Dear All
Somali Intellectuals' Position paper on the current
THE TRANSITIONAL FEDERAL GOVERNMENT (TFG): THE ONLY VIABLE TOOL TO MOVE US FORWARD
We,
the Somali people, are at cross roads and must choose between anarchy
and peace. We must choose as the options and the time are very limited.
We must choose between having a country, nation, state and a tribal
fiefdom at the mercy of other nations. We must choose between
war/conflict and dialogue and peace. We must choose a better and a
brighter future without forgetting the past.
Currently we have an
institution called the Transitional Federal Government (TFG) which we
agree is not the best institution but all the same, we must support this
nascent institution as it is the only choice left for Somalia. We must
support it for the simple reason that it is a conscious choice between a
glimmer of hope and a total chaos and anarchy, considering that since
the onset of the civil war, all of our fundamental institutions
collapsed; institutions such as the central government, regional
institutions, municipal institutions, health, education, legal and
commercial institutions. The TFG represents an institutional memory bank
that can be built upon for a future reconstitution of the Somali state,
not to mention all other contingent institutions thereof. For this, we
believe, that in a spirit of good will, the TFG must be supported by the
Somali public. Instead of expending energy and resources in the
weakening and destruction of this weak institution, it is better to
engage in building and correcting it so that we can have a better system
of governance for a better tomorrow.
But the proponents of
anarchy and lawlessness, in collaboration with the Nairobi based
International NGO’s (Lords of Poverty) have been disseminating all kinds
of fraudulent arguments in order to derail the agendas of the TFG and
its on-going Reconciliation Conference. The proponents of anarchy
include opportunists and business groups who prospered in the chaos and
lawlessness, Islamists with extremist and discriminatory agenda,
politicians who lost their political power and the renegade former
members of the Parliament who are currently based in Eritrea. The latter
group has miserably failed to propose any practical conflict resolution
model to bring peace to the nation.Because of their lack of vision and
their politically bankrupt and simplistic platform, they are stuck with a
pathologically mutated form of nationalism that adheres to the support
of most radical forms of terrorism and the indiscriminate killing of
innocent civilians under a dubious and phony pretext of defending the
country from Ethiopia. Their brand of PSEUDO NATIONALISM is aimed at
cavalierly destroying life, limp and property while ignoring Somalia’s
common enemies of war, poverty, hunger, diseases, and illiteracy and all
this in the name of tribe or personal interest.
All members of
the international community and peace loving people in the world have
expressed outrage at their tactics of hire-for-terror and violence in
which they kill any leader in Mogadishu who stands up to help his/her
people. Many young leaders have already died, NOT in the hands of
foreign troops, but by the bullets, mortars and bombs of the merciless
insurgents hired by Islamic Courts Union (ICU) and its foreign
supporters. Such tactics of enforcing blindly a radical political Islam
has exposed their motive of destruction and violence to the rest of the
world, and will eventually reduce them to nothing more than a mere
nuisance that incessantly disrupts the daily lives of Mogadishu’s
residents and families. The scope and pith of their propaganda amounts
to a handful fraudulent themes, repeated ad nauseam, and their key
arguments stand to be exposed for the fraud they are.
ARGUMENT #1: THAT THE ICU WAS THE BEST CHOICE FOR SOMALIA
The
Islamic courts came to prominence in June 2006. Prior to that, the only
Islamic courts on the scene were a disparate collection of
clan-specific courts more known for chopping the hands of the poor,
minorities and the militarily unprotected civilians of Mogadishu and
elsewhere in the south, than for any political agenda. Not only that,
the progenitor institutions of the ICU were in cahoots with the business
enterprises and anarchists of Mogadishu to the extent that when the TFG
moved to Jowhar in the fall of 2005, you could spot in Balcad in a show
of force, the majority of the notorious personalities of the as yet not
formed ICU breaking bread with all Mogadishu warlords, including
prominent business personalities. How far deep were the Islamic Courts
in cahoots with the business enterprises with whom they co-existed in a
cesspool of injustice, anarchy and mayhem for the past 16 years?
The
infamous CIA funded war between the Islamic Courts and the so-called
Anti-terrorism Alliance was not really a war of ideologies but rather a
business/turf war that started between two business adversaries: The
extremists wagered on one and the warlords bet on the other, and the
winner was the one fronted, armed and spoken for by the extremists now
constituted itself as the ICU. Yet the genesis of that war and the
current belligerent resistance to the TFG’s relocation to Mogadishu
were/are nothing but an attempt by the defenders of the status quo to
preserve the monopolistic stranglehold they had on the public
infrastructure such as ports, airports, highways, ocean lanes, and the
illegal control of southern regions of Somalia and thus uphold the
status quo; a status quo that dealt in unregulated legitimate as well
illegitimate businesses while impoverishing millions of Somali citizens
in Mogadishu, Lower Shabelle and Juba regions.
As soon as the
ICU began lording over Mogadishu, it also began to believe that it was
the governing party of the country, and embarked on promulgating
primitive edicts that banned television, pictures, the mixing of genders
and also started flogging the people in public places for such
innocuous transgressions as not wearing a beard. All this in a country
and culture that has never subscribed to this alien extreme political
form of Islam that is long on symbolism but very short on substance.
These clan-warlords-turned Islamists did bring briefly a semblance of
relative peace in Mogadishu but it is fallacious to equate the whole of
Somalia to Mogadishu. Yet it was obvious that they lacked any real
national structured governance agenda other than to converge their
various disjointed clan and Jihadist agendas. The ICU even failed to
manage Mogadishu for a significant period of time; instead, because of
the short-sightedness of its leaders, it stirred a lot of fear as it
believed that it was a representative of Allah. The ICU did not stop
there but began to believe that they were invincible and then recklessly
invited foreign fighters in to the country and as a result sucked the
country into the vortex of the international Global Jihadist movement by
openly calling Jihad on bordering countries.
Their reckless and
out of control behavior triggered the presence of Ethiopian troops in
Mogadishu today. Why would anyone who is concerned of the suffering of
the Somali people invite foreign fighters to Somalia and drag the
country into a regional war? The answer is simply that the ICU
leadership have always been and still are driven by individual and clan
interests as their actions in Mogadishu, Lower Shabelle and Lower Jubba
indicated.
ARGUMENT # 2: THAT ETHIOPIA IS AN ETERNAL ENEMY OF SOMALIA AND THAT IT HAS AN IMPERIAL AGENDA ON SOMALIA.
It
is ludicrous to entertain the thought that, at the dawn of the 21st
Century when almost all Africans completed the re-acclamation of their
independence and statehood from Western colonial powers; that an African
country, in this case Ethiopia, will embark on imperial designs on
another African country, unless; of course, its leadership is
hallucinating. That might explain why, for the past 16 years, without a
central government and in the midst of chaos, Ethiopia with its state
and military apparatus intact did not invade and permanently occupy our
country. It only came in when the ICU threatened to conduct its next
prayer rituals in Addis Ababa, the Ethiopian capital.
Another
factor negating the likelihood that Ethiopia has imperial designs on our
country is the fact that the two countries share a long unprotected
border in one of the most dangerous international Ghettos (or ‘Hood if
you like) ever. Ethiopia is a nation state comprised of about 70 or odd
ethnic communities speaking 70 different languages and also nursing 70
or more different grievances. The likelihood of settling scores will
have a far more dangerous effect on Ethiopia than any other country in
the Horn of Africa. It is in the interest of Ethiopia to have a good,
peaceful and principled neighbor in the ‘Hood, a neighbor that is
organized as a state, nation or country and not along clan lines.
Moreover, Ethiopia cannot have a realistic imperial agenda per se. It
simply does not meet all the necessary conditions relevant to a nation
with an imperial agenda: It is a very poor African country that itself
is a victim to the vagaries of the dominant imperial/colonial and
economic powers of the past and present; it is busting at the seams with
a young population that it cannot feed, house, educate, nor provide for
its basic health; it is an impoverished nation that depends on foreign
aid for its crucial economic and social development. For all these
reasons, unless the Ethiopian leadership is deluded, Ethiopia can not
have an imperial ambition because it does not meet the conditions
necessary for imperial aspirations. More importantly, Ethiopia is a
fragile and unstable nation and cannot sustain an imperial agenda as
this would be costly to it in many ways.
We must also put a STOP
to the other big lie that Ethiopia and Somalia are eternal enemies. If
we reflect on world history there is no such thing as an eternal enemy.
Many countries that fought vicious wars in the past, today enjoy a
healthy and friendly political relationship; France and Germany, Japan,
Russia and USA, just to name few examples. Somalia and Ethiopia have
never gone to war on their own accord, but that as two poor African and
third world countries, they have been forced to become pawns in imperial
wars that were fought over world economic and hegemonic interests by
imperialists. In 1977, the Somali/Ethiopian war was one among many
theatres of the cold war, the other theatres being Vietnam, Cambodia,
Angola, and Mozambique. We were pawns, plain and simple and our two poor
countries were militarily set up against each other by the cold
warriors, a sad episode that can only explain the vast stockpiles of
weapons left in the backyards of many African countries at the end of
the cold war.
All of this should explain why there is nay a word
from the international community, nor from the EU, nor from the UN, nor
from the AU about the Ethiopian presence representing a latter day
imperial adventure. As a matter of fact, all the communiqués and policy
pronouncements from these regional and international bodies nuance their
statements with a proviso that unless a replacement contingent either
from the AU or the UN can be deployed, Ethiopia must not withdraw from
Somalia lest such action creates a vacuum.
This is not to
suggest that Ethiopia should stay in our country to prop up the TFG
indefinitely. Granted that there are precedents for the principle that
African problems demand African solutions in the case of Nigeria taming
the West African nations of Liberia and Sierra Leone in its ‘Hood, it is
our opinion that Ethiopia should ultimately withdraw out of Somalia
under optimal political conditions, one of which condition is the
deployment of replacement peacekeeping contingent preferably and
predominantly African in constitution.
However, it seems such
rational proposal does not sit well with the anti-TFG contingent. In a
recent statement from Asmara, Sheriff Ahmed, a key Leader of the ICU,
stated defiantly that even if the Ethiopians withdrew and were replaced
by other African peacekeepers the ICU and their international Jihadist
allies will continue their insurgency. Such statements graphically
expose the hypocrisy and the lies propagated by ICU and their Somali
Diaspora cheerleaders and apologists who always, with a shrill voice,
proclaim that the Ethiopian presence is an obstacle to reconciliation.
ARGUMENT#3:
THAT THE NATIONAL RECONCILIATION CONFERENCE IS A SHAM AND THAT THE TFG
LEADERSHIP DOES NOT HAVE THE SUPPORT OF THE SOMALI PUBLIC
The TFG
leadership has delivered its promise of holding a broad based
reconciliation conference inside Somali soil, and it did so despite all
the odds against it, given the bad deck of cards it had been dealt under
the circumstances.
For the first time in 17 years, a relatively
broad based national reconciliation conference has been in session in
Mogadishu since July 15, 2007, and based on the proceedings of the
conference, it is going on as well as might have been imagined or
expected. Clan elders, religious leaders, intellectuals and
representatives of different Somali communities were given a fair and a
level-playing field to choose their own delegates independently and with
no influence from manipulating foreign hands. The overwhelming
participation and the willingness of these brave delegates to come and
listen to each other’s concern have already signaled success and
registered the legitimacy of the conference and inclusiveness of the
process through which the delegates were selected. To his credit, the
Chairman of the Reconciliation Conference, Mr. Ali Mahdi Mohamed, in his
spirited and moving inaugural speech of the conference, set both the
tone and tenor of the conference by emphasizing forgiveness and
tolerance. Following suit, representative clan elders are daily voicing
their communities’ narratives of pain and victimization and other elders
from other clans are listening with empathy. Nothing of this sort could
have been imagined a year ago when many leaders were expressing their
anger and pain with gun fire, killings and vengeance.
Those
opposed to the conference, despite having been invited publicly and
privately, disingenuously base their opposition to the conference on
several bad arguments. For example, they insist that that the conference
should have a political reconciliation thematic format, instead of the
current topic of community reconciliation, conveniently forgetting that
the TFG and its charter came into fruition as a result of the Embgathi
political reconciliation conference of 2002-2004. They also discount the
fact that there has been a 17 year civil war that had a communal and
tribal dimension to it and which unfortunately pitted clan against clan
with some ugly consequences, not to mention the mistrust index that it
has considerably raised. As the majority of the political antagonists of
the past 17 years are under the TFG tent, it was imperative to have a
national reconciliation conference that brings all the traditional
leaders with moral authority and also to hear/listen and share diverse
narratives of pain, suffering and victimization so that the Somali
public can visually and psychically place these feelings in a human
context.
As it is, the conference has already produced
significant results and is moving forward, to the chagrin of the
opposition supporters, who are circulating lies around the world. The
Hawiye, and Darood clans have already admitted committing unjust and
blatant atrocities against their fellow brothers and sisters, and clans
victimized by the civil war had the fortitude and sagacity to forgive
their victimizers. Yes, this conference was about reconciliation among
clans and sub-clans and it is working so far. They have also agreed to
strike out the derogatory misnomer “OTHERS”, an Arta creation, from the
Somali clan identification system and discard it in the dustbin of
history. It is a step in the right direction that could lead to a
genuine reconciliation process to move the community forward. Needless
to say this conference wouldn’t have materialized without the support of
foreign troops, including Ethiopian and Ugandan troops, protecting and
guaranteeing the safety of the conference at any cause.
The
opponents of the conference/TFG also posit that the conference should
not have been held in Mogadishu but in a neutral venue because Mogadishu
is a city controlled by the Transitional Federal Government troops. It
is impossible to find a more neutral place to hold a national
reconciliation meeting for Somalia. Let us for a moment reflect on the
last 14 reconciliation conferences; they were all held outside of
Somalia and yet many critics, rightly or wrongly, blamed the host
countries for lack of neutrality and held them responsible for the
collapse of the respective conferences. Mogadishu is the symbol of
Somali unity and there is no suitable place other than Mogadishu to be
the venue of a conference of this magnitude if the ownership of the
conference outcome has to have a Somali imprint.
This is the
first reconciliation conference that is held inside Somalia and ordinary
Somalis have been given the opportunities to express their opinion and
feelings. It might not be perfect, but it is the first face-to-face
meeting in which the representatives of the victimizers and the victims
are participating on a relatively equal capacity. Contrary to the
previous ones, there will be no individuals, tribes, foreign countries,
or international NGO and UN officials who will be manipulating the
agenda as well as the outcome of the conference. Additionally, the
organizing committee, conscious of the fact that it had initially been
handpicked by the government, skillfully pre-empted the critics and
sought legitimacy from the conference participants at the outset. After
the inaugural celebration, Mr. Ali Mahdi Mohamed and his committee asked
the participants to choose independent organizing members so that the
TFG will have no influence on the conference outcome, or that there will
not be even any appearance of influence. The participants reciprocated
this goodwill gesture by unanimously re-confirming Mr. Mahdi and his
committee members to lead the conference. This was a move to demonstrate
the seriousness of the meeting and defy the critics who have labeled
Mr. Mahdi and his panel in the organizing committee for not being
independent.
The opponents of peace also argue that Mogadishu is
not safe, but the question is who is behind all the Mayhem and the
indiscriminate killings? Is it TFG, or Ethiopians or Ugandan troops? The
irony here is that Ethiopians and Ugandan troops are doing everything
in their capacity to keep safe while the pseudo-nationalists are
orchestrating attacks against innocent Somalis to generate fear and
desperations. It is our considerate opinion that at a minimum about 80
to 85% of the Somali public supports the TFG institution because they
feel that it is an institution that can be corrected and strengthened
over time. Within the Somali Diaspora, support for the TFG and the
national reconciliation conference has grown, especially after the
recent visit of the Prime Minister to the United States as well as the
tour in North America of the Deputy Speaker of the TFG Parliament, Hon.
Prof. Mohamed Omar Dalha, who time and again eloquently and convincingly
reminded his audiences in many cities that the road to peace lies on
dialogue and mutual understanding and on the support of the only
institution we have, the TFG.
We hope the conference to address
the major conflicts of Somalia and we pray for its success. We believe
that any conflict should and must be resolved through dialogue. We also
believe that a stable and strong Somalia is an asset to all ethnic
Somalis in the Horn and will also contribute to regional security. We
finally urge the peace loving Somali public to support the on-going
reconciliation conference and the efforts of the TFG towards a
comprehensive settlement of the Somali crisis. By doing so, we will
usher together a glimmer of hope and reject anarchy, violence,
instability and chaos.
We have no other choice today but to
support, empower, and hold accountable the only viable tool for change,
the Transitional Federal Government.
LIST OF SIGNATORIES
Dr. Ali Said Faqi,(Ph.D), MI (USA)
Avv. Abdurahman Hosh Jibril, ON (Canada)
Dr. Ali Bahar (Ph.D), Texas (USA)
Ahmed Jama Hamud, (P.Eng), ON (Canada)
Jamal Hassan, Ottawa, ON (Canada)
Sagal Ali Jama, ON (Canada)
Abdulhakim Mohamud Faqi, VA (USA)
Eng. Abdulkadir Ali Abdi (Xuurka), Columbus, Ohio (USA)
Dr. Abdiweli M. Ali (Ph.D), NY (USA)
SheikhNur Abukar Qasim, MN (USA)
Eng. Abdulkadir Khalif, MN (USA)
Avv. Yusuf Said Samatar (Bardacad), Boston, (USA)
Yasin Maah, Stockholm, (Sweden)
Abdi Hashi Seed, ON (Canada)
Nasir Abdi Baale, Toronto, ON (Canada)
Eng. Mohamed Ahmed Gilao (Tennis), ON (Canada)
Abdalla Hired, NY (USA)
Abdi Goud, Connecticut, (USA)
Avv. Nurto Hagi Hasan, ON (Canada)
Eng Mohamud Dhafuuje, ON (Canada)
Prof. Mohamud Siad Togane, Poet, QC (Canada)
Suldaan Abdulkadir Galbeyte (Ex), ON (Canada)
Prof. Abdihamid H. Mohamed – Nederland
Prof. Abdulqadir Ismail- Manchester, (UK)
Eng. Jeilani Sheikh Hussein, OH (USA)
Eng. Rashid Guleed, IL (USA)
Asha Abukar Qasim , MN (USA)
Said Ahmed Salah, VA, (USA)
Abdisalaam Haji Mohamud Dheere, London, (UK)
Aden Abokar, Columbus, Ohio (USA)
Prof. Dahabo Farah Hassan, Toronto, ON (Canada)
Caaqil Mohamoud Ali Jimale (Koogaar) AZ (USA)
Haji Mohamoud Ghedi Aw Hilowle MN(USA)
Abdifatah Maroyare, Toronto, ON (Canada)
Mohamud Jama Hamud , MN (USA)
Ismail Gaafow, ON(Canada)
Prof. Mohamed Siad Togane, ON (Canada)
Avv. Hareedo Ibrahim Boolis,
Saido Awad Muse, VA (USA)
Col. Mohamud Qaali Gacamey, MN (USA)
Sarman Ramses, VA (USA)
Ahmed Sharif Ahmed, VA (USA)
Muse Kulow, ON (Canada)
Bashi Hosh Jibril, ON (Canada)
Osman Ali Omar Sheegow, Seattle, WA (USA)
Suldan Said Faqi, Columbus- Ohio (USA)
Abdullahi Mohamed Sheikh, NC (USA)
Muse Ahmed Abdirahman, ON (Canada)
Yasin Mahamud Yusuf (Karani), Stockholm, Sweden
Dr. Liiban Abdullahi Farah (Medical Doctor), L.A. California (USA)
Jeilani Ahmed Adda Munye, GA (USA)
Safia Giama Cagmadhige, Cairo, (Egypt)
Omar Warfa, Toronto, ON (Canada)
Naima Xayle, Toronto, ON (Canada)
Eng. Cabdulqadir Mohamed Abow, ON (USA)
Prince Osman Fatah, San Diego, California (USA)
Abdiaziz Abukar Baafo, MI (USA)
Malaq Mukhtar, MI (USA)
Mohamed Haji Dhagax, San Diego, California
Omer Jamal, Minneapolis , MN
Mohamed Abdi Gacmocadde, Virginia-(USA)
Ali Alio Mohamed, Columbus- Ohio (USA)
Bashir Gardaad, Montreal, Quebec (Canada)
Mohamed Omar Faqi, Columbus, Ohio (USA)
Mahdi Shakiib, Atlanta, GA (USA)
Sheekh Shabaab Sheekh Mumin, Minneapolis, MN (USA)
Ahmed Mohamed (Ahmadey), San Diego, (California)
Jeilani Mayow- Rochester, MN (USA)
Hassan Shire Sheikh, Kampala, (Uganda)
Yusuf Mumin Maio’- London, (UK)
Col. Abdi Daad, Ontario (Canada)
Col. Abdirahamn Ahmed Yare (Maan), Toronto, ON (USA)
Liban Hassan Abdi, Phoenix, AZ (USA)
Halima Farah, Denmark
Hussein SH. Abdulqadir, NC (USA)
Hassan Yusuf, VA (USA)
Amin Abu Hadi, Ohio (USA)
Safi Abdi, Dubai, (UAE)
Prof Mohamed Jibril (USA/Minnesota)
Haji Hussein Jimale MN (USA)
Abdulle Hassan Nuurow , MN (USA)
Dr. Ibrahim Mao Osman (Ghandi) California (USA)
Osman Mohamed Sheikh, MN (USA)
Sheikh Ali Hussein Jaras, MN (USA)
Abdirizaq Jamac Janagale, Alberta, (Canada)
Adan Abdulle Howle, Alberta, (Canada)
Abraham Koshin, Alberta, (Canada)
Hassan Siad Togane, MN (USA)
Sheikh Hassan Ali Alassow, MN (USA)
Haji Abdi Mouse Maahaay,MN (USA)
Mas’uud Sheikh Amir, MN (USA)
Ahmed Mohamed Afrah (Shutul), MN (USA)
Caydiid Ali Hassan, MN (USA)
Dayib Sheikh Ahmed, VA (USA)
Ali Isse Ahmed, MN (USA)
Abdirahman Mussa (timadheere), Toronto, ON (Canada)
Eng. Osman Ali Ahmed (Dheere), Toronto, ON (Canada)
Mukhtar Mohamed Ahmed (Katiitow), MN (USA)
Abdulqadir Omar Ahmed, MN (USA)
Architect Abukar Yusuf Hassan, Columbus, Ohio (USA)
Adan Abdi, Islamabad, (Pakistan)
Shukri Tohow Mohamed, MN (USA)
Madina Hussein Jeyte, MN (USA)
Hawo Mohamed Abdulle, MN (USA)
Macallim Ahmed Halane, MN (USA)
Abdiaziz Omar Hussein, VA (USA)
Abdiaziz Osman Sheikh, VA (USA)
Abbas Abdi Maxaad-Isse, VA (USA)
Shukri Giama Cagmadhige, Bosasso, (Somalia)
Falhad Ahmed Mohamoud, VA (USA)
Mohamoud Mudey Hassan, MN (USA)
Ali Muhudin Mohamed, MN (USA)
Jibril Mohamoud Jilao, NE (USA)
Gargaar Mohamed Hassan, Economist, Columbus, Ohio (USA)
Abdulkadir Abdullahi Jama, Agriculturist, Columbus, Ohio (USA)
Dr. Abdifatah Khalif .H. Farah, Oral Surgeon, Columbus, Ohio (USA
Ali Yusuf Dirie, Agriculturist, Columbus, Ohio (USA)
Eng. Mohamoud Mohamed Ali, Columbus, Ohio (USA).
Ali Maollim Mouse, TN (USA)
Faantoy Omar (Faanka), VA (USA)
Shamso Nur, MN (USA)
Mohamed Omar Karani, MN (USA)
Yasin Abdi jire ( Wiilwaal), (Sweden)
Abdikhalaq Mohamoud, (Nederland)
Fuad Ibrahim (Fuju) , (Nederland)
Hilal Muse Nero, (UK)
Jama Warsame, London (UK)
Adam Moblen, Naples (Italy)
Abdinur Bashir, Naples (Italy)
Abdiqani Mohamoud, (Italy)
Yasin Mahi Moalim, Nederland
Jani Dheere, Stocholm- (Sweden)
Abdirashid Issa Ugas, ON, (Canada)
Asli Jama Badwi, ON, (Canada)
Khali Mahdi Abdi, ON (Canada)
Abdikarim abdulle (Garweyne) London, (UK)
Abdullahi Farah (Dihal) IL, (USA)
Abas Mohamed, VA (USA)
Abdirashid Hassan Hirsi, ON (Canada)
Mubarak Dhiidhaco, ON (Canada)
Mohamed Abdullahi, London, (UK)
Samatar Abdullahi, WA, (USA)
Ibrahim Ahmed Ali (Shaash), Bonn, (Germany)
Dayib Mohamud Sheikh, DC (USA)
Eedaad Hassan Mire, MN (USA)
Saciid Abdi Cali Baradho, Nairobi, (Kenya)
Waris Mohamed Wilad, ON, (Canada)
Shaafici Xassan Maxamed, Gotenburg, (Sweden)
Eng. Abubakar Maxamed Darood, (UK)
Abdirizak Mohamud, ON, (Canada)
Mohamed Jama Jibrel, MN/USA
Abdirizak Bihi, MN (USA)
Mohamed Abdi Hassan Qaac, MN (USA)
Mohamed Osman (Majino), MN (USA)
Saeed Fahiya, MN (USA)
Mohamed Ali Hashi Ottawa, (Canada)
Ali Igal, MN (USA)
Faduma Dubbad, MN (USA)Eng. Ibrahim Sheikh Jama, OH (USA)
Khadra Cadaawe, ON, (Canada)
Mohamed Abdirizak, VA (USA)
Aden Sheegow, ON (Canada)
Hodon Siiqe, ON (Canada)
Ahmed Dahir Afqudhac Ottawa, (Canada)
Abdirizak Galoof (Mulikiyuul), ON (Canada)
Muna Mohamud,Hovedstaden, Denmark
Hassan Mohamed Mudey, ON (Canada)
Ahmed Musse Nero, London, (UK)
Said Hussein Ali (Barawaaani) Ottawa, (Canada)
Suad Awad, ON (Canada)
Jibril Mohamed Said, ON (Canada)
Dr. Abdillahi Adan Gas Ottawa, (Canada)
Shuceyb Osman Mohamed, ON (Canada)
Faduma Jama Dirie, ON, (Canada)
Col. Ahmed Mohamed Carab Ottawa, (Canada)
Rabiica Barre, ON (Canada)
Hodon Ahmed, ON (Canada)
Hassan Jama Ali, Piemonte (Italy)
Omar Alihashi Ottawa, (Canada)
Ali Ahmed Mohamoud Goonle Ottawa, (Canada)
Ahmed H. Hirad Ottawa, (Canada)
Avv. Fadumo Jawaanle, ON (Canada)
Abdirizak M. Ahmed (Caanogeel), ON (Canada)
Omer Mohamed Dufle, ON (Canada)
Abdinur Mohamed Aden, ON (Canada)
Faysal Jama (Jabdhurwaa), AB, Canada
Cumar Gaab, ON (Canada)
Farah Aw-Osman, ON (Canada)
Jibril A. Hassan, GA (USA)
Ahmed Nur Basey, ON (Canada)
Ahmed Shire Dirie, ON (Canada)
Abdiqani Farah Musse, MN (USA)
Ibrahim Koshin Barre, AB (Canada)
Fadumo Abdullahi Barre, MN (USA)
Ilyas Ali, MN (USA)
Mohamed Ali Maamow, (Norwey)
Cabdulahi Mohamud Faytaan, (Norway)
On Fri, Jul 1, 2011 at 7:10 AM, Prof Liban Egal
<prof.li...@gmail.com> wrote:
Waxaan halka tahniyad ugu dirayaa dhamaan Soomaalida qurba joogta ah
iyo kuwa ku nool dalka gudihiisa. Waxaanu leenahay ku ciida xornimada
Soomaaliyeed nabad iyo barwaaqo Amiin, Amiin, Amiin.
Prof. Liban A Egal
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