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Thursday, September 02, 2010

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 Editor's Choice
Spies, Lies and Goodbyes – Part 1
Written by Claude Salhani The killing of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri was until recently widely believed to have been perpetrated by the Syrians, or at least on their behalf. It was the assassination of Mr. Hariri that led to the forced departure of Syrian troops from Lebanon as a result of...
August 15, 2010 - 17:16
Saudis hope giant clock will set 'Mecca Time'
MECCA, Saudi Arabia (AFP) Muslims around the world could be setting their watches to a new time soon when the world's largest clock begins ticking atop a soaring skyscraper in Islam's holiest city of Mecca. Saudi Arabia hopes the four faces of the new clock, which will loom over Mecca's Grand Mosque from what is...
August 11, 2010 - 14:46
Archives... 
 Social Issues
Saudis order 40 lashes for elderly woman for mingling
09 March.2009 By Mohammed Jamjoom and Saad Abedine (CNN) -- A Saudi Arabian court has sentenced a 75-year-old Syrian woman to 40 lashes, four months imprisonment and deportation from the kingdom for having two unrelated men in her house, according to local media reports. According to the Saudi daily...
March 11, 2009 - 00:19
Proud to be a new Canadian
15 Feb,2009 OTTAWA — The 70 people standing in the Great Hall of the Museum of Civilization couldn’t possibly have been Canadian citizens. They waved flags. They spoke glowingly about Ottawa. And they knew all the words to O Canada. Canadians? No way, eh. Yet as they raised their right hands...
February 15, 2009 - 22:28
Afghan foetus 'aborted by razor'
BBC, 07 Jan. 2009--The family of a 14-year-old Afghan rape victim face prosecution after her foetus was removed without anaesthetic. The mother and brother of the girl are accused of cutting her open with a razor blade to perform an abortion. Doctors say the girl is in a critical condition. A man accused of raping...
January 07, 2009 - 13:10
Archives... 
 Business Issues
Bailed-out Goldman Sachs profit soars to 3.44 bln dlrs
By Veronica Smith NEW YORK (AFP) – Wall Street giant Goldman Sachs on Tuesday posted second-quarter profit of 3.44 billion dollars, beating market expectations and possibly signaling recovery in the battered US financial sector. Goldman Sachs, which has repaid a 10-billion-dollar US government bailout in full in the...
July 14, 2009 - 14:48
Is greed overcoming fear in the stock market?
By Chuck Mikolajczak - Analysis NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. stocks typically rebound six months before the economy, but investors worry that the current 25 percent rally since the market's March 9 low could be a red herring. At the same time, lack of investor conviction -- or simple fear -- can be considered a sign of...
April 11, 2009 - 12:17
Archives... 
 Medicine & Tech
Microchip uses nanotechnology to detect cancer
SASKATCHEWAN (CBC) - Canadian researchers have developed a prototype microchip that could one day lead to a portable device that could diagnose cancer in 30 minutes. The chip uses nanotechnology wires and materials on the scale of a billionth of a metre to detect chemical markers that indicate the presence of...
September 29, 2009 - 11:26
Study links morning sickness to brighter kids
CTV.ca News Staff Moms who spend part of their pregnancies vomiting and nauseated can take heart: Canadian research suggests they might actually have a smarter baby. Researchers at Toronto's Hospital for Sick Children's Motherisk Program have discovered that morning sickness appears to be linked to enhanced...
April 27, 2009 - 11:48
HIV mutates at high speed to avoid immune system: study
27 Feb,2009. PARIS (AFP) - - A worldwide team of scientists said the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) was swiftly evolving to avoid the body's immune defences, a phenomenon that adds to the challenge of crafting an AIDS vaccine. Mutations in HIV enable it to rapidly sidestep genetic variations that offer a...
February 27, 2009 - 01:31
Archives... 
 SomaliNews

December 03, 2009 - 13:16
Somalis overwhelm Yemen

By Heather Murdock

KHARAZ CAMP, Yemen

Six-year-old Samira said she, her mother and her two brothers had spent the past week sleeping outside the door of an office waiting their turn to register as refugees.

Her father was shot and killed in the Somali civil war. She and her family were smuggled from Somalia to Yemen in a fishing boat. At the camp, they are hoping to get a tent and some food rations.

"Every day I feel hungry in this country," Samira said.

There are already more than 160,000 African refugees in Yemen, according to the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). Most, like Samira, are among the half million people who have fled the 18-year-old civil war in Somalia.

This year, the number of new arrivals has increased 40 percent. Families are fleeing not only war, but also drought in East Africa and political turmoil in the run-up to 2010 Ethiopian elections.

They pay as much as $150 for the journey and come packed onto small fishing boats by smugglers, who beat passengers if they move even slightly, to prevent the boats from capsizing. In only a few days in early September, the United Nations reported 65 people either died or were presumed dead after three separate boats capsized.

More than a dozen died after being beaten by smugglers, and the rest drowned. Refugees say that many more die along the way and that the bodies are tossed overboard. "Let the fish eat them," smugglers often say, according to Mohammad Noor Adam, a refugee from Somalia.

Sometimes the boats drop refugees on remote Yemeni beaches surrounded by desert. But often the smugglers don't want to risk landing and order the refugees to swim to shore. Those that don't jump are pushed.

Burham Wallow Barihu, an Eritrean refugee, made the journey across the Gulf of Aden with 140 other passengers about six months ago. Twelve died along they way, and their bodies were thrown into the gulf. When shots were fired at smugglers near the shore, an elderly woman, who was afraid to jump, was hit on the shoulder.

"I was the last off the boat because I forgot my documents," he said. "She couldn't drop off the boat." Smugglers pushed the woman overboard, and Mr. Barihu wrangled her to shore. With no medicine to treat the wound, she died on the beach.

Bodies of refugees regularly wash up on the Yemeni shore and are buried in mass graves by UNHCR. So far this year, almost 300 people have drowned trying to cross the Gulf of Aden to Yemen. More than 150 are missing and presumed dead.

After landing, Somalis, who have automatic refugee status in Yemen, are picked up by the international organizations or the Yemeni police and brought to the closest U.N. registration center or refugee camp.

However, refugees from Ethiopia and Eritrea do not have automatic refugee status, which would allow them to stay in the country legally without a UNHCR interview, and often face arrest and deportation when they land. Those who speak the Somali language sometimes fake another nationality. Others flee the beaches. Many are caught and deported without the chance to plead their case to UNHCR.

The Yemeni government says the arrests are a justified defensive move. Officials say that African refugees are draining the country's already limited resources. Yemen, one of the world's poorest and least developed countries, is deeply embroiled in a civil war in the north that has forced 175,000 people from their homes.

The government is also battling a secessionist movement in the south, the growing al Qaeda organization, and a looming oil and water crisis that threatens every aspect of Yemen's tenuous future. Officials often blame crime, disease, social problems, terrorism and economic hardship on the influx of refugees.

"Yemen is becoming a victim to other phenomena coming from other countries," said Ali M. Al-Ayashi, the deputy minister for Arabic, African and Asian affairs at the Yemeni Foreign Ministry.

Yemen is the only country on the Arabian Peninsula that is a signatory to international treaties that obligate the parties to host refugees. Although many refugees say they want to go to Saudi Arabia to find work, the safest route is through Yemen.

According to Mr. Ayashi, the strain that the growing refugee population puts on Yemen should be eased with more international assistance. The international community helps refugees, he said, but does not support host countries that bear most of the burden. "One country cannot take the whole responsibility for this problem," he said.

At the Kharaz camp, about 13,000 refugees depend on international aid for food, water, medicine, housing and education. The refugees say there is never enough to go around.

After an inchlong cockroach crawled across her bed, Kamar Hussein pulled out a picture of her family and friends, taken during happier days in Somalia long ago. She began to sob. "Look," she said. "I used to have beautiful hair." She ripped off her blue headscarf and pointed to her frizzy yellow head. "Now I don't even have shampoo. There is nothing. There is nothing."

Community leaders at the camp say they try to improve living conditions by teaching residents about health care and sanitation but are thwarted by a lack of funding.

According to Abdulaziz Mohammad Ahmed, a Somali refugee and the chairman of the Refugee Youth Club at Kharaz, new arrivals who can will leave immediately.

Those who can't afford to take a bus to the nearest city walk for days to get out of the camp. "Here, there is no work and no food," he said. "Most people leave fast."

U.N. Assistant High Commissioner for Refugees, Janet Lim, recently visited Kharaz camp and said she thought refugees were better off living in Yemeni cities than in camps. In the cities, there is at least a chance of getting a job and building a new life. "A camp is not a natural setting," she said in a phone interview after her tour. "It's far from anywhere, in the middle of nowhere."

But according to residents of Basateen, a shantytown just outside the port city of Aden that is home to about 15,000 African refugees, life in the city is not much easier. On a bench outside the low, white refugee service building, Zahara Yuseff said she was told to leave the Kharaz camp five days after she arrived, exhausted and beaten.

She is 21 and single, and she was told to move to the city to get a job. "They said, 'If you are alone, you don't get anything with us,' " she said. "If you are a family, you can stay."

A month later she has no job or prospects. Desperately poor and without a nationality, refugees in Basateen say they are almost as trapped as the residents of Kharaz camp.

In other Yemeni cities, refugees say they face constant discrimination. Abi Abyah al-Manah, an Ethiopian refugee who heads the Mandated Refugee Association in the capital San'a says Africans are subjected to arbitrary arrests, violence, sexual violence and extortion by the authorities and the local people.

"No one feels sympathy if someone dies over there, because we are Africans," he said.

Refugees in all three locations said what they really want is to be resettled in a third country. But, according to UNHCR's Ms. Lim, there are far more refugees than there are countries willing to take them. "The possibilities are very limited," she said.

The spike in refugees arriving on Yemeni shores this year is largely due to an increasing number of Ethiopians. A four-year-old drought in East Africa has left more than 6 million Ethiopians in need of emergency aid and killed almost 130 people in the first half of this year alone, according to Oxfam International.

But Mr. al-Manah said people are also fleeing Ethiopia because they fear violence or arrest as May 2010 elections approach. In 2005, during the last election period, 200 protesters were killed and at least 100 political leaders were arrested.

"There is a shadow of fear," he said.

Recent arrivals from Somalia said they left their homes after family members were killed by al Shabab, a growing Islamist militia attempting to take over Somalia and enforce its strict interpretation of Islamic law. Al Shabab is closely tied to al Qaeda and able to draw recruits from all over the world, including ethnic Somalis in the United States.

While many people at Kharaz camp are occupied with desperate attempts to find a way out, others have given up hope for a better life in Yemen.

Mohammed Ahmed Ibrahim, a tall and skinny young man with a sad smile, said individual refugees without family scramble to find enough food to survive in the camp. In the cities, if a Somali can find a job, it is cleaning Yemeni bathrooms.

Journalists and NGO workers come to the camp regularly, he said. They ask questions and take notes, but life in the searing desert plods along without change. "You can write something about us," said Mr. Ibrahim. "But nobody will help. There is no future here."

Source: The Washington Times

 

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Next:
Somalia blames al-Qaida, Somali group for bombing – December 04, 2009 - 15:44
Al Shabab blamed for Somalia bombing. Is Al Qaeda's influence rising? – December 04, 2009 - 15:37
Suicide bomber kills three Somali govt ministers – December 03, 2009 - 13:39
Veiled Bomber Kills 3 Somali Ministers – December 03, 2009 - 13:30
Somali militants training pirates – December 03, 2009 - 13:25

Previous:
Jihad draws young men across globe back to Somalia – December 02, 2009 - 16:43
Hijacked Greek tanker reaches Somali coast – December 02, 2009 - 16:32
Grenade attack wounds 24 in northern Somalia – December 02, 2009 - 16:26
Somali pirates seize super tanker of crude oil heading to the US from Saudi Arabia – November 30, 2009 - 12:48
Fighting pushes Somalis, Islamist rebels, into Kenya – November 30, 2009 - 11:24

 Articles&Opinions
NPWJ: “Kenya must arrest President Omar al-Bashir”
Brussels-Rome-New York, President Omar al-Bashir of Sudan arrived in Kenya this morning to attend the promulgation of the country's new constitution. President al-Bashir is the subject of an arrest warrant by the International Criminal Court (ICC) for genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity committed...
August 31, 2010 - 11:49
Is it a Gaffe, Is it a Joke, Is it Cause for Removal?
Once in a while a senior political figure makes a statement that is so outlandish and ludicrous that one is forced to ask questions such as, “is he serious?; has he gone rogue like Sarah Palin?; has he lost touch with reality?” Such an event occurred the other day, when I saw comments reported on the Jamhuuriya website on...
August 09, 2010 - 22:51
Kulmiye’s Win: A Beginning of New Era or Politics of Business as Usual?
Now that Somaliland’s much anticipated presidential election is behind us and the victorious Kulmiye’s leadership in the driver set, what future holds for the down-trodden citizens? Is this a begging of new progressive era or politics of business as usual of the status quo? What does this victory mean for the average...
August 05, 2010 - 11:29
Thank You Mr. Rayalle
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July 27, 2010 - 01:19
A Proposal for the Mo Ibrahim Foundation Prize.
It is my understanding that this prize has been established to nudge African politics and politicians towards democracy and the rule of law, a direction in which the continent so reverently claims to head but often misses by 180 degrees. The matter has been debated, discussed and dissected at many a forum, the least of...
July 25, 2010 - 22:01
Requiem For A Disgrace
According to the definition given in the 1997 New Webster’s Encyclopedic Dictionary of the English Language, plagiarism is “the unauthorized use of the language and thoughts of another author and the representation of them as one’s own”.“To avoid plagiarism, an author should document sources properly using Footnotes, End...
June 28, 2010 - 21:38
Would UDUB Defeat/Kulmiye Victory be Bane or Blessing f or Somaliland?
Somaliland is going to the polls Saturday June 26, 2010 to elect its next president. Since, by all indications, it appears that the this election will be a fiercely contested one and all the counts will be very close with each party getting about 30% plus, it is difficult to predict which party will win. However, it...
June 26, 2010 - 20:28
The Year of Living Dangerously: The Generals and Other Notes of Forgotten Wars (Part I)\
“Even in the valley of the shadow of death two and two do not make six.” Leo Tolstoy. Folks, I have to make serious public confessions today that I would like share with the readers. It is a deeply guarded secret known only to close circle of friends and family members. You would assume I’m going to make...
June 22, 2010 - 02:06
Somalia: Original Bevin plan welcomed and 1897 and 1954 treaties repudiated
Mohamed Osman Omar, former Ambassador of Somalia to various countries including India, former Yugoslavia and the Sudan and as non-resident Ambassador to Sri Lanka and Singapore, was on May 28, 2010, among the speakers at the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London, on the occasion of the...
June 17, 2010 - 00:49
Somaliland Politics: The election fever and tribal politics.
The election fever is on its highest level and tribal politics which we thought we are grown out of it has taken its deepest root ever. We entered in the last two weeks of the presidential campaign. The three parties’ leaders are vying for the crucial votes. Politicking, campaign lies, false propaganda, and finger...
June 17, 2010 - 00:03
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 Literature&poetry
Gabay - Bal yar kaadso
Gabay Magaciisa la yidhaa Bal yar kaadso oo ku socda kuwa quraanku ku tilmaamay ( Humasadi lumasadi) ayaan halkan ku soo bandhigaynaa inay akhristayaashu nala wadaagaan nalana dhuuxaan sugaanta muga weyn ee ku ladhan iyo ujeedada weyn ee ka danbaysa gabayga oo ah mid si toosa ugu socota dadka Jahadu ka luntey ee...
August 03, 2008 - 12:40
KIINIYAA IS DAGAASHAY (Geeraar)
Maansadan waxa tiriyeye Maxamed Xirsi Guuleed. Waxay soo baxday 2008-01-31 Waxay ku saabsantahay xaaladda siyaasadeed ee dalka Kenya ee cakirantay iyo saadaasha mustaqbalka ee Soomaalida u fiicnaan lahayd. Wuxu Yidhi: Kiiniyaa is dagaashay Doorashay isku maagtay Kun daday iska laysay Sidii daad isu jiidhe...
February 02, 2008 - 01:52
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