+1 for Musa bixi,
how about the article in this thread which is 10 folds worse than the one written by Rubin,
https://www.somalinet.com/forums/viewto ... 0&t=396676
Is he on our payroll as well..!!.
are all of the red highlighted international organisations quoted below on our payroll to smear your shitty government ,fake country and nacas president of zoomalia..!!............

The Elliot School of International Affairs at the George Washington University supported the report on “Building the Somali National Army: Anatomy of a failure, 2008-2018,” written by Professor Paul D. Williams. The report states that “over a decade of security force assistance initiatives to build an effective Somali National Army (SNA) failed because of interrelated effects of political, contextual, and operational challenges.” That indisputable failure makes unthinkable the departure of AMISOM forces from Somalia in 2021 or in another decade to avoid quick collapse.
The Swedish International Development Agency has sponsored a report on “Evaluation of Sida’s support to peacebuilding in conflict and post conflict contexts – Somalia Country Report,” prepared by a team led by Erik Bryld and published January 8, 2019. Most of the 2018 key progress indicators like governance effectiveness, political stability and absence of violence, voice of accountability, freedom of press, control of corruption, internally displaced people, and refugee, all show negative, unchanged or negligible positive change compare to 1990 base. That’s a big blow.
The Institute for Economics and Peace (IEP) in Sydney, Australia issued in June 2019, “the Global Peace Index 2019 report” in which Somalia due to small improvement in internal conflicts ranks at 158 place out of 163 countries. Somalia is the sixth least peaceful countries in the world. The other five countries are Iraq, Yemen, South Sudan, Syria, and Afghanistan. The report uses 23 qualitative and quantitative indicators to measure the attitudes, institutions, and structures that create, support, and sustain peace in each country.
Finally, Bertelsmann Stiftung Transformation Index (BTI) 2018 Somalia country report evaluates the political, economic, and democratic governance performance of Somalia as part of 129 countries. Its conclusion on Somalia is not far from the conclusions of other reports. Based on the scale of 1 to 10, the overall status index of Somalia is 1.34. Breaking down in its components, the governance index is 2.25; the political transformation is 1.43; and the economic transformation is 1.25. Important issues considered under those indexes include political and social integration, stability of democratic institutions, rule of law, political participation, sustainability, economic performance, private property and market organization, international cooperation, consensus building, resource efficiency, and steering capability. Somalia is at lower end of the scale.