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Blessed is Djibouti - Always Moving Forward
Posted: Sat Sep 20, 2014 11:00 pm
by Jabuutawi
Re: Blessed is Djibouti - Always Moving Forward
Posted: Sat Sep 20, 2014 11:30 pm
by Caesar
Djibouti is blessed Mashallah.
Keep up the good work Djibouti
Re: Blessed is Djibouti - Always Moving Forward
Posted: Sat Sep 20, 2014 11:35 pm
by Jabuutawi
That is right. We will soon incorporate Shinile, Saylac and Dira Dhabe to Djibouti in due time.
Re: Blessed is Djibouti - Always Moving Forward
Posted: Sat Sep 20, 2014 11:37 pm
by Xildiiid
Seylac?

Re: Blessed is Djibouti - Always Moving Forward
Posted: Sat Sep 20, 2014 11:38 pm
by Jabuutawi
Warya Ceasar,
Allez-vous l'annee' prochaine Djibouti? Je vais la- bas.
Re: Blessed is Djibouti - Always Moving Forward
Posted: Sat Sep 20, 2014 11:39 pm
by Caesar
The colonies in Bale are looking nice as well Jabuutawi.
Shinile is getting developed, and Djibouti is developing even more.
Dire Dawa a crown jewel will be flying her true colours in due time. Expansion time!
Re: Blessed is Djibouti - Always Moving Forward
Posted: Sat Sep 20, 2014 11:40 pm
by Caesar
Jabuutawi wrote:Warya Ceasar,
Allez-vous l'annee' prochaine Djibouti? Je vais.
Nah sxb not next year, next time im going will probably be 3-4 years. I need to hit up Galbeed before I go back to Djibouti again.
The city got nice wallahi.
Re: Blessed is Djibouti - Always Moving Forward
Posted: Sat Sep 20, 2014 11:51 pm
by Jabuutawi
Bro.
My trip will be mostly outside of Djibouti city. I plan on visiting many towns. I would like to check out where one of my great-grand fathers is buried, Saylac. Just like when we were anointing our new Ugass, I will need no visa to visit Saylac. Remember 100s of cars/SUVs passed the so called border and no SNM militia on site...

Can't touch me now. I want to also visit Dira Dhabe but a bit hesistant. I do not get along with Xabashi, they probably have my dossier.
Re: Blessed is Djibouti - Always Moving Forward
Posted: Sat Sep 20, 2014 11:59 pm
by Caesar
Jabuutawi wrote:Bro.
My trip will be mostly outside of Djibouti city. I plan on visiting many towns. I would like to check out where one of my great-grand fathers is buried, Saylac. Just like when we were anointing our new Ugass, I will need no visa to visit Saylac. Remember 100s of cars/SUVs passed the so called border and no SNM militia on site...

Can't touch me now. I want to also visit Dira Dhabe but a bit hesistant. I do not get along with Xabashi, they probably have my dossier.
SXB fuck Ethiopia. Zayla is nice spot drove past there but didn't stay, the heat is as same as Djibouti lol. Nah you won't need no visa
to go there, Lowya Caade is aiight. Ill let you know some insider info on traveling though if you want, some new 2013 info
I wanna go to Dire next 2 years and Jigjiga and Awoowe's town Harar,
I flew in to Djibouti last year from Addis, only a one hour flight so it was cool..
Driving is more of a hassle but you get to see all the little villages and stuff. I did that from North Somalia to Djibouti.
I might try that for my Galbeed road trip ( djb down to galbeed)
Sxb "Somaliland" only has Lowacade on the sland side and its pretty lax. Bring lots of water
Djibouti lowya cade side has electricity and everything it looked proper. lol it was hilarious the contrast.
Re: Blessed is Djibouti - Always Moving Forward
Posted: Sun Sep 21, 2014 12:36 am
by Hawdian
^^ Who cares about the contrast between Lowyacado. Both sides are Cise Warabe. No Isaac is there.
As for Djibouti city, every nerve system of the small port city is controlled by Isaac businessmen and Khadra Haid. Including this tower looking down on Cise Warabe as they scavenge for bones below.

Dahabshiil building
The other opposite building also under construction belongs to another Isaac businessman, Ahmed Osman Guelleh, and his GSK group. He owns over 15 companies in Djibouti and Somaliland Beverage Industry (SBi) in Hargeisa that manufactures the Coke.
The rest of the minor projects that resemble a ghetto project (apartments) belong to Arab investors. Isse remains dirt poor like the Aboriginals of Australia in their land.
Ras
Re: Blessed is Djibouti - Always Moving Forward
Posted: Sun Sep 21, 2014 2:49 am
by Jabuutawi
Look at this Idoor getting his panties all bunched up. War wuxu xasiidsana, Allow iisha Idoor daga nagamaari.
The whole concept of public and private FDI is exactly what I have shown above. It is immaterial who built what. At the end of the day these buildings, plants, ports and other structures stay in the Republic of Djibouti -- a recognized country and a member of the United Nations. Can you say that about your Xaargaysa and Idooristania triangle?
Go back to sucking Habashi ceeb illegitimate son of Yibir and don't derail my thread.
Re: Blessed is Djibouti - Always Moving Forward
Posted: Sun Sep 21, 2014 2:55 am
by original dervish
Re: Blessed is Djibouti - Always Moving Forward
Posted: Sun Sep 21, 2014 3:30 am
by thegoodshepherd
Djibouti always gives me hope. That Somalis are actually capable of running a functioning state. It reminds me that Somalis are capable of being normal humans

Re: Blessed is Djibouti - Always Moving Forward
Posted: Sun Sep 21, 2014 3:40 am
by Hawdian
Jabuutawi wrote:Look at this Idoor getting his panties all bunched up. War wuxu xasiidsana, Allow iisha Idoor daga nagamaari.
The whole concept of public and private FDI is exactly what I have shown above. It is immaterial who built what. At the end of the day these buildings, plants, ports and other structures stay in the Republic of Djibouti -- a recognized country and a member of the United Nations. Can you say that about your Xaargaysa and Idooristania triangle?
Go back to sucking Habashi ceeb illegitimate son of Yibir and don't derail my thread.
Cise Warabe homeless if anyone is sucking anything its you from Ethiopian, Isaac, French to Arabs. The only people doing anything for themselves in the tiny stadium are French, Arabs and Isaac. The Cise Warabe are beggars in their land like the Aboriginals. Furtheremore the entire Djibouti depends on Ethiopia even to breath. If they close the border for 24 hours the entire population will starve to death. They do not produce anything and import everything from power, water, food to oxygen.
The truth about Cise Warabe:
NEARLY a quarter of the population in drought-hit Djibouti is in desperate need of aid, with malnutrition and a dramatic lack of water causing a mass exodus from rural areas, the UN said on Thursday.
“Persistent and recurring droughts have resulted in a general lack of water for both people and livestock,” said the UN’s Djibouti coordinator Robert Watkins.
The crisis, which has dragged on since 2010, has left a full 190,000 of the country’s 850,000 residents in need of humanitarian assistance.
Read more at
http://www.tesfanews.net/tag/drought/#t ... YoLypZb.99
No point posting Isaac, French and Arab apartments. Cise Warabe scavenge for bones to eat. Rural area is where all the Cise lives and they dying like the rest of the hyena population.
Re: Blessed is Djibouti - Always Moving Forward
Posted: Sun Sep 21, 2014 10:53 am
by Jabuutawi
Idoor, you sound like a jilted whore thinking one-night stand would lead to a house with white picket fence and couple of kids. Take your jealousy elsewhere illegitimate child of Bucar Bacayr.
You keep regurgitating the same story about drought in Djibouti. Do something about the drought in Idoorland and tahrib of your women raped in the deserts of North Africa before you lecture others.
A handful of Idoor bowing down to their master Ismail Omar Guelleh to let them continue doing business in Djibouti does not constitute ownership of Djibouti. Land -- including its buildings -- stay put but people move. If ever recognition comes to Xaargaysa (highly unlikely, you will be in an indefinite legal limbo), these people will move on with only their shirts on their backs and all the buildings remain in Djibouti. I dare them to move their businesses now to Berbera port and see what happens

.
Now be a good Idoor boy and go back to your kitfo eating Habashi master's website and continue swallowing his semen. After all your success is predicated on how often Idoor men bow down to their masters.