I dag är det precis 20 SNM erövrat Somaliland huvudstad Hargeisa

 

Idag den 31 Maj 2008, är det excakt 20 år sen SNM intagit Hargeisa, Somalilands nuvarande huvudstad Hargeisa, Klockan var runt 2:30 midnatt när Hargeysa borna hörde kraftiga explotioner sydväst om Stan, där låg millitär högkvarteten  26 . Hargiesa har fallit för SNM,s händer men som under dag gjorde millitär reträtt för, men hade tagit kontroll över stan   2 av 4 delar av Stan. General flydde från sit residens, Somalilands nuvarande presidnet palats, han flydde  för sitt liv, när SNM attakerade milllitär högkvareten 26  kunde han inte stanna där utan flydde vidare till Hargeisas flygplats. Jag kommer ihåg den natten faktiskt, Jag skulle gå på toaletten och när jag lämnade pojk rumet dörr såg min mamma stod  mitt i Hallen (daarada) hon blev vaken av ljudet explatinioner/granater. Jag frågade vad händer mamma och jag kommer inte riktigt ihåg vad hon svarade, men gick på toa och kom tillbaka från toa, jag såg att mamma stod fortfarande mitt i hallen och såg orolig ut. Jag jag framställde en bild av sitiuationen  och fick bild av si 

Jag kommer att mera av det här General Siyad Barre   överste Morgan

Hundreds of thousands of people have been killed, dispersed or bombed out of their homes in northern Somalia after government military operations, which Western aid workers say, are little short of genocide.

The action has been concentrated on the three northern towns of Hargeisa, Berbera and Burao where some 20,000 people are believed to have died in recent bombing raids by the government against the strongholds of the rebel Somali National Movement.

Many thousands of others are being systematically denied food because Somali forces are deliberately holding up essential supplies.

Aid officials said that up to 800,000 people – almost all of them Issaq nomads- have been displaced as a result of the civil war. A quarter of these, and possibly as many as 300,0000, were now struggling to survive in wretched conditions in refugee camps in Ethiopia while a similar number had been forced to leave Africa. The fate of those who can no longer be traced remains largely unknown.


Several European Aid agencies including Oxfam, Save the Children and ActionAid from Britain, have been working in the horn of Africa for several years. Representatives spoke yesterday to The Guardian because of concern but asked not to be identified so that their work would not be prejudiced.

Officials are talking of the partial destruction of the Issaq and of what amounts to “a great cover-up” to prevent an international outcry against the government. The Americans, they said, had not confronted the government in the way they should have done over “the horrific things”, which have been happening. The US maintains a military base at Berbera on the Gulf of Aden.

A US state department spokesman said last night that the “worst excesses” of the civil war had occurred last summer. US policy, he added, was not to cover up the war but to encourage national reconciliation by urging the government to talk with the rebels in the north.

Until about eight months ago the urbanised population of Issaqs were concentrated in Hargeisa, Berbera and Burao. Although few journalists have been authorised to visit the area, tens of thousands of people are understood to have died during a series of bombing raids on the towns last August, conducted mainly by mercenaries recruited in Zimbabwe.

“They just bombed and bombed and bombed,” an agency man, recently returned from Somalia, said. Hargeisa, which originally had a population of 350,000, was 70% destroyed. Burao was “devastated” in the same raids.

Issaqs who survived from the bombings are said to have been rounded up in the streets by Somali troops and summarily shot. Mass graves have since been found as well as corpses, which were left to rot in the streets where they fell.

The people now living in the three towns are believed to be totally non-Issaq or military personnel who have been deputed to guard what has been retaken from the SNM.

These claims, widely accepted by agencies who have been working in the country for some years, are to be investigated by Amnesty International team, which hopes to visit Somalia next month.

The situation has strained Somalia relations with Britain although the overseas development administration has been heavily involved in several aid programs there.

Several agencies have also had to consider their position carefully. Some have cited “impossible” working conditions, including the deliberate obstruction of food deliveries to areas in urgent need.

An Australian agency, Community Aid Abroad, preparing a dossier of complaints against the Somali government, is expected allege that there have been threats against staff members and local recruits.

The situation of 200,000 Somali refugees living in desert camps in southern Ethiopia is also causing acute concern.

Aid officials talk of “political nightmare” and “potential total disaster area”.

Now, in the middle of the dry season, the camps are said to be without access to fresh natural water supplies, having to depend for minimal supplies on erratic electric pumps.

In addition, more nutrition in the camps has been steadily increasing while food distribution is said to be “appalling”. Food is distributed from barbed wire enclosures where would-be recipients may be forced to wait up to two days only to be told supplies have run out.

Source: The Guardian, January 1989.

27 Maj är en historik dag för Somaliland

Idag är det 20 år sedan som SNM (Somali National Movement ) styrkor rullade ellet tågade in Somaliland näst största huvudsatad Burco. Det är en historik dag som alla minns i Somaliland. SNM stytrkorna bestämde sig efter då två dåvarande presidenterna alltså i båda länderna Somalia och Ethiopia, Siyad Barre och Mengistu Haile Mariam kommit överens om fred mellan länderna. En av punkterna i avtalet stod det att SNM skulle  avväpnas och deras baser skulle stängas. Men Snm, valde att kriga tills sista blodet rann

 

vi kommer att berätta om det här lite senare

Somalilands regering och opposition partierna har kommit överens

Parterna möttes i måndags, som var planerad att möttet skulle äga rum.  Efter att parterna förde destruktiva diskutioner om hur man ska lösa den politiska krisen i Somaliland som pågått nu de senaste månaderna,  efter (äldre rådet) Gurti förlänge president Rayaale mandat ett år. Detta har retat upp opposition partierna som kallade olaglig och bryter mot konstitionen (lagen) de har hotat att inte erkänna president Rayaale som Somalilands president efter den 15 Maj 2008.  Parterna har träffats rvå gånger tidigare. Men nu har de alla tre partierna kommit överens om att val ska hållas i landet, kommunal val ska hållas i 15 Dec 2008 och presidnet valet ska hållas den 15 mars 2009.

Vi kommer naturlgtvis följa den politiska  utveklingen.

Somaliland1991 News

 

 

Somaliland National Day 18 may in Hargeisa

 

Somaliland special Army viewing how they are commanding. Central highway in Hargeisa capital of the nation. 

Commandos army troops on foot in capital Hargiesa 

 

 

Somaliland National Day 18 may. National guard troops on foot in capital Hargiesa 

 

Somaliland National Army Headquarter 

 

 

 

independence day of SOmaliland in Pakistan

 

 

 

 

Hur gick det möttet mellan president Rayaale och oppositions partierna

Som vi rapporterade igår om mötet mellan Somalilands presidnet Dahir Rayale och oppositions partierna, forsatte igår. Mötet pågick  fem timmar och enligt nya uppgifeter  från Hargeisa sägs det att man har diskuterat några viktiga punkter, men inga beslut på mötet har ännu fattats. Alla partena satt igår förhandlings bordet i president palatset, från regeringens sida deltog, president Rayaale, vice presidentAhmed  Yasin och finans minisre Awil och oppositions partierna deltog båda ledarna, Kulmiye partiet,  Mahamud Ahmed Siilaanyo och Ucid partiet, Faysal Ali Warabe. Man kan säga så långt nu att parterna har träffats  och kommer att träffas för tredje omgången på måndag den 19 Maj. Idag på fredag är det helg och löradag ska förbredelsern inför firandet av Somalilands självständighet firas över hela världen, och Sverige kommer somaliländerna att fira i olika ställe. Det är 18 år sedan Somaliland blev självständigt.

Hurro Hurro Hurro

Leva Somaliland

Det återse på måndag hur förhandlingarna resulterar.

trevlig helg

Somaliland1991 News

 

första mötet mellan president Rayaale och oppositionspartierna

 

 

 

 

Onsdags kvällen möttes  för fösta gången president Rayaale och oppositions parteierna ledare, ledare för Kulmiye, Mahamud Ahmeda Siilanyo och Ucid ledaren Faisal Ali Warabe i president palaset i Hargeisa inför dagens sista dead line för Rayaale (tidfristen går idag 15 Maj 2008) De senaste dagarna har många olika framstående personer där ibland talmannen Abdirahman Iro i Somaliland har anstängt sig för att medla den

infekterade politiska krisen som landet har hamnat i, efter Gurti(äldrerådet) beslutat Rayaales mandat ett år. Dett har retat upp oppositionen som kallade det för ogiltig. De två oppositions ledarna har sagt att de inte kommer att erkänna president Rayaale efter den 15 som Somalilands president. Både regeringen har de senaste månaderna växlat hårda ord krig i media. Många befarar fortfarande att det kan hända oroligheter i landet om man inte avslutar den politiska döds läget i landet som det befinner sig just nu. Enligt nya uppgifter ska nytt möte ske redan i morgon på fredag. Man hoppas på att partena ska komma en överenskommelse idag på torsdag.

Vi kommer naturligtvis följa den politiska situationen i Somaliland. Vi kommer att uppdatera för våra kära läsare för de senaste nyheterna från Somaliland.

Somaliland1991 News

 

European Parliament conference on Transnistria; other ‘de facto’ states

European Parliament conference on Transnistria; other ‘de facto’ states

TransnistriaThis week a conference will look at democracy and good governance issues facing ‘de facto’ independent states. The event is held at the European Parliament in Brussels with the support of the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe. High-level representatives from Transdniestria, Abkhazia, Somaliland, Northern Cyprus and Taiwan are expected to attend.

On 15 May the European Parliament in Brussels focuses on democracy and good governance issues facing 5 'de facto' states

On 15 May the European Parliament in Brussels focuses on democracy and good governance issues facing 5 ‘de facto’ states

BRUSSELS (Tiraspol Times) – After putting the spotlight on Transdniestria’s de facto statehood during a conference in London last Wednesday, the country’s head of Parliament is now on his way to Brussels where he will repeat the need for Transdniestria to get international diplomatic recognition as a sovereign country.

Parliamentary Speaker Yevgeny Shevchuk, 39, who is also the leader of Transdniestria’s largest opposition party, Renewal, is expected to take part in a conference held at the European Parliament in Brussels, Belgium, on Thursday, May 15.

The Foreign Ministry of Transdniestria (officially: Pridnestrovie) was also invited but will not be able to find the time to attend as key diplomats are currently preparing the ground for what they hope will become a successfully negotiated Friendship and Cooperation Treaty with neighboring Moldova.

Thursday’s EU conference consists of a series of panels under the heading “Opening the World Order to de facto States: Limits and Potentialities of de facto States in the International Context,” hosted by the European Parliament in Brussels, Belgium.

Alliance of liberals and democrats

The conference will be held under the auspices of the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe, ALDE, a centrist coalition which is the third largest political group in the European Parliament. In addition to ALDE, it also has the support of UNPO, an organization for unrecognized countries which included Estonia and Georgia among its members before the two states achieved independence and recognized statehood.

The hope is that by discussing the issues of unrecognized countries in a neutral setting, new aspects of democracy and good governance issues in the de facto states will be brought to light. The event is sponsored by the Taiwan Foundation for Democracy.

Experts familiar with Transdniestria – such as Pal Kolstoe, Scott Pegg and Dov Lynch – are featured panelists at the event, which will also include representatives from other de facto states such as Somaliland, Taiwan, Northern Cyprus and Abkhazia.
From London’s Chatham House, Robert Jackson will address the event with a presentation on security concerns. Jackson comes to Brussel with fresh information on Transdniestria after a conference in the British capital last week addressed similar themes.

Yevgeni Shevchuk

Yevgeny Shevchuk, 39, spoke at London’s Chatham House last week. This week he will be in Brussels.

At last week’s event in London, Yevgeny Shevchuk was the keynote speaker at a gathering of foreign policy experts who came together to analyze the current situation in and around Transdniestria. The conference, which was held on Wednesday 7 May, was called ”Transdniestria: Is a Solution in Sight?” and was a closed special invitation event organized by London’s Chatham House, formally known as the Royal Institute of International Affairs.

18 years with same territorial claim

This week’s event in Brussels takes a broader view and looks not just at Transdniestria but on the need for international integration of other de facto states as well. Although spread throughout the world, with participants from Africa, Asia and Europe, the common feature among them is that all these states currently meet the requirements for full statehood under international law but nevertheless have no recognition or limited recognition due to various unresolved political, rather than legal, issues. In Transdniestria’s case, an 18 year old unresolved territorial claim by Moldova prevents the new and emerging country from effectively engaging with other members of the international community.

According to the organizers, the first panel will address the international dimension of de facto states, with each speaker approaching the function and practice of de facto states under International Law and in the International Community.

Next, the second panel will approach specific issues affecting de facto states, especially concerning health care issues, economics and security. Topics of interest include the challenges surrounding formal trade agreements, obtaining financial assistance from international institutions, and reducing security risks.

Democracy and good governance challenges

Considered one of the most important issues facing the world’s new countries, the conference’s third panel will address the question of Democracy and Good Governance in de facto states, and the challenges faced to preserve these ideals.

This portion of the conference will focus on the complexities of maintaining human rights standards, a strong civil society, and a working level of democracy in states that are politically isolated and unrecognized, such as Transdniestria.

Transdniestria is also known under various names such as Transnistria, Trans-Dniester and Transdnestr, deriving from the Dniester River which since 1359 has formed Moldova’s easternmost border. Its official name is Pridnestrovie. It declared independence in 1990, one year before the creation of the current Republic of Moldova.

Both had been together in the now-defunct Soviet Union: Moldova since 1940, and Pridnestrovie since the Soviet Union was created. In the early days of the Soviet Union, Pridnestrovie was an autonomous republic. It did not include Moldova, which was part of Romania at the time. (With information from UNPO)

Let Somaliland be an independent country

Let Somaliland be an independent country, int’l think tanks say

TransnistriaTwo influential international think tanks are recommending independence and diplomatic recognition of Somaliland ”sooner rather than later”. In its latest report, the Senlis Council underlines the need for quick and official recognition of Somaliland. This is echoed by the International Crisis Group, which also supports international recognition of Somaliland’s right to statehood.

Located in northern Africa, Somaliland has been 'de facto' independent since 1991 ... almost as long as Europe's Transdniestria

Located in northern Africa, Somaliland has been ‘de facto’ independent since 1991 … almost as long as Europe’s Transdniestria

HARGEISA (Tiraspol Times) – The Republic of Somaliland needs to be officially recognized as an independent country says a prominent global think-tank in its latest report on security and development. The Senlis Council, which was established in 2002 as a European-based organization, reveals its policy recommendations in a report entitled Chronic Failures of the War on Terror: From Afghanistan to Somalia which was published in London on Wednesday.

In its report, the think-tank emphasises the need for official recognition of Somaliland.

” – Official recognition for Somaliland would send a clear message to all Somalis that peaceful transitions from stability are possible without the need to use overpowering military force, and will be rewarded,” said Norine MacDonald, a Canadian lawyer who is president and lead field researcher of The Senlis Council.

” – Up to now, Somaliland has toiled in relative anonymity without any recognition of its extraordinary success in creating the conditions for a viable, stand-alone state, and resisting the spread of extremism found in Somalia.”

The Senlis Council is an international policy think-tank with offices in Brussels, Kabul, Kandahar, Lashkar Gah, London, Ottawa, Paris and Rio de Janeiro. It works in partnership with the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) and the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS), as co-organizer of an international conference held in February with the attendance of General David J. Richards, until last year the overall commander of NATO-ISAF.

ICG recommends independence

The International Crisis Group also recommends independence as the best way to build a future for the people of Somaliland. The ICG advocates that the African Union leads the way on international recognition of Somaliland’s right to statehood.

In a special report, the research and advocacy group makes a clear political and legal case for recognition. ICG’s research suggests that an independent Somaliland would add to regional stability, rather than representing a further cause of instability in the Horn of Africa. The International Crisis Group argues that Somaliland’s case is unique, and would not – as some AU members fear – set a precedent for African secessionist movement.

The current internationally recognized state of Somalia is a state in name only. Aside from the briefest of intervals, the last 17 years has been characterised by varying degrees of chaos.

In Somalia, elections have not been held since 1969. Whereas in Somaliland, the 2005 Parliamentary elections were regarded as free and fair, and a test of independence.

But if Somalia is a state in name only, Somaliland is a state-in-waiting without formal recognition.

Of all of the states in the Horn of Africa, it is the self-declared yet internationally unrecognised aspirant state of Somaliland that offers President Bush with his most viable opportunity to claim an African success story. By all rational indicators of a state’s post-conflict development, Somaliland represents impressive progress, and consolidating an area of stability and governance in the Horn of Africa will reduce the vacant space for instability, conflict and extremism to fill.

Somaliland case not creating new precedent

Somaliland has achieved an extraordinary level of political and physical stability after being raised during the bitter civil war of the early 1990s. An embattled population found the resolve to reconstitute itself, establishing functioning organs of government without little upheaval – a rarity in post-conflict reconstruction. Its drive to create multi-party democracy upon a backdrop of relative peace and security has been impressive, if not without flaw.

Somaliland’s considerable achievements must not continue to go unheralded, and the only substantial way to reward it is through full statehood, argues the Senlis Council in its report.

Somaliland’s claim for full state independence is distinct from the majority of similar requests of other separatist enclaves/exclaves. Rather than seeking to secede from Somalia, Somaliland is looking to be re-constituted as an independent state. It held this status for five days between 26 June and 1 July 1960 – being recognized by 35 states in the process – before voluntarily uniting with Italian Somalia within the Somali Republic.

For most of its time inside Somalia, the territory was ruled by dictator Siad Barre’s regime. Barre fell in 1991, along with the country’s political, economic and administrative institutions and any semblance of central government. On 18 May 1991, Somaliland revoked the 1960 Act of Union, and declared Somaliland independent. No country has officially recognised its statehood yet.

According to the report from the Senlis Council, the current policy vacuum needs to be filled by constructive engagement on the issue of Somaliland’s status at every diplomatic level, most notably within the African Union and United Nations. While this dialogue should necessarily be framed by the need for regional stability, the aim of some parties to establish a Somali Federation need not be an immediate focus of such discussions.

Somaliland declared independence in 1991, one year after the independence declaration of Pridnestrovie (Transdniestria). Both have been ‘de facto’ independent states for the better part of the past two decades, but neither one of them has yet obtained international diplomatic recognition. A first step towards broader international recognition will be for the two countries’ Foreign Ministries to establish bilateral ties and recognize each other on a mutual basis.