About Abdullahi Yusuf

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SahanGalbeed
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About Abdullahi Yusuf

Post by SahanGalbeed »

book review

HALGAN IYO HAGARDAAMO: Taariikh Nololeed (STRUGGLE AND CONSPIRACY: A Memoir) by Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed, 2012.

This colossal memoir, written in the standard Somali language of Af-Maxaa, was released in November 2011 roughly three months before Colonel Abdullahi Yusuf, the former president of the Transitional Federal Government of Somalia, died in a military hospital in the United Arab Emirates (UAE).

In December 2008, two weeks after he was forced to resign from the presidency, Yusuf was given political asylum by the former Yemeni dictator, Ali Abdalla Salih. When Yemen descended into fearful signs of Somalisation - the phenomenon of civic disorder and state collapse - Abdullahi Yusuf headed to Abu Dhabi where he had secured another political asylum.

Considered as one of the most ruthless warlords to have emerged during the Somali civil war, Yusuf can quite legitimately be compared to figures in the same league as Liberia's Charles Taylor and Sierra Leone's Fodey Sanko. He nonetheless persistently escaped justice, perhaps a product of his 'fortunate life', which a local soothsayer and fortune-teller had foretold when Yusuf was born into a pastoral nomadic family in northeast Somalia.

Typical of many post-war African biographies, the memoir tells us a completely different story of Yusuf than that known by Somali public. Here, Yusuf chronicles his early life as a nomad and camel herder, his career as an accidental soldier under Italian rule at the time of UN trusteeship (1950-54), a police officer (1956-60), a military officer (1960-69), a veteran of small scale Somali-Ethiopian war (1963-64), a political prisoner under dictator Siad Barre (1969-76), a factory manager (1976-77), a veteran of the more destructive Somali-Ethiopian war (1977-78), a rebel clan commander (1978-86), a mysterious political prisoner in Ethiopia under Mengistu Haile Mariam (1986-91), a clan warlord with the euphemism of a 'factional leader' (1991-98), the leader of autonomous regional government of Puntland (1998-2004) and, at last, interim president (2004-08) of the dysfunctional, feeble government propped up by Ethiopia.

Yusuf recounts how the CIA and other foreign intelligence agencies funded his route to power through its infamous, and continuing, 'War on Terror' venture in the Horn. The US reportedly supplied him not just with cash, but with confidential information used to weaken his adversaries, some of whom had the important characteristic of holding distinctly anti-American sensibilities. Such revelations demonstrate how the dynamics of Somali clan wars are not only based on clan-held vendettas exacerbated by hegemony and oppression, but are also influenced by a networks of foreign influence, as was the case in conflicts from Angola to Cote d'Ivoire Coast.

Regarded as a hostile to democracy and justice, it comes as no great surprise that when Yusuf was selected by clan elders to lead Puntland - a clan-based mini-state administration in northeast Somalia - he soon shifted from warlord to dictator. In the book, he provides some hint of how he opposed any authority distinct from his. He admits that he had ordered his militias 'to demolish by artillery shelling the house' (p. 290) of his political rival Colonel Jama Ali Jama, a Londoner, who returned to Puntland to run for regional presidency when the former's tenure ended in August 2001. When local elders elected Jama to replace Abdullahi Yusuf by way of clan consensus, the latter resorted to a brutal military act. Soon after he defeated his challenger, Yusuf told this reviewer, who in December 2001 visited him in Garowe and observed that the town was deserted by most of its residents, that 'Jama is a refugee who [had] no right to run for presidency' in his fiefdom. Indeed, Yusuf viewed Puntland as his own personal property, though he swiftly abandoned it once he was selected to lead the transitional federal government of Somalia, formed in a hotel in Kenya in October 2004.

Yusuf's love for and trust of his sub-clan was limitless. He held in earnest that he would not die in hunger in their midst (see for example his passionate stories pp. 172-4). His attitude to the concept of clanship is reflected by how he treats his fellow clansmen and other Somalis. It is true that clan consciousness is imbedded in the psyche of Somalis, but the way Yusuf uses it here might provoke scholar of Somalia I. M. Lewis's critics to reconsider their argument that the concept of clanship is not a 'cause', but a 'consequence' constructed by ethnocentric colonial regimes.

In November 2009, when this reviewer interviewed Yusuf in a hotel in Kilburn, northwest London, he looked so ailing and frail that he seemed disinclined to recall his past. Since 1996, when a successful liver transplant operation was carried out in a hospital in central London, Yusuf came to the British capital once or twice a year to see hepatologists from Cromwell Hospital. This reviewer wishes the Colonel had enumerated his mistakes and past record of warlordism straight. Such an account would undoubtedly offer aspiring warlords and would-be-Somali-warriors a lesson that might prevent them becoming ruthless dictators in attaining their ambitions through the mantra and the method of the end justifying the means. The memoir is recommended reading for Af-Maxaa Somali speakers wishing to glimpse the era of Somali warlordism and the 'politics of the belly' in Somalia from 1969 onwards.

Mohamed Haji (Ingiriis) is the Book Review Editor for the Journal of the Anglo-Somali Society. He holds a Master's degree (MSc) from the Department of Social Sciences and Humanities at London Metropolitan University. He is currently working on a second Master's degree (MA) in the Department of History at the

http://allafrica.com/stories/201208031241.html


Note : Now that Obama is president , Petraeus is in charge of the CIA and more muslims are recruited by that spy agency , everything has changed you know
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Gantaal05
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Re: About Abdullahi Yusuf

Post by Gantaal05 »

Bullshit
this writter seems to have hatred but hes somali that is expected

A/y ( aun) is legend and the father of the great state Of Puntland soon to be Puntland republic insh'allah
Puntland is hes legacy fu** the rest



allaw dhawr Image :up:
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Re: About Abdullahi Yusuf

Post by Leftist »

^^ Adeer, Ina Yey wuxuu yahay Soomaali oo idil baa taqaano. No need, marka, for this desperate difaacid. As the Brits say, Allow it, blud. You can't spray perfume on a dead man's shit and call it catar.
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Re: About Abdullahi Yusuf

Post by DayaxJeclee »

Kuligood shisheeyey ayey jeebka ugu wada jiraan, kuwa hadda i soo sharaaxaayo oo dhan wax nadiif ah ma jiro. qaarna waa basaasiin shisheeye iyo wada jaajuus. Danta dalka uma shaqaynaayeen dan shisheeye bey dabodhilif u yihiin :down:

Eebow naga badbaadiya xoolaahaan dhiiga nala wadaago
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Re: About Abdullahi Yusuf

Post by hargaysaay »

AY is in the mercy of his god today if you supported him he cant do nothing for you and if you hated him he cant do nothing to you, lets just say may god ease his judgment on him and all of ass
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Re: About Abdullahi Yusuf

Post by luis1 »

SOMALIA: From Finest to Failed State (PART III)

http://www.hiiraan.com/op4/2010/dec/170 ... t_iii.aspx
To add insult to an injury, Barre ordered Somali military forces to attack next-door country, Ethiopia, in 1977. His ambition was to conquer western Somalia, which was his birthplace. In fact, Barre was born in a small village in Somali territory by the name of Shilabo occupied by Ethiopia, thus he was preoccupied with the desire to ‘liberate’ those territories. So this time, he led whole nation and the state to all-out war against Addis Ababa. Somalia heavily lost this war, not just in terms of human capital, manpower and economic resources, but also in terms of statehood, national identity and unity
Siad Barre was defeated by Cuba and Soviet Union.
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Re: About Abdullahi Yusuf

Post by Thuganomics »

luis1 wrote:Siad Barre was defeated by Cuba and Soviet Union.
luise;Do you suffer from autism
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Re: About Abdullahi Yusuf

Post by luis1 »

luise;Do you suffer from autism
Yes,I do.You are totally right about my mental illness.

:clap: :clap: :clap: :clap:
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Re: About Abdullahi Yusuf

Post by Thuganomics »

^
It's not a mental illness.It's a genetic condition actually.You might be slightly autistic though
Some autistic people have narrowness and single-mindedness in their subject of interests
In your case the Ogaden war

:lol: :lol:
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Re: About Abdullahi Yusuf

Post by Murax »

Let the dead man rest.
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luis1
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Re: About Abdullahi Yusuf

Post by luis1 »

It's not a mental illness.It's a genetic condition actually.You might be slightly autistic though
Some autistic people have narrowness and single-mindedness in their subject of interests
In your case the Ogaden war
Yes,you are right.You are always right.

But I am a man who is looking for the truth about Ogaden War.

I have been 6 years here and there is no somali who can show me some sources which prove somali victory in 1978.

Can you show me any source(book or article) about the somali victory in 1978?

I do not understand if somalia won the war you can not show me sources about the victory.

I feel good because when I began to talk about Ogaden War in the forum,I thought that I would find someone who could prove me Somalia won the war but 6 later nobody can do it.

:clap: :clap: :clap:
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Re: About Abdullahi Yusuf

Post by Thuganomics »

^
If like you said you can't find anywhere a mention of a Somali win regarding the Ogaden conflict in '77.Why don't you then draw your own conclusions as to who won.Why do you need a Somali person to confirm it for you
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Re: About Abdullahi Yusuf

Post by luis1 »

Because I am looking for a somali who can show me sources about Ogaden War.
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Re: About Abdullahi Yusuf

Post by SahanGalbeed »

Luis1 , I don't know about what you're asking me in the private message you've sent me .
I don't know anything about the Ogaden war
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