Saturday, July 20, 2013

THE WORST PLACE IN THE WORLD: See What Life Is Like In Somalia + SHOCKING PHOTOS SPEAKS



Worse than Congo, Sudan, South Sudan, Chad, Yemen, and Afghanistan,  Somalia is the most failed state in the world, according to the annual ranking by Foreign Policy and The Global Fund For Peace.


Located in the Horn of Africa, the majority Sunni Muslim country suffers from an ineffective government, famine, disease, piracy, militant extremism, and frequent external intervention.

No wonder it has topped the list of the most failed states every year since 2008.

 

We have to start with the famine. The UN reports that famine in Somalia, which officially lasted from 2010-2012, killed 260,000 people.







1/3 of all children younger than 5 are underweight.

 Source: CIA World Factbook.
 


For every 1,000 children, 180 will never reach the age of 5.


Famine struck in the early 90s as well, claiming 220,000 lives.

Source: Famine Early Warning Systems Network.


Back then, rampant tribalism and infighting led to extreme food shortages, food hoarding by armed factions, and eventually civil war.

 Source: New York Times.

The turmoil spurned U.S. and international intervention, culminating in the Battle of Mogadishu in 1993, when two Blackhawk helicopters were shot down and 18 U.S troops were killed.


Source: Defense Technical Information Center. 


20 years later, there's little improvement to show for the foreign intervention.


Source: New York Times.


The life expectancy is just 51 years.


 Source: CIA World Factboob.

14.6% of women have access to contraception.


Source: CIA World Factbook.


The average woman in Somalia gives birth to 6 children.


Source: CIA World Factbook.

The maternal mortality rate is through the roof. 1,000 mothers die per 100,000 live births.

 Source: CIA World Factbook.


Infant mortality is even worse. 101.9 children die per 1,000 live births.

Source: CIA World Factbook.



There is a high risk of infectious disease, including rabies and hepatitis.

 Source: CIA World Factbook.


Somalia's key export commodities are livestock, bananas, animal hides, fish, charcoal, and scrap metal.

 Source: CIA World Factbook.

Terrorism is also a key export.

 Source: CIA World Factbook.


The key terrorist group is Al-Shabaab, which has been linked to Al-Qaeda
 


Here, the president of Somalia's Olympic committee lies fatally injured after a suicide bombing last year.

 Source: Reuters.



The African Union has had a peacekeeping force there since 2007.



But violence is rampant, with tribal factions, military elements from Somalia and abroad, and Islamic extremists constantly doing battle.




Somalia is well known as the home country of the pirates who terrorize the key trade waters near the Horn of Africa.




The international community has devoted resources in the region to combat piracy, like these South Koran commandos raiding this ship.

 Source: Time.



Meanwhile, the Gross Domestic Product per capita is just $600.

 Source: CIA World Factbook.



Only 29% of the population has access to improved drinking water.

 Source: CIA World Factbook.



37.8% of the population over the age of 15 can read and write.

 Source: CIA World Factbook.



For women, that number drops to 25.8%.

 Source: CIA World Factbook.



The average child spends just 3 years in school. 49% of children contribute to the labor force.

 Source: CIA World Factbook.



Yet in spite of the hardships and seemingly insurmountable obstacles, Gallup recently found that 94% of people in the region are optimistic about the future. There's nowhere to go but up.



Source: Business Insider.

Friday, July 19, 2013

From Benghazi to Boston: The state of the jihad


Vice President Joe Biden, left, President Barack Obama, and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, second from right, watch the mission to capture Osama bin Laden from the Situation Room in the White House on May 1, 2011. Click through to see reactions from around the world following the death of the al Qaeda leader.

By Peter Bergen, CNN National Security Analyst

Editor's note: This is one in a series of stories and opinion pieces previewing the upcoming Aspen Security Forum. Security Clearance is a media sponsor of the event, which is taking place from July 17 to 20 in Aspen, Colorado. Peter Bergen is CNN's national security analyst and the author of "Manhunt: The Ten-Year Search for bin Laden, from 9/11 to Abbottabad."

                                 STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Peter Bergen: Benghazi and Boston don't alter reality about jihad
  • He says al Qaeda central is in trouble and that it offers no solutions to regional problems
  • Bergen says some affiliates of al Qaeda show life but don't pose major threat yet to West
(CNN) - Every July in the lush, green mountains of Aspen, Colorado, many of the top present and former U.S. national security officials and other experts gather to discuss how the war against al Qaeda and its allies is going.

Ahead of last year's Aspen conference, I wrote a piece for CNN provocatively titled "Time to declare victory: Al Qaeda is defeated." And I then spoke on a panel at Aspen where I tried to make the case for this position.

I'm not sure too many of the folks in Aspen were convinced. (If they had been, it would hardly seem necessary to travel back to Aspen again this year!)

Since last year's Aspen conference, a group of men only very loosely aligned with al Qaeda attacked the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi, Libya, killing four U.S. diplomats and CIA contractors.

And in April, the Tsarnaev brothers whose family originated in the Caucasus -- one an American citizen and the other a US resident -- were accused of detonating pressure-cooker bombs in Boston that were based on a design that al Qaeda's Yemeni affiliate had widely distributed on the Internet.

The bombing killed three and wounded more than 250 and brought ordinary life to a screeching halt in one of the nation's largest cities.

Certainly the attacks in Libya and Boston were victories for "Binladenism," the ideological movement that al Qaeda has spawned.

Indeed, the New Mexico-born cleric Anwar Awlaki who was a leader of al-Qaeda's Yemeni affiliate before he was killed in a US drone strike in 2011, was influential not only on the Tsarnaev brothers who possessed some of his writings but also on 22 other US-based jihadist extremists, according to a count by the New America Foundation.

However, the attacks in Libya and Boston don't really change the prognosis that al Qaeda, the organization that attacked the U.S. on 9/11, is going the way of the VHS tape.

Al Qaeda itself hasn't carried out a successful attack in the West since the suicide bombings in London in 2005 that killed 52. And the terrorist group hasn't carried out an attack in the United States since 9/11. Nor have any of its affiliated groups.

The killings of several high-level al Qaeda militants -- foremost among them the organization's founder and leader, Osama bin Laden, during a Navy SEAL raid on his compound in May 2011 -- have dealt a serious blow to al Qaeda's core leadership.

A few months after bin Laden's death, a U.S. drone strike killed Atiyah Abdul Rahman, who had become al Qaeda's No. 2 commander after Ayman al-Zawahiri had assumed bin Laden's leadership role.

Rahman was one of 30 leaders of al Qaeda in Pakistan who have been killed in CIA drone strikes over the past five years, according to a count by the New America Foundation.

Al Qaeda "Central," in short, remains on life support.

A second chance with the Arab Spring

However, the unrest that swept the Arab world in the wake of the 2011 Arab Spring has provided jihadist extremist groups with more room to operate and injected large amounts of arms into the region.

Al Qaeda affiliates subsequently gained significant footholds in Libya, Syria, Yemen and Mali. But the bulk of jihadist violence in those countries is focused on purely domestic targets. And in countries such as Mali and Yemen, jihadist militants have overplayed their hands and have suffered real reverses in the past year or so.

As a result, the attacks by al Qaeda-aligned groups on the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi in September and on the BP gas facility in Algeria, at the beginning of this year represent the current state of jihadist anti-Western capabilities abroad.

Worldwide, al Qaeda affiliates and allied groups aren't a major threat to the West:

-- Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula remains a real threat to Yemen, but despite its strong interest in U.S. targets, the group has not attempted any serious anti-American attack since its failed October 2010 plot to plant bombs hidden in printer cartridges on cargo planes destined for the United States. However, AQAP's capable chief bomb maker, Ibrahim al-Asiri, remains at large.

-- A long-term safe haven for the al Qaeda affiliate in Syria known as Jabhat al-Nusra, ( "the Victory Front") could create an organization with the capability to attack the West. For the moment, the group, which is widely regarded as the most effective fighting force in Syria, is focused on overthrowing the regime of Bashar al-Assad, a project that may take years to achieve.

That said, this group is gaining substantial territory in Syria; is attracting thousands of foreign fighters, including hundreds from the West; and might eventually turn its attention to Western targets.

-- Al Qaeda in Iraq has also become deeply involved in the civil war in Syria. It has also successfully leveraged a growing sectarian divide in Iraq to garner support from the Sunni community and is, once again, a real threat to the stability of Iraq.

-- Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb and its splinter groups have little ability to target the West but still pose a threat to Western interests in their areas of operation. AQIM and its splinter groups remain active in parts of Algeria, where they attacked the BP gas facility in early 2013, and northern Mali, where they launched an offensive against the government alongside separatist Tuareg rebels in 2012. However, AQIM and its splinter groups were pushed out of major Malian cities by a French military intervention earlier this year

-- In the past two years, the Somali al Qaeda affiliate, Al-Shabaab, has lost substantial territory and influence in Somalia. While Al-Shabaab remains a potential threat to Western targets because of the group's influence among the Somali diaspora in the West, recent battlefield defeats have forced the group to focus internally.

Al-Shabaab has never conducted a successful attack in the West and has not conducted a mass-casualty attack outside of Somalia since it carried out bombings in Kampala, Uganda, in 2010.

-- Islamist militant groups remain a threat to stability in Libya in the post-Moammar Gadhafi era. Ansar al-Sharia's loose network of Islamist militants have conducted attacks and gained some legitimacy among the local populace in Benghazi. Ansar al-Sharia is not, however, organizationally or operationally linked to al Qaeda, and it operates only within Libya.

-- The Pakistani Taliban, also known as Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan, is largely a threat to Pakistan, Afghanistan, NATO soldiers and Western interests in the Afghanistan-Pakistan region. It has attempted only two attacks outside the region. TTP has not conducted an attack on American soil since it directed Faisal Shahzad to carry out a car bombing that proved unsuccessful on May 1, 2010, in Times Square.

-- The Afghan Taliban continue to lead a potent insurgency in Afghanistan, launching persistent attacks against U.S. forces, as well as military, diplomatic, and aid facilities. They remain in control of significant swaths of land in rural Afghanistan, and will continue to threaten Afghan stability after the NATO combat mission ends in December 2014. However, they have shown no interest in mounting an attack against the U.S. homeland.

-- The Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba has not conducted a mass-casualty attack outside of the Afghanistan-Pakistan region since its lethal rampage in Mumbai in 2008. Similarly, the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan and the Islamic Jihad Union have not showed an interest in or ability to engage in international terrorism since an IJU-linked terrorism cell was broken up in Sauerland, Germany, in 2007.

-- Because of continued government crackdowns throughout Southeast Asia, the once-virulent threat posed by the al Qaeda aligned regional terrorist group Jemaah Islamiyah has decreased significantly over the past few years.

Terror groups have local preoccupations

Given the weaknesses and the local preoccupations of the terrorist groups described in this story, many U.S. counterterrorism officials believe the chances of a large-scale, catastrophic terrorist attack in the United States by al Qaeda or an al Qaeda-affiliated or inspired organization are quite small.

Also, the long-term prognosis for most of these terrorist groups is poor because they have all tended to kill many Muslim civilians, and they offer no political or economic ideas to cure the real problems of much of the Islamic world.

However, continued unrest throughout the greater Middle East, especially the current turmoil in Egypt, the rising tensions across the region between Sunnis and Shia, the continuing Syrian civil war and the uncertain future of Afghanistan after U.S. and NATO combat troops are withdrawn in December 2014 are all potential wild cards that could create an environment that gives al Qaeda and allied groups opportunities to resuscitate themselves.

And at home, the Boston Marathon bombings remind us that the United States still faces a threat from disaffected individuals inspired by al Qaeda's ideology and who often radicalize in the online world.

Although they are difficult to detect, these individuals are also quite unlikely to be capable of perpetrating an attack even remotely on the scale of 9/11.

Ex-CIA chief: What Edward Snowden did


Snowden will likely be most damaging leaker in American history
 
Some did it for the money, some did it for idealism, others didn't do it at all. The U.S. has seen a number of high profile leak scandals including the Pentagon Papers during the administration of President Richard Nixon. Click through to see more high-profile intelligence leaking cases.
By Michael Hayden, CNN Terrorism Analyst

Editor's note: Gen. Michael V. Hayden, a former NSA director who was appointed by President George W. Bush as CIA director in 2006 and served until February 2009, is a principal with the Chertoff Group, a security consulting firm. He serves on the boards of several defense firms and is a distinguished visiting professor at George Mason University.

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Michael Hayden: Snowden will likely be most damaging leaker in American history
  • He says the large trove of data reveals how America collects much of its intelligence
  • Hayden says U.S. economic rivals will use it to disadvantage American companies
  • He says other nations will doubt whether the U.S. can do anything in secret

(CNN) -- Edward Snowden will likely prove to be the most costly leaker of American secrets in the history of the Republic.

I know that we have had our share of spies.

Benedict Arnold was bent on betraying the garrison at West Point to the British during the Revolution. Klaus Fuchs and Julius and Ethel Rosenberg ferreted out nuclear secrets for the Russians. Aldrich Ames and Robert Hanssen identified American penetrations for ultimate execution by the Soviets.

We have also had our share of leakers.

Daniel Ellsberg copied thousands of pages of documents related to the Vietnam War. Bradley Manning is accused of indiscriminately scoured the Defense Department's SIPRNET (Secret Internet Protocol Router Network) for all manner of military reports and diplomatic cables.

But Snowden is in a class by himself.

The secrets that Arnold wanted to betray fit into the heel of the boot of his British case officer. The "atom bomb" spies reported out using secret ink. Ellsberg was limited to the number of documents he could physically Xerox. Manning, although fully empowered by digital media, had access only to a secret level network housing largely tactical information.

Snowden fled to China with several computers' worth of data from NSANET, one of the most highly classified and sensitive networks in American intelligence. The damage is potentially so great that NSA has taken one of its most respected senior operations officers off mission tasks to lead the damage assessment effort.

In general terms, it's already clear Snowden's betrayal hurts in at least three important ways.

First, there is the undeniable operational effect of informing adversaries of American intelligence's tactics, techniques and procedures. Snowden's disclosures go beyond the "what" of a particular secret or source. He is busily revealing the "how" of American collection.

The Guardian newspaper's Glenn Greenwald, far more deserving of the Justice Department's characterization of a co-conspirator than Fox's James Rosen ever was, claims that Snowden has documents that comprise "basically the instruction manual for how the NSA is built. ... [To prove] what he was saying was true, he had to take ... very sensitive, detailed blueprints of how the NSA does what they do."

Greenwald has disputed the notion that he aided Snowden, telling David Gregory on NBC's "Meet the Press": "The assumption in your question, David, is completely without evidence, the idea I've aided and abetted him in any way."

And Michael Clemente, Fox News' executive vice president of news, has said, "we are outraged to learn ... that James Rosen was named a criminal co-conspirator for simply doing his job as a reporter."

Greenwald: Snowden is 'the classically responsible whistle-blower'

Absent "rogue" U.S. action to silence him, Snowden has promised not to reveal this data, but there are already reports of counterterrorism targets changing their communications patterns. And I would lose all respect for China's Ministry of State Security and Russia's FSB if they have not already fully harvested Snowden's digital data trove.

As former director of CIA, I would claim that the top 20% of American intelligence -- that exquisite insight into an enemy's intentions -- is generally provided by human sources. But as a former director of NSA, I would also suggest that the base 50% to 60% of American intelligence day in and day out is provided by signals intelligence, the kinds of intercepted communications that Snowden has so blithely put at risk.

But there is other damage, such as the undeniable economic punishment that will be inflicted on American businesses for simply complying with American law.

Others, most notably in Europe, will rend their garments in faux shock and outrage that these firms have done this, all the while ignoring that these very same companies, along with their European counterparts, behave the same way when confronted with the lawful demands of European states.

The real purpose of those complaints is competitive economic advantage, putting added burdens on or even disqualifying American firms competing in Europe for the big data and cloud services that are at the cutting edge of the global IT industry. Or, in the case of France, to slow negotiations on a trans- Atlantic trade agreement that threatens the privileged position of French agriculture, outrage more based on protecting the production of cheese than preventing any alleged violation of privacy.

The third great harm of Snowden's efforts to date is the erosion of confidence in the ability of the United States to do anything discreetly or keep anything secret.

Manning's torrent of disclosures certainly caused great harm, but there was at least the plausible defense that this was a one-off phenomenon, a regrettable error we're aggressively correcting.

Snowden shows that we have fallen short and that the issue may be more systemic rather than isolated. At least that's what I would fear if I were a foreign intelligence chief approached by the Americans to do anything of import.

Snowden seems undeterred by any of these consequences. After all, he believes he is acting for a higher good -- an almost romantic attachment to the merits of absolute transparency -- and he seems indifferent to the legitimacy of any claims of national security.

The appropriate balance between liberty and security has bedeviled free peoples, including Americans, for centuries. But it takes a special kind of arrogance for this young man to believe that his moral judgment on the dilemma suddenly trumps that of two (incredibly different) presidents, both houses of the U.S. Congress, both political parties, the U.S. court system and more than 30,000 of his co-workers.

Arrogant or not, Snowden has thrust into public view sensitive and controversial espionage activities. So what of his facts, fictions and fears and of the national debate that he claims he intended to stimulate?

Spanish hostages freed from Somalia





Montserrat Serra (L) and Blanca Thiebaut (R) were driven by their abductors to Somalia
Two Spanish aid workers kidnapped in Kenya nearly two years ago and held over the border in Somali have been freed, their employer has said.

Medecins Sans Frontieres said the two women were both "safe and healthy and keen to join their loved ones".

Montserrat Serra and Blanca Thiebaut were abducted from Dadaab refugee camp in October 2011.
Following their abduction and those of other hostages, Kenya sent troops into Somalia to battle Islamist militants.

In a statement, MSF said it was with great relief that the organisation was able to confirm the women's release.

"MSF wishes to thank everyone involved in securing their safe release," it said, without giving further details about how they were freed.

"As we are still working on the return of the two girls to their homes, we ask you to respect their need for privacy at this time."

The women were kidnapped on 13 October 2011 by gunmen who opened fire on their vehicle inside the Dadaab refugee camp complex, shooting and wounding their Kenyan driver.

Dadaab, said to be the world's largest refugee camp, houses some 500,000 people who have fled years of conflict and drought across the border in Somalia.

Both women were working as logisticians for MSF in Dadaab.

Ms Serra, a qualified teacher from Girona in Spain, had been working in Kenya for two months before she was kidnapped. She had previously worked on aid projects in Latin America and Yemen.

An agricultural engineer by training, Ms Thiebaut from Madrid had not long finished a degree at the London School of Economics at the time of her abduction.

Kenya accused the al-Qaeda-aligned group al-Shabab of being behind their kidnapping and a spate of others in 2011, thus threatening the country's security.

It sent troops into Somalia to pursue them and later seized most of the border region from al-Shabab.
Its soldiers in Somalia have now been absorbed into the African Union (AU) force which is helping the weak Somali government.

Although the AU and Somali government have driven al-Shabab from most major cities, its fighters still control smaller towns and rural areas in central and southern Somalia and they sometimes launch attacks in government-controlled territory.

Source: BBC

TENDER NOTICE – REQUEST FOR EXPRESSION OF INTEREST (EOI) – Construction of 125 Low Cost Housing Units in Berbera, Somaliland



TENDER NOTICE – REQUEST FOR EXPRESSION OF INTEREST (EOI) – EOI/UNON/13/033
 
BENEFICIARY COUNTRY:  Somaliland  
DESCRIPTION: Construction of 125 Low Cost Housing Units in Berbera,Somaliland
DATE OF THIS EOI:                                    Tuesday 09 July 2013             
CLOSING DATE FOR RECIEPT OF EOI:       Friday 26 July 2013

TENDER NOTICE – REQUEST FOR EXPRESSION OF INTEREST (EOI) – Construction of 150 Low Cost Housing Units in Boroma, Somaliland

TENDER NOTICE – REQUEST FOR EXPRESSION OF INTEREST (EOI)–EOI/UNON/13/032


BENEFICIARY COUNTRY: Somaliland 

DESCRIPTION: Construction of 150 Low Cost Housing Units in Boroma, Somaliland

DATE OF THIS EOI:                Tuesday 9 July 2013

CLOSING DATE FOR RECIEPT OF EOI: Friday 26 July 2013

Description of Requirements:

UNON on behalf of UN-HABITAT seeks the interest of qualified firms to participate in the upcoming solicitation exercise for the provision of Construction of 150 Low Cost Housing Units in Boroma Town, Somaliland. The works are being carried out under the 2nd Phase of the Project “Shelter Provision, Reintegration and Improved Livelihoods for Returnees and IDPs in 3 Towns in Somaliland”, implemented by UN-Habitat with financial support from the Government of Japan.                         

The scope of works consists of the construction of 150 core housing units, with 3 rooms and a built-up area of  10 x 9 meters ( 90 square meters) each, inclusive of kitchen, sanitary facilities, water tank court-yard, and veranda. The works will be carried out at a dedicated resettlement area, South-East of Boroma Town.

The work includes excavation, site preparation, concrete work, compaction, form work, reinforcement, wall and roof construction, and supply of construction materials.

Please note that this notice does not constitute a solicitation and UNON reserves the right to change or cancel this requirement at any time in the EOI or ensuing tender process.

Eligibility

Eligible Contractors must meet the following qualification criteria:

a)      Valid certificate of registration by the Somaliland Ministry of Public Works, Transport and Housing.

b)      Registration at the Boroma Municipal Authority / Current operational Business License.

c)      Confirmation of an established office and/or construction yard in Boroma (or demonstrated access/ability to establish same).

d)     Experience with construction works of a similar nature and magnitude.

Eligible vendors may be required to attend an in-country pre-bid meeting and site visit as part of the requirement for participating in the tender process.

Vendors must submit a signed vendor response form, no later than Friday 26 July 2013 to the attention of Kenneth.Gaciura@unon.org with a copy to Margaret.Mathenge@unon.org indicating their intention to participate in the tender.  Hard copies of the vendor response forms can also be obtained from the UN-Habitat Hargeisa Office (administration and finance section), and delivered to the attention of Paolo Pompili, UN-Habitat Office, Hargeisa, Somaliland.

All vendors interested in fulfilling the requirement described above must be registered with UNGM and may wish to visit www.ungm.org for full registration information in order to be eligible to participate in any solicitation.  More information on the registration process can be obtained from UNON (via email to Naomi.Njuno@unon.org).

The Burao low cost housing works are funded through contributions from the People of Japan and implemented by UN-Habitat.

TENDER NOTICE: Construction of 200 Low Cost Housing Units in Burao, Somaliland



UNON on behalf of UN-HABITAT seeks the interest of qualified firms to participate in the upcoming solicitation exercise for the provision of Construction of 200 Low Cost Housing Units in Burao Town, Somaliland.  The works are being carried out under the 2nd Phase of the ProjectShelter Provision, Reintegration and Improved Livelihoods for Returnees and IDPs in 3 Towns in Somaliland, implemented by UN-Habitat with financial support from the Government of Japan.

The scope of works consists of the construction of 200 core housing units, with 3 rooms and a built-up area of 10 x 9 meters ( 90 square meters) each, inclusive of kitchen, sanitary facilities, water tank court-yard, and veranda. The works will be carried out at a dedicated resettlement area, South-East of Burao Town.
The work includes excavation, site preparation, concrete work, compaction, form work, reinforcement, wall and roof construction, and supply of construction materials.

Please note that this notice does not constitute a solicitation and UNON reserves the right to change or cancel this requirement at any time in the EOI or ensuing tender process.

Eligibility

Eligible Contractors must meet the following qualification criteria:

a)      Valid certificate of registration by the Somaliland Ministry of Public Works, Transport and Housing.
b)      Registration at the Burao Municipal Authority / Current operational Business License.
c)      Confirmation of an established office and/or construction yard in Burao (or demonstrated access/ability to establish the same).
d)     Experience with construction works of a similar nature and magnitude.

Eligible vendors may be required to attend an in-country pre-bid meeting and site visit as part of the requirement for participating in the tender process.

Vendors must submit a signed vendor response form, no later than Friday 26 July 2013 to the attention of Adeline.Singoei@unon.org with a copy to Margaret.Mathenge@unon.org indicating their intention to participate in the tender.  Hard copies of the vendor response forms can also be obtained from the UN-Habitat Hargeisa Office (administration and finance section), and delivered to the attention of Paolo Pompili, UN-Habitat Office, Hargeisa, Somaliland.

All vendors interested in fulfilling the requirement described above must be registered with UNGM and may wish to visit www.ungm.org for full registration information in order to be eligible to participate in any solicitation.  More information on the registration process can be obtained from UNON (via email to Naomi.Njuno@unon.org).

The Burao low cost housing works are funded through contributions from the People of Japan and implemented by UN-Habitat.

TENDER NOTICE: Hargeisa Urban Water Supply Upgrading Project (HUWSUP): Construction of Two (2) Reinforced Concrete Reservoirs at Biyo Khadar and Geed Deeble, Hargeisa, Somaliland



UNON on behalf of UN-HABITAT seeks the interest of qualified firms to participate in the upcoming solicitation exercise for the provision of reinforced concrete reservoirs for the Hargeisa Urban Water Supply Upgrading Project (HUWSUP), Somaliland.  The works are part of a comprehensive water infrastructure package for the rehabilitation and expansion of the Hargeisa Urban Water System, undertaken by Hargeisa Water Agency, with technical support from UN-Habitat and funding by the European Union.

The scope of works will consist of the construction of Two (2) reinforced concrete reservoirs at Biyo Khadar and Geed Deeble, located between 10 and 22km from Hargeisa Town, Somaliland – as follows:

The reservoirs will have an approximate capacity of 800 cubic metres with approximate dimensions of 10m x 20m x 5m high.

Please note that this notice does not constitute a solicitation and UNON reserves the right to change or cancel this requirement at any time in the EOI or ensuing tender process.

Eligibility

Eligible vendors should meet the following qualification criteria:
  1. Valid certificate of registration with the Ministry of Public Works in Somaliland.
  2. Valid tax construction certificate from Ministry of Finance.
  3. Confirmation of an established office and/or construction yard in Hargeisa (or demonstrated access or ability to establish same).
  4. Ownership of suitable equipment for the purpose of the works.
  5. Demonstrated experience in the use of reinforced concrete.
Eligible vendors may be required to attend an in-country pre-bid meeting and site visit as part of the requirement for participating in the tender process.

Vendors must submit a signed vendor response form  no later than 26 July 2013 to the attention of Margaret.Mathenge@unon.org with a copy to Adeline.Singoei@unon.org indicating their intention to participate in the tender.  Vendor response forms are available for collection from the HUWSUP Project Office at Hargeisa Water Agency and the UN-Habitat Somaliland Office in Hargeisa.

Hard copies of the Expressions of Interest and vendor response forms can also be delivered on or before 26 July 2013 to the attention of Marco van der Plas, at the HUWSUP Project Office within the Hargeisa Water Agency Compound, or the UN-Habitat Somaliland Office, Sha’ab Area, Hargeisa.

All vendors interested in fulfilling the requirement described above must be registered with UNGM and may wish to visit www.ungm.org for full registration information in order to be eligible to participate in any solicitation.  More information on the registration process can be obtained from UNON (via email to Naomi.Njuno@unon.org).

The Hargeisa Urban Water Supply Upgrading Project (HUWSUP) is funded by the EU and implemented by UN-Habitat

Ethiopia Planning to Build Hydro-power Plant in the Baro-Akobo River Basin


Written by Meraf Leykun - Ethiopian Infrastructure Business News 

The Ethiopian government is planning to build a 1060 MW hydro-power plant in the Baro-Akobo River Basin. The Ministry of Water and Energy has awarded a US$1.5 million contract for the pre-feasibility and feasibility study of the Tams Hydro-power Project to the state-owned Water Works Design and Supervision Enterprise (WWDSE) and the Italian, Electro Consult (ELC).

The proposed dam site is located between the town of Bonga and the town of Gambella,  which are 449km Southwest and 766km West of Addis Ababa respectively.

WWDSE and Electro Consult have worked together previously collaborated in the supervision and design of the Ethio-Kenya transmission line installation project with a German-based firm. ELC has also undertaken the feasibility study of the dam project for Wolkait Sugar Project, supervision of Gilgel Gibe II and Tana Beles hydroelectric projects and currently it is supervising the hydroelectric projects of Gibe III and Grand Renaissance Dam projects.

In a related news, Ministry of Water and Energy has awarded WWDSE a 23.2 million birr contract for the feasibility and design study of the Upper Guder and Dabus large scale irrigation projects in the Abay basin.
Source: Walta