Friday, November 30, 2012
Will Yusuf Mohamed Siyaad (Indha-Cade) ever face Justice?
Written by: Abdikani Hussein and Mohamed Hassan.
Yusuf Maxamed Siyaad Indho- Cade is most notorious and dangerous warlord in the history of Somalia’s two decades civil war. He currently holds a Military rank of General in the Somali defence force, which he is unqualified for to begin with. First, he has no experience as a Military General; Indho- Cade has been atrocious millions of Somali civilians for many years in Southern parts of Somalia. Most of his victims are still reputed and worried on his criminal actions. Before venturing as war profiteer, Yusuf Indho- Cade was a civilian truck driver in Somalia when Somalia was ruled under military dictatorship of Mohamed Siad Barre. Thereafter, the ruthless Indho- Cade became a militia leader with a brutal reputation in the lower Shabbele and Juballand in Southern Somalia. It is believed that some of the atrocities committed by Indo-Cade amounted to crimes against humanity.
The Federal Republic of Somalia and Prime Minister Abdi Farah Shirdon unveiled a new cabinet on November 02, 2012, keeping a delicate balance among clans of politics in Somalia. Meanwhile, the notorious military leader, Indho- Cade attended the ceremony. The question is how this government would function and be expected to bring stability in Somalia while in the midst of its top ranking military brass have blood on their hands. This is a toll order and the precedence set does not augur well for many Somalis whose basic fundamental rights have been trampled on. The Transitional federal Government habituated a short- term tactic and also negotiated with former militia leaders to empower Somalia’s weak military. In addition, the Federal Government should immediately force out all previous militia leaders and suspected war criminals such as Indho Cade. This is based on logical reasoning and with compliance the Somali new constitution. The new Somali constitution is explicit on the conduct of previous warlords and how the law should be applied against them. The new president should take a step further and ask for the assistance of the International community in investigating cases of war crimes committed against many Somalis so that the likes of Indo-Cade have their day in court to face their victims.
This will be the beginning of serving justice to all; otherwise this would be the case of victor’s justice. The new parliament elected President Hassan Sheikh Mahamoud as the new president of Somalia. His administration should desist from cohabiting previous warlords or militia leaders in his new administration; more so not in the national army that is expected to be at the fore front of stabilising this war torn country. In hindsight, the Somalia Federal Government is promoting democracy and good governance but its leaders are condoning many corrupt practices that override the need for national reconciliation and nation building.
The new administration of Hassan Sheikh Mohamoud was elected on a platform of hope and a means to get Somalia beyond the politics of tribal affiliation. After all, he was elected by parliamentarians across the tribal divide in Somalia least to say that excluded his immediate Abgaal clan. It is therefore naturally expected that this administration would respect Somali citizen’s voice, values, and ideas. Consequently, bring war criminals court to justice including Yusuf Indho- Cade. Indho- Cade has the reputation of talking to the media without thinking logically; sometimes to the detrimental to the Somali Government. Indho- Cade also looted millions of donated humanitarian aid to the famine victims. He was recently quoted as saying that "The Villa Somalia is unsafe place". He also claimed that top government officials are bribing to keep him quite from the media.
Yusuf Indho- Cade savaged and excessively massacred millions of innocent civilians in Lower Shabeele and Jubbaland. Indho- Cade also terrorized civilians in many places such as Merca city in Shabeela region, and Afmadhow city Jubbaland in the Southern part of Somalia in the middle of Juba region. The fact is former president of the Transitional Federal Government (TFG) Sheikh Sharrif and Yusuf Indho Cade were both leaders of the Islamic Courts Union (ICU) and both mislead many innocent children’s to fight against Ethiopian troops and the (TFG) Transition Federal Government troops in the city of Idaale. There was over half million of Somali teens died in that war because of the influence and indoctrination of Indha Cade and Sheikh Shariif. Indho- Cade was responsible of killing innocent civilians in Kismayo.
Yusuf Indho- Cade was also member of the Islamic Courts Union (ICU); later on he joined the Xisbul Islam Group which is affiliated with the Militant group Alshabab which is also partnership the terrorist group Al- Qaeda. Both these groups are a global threat to international peace and stability. Finally, Indho- Cade is also is single handily responsible for massacre of Banadiri ethnic minority group in Mogadishu, Merca and Barawo. It is my hope that Somali Citizens of like-minded urge tough action against (Indho-cade) Crimes. As a Somali peace loving citizen I am asking for the international criminal court to take strong action against Yusuf Mohamed Siyaad Indha Cade.
Abdikani Hussein is a Senior Researcher and Blogger. He can be reached at abdikani_2000@yahoo.com. Mohamed Hassan is Master of Sociology and Higher- Education Consultant. He can be reached at Mohamedwest@hotmal.com
Saturday, November 24, 2012
EU apthen releases nine suspected pirates off Somalia prehends
A boarding team from the Romanian frigate ROS Regele Ferdinand brings a group of suspected pirates and their skiff back to the Romanian warship. The suspects were apprehended off the coast of Somalia on Wednesday. They were released Thursday when European Union legal advisers determined it would be difficult to prosecute them. Photo courtesy European Union Naval Force.
NAPLES, Italy — European Union Naval Force officials released nine suspected pirates Thursday because of insufficient criminal evidence after destroying their skiff off Somalia, said spokeswoman Lt. Cmdr. Jacqueline Sherriff.
Maritime officials from four countries collaborated Wednesday morning to identify and destroy the suspected pirate boat about 420 nautical miles east of Mogadishu, Somalia’s largest city and capital.
But the coalition’s legal advisers quickly determined that building a legal case against the suspects would be too time-consuming and onerous, and the nine Somali men onboard the skiff were released Thursday night onto a Somali beach, Sherriff said.
The men did not have fishing gear on the skiff, which had previously been seen along the Somali shore in a known pirate area, Sherriff said.
“Without their boat, without their fuel, without their ladders, what they are going to have to do now is start over. It’s going to cost them money, so we have made it very difficult for them,” Sherriff said.
A Swedish patrol aircraft reported a “suspicious” skiff Wednesday morning. The Romanian frigate ROS Regele Ferdinand and the Turkish warship TCG Gemlik approached the skiff as a Luxembourg patrol aircraft kept watch. The suspected pirates tried to evade capture for more than an hour.
“They were basically trying to outrun, rather foolishly, the helicopter,” Sherriff said.
A Turkish boarding team eventually searched the skiff. The suspected pirates were then questioned and detained aboard the Romanian frigate. If the coalition had opted to move forward with prosecution, the men would have been sent to Romania, Sherriff said.
“The likelihood of prosecution was difficult,” Sherriff said, adding that the suspects were not caught committing a crime.
The vessel was sunk to prevent it from being used in future pirate attacks.
“My message to the pirates is clear — we are watching you and we plan to capture you if you put to sea,” Rear Adm. Duncan Potts, the force’s operation commander, said in a statement Wednesday.
The incident marked the coalition’s third run-in with suspected pirates since October after a three-month lull in reported piracy attacks during the dangerous summer monsoon season.
The ITS San Giusto, the coalition’s flagship, searched and then destroyed a skiff with seven suspected pirates onboard on Oct. 10.
EU forces apprehended seven suspected pirates onboard a fishing vessel near Somalia on Oct. 20. The men were released after prosecution was ruled out, Sherriff said.
The EU Naval Force has arrested 128 pirates since the anti-piracy operation began in late 2008. Of those, 75 were prosecuted. In that time, the estimated success rate for pirate attacks near Somalia has dropped from 28 percent in 2009 to 15 percent in 2012, according to the coalition
Kenyans riot against ethnic Somalis
Police fire tear gas and warning shots to disperse protest against local Somalis, who are blamed for uptick in violence.Kenyan security forces fired tear gas and made arrests in order to clamp down on the demonstration [AFP]
Kenyan police have fired tear gas at rioters attacking ethnic Somalis in the Nairobi district of "Little Mogadishu".
The flare up in violence, which saw people hurling stones and smashing windows, came after a weekend bomb attack that killed nine people in the area.
The violence on Monday coincided with the beginning of voter registration for the general election in March this year.
In 2007, the last time that such a national poll was held, a dispute over the results fuelled ethnic violence that killed more than 1,200 people and forced about 300,000 from their homes.
Angry mobs broke into Somali homes and shops in anger at Sunday's attack on a minibus which killed at least nine people in Nairobi's Eastleigh district which is dominated by Somali Kenyans and their ethnic kin who have fled fighting in Somalia.
Rising xenophobia against Somalis in Kenya
Ethnic Somalis, some armed with machetes, fought back and hurled stones at their attackers who responded with sling shots and stones. Paramilitary police fired volleys of teargas to prise the battling factions apart.
"We are trying to create a buffer zone so that people cannot cross over," Moses Ombati, the Nairobi regional police commander, told reporters, pointing to a road that he said formed a rough boundary between the two communities.
"These people are neighbours and business partners who need each other, so I don't think it will last long," he said.
Gangs of looters ran amok as the security forces fought to quell the violence. One Somali trader, who gave her name only as Hamdi for fear of reprisal attacks, said she was worried the unrest would spread throughout Eastleigh's rundown estates.
"I condemn anyone who carried out this heinous act," she said, referring to Sunday's bomb attack. "It's affecting many innocent civilians and is causing the Somali community to be targeted."
Warning shots fired
Authorities have blamed Somali fighters and their sympathisers for grenade and gun attacks in Kenya since Nairobi sent soldiers into neighbouring Somalia last year to drive out al-Shabab rebels, a radical religious group with links to al-Qaeda.
"The xenophobic attacks must be stopped at all costs lest they escalate to unmanageable mayhem at grave costs to the nation"
- Al-Amin Kimathi,
Muslim Human Rights Forum chairman
Attacks have intensified since Kenyan forces, fighting under an African Union banner, and Somali government troops routed al-Shabab from their last major urban bastion, the Somali port of Kismayu last month, forcing the rebels to flee.
Two Kenyan soldiers were shot dead in the eastern town of Garissa, which is a rear base for Kenya troops fighting in Somalia as part of the regional African Union force, on Monday.
In Nairobi's Eastleigh district, also known as "Little Mogadishu", crowds poured through the streets chanting "Somalis must go!", hurling stones and smashing windows of some Somali apartment blocks.
Police fired warning shots in the air, but rioters were undeterred. They demanded that the government improve security in the district, which has borne the brunt of the grenade and gun attacks.
Streets in Eastleigh, a congested residential and business area, were strewn with stones and shattered glass. Shops shuttered windows were and most business were closed in what is one of Nairobi's busiest trading centres.
People stood on rooftops while some ethnic Somalis gestured for assistance through their windows.
"These Somalis are getting used to this. Every day there is a grenade attack," said Evans, a non-Somali resident of the area wearing sandals and a dirty t-shirt with a print of Che Guevara.
Children in school uniforms and their parents ran from school, after being trapped there by the violence.
Others ran towards the police, with their hands in the air. At least a dozen Kenyan men were laid face down in one truck, as the authorities began to make arrests.
Local businessman Godfrey Biketi who supplies meat to Eastleigh, urged his fellow Kenyans to be calm.
"They should just chill. They're our neighbours," he said of the Somalis. "Even our country is fighting a war in Somalia. Now our country is becoming like theirs, it's not cool," he said.
The Muslim Human Rights Forum said that even if the suspects responsible for Sunday's bombing were proven to be Somalis, it did not mean the whole community was involved.
"The xenophobic attacks must be stopped at all costs lest they escalate to unmanageable mayhem at grave costs to the nation," the group's chairman Al-Amin Kimathi said.
New census data: Minnesota Somali population grows
Hundreds from the Minneapolis Somalian community gathered on Lake Street on Saturday to celebrate Somali Independence Day which is on July 1.
MINNEAPOLIS - Minnesota's Somali population is still the largest in the United States, according to new census data released early Thursday that raised the number of people of Somali ancestry in the state to more than 32,000.
The new estimate is based on American Community Surveys taken by the bureau from 2008-2010 and updates last year's estimate of nearly 27,000 Somalis in the state. Because the estimates are derived from surveys, they include a margin of error, which means the census calculates the population could be as high as 36,000 or as low as 29,000.
"The (Somali) community has long felt it is a bit larger than the Census Bureau estimate, but this number doesn't feel uncomfortable to me," State Demographer Tom Gillaspy said.
The estimate includes both people born in Somalia and their descendants. Other states that have large Somali populations include Ohio with 12,300, Washington with 9,300 and California with 7,500, according to the latest estimates.
The Somali immigration to Minnesota has been the largest part of a broader influx of people from sub-Saharan Africa in recent years in the state. That broader group now numbers more than 100,000 in the state, according to the new estimates, and promises to keep growing as young couples marry and have children.
Like most immigrant groups, Somalis in Minnesota are younger than the general population with a median age of about 25 years. About half of the Somali population is 24 years old or younger. The median age of the state's general population is more than a decade older at 37 years, and only about a third of the population is 24 years old or younger.
Members of Minnesota's Somali community have been in the news amid long-running federal investigations into recruiting and financing of people from the U.S. to train or fight for al-Shabab in Somalia. U.S. government officials consider the group to be a terrorist organization with ties to al-Qaida.
Two women, both U.S. citizens of Somali descent, were convicted last week of conspiring to funnel money to al-Shabab. They were among 20 people charged in the Minnesota investigations.
Unlike some other populations in Minnesota, including the Hmong, those of Somali descent are not asked about their ancestry during the census. So the survey data represents the Census Bureau's best estimate of the population.
The data released early Thursday also includes snapshots into more than 40 topics. For instance, the state's overall median household income is about $56,500, but there were wide differences in income from race to race.
Asian households had the highest median income at about $61,000 followed by white households at $58,500. Black households reported the lowest median incomes at $27,500.
Gillaspy said the data was not surprising since the household incomes of Asian families have been increasing in recent years.
A changing sense of Somaliness: Somali women in London and Toronto
This article considers how direct and indirect transnational linkages influence Somali refugee women settling in London, England and Toronto, Canada, and lead to shifts in identity in resettlement contexts. Drawing on interviews with Somali refugee women and discussions with resettlement staff, this article shows that under influences of distant and local linkages with other Somalis and through the cultural and social influences of the receiving society, Somali women develop a changing sense of their own Somaliness. The article argues that indicators of belonging, such as dress, religion and language, come to hold new and increased value within the new context, and familiar facets of national, cultural and religious identity shift in significance in response to competing influences and are used as intentional signifiers of identity.
Este artículo considera cómo los vínculos transnacionales directos e indirectos influyen en el establecimiento de las mujeres somalíes refugiadas en Londres, Inglaterra, y Toronto, Canadá, y conducen a cambios en la identidad en los contextos de reasentamiento. Basándose en entrevistas con mujeres refugiadas somalíes y en discusiones con personal de reasentamiento, este artículo muestra que bajo las influencias de vínculos distantes y locales con otros somalíes y a través de las influencias culturales y sociales de la sociedad receptora, las mujeres somalíes desarrollan un cambiante sentido de su propia somalidad. Este artículo propone que los indicadores de pertenencia, tales como vestimenta, religión e idioma, toman un nuevo y mayor valor dentro del nuevo contexto, y las facetas conocidas de identidad nacional, cultural y religiosa cambian en significancia en respuesta a influencias que compiten entre sí y son utilizadas como significadores intencionales de identidad.
Friday, November 23, 2012
Charcoal business threatens deforestation in northern Somalia
Tom Bayly reports.
November,22, 2012.In Somaliland, the semi-desert territory that self-proclaimed independence from Somali in 1991, for many people cutting trees is the only way to make a living.They cut the trees and burn them to make charcoal that can be sold.
However, there is growing concern that the forest could soon turn into desert.
European Union gives Somalia $200 million in aid
By Yara Bayoumy, Reuters / November 3, 2012
The European Union began a new aid program for Somalia Saturday. The goal is to restore a central government, improve the legal system, education, and security in a country that recently saw an end to more than two decades of conflict.
A truck driver walks past a warehouse to his vehicle in Mogadishu's seaport October 30. The seaport is currently experiencing an unprecedented amount of traffic as economic activity resumes in Mogadishu after almost two decades of civil war.
The European Union has given Somalia 158 million euros or $200 million to improve education, the legal system and security, its new envoy said on Saturday, as the Horn of Africa nation tries to recover from more than two decades of conflict.
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The new aid program follows the election in September of a new Somali president, the culmination of a regionally brokered, U.N.-backed effort to restore central government control and end fighting that has killed tens of thousands of people.
President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud, elected in the first vote of its kind since Somalia slid into civil war in 1991, is grappling with corruption, an Islamist insurgency and piracy along the country's strategic Indian Ocean shipping route.
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"After 21 years, the government is finally rebuilding the systems of a functional state at local, regional and central levels," Michele Cervone d'Urso, the EU's special envoy to Somalia, told Reuters.
"The EU is more committed to work directly and in partnership with Somalis. We will ask the implementing agencies to work more closely with the government and civil society."
A suicide bombing in the capital Mogadishu on Saturday highlighted the challenges faced by the new Somali leader .
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