http://www.allgedo.com/2012/07/03/xildh ... i-wareysi/
http://www.allgedo.com/newswire/wp-cont ... -Aadan.mp3
Mohamud Sayid Aden we dont support shirka Nairobi
Moderators: Moderators, Junior Moderators
- CoolPoisons
- SomaliNet Super
- Posts: 10533
- Joined: Sun Dec 16, 2007 7:23 am
- CoolPoisons
- SomaliNet Super
- Posts: 10533
- Joined: Sun Dec 16, 2007 7:23 am
Re: Mohamud Sayid Aden we dont support shirka Nairobi
warsame101 rejects this too
It is no secret that for the past two decades; dozens of regional administrations – many overlapping their virtual regional borders – have sporadically emerged. Notwithstanding that majority were driven by the recent US Policy change in employing the US dual-track approach; it seems that the external actors continue to spur this process fully knowing its impracticability when applied to a nation ripe with clan carved fiefdoms. The US optimistically claims its dual-track policy will expand its capacity to engage with the interim Somali government and sub-state political stakeholders in order to promote peace and stability.
Not too long ago, an IGAD/AU-backed conference was held in Nairobi with the primary aim of establishing a regional state known as Jubbaland. The conference was attended by political stakeholders who incidentally do not share the same let alone similar political outlook for the proposed region apart from the common denominator of eliminating the al-Qaeda-allied al-Shabab rebel movement. The local participants represented various groups, all professing to be the main stakeholders of the regional authority in Jubbaland. They are: 1) the venal TFG, the paper-state Azania; the Ethiopian-backed Ahlu Sunnah Waljama’a; the Kenyan-backed Ras Kamboni and finally a pro-government militia better known as Gedo Defence Forces.
Jubbaland is an area comprising the three most southern regions of Somalia, namely: Gedo, Lower Juba and Middle Juba. A name initially coined by the British a century ago to describe the perennial Juba river; it is often described as Somalia’s breadbasket for its considerable potential of irrigation development. This inter-riverine area has been bedevilled for the past two decades by factional fightings; man-made famine; prolonged droughts and general interminable instability. Presently, al-Shabab holds sway over much of the region.
What differentiates this southern area from the adjacent regions and farther up north in Somalia is its unique heterogeneous clan-composition. It is an area where pastoral, agricultural, and coastal traditions meet. It is often dubbed as ‘Little Somalia’ for its inhomogeneous tribal make-up and the mere fact that those three regions, given its vast size, can harmoniously host the entire populace of Somalia.
A communique was released detailing the proposed foundation of this wildly contested region. The points agreed seem to be ticking all the right boxes of a prototypical sub-state that could serve as an exemplar save one pivotal point: the deliberate omission of all-inclusiveness.
The source of my distrust towards this sham ‘inclusive’ conference is that the local participants all hail from a single umbrella clan, purposely leaving out the rest of the clan confederations inhabiting ‘Little Somalia’. At a time when Somalia is supposed to come together given the current momentum in Mogadishu; it seems that the external powers continue to exploit the same existing factor (i.e. exclusiveness) in order to protract the current turmoil in that particular region. Neglecting the latent breadbasket and the millions of Somalis it could serve and feed once given her due right of stability; the contending factions seem to only envision the prospective exploitation of revenues that awaits them once al-Shabab leaves the scene.
It is therefore important, nay, crucial and equally imperative that if Somalia in the foreseeable future does decide to adopt a federal constitution, that the clan complexity existing in that particular region is not exploited or at worst imbalanced.
To IGAD/AU and its external backer: the US; any solution that hopes to achieve positive outcomes must be indigenous, coming from within Somali society itself.
Mohammed Ibrahim Shire
Warsame101@gmail.com
blog: www.somalimind.com
http://gedoonline.com/?p=41253
It is no secret that for the past two decades; dozens of regional administrations – many overlapping their virtual regional borders – have sporadically emerged. Notwithstanding that majority were driven by the recent US Policy change in employing the US dual-track approach; it seems that the external actors continue to spur this process fully knowing its impracticability when applied to a nation ripe with clan carved fiefdoms. The US optimistically claims its dual-track policy will expand its capacity to engage with the interim Somali government and sub-state political stakeholders in order to promote peace and stability.
Not too long ago, an IGAD/AU-backed conference was held in Nairobi with the primary aim of establishing a regional state known as Jubbaland. The conference was attended by political stakeholders who incidentally do not share the same let alone similar political outlook for the proposed region apart from the common denominator of eliminating the al-Qaeda-allied al-Shabab rebel movement. The local participants represented various groups, all professing to be the main stakeholders of the regional authority in Jubbaland. They are: 1) the venal TFG, the paper-state Azania; the Ethiopian-backed Ahlu Sunnah Waljama’a; the Kenyan-backed Ras Kamboni and finally a pro-government militia better known as Gedo Defence Forces.
Jubbaland is an area comprising the three most southern regions of Somalia, namely: Gedo, Lower Juba and Middle Juba. A name initially coined by the British a century ago to describe the perennial Juba river; it is often described as Somalia’s breadbasket for its considerable potential of irrigation development. This inter-riverine area has been bedevilled for the past two decades by factional fightings; man-made famine; prolonged droughts and general interminable instability. Presently, al-Shabab holds sway over much of the region.
What differentiates this southern area from the adjacent regions and farther up north in Somalia is its unique heterogeneous clan-composition. It is an area where pastoral, agricultural, and coastal traditions meet. It is often dubbed as ‘Little Somalia’ for its inhomogeneous tribal make-up and the mere fact that those three regions, given its vast size, can harmoniously host the entire populace of Somalia.
A communique was released detailing the proposed foundation of this wildly contested region. The points agreed seem to be ticking all the right boxes of a prototypical sub-state that could serve as an exemplar save one pivotal point: the deliberate omission of all-inclusiveness.
The source of my distrust towards this sham ‘inclusive’ conference is that the local participants all hail from a single umbrella clan, purposely leaving out the rest of the clan confederations inhabiting ‘Little Somalia’. At a time when Somalia is supposed to come together given the current momentum in Mogadishu; it seems that the external powers continue to exploit the same existing factor (i.e. exclusiveness) in order to protract the current turmoil in that particular region. Neglecting the latent breadbasket and the millions of Somalis it could serve and feed once given her due right of stability; the contending factions seem to only envision the prospective exploitation of revenues that awaits them once al-Shabab leaves the scene.
It is therefore important, nay, crucial and equally imperative that if Somalia in the foreseeable future does decide to adopt a federal constitution, that the clan complexity existing in that particular region is not exploited or at worst imbalanced.
To IGAD/AU and its external backer: the US; any solution that hopes to achieve positive outcomes must be indigenous, coming from within Somali society itself.
Mohammed Ibrahim Shire
Warsame101@gmail.com
blog: www.somalimind.com
http://gedoonline.com/?p=41253
-
- SomaliNet Heavyweight
- Posts: 4133
- Joined: Tue Aug 14, 2007 6:28 pm
Re: Mohamud Sayid Aden we dont support shirka Nairobi
I hope the IGAD/AU Jubbaland conference moves on full speed and is implemented. It is a process and there will be criticism and they should have a right to be critical but they are not allowed to be spoilers.
Kenya, Ethiopia, IGAD, AMISOM, TFG, and the main groups all involved support it. That's what counts right now.
Kenya, Ethiopia, IGAD, AMISOM, TFG, and the main groups all involved support it. That's what counts right now.
- CoolPoisons
- SomaliNet Super
- Posts: 10533
- Joined: Sun Dec 16, 2007 7:23 am
Re: Mohamud Sayid Aden we dont support shirka Nairobi
Mad_Dog cid kasta oo la timaada maamul goboleed Jubaland waad tageeri
mar waa Ducale marna Mohamud Ali Shire hadana Habashi
mar waa Ducale marna Mohamud Ali Shire hadana Habashi
- Smile-LiKe-SuN-RiSE
- SomaliNet Super
- Posts: 7665
- Joined: Tue Feb 21, 2006 12:52 am
- Location: Jubbaland
Re: Mohamud Sayid Aden we dont support shirka Nairobi
CoolPoisons wrote:Mad_Dog cid kasta oo la timaada maamul goboleed Jubaland waad tageeri
mar waa Ducale marna Mohamud Ali Shire hadana Habashi
















Re: Mohamud Sayid Aden we dont support shirka Nairobi
Lol.CoolPoisons wrote:Mad_Dog cid kasta oo la timaada maamul goboleed Jubaland waad tageeri
mar waa Ducale marna Mohamud Ali Shire hadana Habashi
- FBISOMALIA
- SomaliNet Super
- Posts: 9254
- Joined: Fri Oct 15, 2010 5:26 am
- Location: SSDF FOR LIVE , AUN AWOOWE AY
Re: Mohamud Sayid Aden we dont support shirka Nairobi
CoolPoisons wrote:Mad_Dog cid kasta oo la timaada maamul goboleed Jubaland waad tageeri
mar waa Ducale marna Mohamud Ali Shire hadana Habashi




-
- SomaliNet Heavyweight
- Posts: 4133
- Joined: Tue Aug 14, 2007 6:28 pm
Re: Mohamud Sayid Aden we dont support shirka Nairobi
I supported Ducaale and I support this. I have no loyalties other than to what seems to be moving and optimistic. I don't have the time to perpetually oppose and criticize.CoolPoisons wrote:Mad_Dog cid kasta oo la timaada maamul goboleed Jubaland waad tageeri
mar waa Ducale marna Mohamud Ali Shire hadana Habashi
That's the maangaab's job; to never bring anything forward and to constantly be critical.
-
- Similar Topics
- Replies
- Views
- Last post
-
- 1 Replies
- 461 Views
-
Last post by Advo
-
- 16 Replies
- 1417 Views
-
Last post by ReturnOfMariixmaan
-
- 0 Replies
- 883 Views
-
Last post by CoolPoisons
-
- 8 Replies
- 842 Views
-
Last post by Adali
-
- 3 Replies
- 419 Views
-
Last post by ruralboy
-
- 3 Replies
- 488 Views
-
Last post by Murax
-
- 3 Replies
- 435 Views
-
Last post by Smile-LiKe-SuN-RiSE
-
- 10 Replies
- 1028 Views
-
Last post by Isseayaanle
-
- 0 Replies
- 347 Views
-
Last post by Sadaam_Mariixmaan
-
- 0 Replies
- 475 Views
-
Last post by FaraxZeroIncome