31 October, 2011

KYRGYZSTAN: UN CALLS FOR GREATER STABILITY AFTER PEACEFUL PRESIDENTIAL POLL


KYRGYZSTAN: UN CALLS FOR GREATER STABILITY AFTER PEACEFUL PRESIDENTIAL POLL
New York, Oct 31 2011  4:10PM
United Nations officials today commended the people of Kyrgyzstan for their peaceful conduct of presidential elections yesterday, saying the polls were a demonstration of the people's support for stability and urging political leaders in the Central Asian country to resolve disputes in accordance with the law.

Urging political forces in the country to work together to ensure a stable post-electoral period, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, assured the people of Kyrgyzstan of the continued support of the UN, including through the efforts of his Special Representative for Central Asia, Miroslav Jenca, and the UN Country Team, according to a <"http://www.un.org/apps/sg/sgstats.asp?nid=5651">statement issued by his spokesperson.

Mr. Jenca who visited Bishkek, the Kyrgyz capital, on election day, took note of the preliminary results and the reports of poll monitoring missions. He stressed that the election should contribute to a democratic, secure and prosperous future for all citizens of Kyrgyzstan.

Preliminary results quoted in the press indicated that former Prime Minister Almazbek Atambayev was in the lead.

Mr. Jenca met with President Roza Otunbaeva, Speaker of Parliament Akhmatbek Keldibekov, Chair of the Central Election Commission Tuigunaly Abdraimov and Deputy Foreign Minister Dinara Kemelova during his two-day visit, according to a statement issued by his office.

He also conferred with heads of poll monitoring missions of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) and the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO), as well as local civil society organizations.

The presidential poll was held over a year after the Central Asian country experienced deadly clashes between ethnic Kyrgyz and ethnic Uzbeks that killed hundreds of people and displaced an estimated 375,000 others.

It was planned as part of a transitional programme established in the wake of the departure of ex-president Kurmanbek Bakiyev after a violent uprising against his rule in April last year.
Oct 31 2011  4:10PM

Saudi police release Canadian Shia imam


Saudi police release Canadian Shia imam
Witnesses say officers beat prominent Muslim leader from Edmonton who had travelled to the kingdom for pilgrimage.

The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation said Atar was accused of attacking Saudi religious police [UsamaAlAtar.net]
The Islamic Human Rights Commission says a Canadian man who was allegedly beaten and dragged out of a mosque while performing the Hajj pilgrimage in Saudi Arabia has been released from prison.
Usama al-Atar was arrested in Medina during dawn prayers and held for about 24 hours until he was freed on Monday, the group said.
The London-based group, which spoke to witnesses, said Atar, a Shia, may have been arrested for criticizing the kingdom's handling of uprisings in Yemen and Bahrain.
Massoud Shadjareh, spokesman of the rights group, said the arrest reflects Saudi intolerance toward Muslims who do not follow the country's conservative Wahhabi branch of Islam.
Atar, a lecturer at the University of Alberta in Canada, said he planned to continue his pilgrimage.
"We are always concerned when Canadians are in trouble abroad," John Babcock, spokesperson for the Canadian Minister of State of Foreign Affairs, said.

Kenya to divide Somalia?

Kenya to divide Somalia?

Submitted by Bill Weinberg

At least five people, including three children, were killed when a displaced persons camp at Jilib in southern Somalia was bombed yesterday, the charity Doctors Without Border (MSF) says. Now, predictably, the Kenyan army and Shabab rebels are blaming each other. Kenya's military released a statement saying the camp had come under fire by a Shabab "technical battle wagon" mounted with an "anti-aircraft gun." Sheikh Abukar Ali Ada of the Shabab countered: "Kenya has brutally massacred civilians already displaced by hardship. We will ensure that Kenya mourns more than we did." (The Telegraph, BBC News, Capital FM News, Nairobi, Oct. 31)

Kenya's offensive in Somalia—dubbed Operation Linda Nchi, Kiswahili for "Protect the Nation"—is also exacerbating tensions and violence at home. The UN news agency IRINreports that Somali refugees in Kenya as well as Kenyans of Somali ethnicity are "living in fear" after grenade attacks on a pub and a bus stop in Nairobi last week, which resulted in one death and several injuries. The government says the Shabab are behind the attacks, as well another on a vehicle carrying Ministry of Education officials that left four dead in the northeastern town of Mandera. Following the blasts, one Kenyan Somali was arrested in Nairobi with a cache of weapons, including several grenades, and apparently admitted his involvement in the attack on the bus stop as well as being a member of the Shabab. He was quickly convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment. Somalis in Kenya say they are being treated as terrorism suspects due to their ethnicity.

A BBC News report loans credence to Shabab claims that the Kenyan intervention is an assault on Somalia's sovereignty—and even its territorial integrity. BBC's Will Ross cites unnamed "analysts" as saying that "for several years," Kenya, "with international [read: US] support," has been seeking to carve a semi-independent enclave called "Azania" out of Somalia's border region as a "buffer zone to shield its territory" from the neighboring country's lawlessness. The taregtted area, traditionally known as Jubaland, consists of the administrative regions of Gedo, Lower Juba and Middle Juba. Ross reports: "It already has a flag—blue, white and red—a parliament, a house of elders and a president in waiting." He interviews Abdullahi Shafi, personal assistant to the governor of Lower Juba region, who is wearing a T-shirt emblazoned with "Azania" and says, "We have been in hell for the last 20 years. We need a new Somalia."

This ambiguous comment seems to imply that the envisioned Azania would still be "technically" a part of Somalia. But—as a map accompanying the BBC story makes clear—the now truly fictional state of Somalia is already divided into four independent entities: Somaliand and Puntland in the north, and the Islamist-controlled and "government"-controlled areas zones of Somalia proper (the latter being somewhat smaller than the former). Azania would now be a fifth. And—in contrast to Somaliland and Puntland, which are truly autonomous—would presumably be under Kenyan military control.

http://www.ww4report.com/node/10487

See our last post on Kenya and Somalia. http://samotalis.blogspot.com/

Kenya,Somalia sign joint pact on security operation



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Prince Nayef bin Abdul Aziz: profile

Prince Nayef bin Abdul Aziz: profile
Saudi Arabia's powerful interior minister Prince Nayef bin Abdul Aziz, who has been named crown prince after the death of his brother Sultan, led an iron fist crackdown on Al-Qaeda.-http://www.telegraph.co.uk


Saudi Interior Minister Prince Nayef bin Abdul Aziz al-Saud Photo: AFP/GETTY

Prince Nayef, 78, seen as more conservative than his half brother King Abdullah, 87, is a pragmatist who likes to describe himself as a soldier under the command of the Saudi monarch.
But like the former Crown Prince Sultan who died on Saturday, Prince Nayef also has health problems. According to experts on the Saudi monarchy, he was treated abroad in April for cancer.

The new crown prince is also known for his solid relations with the kingdom's religious elite and is believed to oppose reforms that could liberalise the ultra-conservative Islamic nation.

He is known for his suspicion and mistrust of Saudi Arabia's arch-rival Iran, and has pushed for hardline policies towards the Shia nation.

Interior minister for more than three decades, Prince Nayef enjoys strong relations across the Arab region.

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Diplomats say he played a key role in the kingdom's decisions to host Tunisia's ousted strongman Zine El Abidine Ben Ali in January, and to dispatch troops in March to Bahrain to help end protests led by the Shias.

Born in the western city of Taif in 1933, Prince Nayef was quickly pushed into public service, being named governor of Riyadh when he was barely 20.

His elder brother Fahd brought him into the interior ministry, where he was named deputy minister in 1970 and minister five years later, when Fahd became crown prince.

Nayef was credited for the successful crackdown on Al-Qaeda militants in subsequent years, halting their wave of bloody attacks on the kingdom between 2003 and 2006.

His internal security campaign forced Al-Qaeda leaders and many members to flee to southern neighbour Yemen, where they formed Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, which continues to threaten Saudi interests.

Charged with managing the country's borders, its internal crime-fighting apparatus and the internal intelligence force, the mabahith, he dismantled charities which used to collect donations for Osama bin Laden and his network.

Nayef's son, Prince Mohammed, who is the assistant interior minister and the kingdom's top counter terrorism official, escaped assassination in 2009, when a suicide bomber from Yemen tried to kill him.

In recent years he has handed over the day-to-day security responsibilities to Mohammed, who has been even more methodical in pursuing Islamist radicals and battling their ideology.

But critics have accused Prince Nayef of targeting democracy and human rights activists while neglecting, until recent years, the rise of Islamic radicalism in the country.

Saudis however have shown support and appreciation for the strongman persona that Nayef reflects due to public perceptions that he can deliver on national security.

Nayef told reporters early in 2009 that he opposed electing members of the consultative Shura council, or to include women in the group. "I don't see the need for that," he said.

He defended members of Saudi Arabia's religious police, who have often been accused of brutality and abuse.

In recent months, the interior ministry has played a key role in preventing popular demonstrations. Prince Nayef has publicly thanked Saudis for not answering local activists' calls for protests.

The ministry has also sought to maintain order in the face of increasing unrest in the primarily Shiite inhabited and oil-rich Eastern province, where the kingdom accuses Iran of inciting the local population against the Sunni-led monarchy.

Nayef is the middle prince of the Sudairi Seven, the formidable bloc of sons of King Abdul Aziz by a favourite wife, Princess Hassa al-Sudairi.

Among his other full brothers are King Fahd, who died in 2005, Crown Prince Sultan who passed away on Saturday and Prince Salman, governor of Riyadh.



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Unesco gives Palestinians full membership

Unesco gives Palestinians full membership
Unesco, The United Nations' cultural agency, has decided to give the Palestinians full membership of the body, in a vote that will boost their bid for recognition as a state at the UN.

Riyad al-Malki, the foreign minister, said: 'This success, if it is realised, and with this large number of votes, will give a great boost to the efforts that we are making to get the required vote in the United Nations' Photo: EPA



By Our Foreign Staff

12:45PM GMT 31 Oct 2011



Unesco is the first UN agency the Palestinians have sought to join as a full member since President Mahmoud Abbas applied for full membership of the United Nations on Sept. 23.


The United States, Canada and Germany voted againstPalestinian membership. Brazil, Russia, China, India, South Africa and France voted in favour. Britain abstained.


Huge cheers went up in Unesco after delegates voted to approve the membership Monday. One shouted "Long Live Palestine!" in French.


Israel said that the vote will harm prospects for the resumption of Middle East peace talks.


"This is a unilateral Palestinian manoeuver which will bring no change on the ground but further removes the possibility for a peace agreement," Israel's Foreign Ministry said in a statement. "This decision will not turn the Palestinian Authority into an actual state yet places unnecessary burdens on the route to renewing negotiations."

RELATED ARTICLES
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On Sunday, Riyad al-Malki, the foreign minister had said of the bid: "This success, if it is realised, and with this large number of votes, will give a great boost to the efforts that we are making to get the required vote in the United Nations."

Admission will be seen by the Palestinians as a moral victory in their bid for full UN membership.

Washington, which has the power to veto such applications, opposes the Palestinian bid for a full UN seat on the grounds it is unhelpful to efforts to revive peace talks with Israel, the last round of which broke down a year ago.

Israel's closest international ally, the United States has said it will use its veto power in the Security Council to quash the bid for full UN membership, were it brought to a vote.

But Unesco is one of the UN agencies the Palestinians can join as a full member regardless of their broader status at the United Nations, where they are currently classified as "an observer entity".

Palestinian success could bring a financial cost for Unesco. Under US law, the admission as a full Unesco member would trigger a cut-off in US funding which accounts for 22 per cent of the agency's funding.



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Xaaskii Marxuum Cigaal Oo Ka Warantay Dagaal Iyo Dulmi Ay Ka Tirsatay Rayaale Iyo Xisbiga Udub

Xaaskii Marxuum Cigaal Oo Ka Warantay Dagaal Iyo Dulmi Ay Ka Tirsatay Rayaale Iyo Xisbiga Udub

"Naxariistii aan ka waayay UDUB iyo Daahir Rayaale. waxaan ka helay Axmed Siilaanyo Iyo Xaaskiisa"

Hargeysa - Marwo Kaltuun Xaaji Daahir oo ahayd Xaaskii Madaxweynihii hore ee Somaliland Marxuum- Maxamed Ibraahim Cigaal ayaa maanta markii u horeysay ka hadashay dagaal iyo dulmi ay ka tirsanaysay dawladii Rayaale iyo xisbiga UDUB-ba.

Marwo Kaltuun waxay sidaasi ka sheegtay furitaankii xaflad xisbiga UDUB ku qabsaday Huteelka Crown ee magaalada Hargeysa oo loogu magac daray toban guurada xisbiga iyo Kalfadhigii Golaha Dhexe.
Marwo Kaltuun Xaaji Daahir waxa kale oo ay ka warantay aasaaskii xisbiga UDUB waxaanay tidhi "Waxaan filayaa maalintii ILAAHAY ha u naxariistee uu Marxuum-Maxamed Ibraahim Cigaal ka furay shirweynihii aasaaska UDUB aqalka shaqaalaha waxa ka soo wareegtay toban sanadood, intaasi ka dib la iguma arag saaxad ay UDUB leedahay si ay u dhacdayba. Waxay ahayd bishii 3-dii Bishii May Khamiisa Cisbitaalka Milatariga ee Pretoria markii sakaraatul mowtkii ku qabtay Marxuumkii anagoo markaa kaligay la jooga oo uu markaas uun naga baxay Dr. Cali Qaadi waxa I weheliyay Abokor Sulub oo ahaa Taliyihii ciidanka Madaxtooyada. Markaa anigaa gunaanadkii la gaadhay waxay ahayd laxdadii nolashayda ugu naxdinta iyo murugada badnayd."

Marwo Kaltuun waxay sheegay in Madaxweynihii Cigaal dabadii Hoggaankii dalka loo dhaariyay uu dagaal ku bilaabay waxaanay tidhi "Waxa la yidhi Madaxweyne ayaa la sii dhaariyay oo Marxuum- Cigaal ku sii dardaarmay oo uu yidhi waxaan kaga sii tagay Daahir Rayaale, markii aanu maydkii Marxuumka keenay ee la aasay wixiiba waa la iloobay oo daaqada ayaa laga tuuray, maanta waan garnaqsanayaa nin ka naxa iyo nin ku farxowba. Madaxweynihii dalka loo dhaariyay dagaalkii aniga (ooridii madaxweynihii hore) ayuu ka bilaabay."

"Waxaan garan waayay xisbigii aan aasaaskiisa wax ku lahaa ma UDUB buu ahaa mise Xisbiga KULMIYE waayo naxariistii aan ka waayay UDUB, Daahir Rayaale iyo Xaaskiisa waxaan ka helay xisbiga KULMIYE, Axmed Siilaanyo Iyo Xaaskiisa kuwaasi ayaan sharaftii iyo nabsi bixii ka helay oo I soo dhaweeyay intaasi waa wax dhacday oo aan la diidi Karin waana maalintii u horaysay ee aan wax taabtaabtay,"ayay tidhi Marwo Kaltuun Xaaji Daahir.

Xaaskii Marxuum- Cigaal waxay ku baaqday in tallada xisbiga UDUB gacanteeda lagu soo celiyo si ay marka dambe cidii loo garto ugu wareejiso maadaama oo gurigeeda lagu soo dhidbay iyadoo arrintaasi ka hadlayaysayna waxay tidhi
"Waxaan codsanayaa maanta in taladii xisbiga UDUB Guddoomiyenimadeedii aniga la igu soo wareejiyo diyaar ma u tihiin arrintaasi, talladii xisbiga UDUB in badan bay nimanku hayeen oo aanan tallo ku darsan oo aan lahaa inamada loolamaya ha dhex gelin maanta waan soo diyaar garoobay carabtu waxay tidhaahdaa wax waliba waxay ku noqdaan asalkiisii. Faysal Cali Waraabe maxkamad ayaa UCID rag kula galay maxkamadii isaga ayay u xukuntay xisbigii uu aasaasay. Waxaan leeyahay talladii xisbiga ha la igu soo wareejiyo cidii la isku waafaqana anagaa ku soo celin doona tallada gacantooda."

"Xisbigan la yidhaahdo UDUB waa xisbi gurigayga ku soo dhashay oo aan gacmahayga ku soo koriyay kuna soo gardaadiyay oo aan goobtii la iskugu imanayay ku keenay. Xisbigii UDUB markii uu tallada hayayna waa lala ambaday oo xisbigii waa lala lumay. Maanta waxaan leeyahay rag badan baa UDUB ka tartamaya oo xisbigii mar labaad burburin kara, anigu hooyadii xisbiga ayaan ahay oo xisbigii lexjecelo ayaan ka qabaa. Cidaan muranay iyo xisbiga UDUB kala gooni ayay noqdeen horta waxaan idin leeyhay ha tafaraaruqina oo tallada iskaga tanaasula oo ha is barbar yaacina ee madax iyo mijo kala yeesha,"ayay tidhi Marwo Kaltuun.
Intii ay hadlaysay xaaskii marxuum Cigaal dhawr jeer ayay Hoggaanka xisbiga UDUB isku dayeen inay makarafoonka ka qaadaan hase yeeshee way u suurto geli wayday markii ay ku adkaysatay inay sii wadanayso hadalkeeda.

Weriye Cumar Maxamed Faarax
Somaliland.Org/Hargeysa
cumarmfaarax@hotmail.com

Hadith of the Day


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بِسۡمِ ٱللهِ ٱلرَّحۡمَـٰنِ ٱلرَّحِيمِ
Peace and blessings be upon the Beloved Prophet Muhammad,
As-salamu-alaikum your daily hadith from ahadith.co.uk

Narrated: Ibn Abbas

Allah's Messenger (PBUH) said: When your brethren were killed as martyrs in the battle of Uhud, Allah put their souls into some green birds which arrived at the rivers of Paradise, ate from its fruits and took shelter beside lanterns, made of gold, and suspended in the shade of the Divine Throne. When they enjoued eating, drinking and sleeping, they said: Who will convey to our brethren on earth that: we are alive in Paradise where we are provided with sustenance, so that they would neither renounce fighting in the way of Allah nor retreat at the time of war. Allah the Glorified said: I shall inform them of you. The Prophet (SAW) said: So Allah revealed this verse: "Don't consider those killed in the way of Allah as dead, rather they are alive with their Lord being provided with sustenance".(3:169) (This Hadith is good and reported in Sunan Abi Da'ud).

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Clinton says US ready to talk with Mullha Omer

Clinton says US ready to talk with Mullha Omer

By Katrina Jones -

Washington: US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton says that Washington is ready to talk Taliban leader Mullah Mohammad Omar as his involvement is crucial for the prospects of peace in Afghanistan.

Clinton’s comments are seen as a significant shift in US policy, from moves to divide the Taliban-led insurgency and isolate Omar, to an acknowledgement of his leadership.

Earlier, the Haqqani network’s commander, Sirajuddin Haqqani, warned Washington that only the Quetta Shura, the Taliban-led militant organisation, could negotiate a peace deal and that his fighters would not be divided.

In an appearance before the House foreign affairs committee, Clinton said the US would continue to “fight, talk and build” in Afghanistan and Pakistan to test any willingness to negotiate.

Clinton said that there was “evidence going both ways” on its intentions.

She said last month’s Haqqani meeting was not a “negotiation” and that no meetings had followed it, but she stressed that any negotiations with the Taliban in the future would require the Quetta Shura’s blessing.


http://www.thenewstribe.com/2011/10/31/clinton-says-us-ready-to-talk-with-mullha-omer/#.Tq3fTEPCh5s
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Gaddafi: 'He died an angry and disappointed man'By Katya AdlerBBC News, Misrata

Gaddafi: 'He died an angry and disappointed man'By Katya AdlerBBC News, Misrata


Katya Adler meets members of Gaddafi's inner circle


Bombed-out devastation is pretty much all you see when you drive in to Misrata.

A few men sit on shabby orange sofas in front of the rubble that lines the main road. The only real sign of life here is the newly-dubbed Misrata Museum where weapons seized from Gaddafi loyalists and other spoils of war are displayed and gloated over.

But one of Misrata's prized trophies is very much hidden from public view.

Mansour Dhao Ibrahim is one of Libya's most wanted - a man believed to have ordered the killing, rape and torture of the opponents of Col Muammar Gaddafi.

It is thought he knows the whereabouts of several mass graves of anti-Gaddafi fighters.

Mansour Dhao's interrogation was briefly stopped to allow us to talk to him. He was sitting crossed-legged and bare-foot on the floor when we met him, a Koran in front of him and a slightly blood-smeared mattress beside him.

A trusted member of Col Gaddafi's inner circle, Mansour Dhao was captured with him in Sirte. He provides a rare insight into the former dictator's state of mind in his last hours and days.

"Gaddafi was nervous. He couldn't make any calls or communicate with the outside world. We had little food or water. Sanitation was bad," he told me.

"He paced up and down in a small room, writing in a notebook. We knew it was over. Gaddafi said, 'I am wanted by the International Criminal Court. No country will accept me. I prefer to die by Libyan hands'."

Suicide mission

Mansour Dhao said Col Gaddafi then made the decision to go to his birthplace, the nearby valley of Jarref. I asked if it was a suicide mission.
The convoy of vehicles in which Col Gaddafi was travelling was hit by a Nato air strike in Sirte

"It was a suicide mission," Mansour Dhao said. "We felt he wanted to die in the place he was born. He didn't say it explicitly, but he was going with the purpose to die."

But Col Gaddafi's plan was thwarted - his convoy was bombed by Nato.

The once-feared dictator scrambled into a water pipe for cover. That is where he was found and captured.

With him inside the water pipe was Huneish Nasr, Col Gaddafi's personal driver.

When we spoke to him at the detention centre, he was wearing the same bloody shirt he was wounded in that day.
Continue reading the main story
“Start Quote


He thought his people should love him until the end. He felt he had done so many good things for them and for Libya”Mansour DhaoAide to Col Gaddafi

He said: "Gaddafi got out of the pipe. I stayed inside. I couldn't get out. There was such a crowd of fighters.

"Gaddafi had nowhere to go. He was one man amongst many and the fighters were shouting, 'Gaddafi, Gaddafi, Gaddafi'."

Huneish Nasr was nervous and clearly mindful of his captors, two of whom stood with us in the room, their arms folded.

His black eyes darted around the room.

He insisted over and over that the fighters who captured Col Gaddafi did not shoot when they came towards him.

'Angry and disappointed'

He said Col Gaddafi did not seem surprised to see them approach. He said he seemed resigned.

But Mansour Dhao believes Col Gaddafi died an angry and disappointed man.
His home and his regime have been destroyed but after Muammar Gaddafi, Libya's future is uncertain

"He thought his people should love him until the end. He felt he had done so many good things for them and for Libya. He also felt betrayed by men who had seemed to be his friends, like Tony Blair and Silvio Berlusconi," he said.

When I asked about terror and torture, the men were less forthcoming. They fear for their lives. If found guilty in Libya, Mansour Dhao could be hanged.

Still, while waiving any personal responsibility, Mansour Dhao spoke about crimes of the Gaddafi regime that are well-known but rarely confirmed by a Gaddafi loyalist.

He said opponents of Col Gaddafi were tortured, that he openly sponsored international terrorism and that the Lockerbie bombing was planned by Gaddafi's external security.

He said one of Gaddafi's most terrible moments was when he ordered the mass murder of around 1,200 essentially political prisoners in Abu Salim jail in Tripoli back in 1996.

The fate of Mansour Dhao and Huneish Nasr is uncertain.

Will the fighters of Misrata hand over their prisoners, along with their weapons and their newly-found power, to the new transitional authorities in Libya?

Or will regional rivalries blight Libya's future before the problems of the past are solved?

More
Libya Crisis
Muammar Gaddafi: How he died
The bloody birth of new Libya
Last of the buffoon dictators?
Revolution 'still has far to go'


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American Identified as Bomber in Attack on African Union in Somalia

American Identified as Bomber in Attack on African Union in Somalia
By JOSH KRON  VOA

MOGADISHU, Somalia — The voice in the recording sounds unmistakably familiar — the tenor, the colloquialisms — a boy who grew up in America.


The voice on a suicide message is said to be that of Abdisalan Hussein Ali, a Somali-American who joined the Shabab rebels.


Multimedia
Graphic
Joining the Fight in Somalia


The recording was a suicide message, posted online on Sunday by an Islamist militia aligned with Al Qaeda. The voice was said to be that of Abdisalan Hussein Ali, 22, who was born in Somalia but spent his formative years in Minneapolis.

His life appeared to have come full circle here on Saturday, when he is said to have blown himself up in an attack on African Union troops in Mogadishu. He would be the third American known to become a suicide bomber for Somalia’s Shabab rebels.

The Shabab said that Mr. Ali was one of two suicide bombers in the attack, which the militant group said killed scores ofpeacekeepers. The African Union has confirmed that it suffered casualties, but has not disclosed the number.

But as the Shabab have lost power and support in Somalia in recent months, the battle has turned into a war of words as much as weapons, and the claim of an American suicide bomber packs a powerful punch.

Omar Jamal, a Somali diplomat at the United Nations, said that Mr. Ali was one of the bombers. Mr. Ali’s friends and family listened to the recording, Mr. Jamal said, “and they all say that it is him.”

A spokesman for the American Embassy in Nairobi said the United States had “seen reports” that one of the bombers was an American citizen, and was investigating them.

Mr. Ali was known by the F.B.I. to be one of an estimated 30 Americans who have joined the Shabab, at least 20 of whom came from the Somali community in Minneapolis.

He had been an ambitious pre-med student at the University of Minnesota, hoping for an internship at the Mayo Clinic, before he disappeared in 2008. The audio recording, in which the speaker exhorts Westerners to join the fight, appears to reflect those qualities.

“Don’t just sit around, you know, and be, you know, a couch potato and just like, just chill all day,” the voice on the recording says. “Today jihad is what is most important. It’s not important that you become a doctor, or some sort of engineer.”

For Mr. Ali, life began in war and seems to have ended that way. He was only a few months old when his family fled the strife in Somalia in a makeshift boat, landing first at a Kenyan refugee camp, his mother told The New York Times in a 2009 interview. The family, with 12 children, arrived in Seattle in 2000 and then moved to Minneapolis.

Minneapolis has embraced generations of refugees from around the world, and Mr. Ali’s high school, Thomas Alva Edison High in northeast Minneapolis, calls itself an “International World School,” offering open houses to prospective students in Spanish; Hmong, which is spoken in Southeast Asia; and Somali.

During high school, he sold sneakers out of his locker to make money to help support his family. He lifted weights, and his friends called him “Bullethead.” He was elected president of the school’s Somali Student Association, and he later became a caseworker at a prestigious law firm. At the University of Minnesota, he majored in chemistry and held a part-time job as a security guard at the management school there.

“He was a highly motivated kid,” said a fellow student, an upperclassman who became his mentor. “He wanted to change lives.”

Why and when he turned to Islamic militancy is unclear.

A friend of Mr. Ali’s, who attended middle school and then college with him, said they were part of a tight-knit group of Somali-Americans who grew up together and would talk about Somalia and debate politics.

“There was a desire in all of us, that our parents always talk about, the great Somalia,” the friend said, who did not want to be identified for fear of being questioned by the F.B.I. Mr. Ali was not her first Somali friend to join the Shabab, she said, nor the first to die as a member of the group.

She described Mr. Ali as “very outgoing.”

“We used to call him a womanizer,” she said. “He was always in with the ladies. But then all that changed.”

In Arabic class, he started sitting in the back, not talking to anyone. “But then again, you’re not going to look at him and say his personality changed, he’s going to get radical and leave the country,” she said. “In college that’s when you find out who you are, so I didn’t think much of it then.”

One night in 2008, he was wrongly accused of robbing a Subway sandwich shop on campus. Friends said the experience left a mark on him long after the charges were dropped.

In November 2008, he disappeared, along with two other Somali-Americans. “For an unknown reason the family thinks that” Mr. Ali “may have got on a plane and went somewhere,” a Minneapolis Police Department missing persons report says.

The Shabab, which controlled most of southern Somalia by the end of last year but have since lost ground, have posted videos on YouTubeaimed at encouraging young Somali-Americans to come here. Many have heeded the call.

In October 2008, Shirwa Ahmed, also from Minneapolis, blew himself up in one of a string of Shabab attacks in northern Somalia. In May of this year, Farah Mohamed Beledi, 27, of St. Paul, tried to attack a government checkpoint in Mogadishu but was killed by African Union troops before he could detonate his explosives.

Another American, from Washington State, was reported to have been part of a suicide squad that attacked an African Union base in Mogadishu in 2009, killing more than 15 peacekeepers, but his identity has not been confirmed. And this month, two Somali-American women from Minnesota were convicted of aiding the Shabab.

However, many Somali-Americans have returned, not to fight, but to help rebuild the country, including the current prime minister and his predecessor.

Speaking of Saturday’s suicide attack, the weak American-backed transitional government expressed sorrow over what it said was not just a loss of life, but of a vital human resource.

“It’s tragic, because we were hoping for this young man to come back and take part in the rebuilding of the country,” said Suldan A. Farahsed, a government spokesman. “We needed young people like that.”

Mr. Ali kept in touch with his old life back in the United States by telephone and Facebook. His Facebook page shows him wearing a skullcap and wielding a baseball bat.

The friend says that Mr. Ali and a mutual friend last exchanged Facebook messages three weeks ago, but that the mutual friend stopped contacting Mr. Ali because “he said things that made her uncomfortable.”

Two years ago, he told a friend in Minneapolis that he would never attack the United States.

“Why would I do that?” the friend recalled Mr. Ali saying. “My mom could be walking down the street.”


Andrea Elliott contributed reporting from New York. http://samotalis.blogspot.com/

جمهورية عمرو موسى!


سليمان جودة
جمهورية عمرو موسى!
كنت قد كتبت في هذا المكان، مقالا، تحت عنوان «بيضة الديك في سباق الرئاسة المصرية» يوم 3 أكتوبر (تشرين الأول) الحالي، وكنت أتحدث فيه عن مرشحي الرئاسة في مصر، وكيف أنهم كثيرون، وبلا عدد تقريبا، ثم إنهم، في الوقت نفسه، لا يكاد يميزهم بعضهم عن بعض شيء، إلا عمرو موسى.. لا لشيء، إلا لأني أظن، وبعض الظن ليس إثما، أن الذي يظل يميز مرشحا عن غيره من منافسيه في أي انتخابات، وليس في الانتخابات المصرية فقط، هو البرنامج الذي على هذا المرشح أن يتقدم به إلى ناخبيه، ليختاروه هو، دون سواه.. ومثل هذا البرنامج يبقى في العادة برنامجا مكتوبا، أولا، ومعلنا، ثانيا، ومحددا بملامحه ومعالمه، وهذا هو الأهم، ثالثا، حتى يمكن للناخب، في مثل هذه الحالة، أن يعرف رأسه من قدميه، وأن يعرف بالتالي على أي أساس سوف يختار هذا، من المرشحين المطروحين أمامه، وعلى أي أساس سوف يستبعد ذاك.. منهم!
يومها، كنت أشير إلى مقال منشور لعمرو موسى، في «الأهرام» بوصفه، أي المقال، جزءا من برنامجه الانتخابي الذي سوف يتقدم به إلى الناخبين المصريين، وكان المقال المنشور له يتكلم عن الكيفية التي يمكن أن تنتقل بها مصر، من دولة كان يحكمها نظام سلطوي ديكتاتوري، بدءا من قيام ثورة يوليو 1952، وحتى الساعة التي تنحى فيها الرئيس السابق حسني مبارك عن الحكم يوم 11 فبراير (شباط) الماضي.. إلى دولة يحكمها نظام ديمقراطي لا مركزي، في ظل الجمهورية الثانية، التي سوف تقوم فيها هذه الديمقراطية اللامركزية، عندما يأتي لها رئيس جديد، في انتخابات الرئاسة المقبلة.
قرأ عمرو موسى ما كتبته، ثم أرسل لي خطابا يؤكد فيه على الفكرة ذاتها، من جديد، ويقول إن وضعها موضع التنفيذ، في الجمهورية الثانية، يحتاج إلى وقت، وإلى جهد، وإن الأساس في الانتقال من نظام سلطوي ديكتاتوري، إلى نظام ديمقراطي لا مركزي، هو تقسيم المسؤوليات والصلاحيات، بين السلطة الأم القائمة في العاصمة، عندئذ، والسلطة المحلية القائمة في كل محافظة على حدة!
ولا بد هنا أن أقول إني عندما شبهت ما نشره عمرو موسى في «الأهرام» بـ«بيضة الديك» كنت أريد أن أشير إلى أن الديك في العرف الشعبي، إذا باض! فإنه يبيض مرة واحدة، ولا يكررها، وبالتالي فقد دأب المصريون خصوصا، والعرب عموما على تشبيه الشيء الذي لا مثيل له بـ«بيضة الديك»، إلى أن تأتي ساعة يكون له فيها نظير، فلا يعود يشبه بيضة الديك، حينئذ.. ولو أن أحدا «عرض ما يتقدم به مرشحو الرئاسة المصريون، إلى ناخبيهم، هذه الأيام، فسوف يستوقفه أن عمرو موسى هو الوحيد، حتى هذه اللحظة، الذي تقدم إلى الناخبين بشيء مكتوب بصرف النظر طبعا عما إذا كان هذا الشيء المكتوب محل اتفاق، أو موضع خلاف، وبصرف النظر أيضا، عما إذا كان من الممكن تنفيذه، أم إنه صعب، وليس من السهل إخراجه في كيان متجسد في النور.
يؤمن عمرو موسى، في خطابه الذي تلقيته، إيمانا عميقا بالفكرة، ويراها حلا لآفة طالما جنت على الجمهورية المصرية الأولى، في مراحلها الثلاث، بدءا من عبد الناصر، ومرورا بالسادات، وانتهاء بمبارك.. هذه الآفة هي المركزية المفرطة التي كانت ولا تزال تختزل البلد كله في عاصمته، بحيث تستحوذ القاهرة، في كل الأحوال، على كل شيء تقريبا، ولا يتبقى للأقاليم والمحافظات، سوى الفتات الذي لا يجدي في شيء.. وبطبيعة الحال، فإن أي إنسان يعيش في مصر يشعر في كل وقت بثقل هذه الآفة، التي يتوقف عندها «موسى»، ويراها الأجدى بالعلاج أولا، قبل غيرها من الآفات الكثيرة.. إذ ليس أدل عليها، وعلى تداعياتها خارج العاصمة، من أن أبناء الأقاليم خارج القاهرة، لا يزال الواحد منهم إلى اليوم، إذا أراد أن يسافر من مدينته أو قريته، في أي مكان على امتداد الدولة، إلى القاهرة، فإنه لا يقول إنه ذاهب إلى القاهرة، ولكنه يقول، ربما بضغط من تراكم «قاهري» طويل، إنه ذاهب إلى «مصر».. وكأن القاهرة هي مصر.. ومصر هي القاهرة.. أما الذين هم خارجها، فإن لهم الله، ثم عمرو موسى، إذا كتب له الله أن يكون رئيسا، فينظر وقتها ماذا يرى من أجلهم.
ولكن.. رغم اتفاقي معه، في الشكل، وفي المضمون الحافل بتفاصيل كثيرة في خطابه، فإنني أختلف في ترتيب الفكرة، من حيث الأولويات التي سوف يكون عليه، كرئيس، أن يعمل وفقا لها، حين يفوز.
أراها فكرة مفيدة للغاية، ومجدية، ولكنها، في الوقت نفسه، في حاجة إلى بشر مؤهلين ينقلونها من خيال افتراضي نظري في ذهن صاحبها، إلى واقع عملي يعيشه الناس، ولن يكون في مقدوره، وحده، أن يحقق لها هذا الانتقال.. إنه يملكها، ويدعو إلى تنفيذها، ويتعهد بذلك، عندما يفوز، ويشرح وسائل هذا التنفيذ، وبدايته، ونهايته، ومداه الزمني، ويعدد فوائدها.. ولكنه، وحده مرة أخرى، لا يمكنه أن يفعل ذلك، مهما كان حماسه، ومهما كان إيمانه بها، ويقينه فيها، ولذلك فهو في حاجة إلى ناخبين مؤهلين يمكنهم عند الضرورة، أن يسعفوه، وأن يخرجوا إلى صناديق الاقتراع، وأن ينتخبوا سلطة محلية، في كل محافظة أو ولاية، فيكون في إمكانهم، ساعتها، أن يراقبوا السلطة، طوال الوقت، وأن يحاسبوها، ويعيدوا انتخابها، فيما بعد، أو يأتوا بغيرها.
هذا كله في حاجة إلى تعديل طفيف، في فقه الأولويات، لدى عمرو موسى، بوصفه مرشحا رئاسيا محتملا عنده برنامجه.. وهذا التعديل الطفيف يتطلب أن تكون الفكرة هي رقم 3 في برنامجه المكتمل.. أما رقم واحد فهو «إتاحة فرصة تعليم حقيقي للمواطنين، في كافة مراحل الدراسة».. وأما رقم 2 فهو «توفير رعاية صحية آدمية» لكل مواطن، لتأتي فكرته تلك، بعد ذلك، في الترتيب الثالث بين الأولويات.
طبعا.. أعرف أن إتاحة تعليم من هذا النوع، في حاجة إلى جيل كامل، لتؤتي ثمارها على الأرض، أي في حاجة إلى عشرين عاما تقريبا.. ولكن.. ليس هناك في تقديري بديل آخر، إذا أردنا لها، كفكرة، أن تتحقق كما يتعين لها.. إذ الإنسان «المؤهل» هو الأساس فيها، وبغير هذا الإنسان «المؤهل» مع وضع مائة خط تحت هذه الكلمة، التي بين الأقواس، يصبح تنفيذها شيئا بالغ الصعوبة.. فتش عن الإنسان المؤهل، باعتباره أداة، عند تجسيد أي فكرة على الأرض.. فهو إذا حضر، حضرت هي معه، وإذا غاب، غابت معه، وإن ظلت تحلق في السماء!

http://samotalis.blogspot.com/

After Gadhafi, the West eyes the Libyan prize


After Gadhafi, the West eyes the Libyan prize


Oil rich and deeply divided, the country is vulnerable to outside powers

By Phyllis Bennis


The death of Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi will likely - though it’s too early to know anything for sure - mean the end of the current stage of Libya’s civil war. Whether it will set the stage for peace, national reconciliation, democracy, normalization with the region or other goals is far less clear. And what post-Gadhafi Libya ’s relationship with the United States and other NATO countries will look like remains uncertain.

A Libyan commentator on Al Jazeera this morning, celebrating the death of Gadhafi, described it as the “third fall” of dictators in the Arab Spring. But while the overthrow of Gadhafi’s 42-year-old regime found its origins in the same Tunisian- and Egyptian-inspired nonviolent mobilizations as those still underway in Bahrain, Syria, Yemen and elsewhere, Libya’s trajectory was profoundly different.

It began the same way, with a home-grown call for protests against a dictatorship responsible for terrible repression, the massacre of prisoners and more. But when Libyan protesters took up arms, and especially when leaders invited NATO and the U.S. to become the “air force of the Transitional National Council,” the links between Libya’s rebellion and those of the rest of the Arab Spring began to fray.


Early on, the TNC’s call for a “no-fly zone” had little popular support. Many described it warily as undermining the independence of Libya’s revolution. But support appeared to grow with talk of an “inevitable” and “imminent” massacre in Benghazi, where the armed rebels were concentrated. Even among rebels, support for the U.S./NATO intervention was never unanimous, perhaps because of uncertainty about Gadhafi’s intentions and, crucially, his capacity.

A massacre was certainly possible. But the people of Benghazi had already shown their ability to protect their city. When the first French-piloted NATO bombers attacked the four Libyan tanks outside of Benghazi, they were targeted in the desert outside the city precisely because they had already been driven out of the city by anti-Gadhafi fighters. The rebel military capacity at that moment was unknown, but the visible contradiction between that initial victory and the claim that only Western airstrikes could save the people of Benghazi may have been part of why the unease over the U.S./NATO role remained for so long.

The question now is whether and how the new post-Gadhafi Libya, having overthrown its longtime leader in essentially a civil war in which the U.S. and NATO backed one side, rather than through the kind of independent, and largely nonviolent revolutionary processes underway in the other countries of the Arab Spring, can claim pride of place within that regional awakening.

War for control, not oil

The U.S. was not the original instigator of the NATO intervention. That role lay in Europe, starting with France, whose president was still smarting from political attacks for his too-little-too-late response to the Tunisian uprising. Sarkozy’s domestic popularity concerns were joined in the United Kingdom by the Conservative Party government, which was eager to claim a position in what they anticipated would be the winning side of the Libyan struggle. This set the stage for privileged European positions vis-à-vis influence with the new post-Gadhafi government and, of course, privileged access to Libyan oil.

So France and Britain took the lead in the U.N. Security Council, drafting an initial resolution calling for a “no-fly zone,” ostensibly to “protect civilians” in Libya. The United States military was not thrilled at the prospect. Top U.S. officials, including Chief of Staff Michael Mullen, described how a “no-fly zone” by itself wouldn’t work - that it would require bombing Libya first, to “take out” anti-aircraft weapons and protect the Western pilots. The White House showed little enthusiasm.

Then a State Department-based group led by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, U.N. Ambassador Susan Rice, and White House advisor Samantha Power, officials who had histories of often urging military action in response to human rights violations, won out. So instead of simply voting “no” on the resolution that the Pentagon agreed wouldn’t work, the U.S. took the British-French draft and “improved” it by calling for “all necessary means” to protect civilians - a green light for the use of all weapons, against any targets, for as long as the Pentagon and NATO chose to stay in Libya. That marked the end of the Libyan Spring and the opening of a very difficult - and for civilians, deadly - civil war.

The U.S./NATO intervention in Libya was not a “war for oil.” Access to oil wasn’t even the main issue during the 1970s or 1980s, years of U.S. opposition to Libya ’s role in supporting national liberation movements during the Cold War, or through the 1990s when the U.S. isolated Libya for its involvement with terrorism. Libya’s sweet light crude was always widely available on the world’s oil market.

But after 2001, when the Bush administration was eager to round up new recruits for its “global war on terror,” emissaries were sent to make nice to the long-excoriated Libyan leader. Within a couple of years, Gadhafi had been brought in from the cold. He had agreed to dismantle Libya ’s nascent nuclear program, he had offered compensation to families of the Lockerbie bombing, he offered normal diplomatic relations with his once-and-future enemies in the U.S. and Europe . By 2003 or so European and U.S. oil companies were standing in line to sign contracts. By 2007 and beyond, photos of Gadhafi arm-in-arm with Sarkozy, Tony Blair, Silvio Berlusconi - as well as both Bush and Obama and, famously, Condoleezza Rice – were staples of newspaper front pages and websites around the world.


For the United States in 2011, the strategic interest in turning on Gadhafi after years of chummy good relations was primarily rooted in fear of loss of control. Gadhafi was our guy now, yes - but Washington had to ask, What if? What if the mercurial Libyan leader, under pressure from anti-dictatorship democratization processes next door, reversed course and turned to Washington’s enemies for strategic ties? China continues its expansion of investment and influence in Africa : What if? Gadhafi’s opponents include Islamists of various stripes, including some Salafis, followers of the Saudi Arabia-based branch of extremist Islam favored by some militants: What if? Libya’s own people might decide that an alliance with the West was not in their best interests: What if?


“What if?” quickly became “yes let’s.” And so it began. The new U.S. Africa Command (AFRICOM) had its first chance to show its stuff (although it appears AFRICOM’s chief was replaced by the commanders of U.S. airpower at NATO bases in Italy). The Libyan opposition leaders who first said, “We can do it ourselves,” started saying, “just a no-fly zone, but no foreign intervention” - even though top U.S. generals had already said you couldn’t have one without the other. And with UN Security Council Resolution 1973 including the expansive language of “any means necessary” regarding military attacks, the resolution’s other calls for negotiations and especially for an immediate cease-fire, were disregarded by Western powers. Of course, Gadhafi scorned a cease-fire too, but the U.N. resolution should have led to a much greater emphasis on negotiations to end the violence.


The question of whether, when and to what degree a new Libya can break free of its current dependence on Western militaries and other strategic backers remains unanswered

A divided society

As was the case in Egypt and Tunisia, it appeared that most Libyans supported the calls for more democracy, more rights, even for an end to the regime. But not all. A significant number of Libyans clearly supported the regime, a situation closer to the ongoing crisis still playing out in Syria.

It would have been surprising if this had not been the case. In his 42-year reign, Gadhafi had concentrated power in his own hands, and had allowed little freedom of speech, freedom of assembly or political opposition. He had used Libya’s oil revenue to arm and train a set of geographically and politically separate militias, many of them commanded by his sons and other relatives but answerable only to him, while the official national army remained relatively weak.


But Libya’s oil wealth is massive enough, and its population small enough, that Gadhafi’s “Green Book”-style quasi-socialism, idiosyncratic as it was, still mandated national systems of healthcare, education and social security that led to top United Nations rankings in human development indicators. And because of the singular concentration of power in one person’s hands, Gadhafi was popularly credited not only with repression but also with providing jobs, access to hospitals, university scholarships and the like.


Certainly those economic and social rights were not equally available. Libya’s modern history as a unified nation was based on an often uneasy joining of Western and Eastern parts that had long histories, under colonial rule and before, as separate provinces. Gadhafi had always found stronger support in Libya ’s west, including Tripoli , than in the eastern half of the country, where Benghazi is the largest city. His own hometown of Sirte, where he was killed Thurdsay, lies on the coast almost exactly half way between east and west. Sirte especially, and the western half of Libya more generally, had received relatively privileged access to the benefits of Libya’s petro-wealth.


The challenge facing post-Gadhafi Libya is daunting. The power, accountability and especially the legitimacy of the interim governing structure remains contested. The civil war created new divisions and consolidated others between parts of the Libyan population. Rifts between east and west have amplified, with the Benghazi-based TNC widely distrusted in other areas of the country. They have already had difficulty setting up shop in Tripoli, where anger remains at the disproportional Benghazi/Eastern Libya representation. The anti-Gadhafi militias largely remain independent of the TNC, with fighters from the western town of Misrata and the Nafusa Mountains, making public their lack of accountability to the TNC.


Divisions have been exacerbated between Arab and Tuareg Libyans, as well as between those with different languages, local tribal or clan or regional identities. The divide between lighter-skinned Arab Libyans and black African Libyans has been further worsened by the widespread attacks on dark-skinned Libyans as well as on sub-Saharan African workers by anti-Gadhafi fighters accusing them of serving as mercenaries for Gadhafi. While African mercenaries were indeed part of some pro-Gadhafi militias, the vast majority of Africans in Libya are there as economic migrants, working in the lowest-paid and hardest jobs across the country. The racism inherent in those attacks is now a bleeding wound across Libyan society.


How will the TNC – or whatever governing structure follows it – include representatives of Sirte, which many in and around the TNC have condemned as being all Gadhafi loyalists? Certainly Sirte’s population included many supporters of the ousted and now dead leader, but many had fled the city before the fighting escalated in recent weeks.


They are now returning to find their city in ruins, with blocks of houses looted and destroyed.

The TNC has committed itself to holding elections within eight months of the “final liberation” of the country - expected to be announced sometime today or tomorrow. The U.S.-backed appointed prime minister has promised to step down immediately after that announcement. Whether those promises are kept, whether anything remotely resembling a free and fair election can be arranged in eight months in a country with no recent legacy of political parties or civil society institutions, remain huge challenges.

There was a fascinating Freudian slip on Thursday afternoon when Secretary of State Clinton, referring to Libya now being awash with weapons, described a U.S. “concern as to how we disarm” the country, only then catching herself and correcting her statement to “or how the Libyans disarm everybody who has weapons.”

Whether U.S. and European offers of “help” will serve as cover for ensuring the election of a pro-U.S. government, maintaining Libyan dependence on the West, and thus keeping a U.S. foothold in the very center of the otherwise independent Arab Spring, are questions hovering just behind today’s celebrations on the Libyan street.


Phyllis Bennis is a Fellow of the Institute for Policy Studies . Her books include Calling the Shots: How Washington Dominates Today’s UN.

http://therealnews.com/t2/component/content/article/51-phyllis/781-after-gadhafi-the-west-eyes-the-libyan-prize

http://samotalis.blogspot.com/

ما لم يفهمه النظام الأسدي



طارق الحميد

ما لم يفهمه النظام الأسدي
في زحمة الانشغال بمقتل معمر القذافي أعلن النظام الأسدي على استحياء أنه قد يقبل بمبادرة الجامعة العربية، لكنه يرفض ترؤس قطر لها. خبر مهم، لكن ليس لأن نظام الأسد وافق، بل لأنها موافقة تظهر أن النظام بات أكثر خوفا، وأقل استيعابا للمتغيرات حوله.
فقبول المبادرة العربية الآن، وبشروط، خصوصا بعد إعلان النظام الأسدي أنه يرفضها، أي المبادرة، جملة وتفصيلا، لم يعد أمرا مؤثرا وذا قيمة؛ فمقتل القذافي على يد الثوار الليبيين، وبعد قرابة تسعة أشهر، أقل أو أكثر، من عمر الثورة الليبية، قد قلب المعادلة بالمنطقة، وقد يغير نظرة المجتمع الدولي حتى أمام الحلول المقترحة تجاه سوريا.
نهاية القذافي التي تشبه نهج حياته تقول لنا إن التحالف الدولي قادر على القضاء على أي طاغية بحال كان ذلك من خلال غطاء شعبي، وهو ما حدث بليبيا، وبمشاركة من الناتو تحت قيادة فرنسية بريطانية، ودعم أميركي. والأمر ليس عصيا على التطبيق بالحالة السورية. فكل المطلوب هو توفير منطقة محظورة داخل سوريا يتسنى من خلالها للمنشقين من الجيش السوري الاحتماء بها وتنظيم صفوفهم، ومن ثم توافر غطاء جوي من الناتو، على غرار ما حدث بليبيا، وحينها سنجد أن القيادة الأسدية قد التحقت بركب الأشرطة الصوتية، وبالطبع وقتها لن يستفيد النظام الأسدي لا من حزب الله ولا العراق ولا نوري المالكي الذي هنأ الشعب الليبي بـ«سقوط الطاغية»، بحسب ما نسب للمالكي، ويا لها من سخرية طبعا، فانظروا من يتحدث!
حينها، وعند تحرك التحالف الدولي، سينظر الجميع لمصالحه الاستراتيجية، وليس العاطفية أو الطائفية، فحينها سيكون تفكير حكومة لبنان منصبا على كيفية تماسكها، وسيفكر حزب الله بكيفية حماية ظهره، وبالطبع فإن حكومة المالكي بالعراق ستكون مشغولة بكيفية المحافظة على تماسكها أيضا لكي لا تنهار، خصوصا أن المظاهرات ضدها، وإن غيبها الإعلام، حقيقية. والأمر نفسه ينطبق على إيران المرعوبة من تداعيات ملف محاولة اغتيال السفير السعودي بواشنطن، فكيف بمواجهة عسكرية مع المجتمع الدولي؟
المراد قوله إن المنطقة تغيرت، والتعاطي الدولي معها تغير أيضا، وكذلك الرأي العام العربي الذي بات لا يرى غضاضة بإسقاط الطغاة ولو على يد الغرب، وهو أمر مختلف عن طريقة إسقاط صدام حسين، ولذا فإن ما بعد القذافي ليس مثل مرحلة ما قبل قتله، وهذا ما تظهره ردود فعل القادة الغربيين بعد قتل القذافي، وهذا ما لم يفهمه النظام الأسدي، والدليل أنه يريد اللعب مجددا مع المبادرة العربية التي كان قد رفضها بالأساس.
ما يجب أن يفهمه النظام الأسدي أنه تأخر كثيرا، وفوت الفرصة تلو الأخرى، حيث استنفد كل أساليب الحيل، ولم يعد أمامه اليوم إلا تقديم تنازلات حقيقية وقاسية لا مناص منها، وإلا كانت النهاية مأساوية، خصوصا أننا أمام 4 حالات لرؤساء عرب كل واحدة منها أسوأ من الأخرى، فهناك من انتهى بحفرة، وآخر داخل مجرى مياه، والثالث بالمنفى، والرابع بمشفى!
tariq@asharqalawsat.com

http://samotalis.blogspot.com/

WARKII TV-GA QARANKA 30 OCTOBER 2011.flv

Inay Gabiley shalayna Madaxwaynaha Somaliland,Muj. Axmed Siilaanyo KABO Nijaasa kala hor tagto,maantana aay Xisbiyo.....

Inay Gabiley shalayna Madaxwaynaha Somaliland,Muj. Axmed Siilaanyo KABO Nijaasa kala hor tagto,maantana aay Xisbiyo aan laba gar daadin iyo durbaano madhan u mashxaraddo, una sacabo tunto, waa kaaf iyo kala dheeri iga dheh‏

Afeef : Weli geed intaan tegay, kama furin gar eexo ,kalmadda Xaqa ahna , cidna kalama leexdo
Marka hore waxaan salaan qadarin,sharaf iyo karaamaba leh u dirayaa dhammaan shacabka xariirta ah ee reer Somaliland iyo inta maqaalkan akhrisataba.Waxaanan Allaha weyn idiinka baryaya , inuu idinka yeelo kuwii if iyo aakhiraba liibaana,xaqana u hiiliya,baadilka iyo dulmigana ka fogaada.
Inta aanan si xarago leh u soo bandhigin dulucda qoraalkaygan,aan ku daah furo heestan macnaha weyn xanbaarsan , ee uu qaado Xasan Adan Samatar:
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Ileyn Doqoni, qiiq kama kacdee,daaman keey meer meerisaa
docdeey kaa jirtaa bay,dhaxani kaa dishaayoo,
ma diirsado walaalkeed,intay duinda joogtee,
Doqoneey dabkaa be'
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Ileyn Doqoni qiiq kama kacdee,daaman keey meer meerisaa
ma taqaano dawgoo,dabool baa ka saarane,
markay dalaq tidhaa bay,ilmada daadisaaye,
doqoneey,dabkaa ba'.
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Akhriste,bal aan haddaba u deg dego halkaan u dan leeyahay iyo waxaan ka biyo diiday,ee aan rabo inaan ku saxo qalinkayga dhumucda leh,ee ka madhan fool xumada qabyaalada,shaqsi jeclyesiga iyo eexda.
Shalay bay ahayd markii Madaxweynaha Somaliland,Muj. Axmed Maxamed Maxamuud (Siilaanyo) iyo wefti uu hogaaminayo,iyagoo maraya faras magaalaha magaalada Gabiley,KABO NIJAASA,lagala hor tegay.Dhacdadaasi oo ahayd mid aad u fool xun,oo xag diineed iyo mid dhaqan toona aynaan u lahayn.Haddiise Xukuumadda Madaxweyne Siilaanyo aad saluugteen,miyaanay ka qumaneyn ,in sidii rag yeeli jiray ,ee milgaha iyo sharafta lahayd,ee Somaliland ku caano maashay,inaad gole joog iyo miiska wada tashiga, dareenkiina ku soo ban dhigtaan…Anigoo ka duulayaa maah maahda Somaliyeed ee tidhaa:"Walaalkaa magtana ka bixi, markhaatigana ku fur," waxay aniga ila tahay,inay taasi ahayd talo guracan , waxbana aydaan  kororsan , taariikh xumana aad la galbateen.
Hadaba,iyadoo taasi jirto,maxaa maantana keenay inaad Xisbiyo cusub , oo aan laba gar daadin iyo ballaan qaadayadii aad tidhaaheen hore ayaan ugu  hungoobney, iyo durbaanadan madhan, ugu  mashxaradaysaan , uguna sacabbo tumaysaan…….Waar ileyn , Doqoni xadhko lagu xidhayo,xusuladeey ku sidataa,ayaabaa hore loo yidhiye..Maxaase
idiin diiday , inaad idinku gacantiina Xisbiyo ku sameysataan,danta guud u walaalawdaan, gacmihiinana ku hagar baxdaan.
Yaan tawaadu iga idlaane  , aan soo af meero dulucda qoraalkaygan, oo ah:
Inay Gabiley shalayna Madaxwaynaha Somaliland,Muj.  Axmed Siilaanyo KABO Nijaasa kala hor tagto,maantana aay Xisbiyo aan laba gar daadin iyo durbaano madhan u mashxaraddo,waa kaaf iyo kala dheeri iga dheh
Waxaan dhammaantiinba idinku dhaafayaa, Somaliland Ha Noolaato  &  Long Live Somaliland
Reer Gabileyna waxaan ku sagootinayaa,Xasan adan Samatar, oo aan ka codsaday inuu heestii aan
ku wanqalay qoraalka ,u dhameys tiro….Sidee waaye Xasan,dabada u qabo hee !!!!
Eng.Mohamed Ali Muse
October 30,2011

Did Libya's NTC lose control of its fighters? - Inside Story - Al Jazeera English

Did Libya's NTC lose control of its fighters? - Inside Story - Al Jazeera English: "The former Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi has gone. He is now officially "dead and buried", but just how did he and more than 50 of his supporters die?

As Gaddafi was buried at an undisclosed location at dawn on Tuesday, the National Transitional Council (NTC) bowed to international pressure and announced the formation of a committee to investigate how he and his son were killed.

Mustafa Abdul Jalil, the head of the NTC, still held to the initial explanation given that Gaddafi may have been killed in crossfire - a view many of his officials do not appear to believe.

There is also a report from Human Rights Watch pointing to evidence of atrocities committed against 53 captured Gaddafi supporters who were found in the grounds of an abandoned hotel in Sirte, some bound and shot in the head.

As evidence emerges of summary executions, questions are being asked about whether the NTC lost control of its fighters during the final chaotic weeks of battle or if 40 years of brutality and repression justify such acts."

Read More

30 October, 2011

Elite commandos storm lawless Somali war zone to snatch tribal leader

 Elite commandos storm lawless Somali war zone to snatch tribal leader

By DAVID WILLIAMS and IAN DRURY

British commandos made a dramatic amphibious landing on Somalia’s war-torn shores to seize a tribal leader, the Daily Mail can reveal.

In an extraordinary operation in a lawless area teeming with bandits and pirates, elite Royal Marines launched Viking armoured vehicles from landing craft and pushed several miles inland to pick up the clan chief.

The unprecedented covert landing comes at a sensitive time in the troubled East African country as Al Qaeda-linked groups are training terror recruits and pirates are holding more than 100 hostages after seizing their boats.




Intrepid raiders: A Viking armoured troop-carrying vehicle, similar to the one used in the daring Somali raid
The tribal elder, one of the most influential figures in the region, was whisked through bandit country by heavily armed troops from 539 Assault Squadron and taken to a ‘very important meeting’ with MI6 and the Foreign Office aboard a Royal Navy support ship anchored off the coast.

More...
Kenyans face court over death of British tourist and wife's kidnap from resort
U.S. embassy in Kenya warns of 'imminent threat' over terror attack
Two Minnesota women convicted of aiding terrorists by 'funnelling money to Somali terror group al-Shabab'

The discussions are understood to have included the location of terror training camps and the seizing of hostages by clansmen operating in the Indian Ocean off Somalia.

The operation raises the prospect of further raids against terror camps and pirate bases.



Ready for action: A Royal Navy special forces diver

Special Forces have increasingly focused on Somalia and the Horn of Africa in recent months amid a rise in the number of ships seized by pirates for ransom, the kidnap of Western citizens and the mounting threat of the Al Qaeda-linked Islamist group Al-Shabaab.
There are also fears that Somalia has replaced Pakistan and Afghanistan as the main area of training for UK-born terrorists.

The U.S. has carried out a series of unmanned drone attacks on terror training camps, but until now there has been no confirmation of British forces operating in Somalia.
It is known that British Special Forces in the region have been involved in gathering intelligence on pirates and on Al-Shabaab, which is suspected of being behind the kidnap of Briton Judith Tebbutt, 56, from a Kenyan island resort last month.

Mrs Tebbutt’s husband, David, 58, was shot dead during the kidnap, which happened after bandits landed by boat at the resort near Somalia’s border with Kenya.

Mrs Tebbutt’s whereabouts are currently not known.



The Marines used Viking armoured vehicles similar to these to push several miles inland and pick up the clan chief

The Marines’ raid in July was the first time British troops have conducted a military operation in the troubled territory in 40 years. The swoop was part of Exercise Somaliland Cougar, a mission to train coastguards in Somaliland – a former British protectorate that broke away from failed Somalia – in anti-piracy techniques and meet MPs and tribal leaders.

'Further raids against terror camps and pirate bases'

The Marines, serving on the 60-man Royal Fleet Auxiliary ship Cardigan Bay, had come under fire as they sailed near the autonomous Somali region of Puntland, which is in dispute with Somaliland.
But despite the danger, a small unit from 539 Assault Squadron was sent in to pick up the tribal elder for the talks.

Under cover of darkness, they set out from RFA Cardigan Bay, a landing ship dock that allows smaller boats to send troops and equipment to shore.
The landing craft carried two armoured Viking troop-carrying vehicles protected by machine guns and smoke grenades.

The Vikings successfully left the landing craft and headed for their rendezvous with the tribal leader. Each carried up to 12 commandos.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2054936/Somalia-Commandos-storm-war-zone-snatch-tribal-leader.html#ixzz1cDGlIeJi

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Turkey sticks to promise of sustainable Somalia

Turkey sticks to promise of sustainable Somalia
30 October 2011, Sunday / TODAY'S ZAMAN, İSTANBUL

Turkey continues to invest in Somalia's infrastructure, demonstrating Turkey's commitment to help the drought-afflicted nation establish a foundation for a sustainable, prosperous future.

The Housing Development Administration of Turkey (TOKİ) plans to build a mosque, a hospital, two elementary schools and three prayer rooms in the Somali capital of Mogadishu, the Anatolia news agency reported on Sunday.

"The Somali government has allocated 50 hectares of land for us," TOKİ procurement specialist Ahmet Deniz told Anatolia. The mosque will be able to accommodate 1,000 people, the fully equipped hospital will hold 200 beds and each school will contain 24 classrooms.

Deniz and a research team from TOKİ are in Somalia to survey the property and are making preparations for the construction to begin. “We have been here making observations for the last five days. We have seen the land allocated to us, and we have been examining infrastructure possibilities like drainage systems. We have also been logging the sort of materials and equipment we will need, like sand and cement, for construction,” he said.

Another sign of Turkey's dedication to Somalia is the reopening of the Turkish Embassy in Mogadishu, which is expected to begin offering services in two weeks. Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu announced the reopening of the embassy in August, which was closed in 1991 due to security concerns.

Doctors and nurses from Turkey shared their experiences with Anatolia correspondents on Sunday after returning from Somalia, where they provided healthcare under extreme conditions.

The health professionals, who worked in a tent hospital in Mogadishu, said they look forward to a day when Somalia rises above its current plight. "I hope Somalia will face better days in the future and we will visit this country as tourists," pediatrician Enver Erman said. Nurse Serap Doğan said that when they first arrived in the famine-stricken country, the children they treated were suffering from malnutrition and dehydration. Now, the children's health conditions are greatly improved.

All of the nurses and doctors admitted that administering care in Somalia is challenging at the least, but they also readily acknowledged that the experience was a valuable one for both Somalia and Turkey.

Turkey has proven itself to be a leader among the international community in its ongoing support of and humanitarian assistance in Somalia.

Turkey collected more than TL 526 million for Somalia in fundraising drives that began during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, according to data released by the Prime Ministry's Disaster and Emergency Management Directorate (AFAD) on Thursday. Under the coordination of AFAD, Turkey has sent one plane and eight ships transporting nearly 22,000 tons of humanitarian aid worth approximately TL 67 million to the Somali people. Another TL 87 million went to distribution, security services and other costs. The remaining funds have either been distributed through nongovernmental organizations and other organizations or have been reserved for future projects in Somalia.

Somalia has been suffering from the worst drought the region has experienced in the last 60 years as well as dealing with ongoing conflict and terrorist attacks in the region.





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