaynaha Muqdisho Xasan Sheekh Maxamuud iyo Xukuumadiisu u dirayso shacabka Somaliland taasi oo ay ugu sheegayaan in ay si buuxda ugu taageersan yihiin cawaaqibkii ka dhashay awaamiirtii uu General Maxamed Cali Samantar bixinayay iyo xasuuqii baahsanaa ee ciidamadii uu hogaaminayay Cali Samantar u gaysteen Shacabka Somaliland kuwaasi oo burburiyay dhulkana la simay magaalooyin boqolaal sano la soo dhisayay.

Waxana ay tani u quusgoynaysaa cidkasta oo wax rajo ah ka qabtay in xal ay ku gaadhi doonaan wada hadalo la rajaynayay in ay dhawaan yeeshaan Somalia iyo
Somaliland.

SHOCKING NEWS: Somalia, newly recognized by US, seeks immunity for General Mohamed Ali Samantar, the defence minister and Prime Minister in US Case


THE ASSOCIATED PRESS 

McLEAN, Virginia — Somalia's newly recognized government is asking the State Department to grant immunity to a former prime minister accused of human-rights abuses.

The letter issued this week by the Federal Republic of Somalia seeks immunity for Mohamed Ali Samantar, who now lives in Fairfax but was a top official in dictator Siad Barre's regime.

Last year, a federal judge in Virginia awarded seven Somali victims a $21 million judgment against Samantar for orchestrating a campaign of torture and killings against members of the Isaaq (ee-SOCK') clan.

At the time, Samantar was denied immunity because there was no functioning government to claim immunity on his behalf. In January, the U.S. formally recognized the Somali government.

Samantar's attorney said he expects the U.S. to honor Somalia's request and the case to be dismissed.


http://www.cja.org/article.php?class=20&list=classt&type=287

Friday, March 1, 2013

'Gold Miners' bolster brigade's prospects for AFRICOM success



'Dagger' Brigade Soldiers stand in front of a Field Artillery Ammunition Support Vehicle that hauls ammunition for the M-109A6 Paladin, in the foreground. "Gold Miner" logistics coaches emphasize correct ammunition reporting procedures. The brigade is...
By David Vergun
FORT IRWIN, Calif. (Army News Service, Feb. 23, 2013) -- Gen. George S. Patton once said, "Gentlemen, the officer who doesn't know his communications and supply as well as his tactics is totally useless."

That quote illustrates the importance of sustainment for mission success, said Lt. Col. Michaele McCulley, commander of the "Gold Miner" team of the National Training Center's, or NTC, Operations Group.

Her team of 32 Soldiers are responsible for providing sustainment training, coaching and mentoring to "Dagger" Soldiers of 1st Infantry Division's, 2nd Armored Brigade Combat Team, or ABCT, as well as other units that rotate through here.

The 2nd ABCT will become the first regionally aligned brigade to U.S. Africa Command in early May, following 14 days of training here, which end March 1, and follow-on region-specific training at the brigade's home station at Fort Riley, Kan.

Gold Miner Soldiers, all of whom have combat experience and are experts in their logistics specialties, move about "the box," as the 1,100-square-mile training area is called, providing guidance mostly to Soldiers of the brigade support battalion, or BSB, and the corps support sustainment battalion, or CSSB, she said.

Their occupational specialties include staff organization; distribution; warehouse operations; mortuary affairs; fuel, water, maintenance and recovery operations; medical operations, including treatment and evacuations; intelligence; communications; and ammunition resupply.




TRAINING TO DOCTRINE "We providing training and mentorship using our own experiences, coupled with doctrine," McCulley said.

The doctrine piece comes from Training and Doctrine Command, which anticipates future threats and ways to meet them, using subject-matter experts, modeling, simulations and live experimentation.

"Doctrine is the basic recipe for how we do operations," she said. "You can add spice to it, but it's still the basic recipe."

In 1999 and 2000, McCulley was with the Gold Miners here when Cold War, force-on-force training was still conducted at NTC. Following the 9/11 attacks, counterinsurgency training was emphasized, she said. McCulley has first-hand experience with COIN, as it is termed, since her last tour before arriving here in 2011 was in Afghanistan.

 Current doctrine anticipates a hybrid threat, she said. Now, the training is known as decisive action and consists of two main parts that, in reality, occur simultaneously, the conventional force-on-force and wide area security. The latter includes counterinsurgency, humanitarian crises, cultural awareness and diplomacy.




This is the fourth unit rotation through NTC that is using this doctrine, she added.

 What makes this training unique, she said, is that most BSBs don't get the opportunity to set up their full complement of logistics scenarios at home-station training because the size of the training area at most installations is so much smaller and that limits full-brigade involvement, she said.

 "When they come out here, we're able to help them develop ways to set up the entire BSA (brigade support area) that could be a 2- or 3-kilometer sized goose egg (shaped area)," she said. "They see the big picture here."

Soldiers are shown how to use the terrain to set up their equipment, for example, she said. There are some benefits to setting up the BSA where there's a lot of open terrain for good visibility and at other times, the BSA might be better off in a wadi or on a mountain.

It's all based on enemy threats and the brigade commander's intent, she said. "We help them to use all their intelligence and communication assets to set this up."

A wadi is a gully formed by a stream. At Fort Irwin and in other desert locations around the world, the wadis are normally dry, but can flood quickly when it rains.

"You wouldn't want to be in a wadi when that happens," she said.

Another unique training opportunity here is that the Soldiers gain an appreciation for traveling long distances and seeing just how long it takes to do a resupply mission, she said.

Since there is no dedicated security element for logistics operations, Soldiers must provide for their own security.

"We're all Soldiers first" and then logisticians," she said, adding that security challenges can be especially challenging with wide area security threats, coupled with conventional.

In humanitarian or refugee situation, Soldiers tasked with sustainment rely on government and non-governmental organizations like the Red Cross, United Nations, State Department or U.S. Agency for International Development for support, she said.

"Doctrine says we help locals tap into international or NGO-type organizations to help bring that level of assistance," she said, adding that "often, those organizations don't have their own distribution capability, so we would work with them jointly (so that relief) supplies could come to the BSB for distribution to local population.

Although NTC provides role players for these NGOs and governmental organizations, some of the participants are actually State Department personnel on training prior to foreign-service duty, she said.

EMPHASIS ON REPORTING

"We rely on Soldiers in all the units for accurate information reporting to anticipate their fuel, water, ammunition needs. There's only so much ammo in this training environment," she said. Coincidentally, as McCulley was explaining this she got a call in the box, where she was located, regarding a Class V resupply issue. Class V refers to all categories of ammunition.

"Units struggle with detailed reporting," she said after the call. "They say 'we need ammo' but they can't tell the BSB how much they need or how much they have on hand. They just want more ammo. They absolutely should know, just like you should know how much is in your checking account before you write a check. But they're learning.

"Also in the past, Soldiers relied more on contractors for many sustainment tasks, and here, Soldiers are having to do it all themselves," she added.

Soldiers are used to operating out of large forward operating bases, known as FOBs, that have plenty of stocks of supplies at hand, said Command Sgt. Maj. Jason Runnels, who has been with the Gold Miners for 18 months. He mentors the brigade command sergeants major in logistical matters and works with McCulley on personnel matters.

"Our first sergeants have been so engaged with the forward fighters, that they're not used to the basic responsibilities of beans and bullets being put back on their shoulders, ensuring all the sustainment functions are in place," he said.

"We had prepositioned stockpiles of supplies at the FOBs so they thought it doesn't matter if my report for fuel was wrong. I'm still going to get plenty of fuel. It doesn't matter if I request enough Class V because there's plenty at the FOB. If you don't submit the proper requests, it doesn't show up. And if it doesn't show up, you won't get it," he said.

Maneuver Soldiers who come to these rotations learn that if they don't get logistics right, the operation is not going to work, Runnels said. And, from the logistical side of the house, they gain a better appreciation for the decisive action environment, the magnitude of tactical responsibilities that have to be coherently built into the plan.

He said it's a real wake-up call for Soldiers who are used to having air superiority and rule the night with their night-vision goggles.

"Now, the enemy has every capability you have, so how do you defend against that?" he asked rhetorically.

"You spread your fuelers, equipment and personnel across the BSA. You use biometrics at our (equipment collection points) because we might be engaged with local civilians. You emplace hasty fighting positions, we haven't done that in years," he said, citing some force protection measures Soldiers learn to take here.

Biometrics are ways to measure physical and behavioral characteristics used to establish personal identity to prevent sabotage, terrorism and espionage. Techniques could include fingerprinting, iris scans and so on.

"How to manage your people is challenging for all rotations," he said. "All it takes is one or two individuals not completing their tasks or doing so incorrectly and it could affect the success of the entire organization."

(Editor's note: This is the final article in a four-part series on "Dagger" Brigade Soldiers training at NTC for regional alignment to U.S. Africa Command).




Somalia and the G8

G8 leaders at the 2012 Summit. Photo by: European Council
The UK is working with the international community through the UK's Presidency of the G8 to support the rebuilding of Somalia.

Along with the Somalia Conference in May, a key milestone this year for Somalia is the UK’s Presidency of the G8. Within the G8 forum Somalia has been identified as one of the most important foreign and security policy issues, and the UK will use the G8 as an opportunity to encourage leaders to provide high-level political support.
International Financial Institutions(IFIs) support to Somalia

At both the G8 Foreign Ministers meeting in April and G8 Leaders’ Summit in June, Ministers will consider how best to support the re-engagement of the International Financial Institutions in Somalia.

Engagement in Somalia by the World Bank, the African Development Bank, and the International Monetary Fund has been limited following the outbreak of civil war in 1990/1. A combination of an unstable security situation, absence of Government, and accumulation of arrears has meant that IFIs have been constrained in the amount they have been able to engage with Somalia.

Now there are however moves to restart support – at first on a small scale, but gradually building up to greater levels of technical and financial help.

The re-engagement of the IFIs would initially provide the economic and institutional expertise and broader support needed to help increase economic stability and growth. Over the medium to long term this could lead to arrears clearance of Somalia’s debt to the IFIs, eligibility for new concessional funding (finance with very low rates of interest), and ultimately, to the possibility of debt relief on the money that Somalia owes to other countries.

The push for IFI re-engagement will lead up to and build on the state-building focus of the Somalia Conference in May. IFIs will only consider re-engagement and the provision of technical and financial support to Somalia if the Somali Government can show they are committed to delivering on the priorities outlined at the Conference. These include rebuilding its armed forces, police, coastguard, justice and public financial management systems.

source:https://www.gov.uk/government/news/somalia-and-the-g8

Somalia's president wants partial amnesty for boy pirates

(CNN) -- Somalia's president intends to offer partial amnesty to boys involved with pirate groups, a move designed to curb attacks on shipping off the Horn of Africa, his office says.

"We have been negotiating with pirates indirectly through the elders to see if we can organize a partial amnesty for the young boys lured in this criminal activity," Somali President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud said in a statement released by his office Thursday.

The statement didn't detail what shape the partial amnesty would take. Negotiations were in an early stage and details still have to be worked out, the statement said.

Article 19 Stement - US: WikiLeaks and hacktivists should not be labelled as threat to US trade

ARTICLE 19 is concerned that the new US Administration Strategy on Mitigating the Theft of US Trade Secretes (Strategy), released last week, lists whistle-blowing organisation WikiLeaks and other digital activists ("hacktivists") among those who use tools of "economic espionage against US companies." The Strategy, aimed at "coordinating and improving the government's efforts to protect trade secrets against foreign competitors," was made public as Private Bradley Manning, accused of providing documents to WikiLeaks, marked 1,000 days in custody and prepares to appear again before a military court.

ARTICLE 19 recognises that the US government has legitimate interests in protecting the confidentiality of information that contains trade secrets or that would be likely to seriously prejudice the commercial interests of third parties. However, including whistleblowers and new media websites, such as WikiLeaks, among those that pose a threat to the US economy is worrying. It is indicative of continuous attempts by the US government to suppress the functioning of whistleblowing organisations on various grounds.

ARTICLE 19 has previously highlighted that organisations, such as Wikileaks, represent a powerful extension of the media's function as a public watchdog, by receiving information from confidential sources and making it available to the public. This is particularly important for information about corruption, fraud, mismanagement, illegal corporate practices and many other ills in society. WikiLeaks and similar organisations have become important forums through which the public are alerted to such disclosures. They have also reinvigorated investigative journalism and inspired new forms of non-traditional media that have diversified the means through which people share and receive information.

So far, WikiLeaks has exposed governmental wrongdoing alongside the wrongdoing of private companies. The organisation has also drawn attention to illegal and unethical practices of private intelligence companies targeting individuals on behalf of their corporate and government clients, shed light on tax evasion through Swiss banks and revealed the US government's efforts to drive up the price of medicine in developing countries.

In respect to the protection of commercial interests, ARTICLE 19 also recalls that in 2008, the US District Court for the Northern California rejected an attempt of the Swiss Bank, Julius Baer, to restrain Wikileaks from disclosing certain information of public concerns on its website, based on freedom of expression (First Amendment) arguments.

The US Government made freedom of expression on the Internet one of the priorities of its foreign policy and this commitment must not be limited to the international arena.

There is growing international recognition that new media organisations and whistleblowing websites are creating new channels for political debate and activism and play a crucial role in maintaining transparency and democratic forms of government.

ARTICLE 19 calls on the US Government to follow this trend and adopt measures that enable - rather than restrict – the work of whistleblowers and new types of media. Such measures are also necessary to demonstrate that US Government foreign policy genuinely supports freedom of expression online and applies at home as much as it does overseas.

Adduunka Qof Baa beddala! Faallo Ku Saabsan Barnaamijkii Qiimee Qofkaaga:




Qalinkii/ Muuse M. Ciise ( Dalmar )xajidalmar@gmail.com……

Qof kastaba wanaagiyo,
Kartidiyo wax-qabadkiyo,
Waxa lagu qadariyaa,
Qawlkiyo run sheegee,
Maya dhaha qabiilkiyo,
Qoladayda weeyiyo,
Wixii qaranka dumin kara.

Kala danbaynta, isqadarinta, wax wada qabsiga iyo isqiimayntu waa furaha guusha. Waana jidka ay bulsho ku gaadho nolol rayn rayn iyo ladnaan badani ku dheehan tahay. Marka ay bulshadu qiimayso qofkeeda wanaagsan, garabna siiso keeda wax wanaagsan ku soo kordhiyay waxa hubaal ah inay bulshadaasi ku guulaysanayo hadafka ay nolosha ka leedahay.

Si xun wax u sheegu,
Sixir waa ka daran yee,
Adoo suubin kara wanaag,
Ha samayn xumaan iyo,
Wax Soomaali kala dila

Hudheelka Maansoor ee magaalada Hargeysa waxaa 20 bishan Febraayo 2013 lagu qabtay xaflad si weyn loo soo agaasimay, taasi oo abaalmarinno badan lagu guddoonsiiyay hal-door tiro badan oo bulshada qaybaheeda kala duwan ka socday. Barnaamijka munaasibadda buddhigga u ahaa oo magaciisu ahaa QIIMEE QOFKAAGA AAD QIIMO YEELATIDE, ayaa ahaa fikir iyo halabuurnimo cusub oo uu soo kordhiyay muwaadin reer Somaliland ah oo magaciisa la yidhaa Rashiid Sulub Caalin.

Qofka bini-aadamka ahi micno weyn buu dunida guudkeeda u joogaa, waxaana qof kasta looga fadhiyaa in uu wax wanaagsan ku soo kordhiyo bulshada uu la nool yahay. Haddaba tallaabadan ayaa ah mid ku dayasho mudan, una qalanta in la garab istaago muwaadinkan hawsha fiican bilaabay. Waxaana mihiim ah in la kobciyo, oo la horumariyo fikirkan cusub oo aan anigu qabo in uu yahay albaabkii guusha iyo horusocodka bulshada. Waxa aan barnaamijkan u arkaa in uu yahay shaandhadii kala haadin lahayd ee kala hufi lahayd dadka inta waxtarka leh iyo inta bulshada culayska ku haysa.

Tartan weeye noloshuye,
Tiigsiga qofkii wacan,
Diintaa tilmaantee,
Ha tabcayn walaalkaa

Labadii cisho ee u danbeeyay waxa aan warbaahinta qaybaheeda kala duwan ku arkaayay qoraallo naqdin iyo niyad-jabin u badan oo lagaga soo horjeeday barnaamijkaasi aynu kor ku xusnay. Iyada oo dadka intooda badani saluugsanayeen sida hal-doorka bulshada loo soo xulay. Waxa ugu weyn ee ay dhalliil ka dhigayeenna ay ahayd maxaa hebel looga tegay? iyo heblaayo inay ku jirtay ahayd. Nin habari dhashay hal ma seegi waydo, hawl aadame qabtayna ma dhalliil weydo. In wax la naqdiyaana waa habka ugu wanaagsan ee laysku sixi karo. Waa haddii naqdintaasi tahay mid wadata talooyin iy tusaalayaal lagu sixi karo wixii qaldamay. Bulshooyinka horumarayna midda kaliya ee ay ku liibaaneen waxa weeye; qiimaynta hawsha inteeda wanaagsan iyo naqdinta hawshaasi inteeda laangadhaynaysa oo la raaciyo xalka iyo dawada lagu dabiibi karo.

Han-yaridu ma fiicnee,
Ha xaqirin walaalkaa,
Adna hiigso meel sare.

Rashiid Sulub Caalin waxa uu mudan yahay in garab la siiyo, laguna biiriyo wixii aqoon, dhaqaale, fikir, waayo-aragnimo iyo taageero guudba ah. Waana hubaal in ay dhalliil yeelan karto hawshaa weyn ee uu Rashiid Kaligii u istaagay, laakiinse waxa mihiim ah in lagu wada dadaallo sidii ay barnaamijyada danbe u noqon lahaayeen kuwo la saxar tiray iyada oo laga faa’iidaysanayo waayo-aragnimada kan sannadkan 2013. Iyada oo Rashiid lagu sharfayo fikirka cusub ee uu keenayna waxa ila quman in barnaamijkan la balaadhiyo, oo halka laga odhanayo muwaadinbaa barnaamijka soo qaban qaabiyay waxa ila wanaagsan in laga dhigo urur ama haayad miisaankeeda leh ayna gacan ka gaysanayaan haayadaha dawladda ee ay khusayso iyo waliba qaybaha bulshada ee horumarku jecel.

Alloow eex ma tiraabine aqoon haygu cadaabin. Gaarriye IHN-tee.
W/Q Muuse M. Ciise ( Dalmar )
xajidalmar@gmail.com
http://www.musadalmar.wordpress.com
Stockholm, Sweden.

Warka xaqiiqada ah ee barnaamijka qaran ee qiimee qofkaaga si aad qiimo u yeelatid




Aniga oo ah DATA OFFICER kii barnaamijkan qiimee qofkaaga si aad qiimo u yeelatid waxaan maalmihii u danbeeyay arkayay maqaalo laga soo qoray barnaamijkii qaran ee qiimee qofkaaga arintaas oo ay dadweynuhu ku kala aragti duwanayaayeen ayaan qalinka u qaatay in aan ka turxaan bixiyo in badan oo dadweynaha ka mid ah oo si khaldan loo fahamsiiyay hadaba hadii aan waxrbixin kooban ka idhaahdho barnaamijkan qiimee qofkaaga. Figrada waxaa is lahaa muwaadin rashiid sulub caalin oo ah sakhsi aad iyo aad u jecel samofalka iyo taakulaynta dadka jilicsan.

Fikrada isaga ayaa noolayimi isla markaasna noosoo bandhigay aniga iyo intii kale ee nala shaqaynaysaba waanu la qaadanay in aanu kala shaqayno weliba si tuburuc ah anagoo aaminsan in aay tahay hawl qaran waxaanu ku faraxsanayn oo aanu ku niyad samayn dhamaantayoba in aanu u adeegno qarankayaga oo aanu hawl baaxadaas leeg u qabano.

Barnaamijkani waa fikrad saliim ah isla markaasna ka dhashay maskax caafimaad qabta.

Ujeedooyinkii barnaamijka

Ujeedooyinka barnaamijkani laga leeyahay waa arimo dhawr ah isla markaasna xambaarsan xigmado aad iyo aad u qotodheer

1.      in la abaal mariyo la qadariyo oo la qiimeeyo dadka  dalka iyo dadkaba waxyaabo la taaban karo u qabtay.

2.      in wax u qabashada dalka iyo dadka lagu dhiirigeliyo jiilalka cusub ee soo kacaya. Si aay ugu baraarugsanaadaan horuumarka wadanka.

3.      in bulshadeena la baro is qiimaynta iyo isu mahadcelinta si aaynu unoqono bulsho ixtiraamta kooda mudan.

4.      in la dhiirigeliyo lana kobciyo fikradaha munaasibka ah ee ka soo maaxanaya maskaxaha caafimaadka qaba.

5.      in la barto taariikh toganna laga reebo shakhsiyaadka ku suntan horuumarka dadka iyo dalka

6.      in lagu daro manhajka wax barashada ee dalka dadka mudan in lagu daydo si aay dhiiri gelin ugu noqoto dhalinyaradeena


*Sugnaanshaha iyo cadaalad u samaynta*

Waxaan kaloo aan jecelahay in aan idiin soo gudbiyo bal siyaabaha dadkani ku mutaysteen in aay gudoomaan bilada haldoor.

Run ahaantii dadkan dhamaantood waxaa u soo gartay isla markaasna soo qiimeeyay dadweynaha reer Somaliland. Dadku waxaay codkooda soo siiyeen qofwalbaa cidii uu islahaa wax qabad fiican buu dalka ku soo kordhiyay ama heer horuumarineed buu gaadhsiiyay  iyadoo lagu qiimaynayo dhamaanba
baahiyaadka aas aasiga ah ee bulshada.

Bulshada ayaa ka markhaati kacaysa qaabkii aanu marnay nidaamka qiimaynta shakhsiyaadka loo aqoonsadey haldoor.

Waxaanu bulshada u bandhignay in aay fikirkooda ka dhiibtaan dadka aay is leeyihiin wax qabad muuqda oo la taaban karo ayay la yimaadeen.

Qofkastaana waxa uu fikirkiisa ku dhiiibanayay siyaabahan

1: in goobaha dadku ku kulmaan ee faras magaalah ah aanu dadka ugu qaybinay waraaqo u saamaxaya in aay si fuduud fikirkooda u cabiraan

2: ina aay dadku codkooda soo dhiibtaan iyagoo adeegsanaya mobilkooda

3: in dadku ku codeeyaan email khadka internetka iyo in aay ku soo codeeyaan websitka barnaamijka  taas oo u fuduudeysay in badan oo qurba jog ahi in aay soo dhiibtaan codkooda

4: anaga oo tagnay gobolada dalka oo dhan si loo helo cadaalad iyo sinaan loo dhanyahay.

Hadaba markii aay codbixintii ku soo dhamaatay sidaa aynu kor ku soo xusnay waxaa bilaabanatay kala saaristii dadka.

Anaga oo doonaynay in aay soo baxaan boqolka qof ee ugu codka sareeya qaybkasta waxaanu ka soo xulnay dhawrka qof ee ugu codka badan anaga oon u ee gayn qabiil iyo qofjeclaysi toona iyo cid aanu dano gaar ahaaneed ka leenahay taasna waxaa marag u ah oo qofkasta oo iiman lehna dawo u
noqonkarta dhamaan hawlwadeena shaqdan faraha ku hayay way wada dhaarsanaayeen.

Waxaan filayaa in aay intaasi bogsiinkarto daawona u noqonkarto in badan oo su aallo is weydiinaysay.

Hadaba waxaan bulshada reer Somaliland  u cadeeynayaa in aanay jirin cid aanu ku keenay is xanbaar cid aanu ku keenay qofjeclaysi cid aanu ku keenay dano gaar ah oo aanu ka leenahay

Hadaba waxaan leeyahay cid kasta oo fikrad khaldan ka aaminsan barnaamijkan qaran
Markaad walaalkaaga Muwaadinkaaga ah wax ka dhigto ayaad adiguna wax ku noqonaysaa

Aduun magac baa ka hadha gobina way maaxataa

Bradley Manning admits to leaking 'the most significant documents of our time

Protesters carry signs in support of US Army Private First Class Bradley Manning. (AFP Photo / Paul J. Richards)
Bradley Manning, the US Army intelligence officer accused of passing sensitive military documents to whistleblowing website WikiLeaks, has pleaded guilty to ten separate charges. The army, however, will pursue the grave charge of aiding the enemy.

Although the army judge has accepted Manning’s guilty pleas on ten counts, the remaining 12 charges are still to be reviewed. The army accuses Manning, 25, of aiding the enemy. If convicted, he could face a life sentence.


Private First Manning told a military court that he was responsible for uploading a trove of material to the website and pleaded guilty to 10 counts, RT's Andrew Blake reported from the courtroom.


After his plea was read to the court, Pfc Manning for the first time formally admitted guilt in the court, more than 1,000 days after being arrested. Reading a 35-page statement from his seat before Col. Denise Lind, Manning explained why exactly he risked his life to publish state-secrets.


Pfc. Manning pleaded not guilty to aiding the enemy and a number of other lesser charges, but told the court he’d like to take the blame for a series of other counts — charges that were not presented by the government but introduced by the soldier himself. In lieu of a laundry list of charges that could put Manning away in prison for life, he hopes the court will convict him of only ten lesser offenses that come with only a maximum sentence of 20 years.


Manning pleaded guilty to unauthorized possession and willful communication of sensitive material, including the hundreds of thousands of State Department cables and other materials provided to WikiLeaks. By pleading guilty, he waves the right to appeal a decision made earlier in the week in which the court ruled that Manning’s right to a speedy trial was not violated.

Bradley Manning (Mark Wilson/Getty Images/AFP)

In explaining himself, Manning told the court that he communicated with unidentified persons he believed to be working for WikiLeaks, and assumed he was speaking with founder Julian Assange. Manning says he only sent the anti-secrecy website material after being rejected by other outlets, however.


While on break from the Army, Manning says he called up the Washington Post and claimed to have materials with “enormous value to the American public.” Manning told the judge that he “spoke for 5 minutes about the general nature” of the documents but said, “I do not believe she took me seriously.”


Rejected, Pfc. Manning approached The New York Times, an outlet he described as “the largest and most popular newspaper” in the world. “I left a message saying I had access to information about Iraq and Afghanistan that I thought was very important,” he said.


“I never received a reply from the New York Times,” claimed Manning, even though he left the paper with multiple ways to be reached, including his Skype name.


Believing there were few appropriate conduits for the materials he collected as an intelligence officer, he said WikiLeaks “seemed to be the best medium for publishing this information.”


In an interview with British public television, Assange referred to Manning as "America's foremost political prisoner," adding that "the only safe way to get these cowards to publish anything is to get WikiLeaks to do it first."


"All those involved in the persecution of Bradley Manning will find cause to reflect on their actions," Assange asserted.


During pre-trial motion hearings earlier in the case, prosecutors admitted that they would have charged the Times with releasing the information had they published them before WikiLeaks. In January, prosecuting attorney Capt. Angel Overgaard, said, "publishing information in a newspaper [can] indirectly convey information to the enemy." When Col. Lind asked if that would apply to WikiLeaks, Capt. Overgaard said, "'Yes, ma'am.



Manning is slated to go before a military court-martial this June, and faces life imprisonment if convicted of aiding the enemy, the most serious of the charges against him. On Thursday, however, the Kansas-born pleaded guilty to lesser charges in hopes of a more lenient sentence. Earlier, during this week’s pre-trial hearing, those in the Ft. Meade, Maryland, courtroom were told that Manning hoped releasing intelligence to WikiLeaks would “spark a domestic debate on the role of our military and foreign policy in general.” Last year, WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange credited the materials attributed to Manning with helping end the US war in Iraq.


"If Bradley Manning did as he is accused, he is a hero and invaluable to all of us,” Assange said during a December address penned from London’s Ecuadorian Embassy. “It was WikiLeaks’ revelations — not the actions of President Obama — that forced the US administration out of the Iraq War… By exposing the killing of Iraqi children, WikiLeaks directly motivated the Iraqi government to strip the US military of legal immunity, which in turn forced the US withdrawal.”


Among the materials Manning said he handed over were State Dept. cables, Pentagon logs referred to today as the ‘Iraq and Afghan War Diaries,’ as well as video published by WikiLeaks under the title ‘Collateral Murder.’ With that release, WikiLeaks showed US soldiers onboard an Apache helicopter opening fire on Iraqi civilians, including a Reuters photographer.

Members of the Bradley Manning Support Group protest under the rain during a rally at the entrance of Fort George G. Meade military base in Fort Meade, Maryland (AFP Photo/Mladen Antonov)

"For me, this seemed similar to a child torturing ants with a magnifying glass,” Manning said Thursday of the footage. In regards to the war logs, he said his opinion remains that the releases consisted of “two of the most significant documents of our time.” The cables, he added, “documented backdoor deals and seemingly criminal activity that didn’t seem” to fit with the public’s perception of an ethically-sound America.


“I thought these cables were the perfect example of a need for more open state diplomacy,” he said.


Previously, Col. Lind expressed concern over having Manning read a sworn statement, instead perfering for him only to answer questions while on the stand. “He can try to read it, but I am going to stop him” if the contents are not relevant to being guilty of committing the lesser offenses of entered in the plea, she said.


“He understands his statement and he understands the elements he needs to plead guilty,” Manning’s attorney David Coombs told the judge.


Manning has been detained for over 1,000 days without a formal military trial, and will see the start of his fourth year behind bars this May. The only other time he has spoken publically on the stand was in December 2012, when he testified about the conditions he endured while detained at a military brig in Northern Virginia.


Lind agreed to take 122 days off any eventual sentence for Manning due to the poor treatment. Earlier this week, she dismissed an attempt by the defense to have all charges against Manning dropped over an alleged violation of the ‘speedy trial’ statute.