Friday, April 19, 2013

Refugees with Disabilities from Somalia and South Sudan Receive 2013 Voices of Courage Award



Women’s Refugee Commission urges that displaced persons with disabilities be recognized for their capacities and determination to overcome the odds.
 
Dahabo Hassan Maow
New York, NY, April 16, 2013 – The Women’s Refugee Commission is honoring refugees with disabilities from two of the world’s hotspots – Somalia and South Sudan – at its 2013 Voices of Coverage Awards Luncheon on May 2 in New York City. The Government of Australia will also be recognized for its leadership supporting initiatives that develop the capacity of persons with disabilities to lead full lives and make meaningful contributions to their communities.

At age 14, Dahabo Hassan Maow, lost her leg in rebel crossfire on the way home from the market. Escaping her war-torn country of Somalia, she was unable to get the assistance she needed at two refugee camps in Kenya – standing in line for food and walking long distances for water was virtually impossible with only one leg. But Ms. Maow was determined. She was finally referred to Heshima Kenya, an organization that protects unaccompanied refugee youth in Nairobi. There, she founded an entrepreneurship-training program to help vulnerable girls learn a trade – textile design and production – that they can use to make a living. Now resettled in Minnesota, Ms. Maow serves as an ambassador for Heshima Kenya.

“My advice to women and girls with disabilities is to learn a valuable skill so they can get the respect and credibility they deserve,” said Ms. Maow. “If women and girls can work, they will never be without a place to sleep, food to eat or water to drink.”

Atim Caroline Ogwang, from South Sudan, lost her hearing in a Ugandan refugee camp when she was five years old because she was hungry. As she was searching for food in the bush, ammunition left under a tree exploded, leaving her traumatized and deaf. At age 16, along with a group of deaf South Sudanese refugees, Ms. Ogwang founded the nongovernmental organization South Sudanese Deaf Development Concern. At her organization, she currently focuses on improving access to education and employment for women and girls who are deaf and hard of hearing. Ms. Ogwang’s goal is to qualify as a lawyer and become the first female Member of Parliament in Africa with a hearing impairment.

“We need to establish a foundation for the next generation of women and girls to be seen first as people and second as people with disabilities,” said Ms. Ogwang.

“I want to show the women and girls of Africa that having a disability does not end your life.”

AusAID, Australia’s overseas aid program, is a recognized leader in championing disability-inclusive development and humanitarian work. Enhancing the lives of people with disabilities is one of the priority objectives of Australia’s aid policy. In addition, AusAID’s humanitarian work is fundamental to supporting the broader purpose of the country’s aid program – to help people overcome poverty. AusAID believes that poverty reduction can only be achieved if it reaches and benefits many of the world’s most vulnerable – including people with disabilities.
“Displaced persons with disabilities remain invisible in so many ways,” said Sarah Costa, Executive Director for the Women’s Refugee Commission. “They are socially isolated and rarely consulted when humanitarian programs are designed and implemented. This is why we are proud to be recognizing these incredible women for their perseverance, and the Australian government for its inclusion of persons with disabilities in AusAID’s policies and programs at our Voices of Courage Luncheon on May 2.”

The Women’s Refugee Commission’s Disability Program seeks to advance the rights and dignity of refugees with disabilities. Our global research report was the first to address the critical needs of neglected population. We hold consultations with refugees with disabilities and include them in training and planning workshops for humanitarian agencies, NGO partners and disability organizations around the world. In fact, the Women’s Refugee Commission has just returned from Lebanon where we met with Syrian refugees with newly acquired physical injuries from the conflict as well as persons with developmental delays, hearing and vision impairments. While in the field, we met with humanitarian agencies and local organizations who work with these populations to ensure their inclusion in all aid programs and services.

According to the World Health Organization, an estimated 15 percent of any population is made up of persons with disabilities, with higher proportions in communities that have fled war or natural disasters. This means as many as 6.5 million of the world’s 43.5 million people displaced by conflict live with disabilities.

These individuals are among the most vulnerable and socially excluded groups inany refugee community. They are often invisible, confined to their shelters. Manyare excluded from or unable to access humanitarian aid programs because ofphysical and social barriers or because of negative attitudes and biases. Evenworse, women and girls with disabilities are four to 10 times more likely toexperience a form of sexual violence than their non-disabled peers.

Nancy Deyo
For more information contact
Nancy Deyo at (415) 505-2200 or
Email: NancyD@wrcommission.org

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The Women’s Refugee Commission works to improve the lives and protect the rights of women, children and youth displaced by war, persecution and natural disaster. It is affiliated with and is legally part of the International Rescue Committee (IRC), a non-profit 501(c)(3) organization. For more information, visit
www.womensrefugeecommission.org

An Interview With Our 2013 Voices of Courage Honoree Dahabo Hassan Maow

Dahabo Hassan Maow

Orphaned as an infant in Somalia, Dahabo Hassan Maow lost her leg after she was caught in crossfire at age 14. Unable to access sufficient assistance at the Dadaab and Kakuma refugee camps in Kenya, she was eventually referred to Heshima Kenya, an organization that supports unaccompanied refugee youth in Nairobi. Dahabo helped create the Maisha Collective, an entrepreneurship-training program designed to help vulnerable girls—many who have disabilities of their own—earn and save money. She resettled in Minneapolis, Minnesota, in 2010, which is home to over 50 percent of the U.S. Somali population. Dahabo is a role model for the potential of persons with disabilities to lead full lives.

Where were you born? Tell us about your family.
I was born in Mogadishu, the capital city of Somalia. I never knew my parents or if I have sisters and brothers. I was an orphan from the time I was a small baby. My mother’s friend raised me.

What was it like living in Somalia as a child?
I lived in Mogadishu when I was a young girl. The war was going on, but I didn't know anything else. There was always fighting between tribes. Sometimes people got killed and there were always guns shooting. I remember being scared a lot, but to me the fear seemed normal.

How did you lose your leg? Why did you leave Somalia?
One day when I was 14 years old, I was with my mother's friend coming home from the market. There was crossfire between two rival tribes and we were caught in the middle of it. I was shot in my leg and the doctors had to cut it off above the knee. My mother's friend was killed. I was left alone in the house to care for two children. When their aunt came to get them, I was left behind. I was alone. After that, I decided to leave Somalia.

Tell us about your refugee camp experiences. What are some of the challenges women and girls with disabilities like yours face in these situations?
I made my way to Hagadera camp in Dadaab, Kenya. I tried to get the UN to help me, but no one welcomed me. It is very difficult to get around a refugee camp with one leg on unpaved roads. That is the problem for anyone with my disability. Next, I moved to Nairobi where I lived with a girl who had a small business selling tea. She took me to UNHCR [the UN refugee agency] for help, but they sent me to Kakuma camp. To have a place to sleep or food to eat you have to go to the camps. There is no help for refugees in the city, and it is worse for refugees with disabilities. At Kakuma, I got my registration card. But standing in line for food and walking to get water was almost impossible. The challenges are the same for anyone with only one leg. I did get a prosthetic leg in Kenya, but it did not work and it hurt a lot to walk.

What is Heshima Kenya? Tell us about your experience living there.
I went back to Nairobi and the UNHCR sent me to Heshima Kenya [a nongovernmental organization]. I was the first person to live there. They help support young unaccompanied refugees. The woman who ran Heshima Kenya became like my mother. With food, a bed, water, health care and therapy my life began again. As Heshima Kenya grew, kids came from all over Africa – I felt like I had a family for the first time in my life. Heshima Kenya sent me to learn tailoring and tie-dying, which is my specialty. They paid for me to learn these skills and at the end of my schooling I got a certificate in tailoring.

What is the Maisha Collective? Why is it important for women and girls with disabilities?
The Maisha Collective is a project of Heshima Kenya that I helped found. It is a leadership and business management program for teaching girls to learn tailoring and tie-dying skills. Many of the girls who are there also have disabilities. During the time I was there, I trained three or four girls. Today, there are 20-25 young women and girls who have learned this skill. The Maisha Collective is very important for women and girls with disabilities so they can earn and save money on their own. If they have a trade, they will always be able to survive. Nobody will be able to turn them away.

When did you resettle in the United States and why did you pick Minneapolis as your new home?
I came to the United States in 2010. First I lived in North Dakota, but there were not many Somalis so I was not happy there. Soon after, I moved to Minneapolis where many Somalis live. I believe that Minneapolis is the home of most of the Somalis in the United States. Here you can learn English, you can get a job and there are good schools for your children. In Minneapolis, I am surrounded by my own people.

What advice would you give to other women and girls with disabilities?
I would tell them to get an education and learn a trade so they can earn money on their own. If you have gone to school or you have learned a trade, you will have respect. This respect will give you more confidence. You can become a leader and you will have credibility. If you can work, you will never be without a place to sleep, food to eat or water to drink.

What hopes do you have for Somalia now that there is a democratically elected Somali president for the first time in a generation?
Somalia is still at war after more than 20 years. The country has been at war my whole life. But when our new president was elected in 2012 we were all very happy and excited. We hope now there can finally be peace. Many Somalis are waiting for peace so that they can finally return home.

What are your goals for the future?
Right now I have everything I could ever want. A large community that shares my culture and my religion surrounds me. I am working hard to learn English. I have a husband, my first child on the way, a home and a skill I can use to earn money. In the future, I hope to finally get a leg that works. I hope to become better known in the United States and around the world for my designs.

We will be honoring Dahabo at this year's Voices of Courage Awards Luncheon in New York City on May 2. Our annual luncheon helps us raise funds to improve the lives and protect the rights of refugee women and children around the world.


An Interview With Our 2013 Voices of Courage Honoree Atim Caroline Ogwang


Atim Caroline Ogwang
Born in what is now South Sudan, Atim Caroline Ogwang lost her hearing when she was five when explosives left by the Lord’s Resistance Army rebels detonated when she was picking fruit. She is currently human rights, sign language and gender officer of a nonprofit organization called the Southern Sudan Deaf Development Concern (SSDDC). At SSDDC, Atim Caroline promotes and advocates for deaf girls’ education, organizes deaf women to work towards self-reliance and capacity-building and calls for the full inclusion and participation of women with disabilities in international development programs. Among Atim Caroline’s many talents, she advocates through a performance art called deaf story telling with music.

Where were you born? Tell us about your family.

Soon after I was born in South Sudan, my family became refugees in Uganda. There are eight children in our family – three girls and five boys. I am number seven. I lost both of my parents in the war by the time I turned 10 years old. I was left in the care of my teenage sisters and brothers, all trying to survive in a very harsh environment.

What was your childhood like?

Everything about my childhood seemed normal, just as others normalize poverty, human rights abuses, neglect and oppression. Abductions in the refugee camp were normal. Losing family members was normal. Sleeping on the floor was normal. Waking up hungry and seeing if your neighbors could give you something to eat was normal. I did not even realize I was from South Sudan until I was in primary school and we were divided into Sudanese refugees and Ugandan IDPs [internally displaced people].

How did you become deaf? Were you treated differently growing up because you were deaf? If so, how?

When I was 5 years old, I had gone with some other children to look for fruit in the wild – hunger and idle time led children to do anything to find something to eat. I survived an explosion of ammunition that had been abandoned by the Lord’s Resistance Army under a mango tree. I was not physically injured, but the trauma stayed with me for weeks. I could not speak or hear. I had pain and bleeding in my ears, but no medication was provided to save my ears. Becoming deaf brought a halt to my education for two years until a church supported me to join a deaf school. Unfortunately, everyone thought educating the deaf was a waste of time and resources.

What are some of the challenges women and girls who are deaf or have other disabilities face in South Sudan?

Women and girls with disabilities face many challenges, including lack of information and education, no sign language interpretation services, and even parental neglect. Many girls with disabilities get pregnant outside of marriage and live with their parents. Most deaf girls and women have not completed secondary school education. More than 80 percent have jobs such as cleaning offices and doing washing or domestic chores. Girls who are blind suffer stress walking to school because of the traffic on the roads. In addition, there is a lack of services such as computer technology for the blind.

Why did you found the Southern Sudan Death Development Concern (SSDDC)? Tell us about your NGO.

We founded the SSDDC NGO because we were not happy with the National Sudanese Deaf Association – they never developed sign language for the deaf in Southern Sudan. Our NGO provides sign language training, adult literacy in the deaf community, vocational training, deaf rights advocacy in education, representation in government and access to information. We also try to help deaf refugees in other countries to find their parents. We coordinate these activities with War Disabled, Widows, and Orphans Commission and the Ministry of Gender, Child and Social Welfare.

Tell us about your job at SSDDC.

Before my current job, I was an advocate for deaf education in Pariliament. I worked to get sign language, human rights for deaf children and deaf literacy education issue included in the South Sudan Constitution. Now, I am the Human Rights, Sign Language and Gender Officer. I advocate for deaf girls' education, organize deaf women to work towards self-reliance and share ideas about the right of inclusion and participation of women with disabilities in international development programs. Today there are many women's organizations that include women with disabilities in their agenda. It is challenging, but they respect me because I believe in myself and advocate without fear.

Your work is rights-based and focused on inclusion. Why is this important for women and girls with disabilities?

It is important to include women and girls with disabilities because even with affirmative action there is a tendency to forget the needs of women with disabilities. They cannot compete in the normal job market, and this causes discrimination. The poorest of the poor are women with disabilities. The least educated are women with disabilities. When girls get scholarships, those with disabilities are not considered. Support for women to become self-reliant exists but programs do not consider women with disabilities. This is what needs correction.

What advice would you give women and girls who are deaf or have other disabilities?

My advice for women and girls with hearing impairments is to stand up for your rights. If it doesn't happen for us now, we need to fight for the generation that comes after us. We need to establish the foundation so that women and girls will be seen as people first and second as a person with a disability. Get an education if you have the chance. Help our leaders see that we are interested in studying and encourage young girls to go to school. No one wants to be discriminated against.

What is life like in South Sudan now that it is an independent nation?

Most important, we are now free. What is missing is the belief in the capacity of persons with disabilities and women with disabilities. Because war is possible again, there is a lack of services. NGOs have programs and activities for regular people, but not for those with disabilities to become self-reliant or start businesses of their own. There is a high illiteracy level among persons with disabilities because of the war.
What role do you believe women and girls should have in South Sudan's future?

Women and girls are central to the development of South Sudan. They should be able to compete for jobs, set up their own businesses and have families. Women and girls with disabilities should even teach normal people and become caretakers of the people who now take care of them.

What are your goals for the future?

My goal is to become a lawyer and to use my education to advocate for the rights of persons with disabilities across the African continent. I want to lead by example to show others that having a disability does not end your life. I believe I will be the first female Member of Parliament in Africa with a hearing impairment


9 killed by gunman in Kenyan city near Somali border; police blame al-Qaida-allied militants



By Associated Press, Updated: Friday, April 19, 3:36 AM

NAIROBI, Kenya — A police chief says that a masked gunman believed to be a member of an al-Qaida-linked Somalia militant group stormed a hotel in a Kenyan city near the border with Somalia and opened fire with an assault rifle, killing nine people.

Vitalis Okumu said Friday that the Thursday night attack could have been in retaliation for military activity carried out by African Union forces, which Kenya is a part of, against al-Shabab militants in Somalia.

Garissa lies near the border with Somalia and has suffered a string of attacks over the last 18 months by gunmen believed to be associated with al-Shabab.

Thursday, April 18, 2013

4 UK men jailed for toy-car terror plot

This is an undated handout photo issued by London's Metropolitan Police of top row left to right, Zahid Iqbal, Mohammed Sharfaraz Ahmed and bottom row left to right Umar Arshad and Syed Farhan Hussain. The four men have been jailed in Britain for discussing plans to carry out a terrorist attack using homemade guns and bombs. they pleaded guilty in March to engaging in conduct in preparation for acts of terrorism. (AP Photo/Metropolitan Police
By PAISLEY DODDS and CASSANDRA VINOGRAD | Associated Press

LONDON (AP) — The terror plot involved targeting British reserve troops using a toy-car packed with explosives.

But investigators said Thursday Britain's domestic spy agency of MI5 and police were able to stop Zahid Iqbal, Mohammed Sharfaraz Ahmed, Umar Arshad and Syed Farhan Hussain before they could launch the deadly attack.

Iqbal and Ahmed were given extended sentences of 16 years and 3 months, which means they will be in jail for more than 11 years and put on parole for the rest of the time. Arshad was sentenced to more than six years in jail, while Hussain received more than five years.

The British men — aged between 22 and 31 — pleaded guilty in March to engaging in conduct in preparation for acts of terrorism.

The four were arrested a year ago in the town of Luton, north of London, after an operation by police and the MI5.

Prosecutors said the Britons downloaded files containing instructions for an attack, bought survival equipment and collected money for terrorist purposes. They also admitted "facilitating, planning and encouraging" overseas travel for terrorist purposes.

The men were recorded discussing sending a remote-controlled toy car carrying a homemade bomb under the gates of an army reservist center in Luton and speaking of using instructions in an al-Qaida manual to make an improvised explosive device.

"Using a toy-car as an explosive device may seem childish, but if they had succeeded in pulling this off, the consequences could have resulted in deaths and injuries, much like we have seen in recent days in Boston," said a British security official with knowledge of the investigation and who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to be named.

The court heard that Iqbal had direct contacts with a Pakistani operative and helped Ahmed travel to Pakistan in 2011 for terror training.

Prosecutors also said the men gained inspiration from the 2010 first issue of "Inspire," an online English-language magazine from Yemen's al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula and linked to the U.S.-born militant cleric Anwar al-Awlaki. The militant leader was killed in 2011 in a drone strike.

The same online magazine gave instructions on how to build a "pressure cooker" bomb — the same type of explosive device that was used in Monday's attack at the Boston Marathon when three people were killed and more than 100 were wounded.

Stories of casualties in Boston Marathon bombing

Associated Press/Rodrique Ngow - This image from video shows Boston Marathon bombing victim Kevin White during an interview with the Associated Press on Wednesday evening, April 17, 2013 soon after Kevin White was released from Boston Medical Center, where he was treated for injuries he suffered in Monday's blast. Kevin White had just left a restaurant with his parents when the first of two bombs that hit the Boston Marathon exploded about 10 feet away. The force of the blast, he said Wednesday, was so strong that it slammed them to the ground, breaking some of his mother's bones and tearing his father's right foot so badly surgeons had to amputate it. (AP Photo/Rodrique Ngow)
By The Associated Press | Associated Press

The twin bombs at the Boston Marathon killed Lu Lingzi, a 23-year-old Boston University student from China; 8-year-old spectator Martin Richard; and 29-year-old spectator Krystle Campbell. But it also injured more than 170 people: runners, couples, spectators, children. Some are in grave condition; some lost limbs or senses; all their lives will be forever touched by the bombings. Here are some of their stories.

AARON HERN: A TOUGH COOKIE

Eleven-year-old Aaron Hern was there with his father, Alan, and little sister, Abby, to cheer on his mother, Katherine, in her first Boston Marathon when the bomb went off. After initially becoming separated, Alan found his son lying injured on the ground with leg wounds.

"He was conscious, he talked to me and said, 'My leg really hurts, daddy,' but he was being pretty brave," Alan Hern told KGO-TV.

The family is from Martinez, Calif., and Alan Hern is the Alhambra High School varsity football coach, KGO reported.

Aaron remained in critical condition at Boston Children's Hospital on Wednesday and underwent three to four hours of surgery on his leg, the hospital said.

His mother said in a note posted online by Kiwanis Club of Martinez that Aaron was trying harder and harder to communicate through a touchpad. She said it was stressful because he was starting to remember everything and getting upset.

The mother of Aaron's best friend, Katherine Chapman, told The San Francisco Chronicle that Aaron was an outgoing and fun-loving kid.

"A tough cookie, an athlete and a scholar. He gets good grades and participates in every sport and is good at everything he does. He's one of those kids that everybody loves," she said.

His 12th birthday is May 1.

PATRICK AND JESSICA DOWNES: NEWLYWEDS

Patrick and Jessica Downes married in August. According to an email sent to friends, Patrick had surgery Wednesday and is out of intensive care, while Jessica was in surgery. Both lost their left leg below the knee, and Jessica was in danger of losing her remaining foot.

Friends who set up a page at GiveForward.com to raise money for the couple's expenses said they first started dating in 2006.

Patrick graduated from Boston College and was so well-behaved in high school that he was nicknamed "Jesus." They described him as the "ultimate Boston boy."

"He has that accent that makes it impossible to tell if he's saying 'parking' or 'packing,' he's no more than two degrees of separation from Whitey Bulger (or so he claims), and he cried his eyes out when the Sox finally won the World Series," the site said.

Jessica, described as a sassy California girl, is a nurse at Massachusetts General Hospital.

"She has the spirit of a lion," the site said.

A spokesman for GiveForward.com said the page got so many hits Wednesday that it crashed.

JARROD CLOWERY: 'GET INTO THE STREET'

Jarrod Clowery and his friends were cheering on spectators when he heard the first explosion.

"I got this feeling that we need to get into the street," Clowery said.

Clowery, 35, a carpenter, hopped over one of the metal barricades that separates spectators on the sidewalk from runners on the course when the second blast went off behind him.

"Because I was elevated on the railing I think I avoided major, major injury," Clowery said, adding that his friends were injured much more severely.

Clowery said his hearing was diminished by about 85 percent. He has shrapnel embedded in the back of his leg and suffered flash burns.

"The Lord was watching over me, somebody was watching over me," Clowery said. "And I feel very blessed."

JOHN ODOM: CHEERING HIS DAUGHTER

John Odom's daughter, Nicole Reis, was running the marathon as a member of the New England Patriots Charitable Foundation Marathon team, and he was there to support her. Her husband, Matt Reis, is the goalie for the Major League Soccer team the New England Revolution.

Odom was around 10 feet away from the first bomb when it went off, Matt Reis told reporters at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough on Wednesday, where he visited to thank teammates for their support. Odom remained in critical condition and had undergone three surgeries in about 40 hours, he said.

"He hasn't really stabilized yet, and we're still hoping," he said. "He is progressing a little bit, but we're talking about footsteps here and not very big strides."

HEATHER ABBOTT: BEST FRIEND TURNED, FOUND HER GONE

Heather Abbott, of Newport, R.I., was entering a bar with friends as the bomb went off. Her best friend, Jason Geremia, told WJAR-TV that everyone ran out the back. Once he got there, he realized Abbott wasn't with him. He turned to go back when he saw a bouncer carrying her down the stairs.

"I said, 'Give her to me. Give her to me.' And he was like, 'Do you know her?' I said, 'Yes, yes. That's my best friend.' I said, 'Give her to me.' He said, 'No, no, no. Look at her leg.' It was very tough to see that."

Her leg was severely injured. Another friend took off his belt, and they used it as a tourniquet.

Geremia spent much of Monday and Tuesday at the hospital, along with Abbott's parents, who are from Lincoln, R.I.

"It's very, very hard to see her," Geremia said.

FRIENDS COME TOGETHER TO HELP PAY FAMILY'S MEDICAL BILL
S

Kevin White says the toughest part of being injured in the Boston Marathon bombing was not being able to find his parents.

White, 35, who lives in Boston and Chicago, suffered shrapnel injuries. His mother, Mary Jo, broke several bones and his father, Bill, had his right foot amputated. They had just left a restaurant when the bomb exploded about 10 feet away.

White, who was released from Boston Medical Center Wednesday, says he's looking forward to reuniting with his parents, who were sent to another hospital.

Some close family friends have an online fundraising drive to help the White family pay some of the hefty medical bills they are expected to confront during the months.

The initiative had generated more than $18,400 by late Wednesday, reaching in two days nearly its original goal of raising $20,000 in a month.

White said his family is very grateful, but urged well-wishers to also donate to The One Fund Boston, the charity established to help all families affected by the bombings.

Madaxweynaha Somaliland oo Xalay la kulmay Ra’iisal Wasaaraha Ingiriiska






London - Raysal Wasaaraha Dalka Ingiriiska ayaa caawa xafiiskiisa Number 10 Downing Street ku qaabilay madaxweynaha Somaliland Mudane Axmed Maxamed Maxamuud (Siilaanyo) oo socdaal ku jooga dalka Ingiriiska.


Sidaasna waxa lagu sheegay war-saxaafadeed uu caawa soo saaray Afhayeenka madaxtooyadda mudane Axmed Saleebaan Dhuxul, waxaana labada Hoggaamiye kulankoodaasi ay diirada ku saareen sidii labada dal ay wada shaqayn dhow iyo wax-wada qabsigooda u sii adkayn lahaayeen.

War-saxaafadeedkaasina waxa uu u dhignaa sidan:-“Madaxweynaha JSL, Mudane, Axmed Maxamed Maxamuud (Siilaanyo) iyo weftigii uu hogaaminaayey ee ku sugnaa maalmahanba Dalka Ingiriiska gaar ahaan Magaalada London ayaa caawa fiidkii la kulmay Ra’iisal wasaaraha Dalkaasi Ingiriiska David Cameron.

Kulankan oo ahaa mid ay ku lafa-gureen labada dal, wada shaqaynta iyo xidhiidhka soo jireenka ah ee ka dhexeeya, ayaa madaxweynaha Jamhuuriyada Somaliland oo kulankaasi ku dheeraday sidii loo ilaalin lahaa wada jirka iyo wada shaqaynta ay labadan dal mudada dheer soo wadeen iyo sidii laysaga kaashan lahaa xoojinta iyo adkaynta nabad-gelyada geeska afrika, horu-marka iyo dhaqaalaha.

David Cameron oo isna madaxweynaha uga mahad-naqay sida qiimaha leh ee ay Somaliland marwalba isaga xil-saarto adkaynta iyo wada shaqaynta ka dhaxaysa labadan dal, ha noqoto dhanka ammaanka mandaqada geeska afrika iyo xidhiidhka caalamiga ahba.

Sidoo kale waxa uu ra’iisal wasaare David Camaron Madaxweynaha Jamhuuriyada Somaliland Mudane Axmed Maxamed Maxamuud (Siilaanyo) u soo bandhigay ahmiyada uu leeyahay shirka London lagu qaban-doono ee Somaliland iyo Soomaaliya la doonayo in lagu wada hadashiiyo oo uu ku nuux-nuuxsaday ra’iisal wasaaruhu in ay Somaliland faa’iido weyni ugu jirto ka soo qayb-galkaasi, ingiriiskana ay muhiim u tahay.

Kulankan waxa Madaxweynaha kulankan ku wehelinayay Wasiirka Arrimaha Dibeda JSL. Dr. Maxamed CabdilaahI Cumar, Wasiirka Madaxtooyada JSL, Mudane Xirsi Cali Xaaji Xasan iyo Safiirka Somaliland u fadhiya Ingiriiska, Ambasador Cali Aadan Cawaale. Dhinaca Raisal Wasaarahana waxa ku wehelinaayey Wasiirka Arrimaha Dibeda Ingiriiska Mr. William Hague.”