..... Bogan waxad ka daalacan kartaa warar iyo wacaal sugan oo ku saabsan J.Somaliland iyo Caalamka kale ........."Ha Jirto Jamhuuriyadda Somaliland Oo Ha Joogto Waligeed"........

Thursday, November 23, 2017

War-baahinta Caalamka Oo Si-balaadhan U-baahisay Doorshadii J.Somaliland.

 Warbaahinta kala duwan oo ay ka mid yihiin; BBC, VOA, FOXNEWS, TRIBUNE [USA], WASHINGTON POST, NEWYORK TIMES, NEWS24, HORNDIPLOMAT, AFRICAREVIEW, MAGAZETINI, BLOOMBERGQUINT, CETUSNEWS,  iyo Wakaaladda Wararka ee dalka Shiinaha oo la yidhaa [XINHUA], ethiopiaobserver.com, mereja.com, updatesnews.com, worldnews.easybranches.com, worldaffairsjournal.org, newsafrica.ga, kenya.myasalon.com, latestafricanews.com, daily.news.itthon.ma,

- Beesha caalamka iyo warbaahin fara badan oo dunida ka mid ah, ayaa ka hadashay natiijada doorashadii Madaxtooyada Somaliland ee Guddiga Doorashadu shaacisay 21-kii bishan November, taas oo ay ku guulaystay xisbiga KULMIYE oo ay u sharraxnaayeen Madaxweyne Muuse Biixi Cabdi iyo Madaxweyne-ku-xigeenkiisa Cabdiraxmaan Cabdillaahi Ismaaciil (Saylici) oo helay in ka badan 55% codadkii shacabka Somaliland dhiibteen.

South Lakes man gains insights into Somaliland presidential election

- A SOUTH Lakes man played a role in the third Presidential election in Somaliland. Robin Le Mare, of Allithwaite, serves on the Election Observer Mission, as as a result, gained first-hand experience into the political process in one of the most controversial countries in the world. The team arrived ahead of the election process, which began on November 13, to impartially observe and report on the election. 

Following Somaliland’s election, the 60-member mission, funded by Britain’s government and drawing on members from 27 countries is now finalising its interim report to Somaliland’s National Electoral Commission as observers return to self-declared capital city Hargeisa.

Wednesday, November 22, 2017

The Case for Somaliland Recognition By Mahamoud Adan Jama

UK congratulates Somaliland

The new president of S/land (Muuse Biixi

Somaliland’s ruling party candidate declared election winner

Hargeis. The ruling party candidate in Somalia’s semi-autonomous region of Somaliland has been declared the winner of the presidential election but the opposition claims irregularities in the vote.
The electoral commission says Muse Bihi Abdi of the Kulmiye party won 55 percent of votes counted while Abdirahman Irro of the Wadani opposition got 40 percent.

Tuesday, November 21, 2017

Somaliland ticks boxes of statehood

- The immigration official at the border between Ethiopia and the Republic of Somaliland says that, in his seven years of working at the small and dusty border post, he has never seen a South African passport before.
During the day, the air in Somaliland’s capital city Hargeisa is still and listless in the heat. There is not a great deal to do except nap to the lullaby of an electric fan, listen to the mu’addhin calling out to the faithful, or chew khat. Alcohol is banned, so there is no cold beer to help the day drift on by.

Wednesday, November 15, 2017

UK-Parliament debated S/land Election

Mobile clinics bring stable care to moving populations in Somaliland

Dallow, SOMALILAND — Twenty-year old Safia Ali Abdi had never been to the doctor before she lined up at a mobile clinic under an acacia tree one October morning this year. She left her home at 7am, carrying her five-month old son Sakaria in her arms along a four-hour walk to seek care. Both their mouths had been sore and bleeding, which made it hard for Sakaria to breastfeed. When Abdi arrived, she found three nurses and a midwife, with a line of patients waiting. The clinic was comprised of two tables, now stacked with medicine, scales to measure body weight, a wooden block for measuring height, and a tent for the midwife to examine pregnant women and new mothers. Abdi and her son were diagnosed with stomatitis, a condition that causes sores and swelling in the mouth. They were given zinc tablets and anti-fungal oral drops, and sent home.
Read more;
https://www.devex.com/news/mobile-clinics-bring-stable-care-to-moving-populations-in-somaliland-91419

To Improve Trust in Its Elections, Somaliland Goes High-tech


- Last week, Somalilanders went to the polls in a historic presidential election. Officials employed advanced iris-scanning technology to identify voters and prevent duplicate ballots — the first use of such a biometric system in a national election.

For Somaliland, a breakaway region whose independence has not yet been recognized by the U.N., the scanners also made a powerful statement about its legitimacy as a nation-state.

Monday, November 13, 2017

Voting Begins in Somaliland in Third Presidential Election Since 2003

- Polling stations have opened in the self-proclaimed republic of Somaliland for the third presidential election since 2003. A VOA Somali reporter in Hargeisa, Barkhad Kariye, says he saw long lines, with some people waiting since 3:00 a.m.
“They wanted to be the first to cast their ballot, people want to make sure they vote before polling stations close,” Kariye said.
The electoral commission has urged people to prioritize the elderly and the vulnerable. There are 1,642 polling stations were voters will cast their ballots.

Sunday, November 12, 2017

The man who buried Somaliland's dead

- It was June 2, 1988 and Hargeisa was under attack. The rat-a-tat-tat of nearby artillery rose above the city and filled Ibrahim Abdullahi's ears, but the battle was in the north and hadn't reached his government-controlled southern district - at least not yet. As he nervously ventured outside, Abdullahi's mind raced. He had already sent his wife and eight children to safety in Ethiopia, but he felt a longing to stay in Hargeisa, a need to protect his modest mud-brick home and keep it occupied in order to deter looters and to defend the product of years of his own hard work.

Why Somaliland broke from Somalia?

Saturday, November 11, 2017

Somaliland: Observation Mission Deployed to Monitor Historic Election

- On 13 November 2017, Somaliland will hold its third presidential election. A team of 60 international election observers from 24 different countries – including representatives of the Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization (UNPO) – have arrived in Hargeisa. The international election observation mission (EOM) will undertake various tasks before, during and after election day, such as examining the pre-election campaign, verifying access by political parties to locations for campaigning, the equality of access to the media, the procedures which will be employed for the distribution of election materials, voting itself and the counting and tallying of ballots. This election will be a landmark for Somaliland as this is the first time an incumbent does not run again for presidency, making it an important phase in Somaliland’s consolidation of its representative democracy. 

Breakaway Somaliland to elect new president


- The self-proclaimed state of Somaliland will vote for a new president on Monday, hoping to continue a series of democratic transitions of power that sets it apart from its troubled neighbour Somalia.

The northern territory, which is more tribally homogenous and stable than the rest of Somalia, broke away in 1991 and has been striving to attain international recognition ever since.

Three candidates are running for the state's top office, seasoned politicians Muse Bihi of the ruling Kulmiye party and opposition candidates Abdirahman Iro and Faysal Ali Warabe, who was defeated in previous elections in 2010.

Recognition a Key Issue in Somaliland's Presidential Election

- Somaliland's three presidential candidates have concluded their campaigns ahead of Monday's poll to elect the next leader of the breakaway region. Muse Bihi of the ruling Kulmiye party, Faisal Ali Waraabe of the For Justice and Development party (UCID) and Abdirahman Mohamed Abdillahi of the Wadani party held their final rallies this week in the capital, Hargeisa.

A central issue, as always, is how to win international recognition for Somaliland. Somalia, which was once governed by Italy, wants Somaliland to be part of a single Somali state. But Somaliland, which used to be a British colony and broke away from the rest of Somalia in 1991, wants to be a separate country.

Friday, November 10, 2017

DP World's Berbera Port Gets Election-Year Attention

- The Port of Berbera's future may depend in part on the results of Somaliland's upcoming presidential election. Opposition party candidate Abdirahman Irro has criticized the current government's $440 million deal with DP World for a 30-year lease on the port, and he has promised to review the agreement – along with other privatization efforts – if he should win the election. 
"Our party is welcoming of all investment projects in Berbera, but investment deals shouldn't be conducted under the table," Irro said. "We promise to review all the deals that were signed by the [current] administration."

Dood: Musharixiinta 3da Xisbi "S/land

Tuesday, November 7, 2017

Somaliland Elections on Track for November

- Somaliland’s National Electoral Commission has released the total number of registered Voters with Identification Cards to vote in the upcoming November election. The data which was released at a news conference Tuesday put the total number of registered and eligible voters in Somaliland at 704,089. Speaking to VOA Somali, NEC spokesman, Sa’id Ali Muse said the commission has completed the distribution and the cleaning up of voter registration identification cards and released the list to Somaland’s three political parties and the minister of interior. 

Monday, November 6, 2017

Dubai's DP World to develop free zone in Somaliland

- Dubai-based DP World announced on Monday that it will develop a greenfield economic free zone in Somaliland to complement the development of the Port of Berbera. 

DP World Group chairman and CEO Sultan Ahmed Bin Sulayem and Republic of Somaliland Minister for Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation Dr Saad Ali Shire have signed an agreement for the Berbera Free Zone (BFZ).

The development is based on DP World’s Jebel Ali Free Zone (Jafza) in Dubai and aims to attract investments, encourage trade, create new jobs and position Berbera as a gateway port for the region, a statement said.

Somaliland election: Will the self-declared state show East Africa how it’s done?

- On 13 November, Somaliland will embark on its third presidential elections since it unilaterally declared independence in 1991. With the incumbent set to step down, voters at 1,600 polling stations across the autonomous region of Somalia will choose a new president.
Despite not being a recognised independent state, Somaliland is considered to be one of East Africa’s best-functioning and most stable democracies. The election, part funded by the European Union and UK, will be overseen by international observers and may be the first in the world to employ iris-based biometric voter registration.

Saturday, November 4, 2017

Catherine Wines: ‘International remittances help people directly’

- I’m the co-founder of WorldRemit. It’s an online remittance business which targets helps migrants send money back home. We’re seven years old. We very much wanted to disrupt the remittance sector, which was very traditional until then. This means that when people wanted to send money back home they had to first withdraw cash, then go to a shop, queue and send the money, while the person on the other end would have to go to a shop and collect the money. Our mission was to make it more convenient, secure and fast – but also cheaper, because remittance was dominated by a few players and the cost was very, very high. We did that by using technology to be able to make it easier, so that people could just go on a website or use our app to do a transaction very quickly,
Read more;
http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/businessreview/2017/11/03/catherine-wines-international-remittances-help-people-directly-interview/

Thursday, November 2, 2017

Somaliland: From fighting famine to election fever

- For most of this year, I have been reporting on the catastrophic drought which has gripped Somaliland for almost three years, a drought which has also affected huge areas of Puntland and Somalia.
I travelled across the length and breadth of the country - from the overflowing paediatric feeding clinics in the capital, Hargeisa, to the remotest nomadic communities in the far east of the country. Throughout that time I never thought I would see people in Somaliland turn out in their tens of thousands for a multi-party election. Yet that is exactly what is happening right now. A country that had been in the grip of hunger and disease is now in the grip of election fever.