Friday, November 16, 2012

Briefing: Ethiopia's Muslim protests

Briefing: Ethiopia's Muslim protests

ADDIS ABABA, 15 November 2012 (IRIN) - Tensions have been simmering over several months between Muslims and the government, with thousands holding demonstrations in protest at the government's alleged interference in religious affairs; the government has blamed the protests on a small group of extremists.

Around 60 percent of Ethiopia's 84 million people are Christians; Muslims make up about one-third of the population, according to official figures. Religion-related clashes have been rare in the country, but unrest over the past several months has led to several deaths and dozens of arrests. IRIN looks at the causes of, and fallout from, the protests.

What sparked the protests?

The leaders of the protests, which began in December 2011, accuse the Ethiopian government of trying to impose the al-Ahbash Islamic sect on the country's Muslim community, which traditionally practises the Sufi form of Islam. Al-Ahbash beliefs are an interpretation of Islam combining elements of Sunni Islam and Sufism; its teachings are popular in Lebanon. Said to be first taught by Ethiopian scholar Abdullah al-Harari, the Ethiopian Al-Ahbash teachings are moderate, advocating Islamic pluralism, while opposing political activism.

In December 2011, the state moved to dismiss the administration of the Awoliya religious school in Addis Ababa. In July, police dispersed an overnight meeting at the school on the eve of an African Union heads of state summit, and arrested several protesters and organizers of the meeting, which police officials said did not have a permit.

Those behind the meeting, an "Arbitration Committee" of 17 led by prominent religious scholars, said they wanted to dialogue with the government but insisted they would continue legitimate protests to oppose its continued interference in the administration of the religious school and the election of members of the country's supreme Islamic Council.

They accuse the government of dictating elections to the council, which concluded [ http://www.mfa.gov.et/news/more.php?newsid=1370 ] on 5 November, and favour the Al-Ahbash Muslim sect.

Temam Ababulga, a lawyer representing activists who led the protests - some of them are currently behind bars - says they are appealing to a federal court to cancel the election and its outcome, on the grounds that the elections were not conducted in accordance with the council's by-laws.

"The opposition to Ahbash at this time is not theological. the protesters oppose... that the regime is sponsoring the movement, providing finance, logistical support and allowing it to use both the Islamic Council and the state institution in its proselytization," said Jawar Mohammed, an Ethiopian analyst now studying at Columbia University in the USA.

"Ahbash has been in Ethiopia since the 1990s and has peacefully coexisted with the rest of Islamic revival movements," he added. "The confrontation came only after the government invited the leading figures from Lebanon and started aggressive re-indoctrination campaign."

What is the government's response?

The government denies that it is violating the country's constitution by meddling in religious affairs. Addressing parliament on 16 October, Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn said: "The government is not and would not interfere in the affairs of any religion in the country."

At the height of the protests in mid-April, then Prime Minister Meles Zenawi, who died in August, told parliament that "a few extremists are working to erode the age-old tradition of tolerance between traditional Sufi Muslims and Christians in Ethiopia," and stressed that they would not be tolerated by the government.

"The government... has made a number of efforts to encourage engagement with the protesters and has, for example, also done all it can to support the matter of elections for the Islamic Council," said a statement [ http://www.mfa.gov.et/weekHornAfrica/morewha.php?wi=684 ] by the government in response to Amnesty International's allegations.

"It is true that some members of a `protesters committee' have been arrested following violent protests, but it is completely misleading to suggest that this `committee' had been `chosen to represent the Muslim community's grievances to the government'. This `committee' was not chosen nor elected by anyone... It was, in sum, a small, self-appointed committee of protesters whose support in the community at large, as the recent election clearly demonstrated, was minimal."

Increasing Islamic militancy in the region - Kenya, Somalia and Tanzania have all witnessed increased Islamist activity - is of concern to the Ethiopian authorities, who say they are facing growing threats evident from the discovery of the first Al-Qaeda cell in the country; 11 people have been in an on-going trial, suspected of being members of an Al-Qaeda cell and accused of planning terrorist attacks.

What are rights groups saying?

The USA has added its voice to accusations that Ethiopia has been interfering in the religious affairs of its Islamic population and wrongfully arresting people. Addis Ababa has on several occasions rejected these charges.

"Since July 2011, the Ethiopian government has sought to force a change in the sect of Islam practiced nationwide and has punished clergy and laity who have resisted," an 8 November press statement [ http://www.uscirf.gov/news-room/whats-new-at-uscirf/3860-press-statement-uscirf-deeply-concerned-by-emerging-religious-freedom-violations-in-ethiopia.html ] by the US Commission on International Religious Freedom - a bipartisan federal government body - said. "Muslims throughout Ethiopia have been arrested during peaceful protests."

Amnesty International [ http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/asset/AFR25/016/2012/en/f77e6342-5d69-4ed9-b595-c23fd2e3cb3d/afr250162012en.html ] has also accused the Ethiopian authorities of "committing human rights violations in response to the ongoing Muslim protest movement in the country". The organization said the police was using "excessive force" against peaceful demonstrators.

Human Rights Watch says it is deeply concerned that Ethiopia's government has repeatedly used terrorism-related prosecutions to clamp down on lawful freedom of speech and assembly.

"Many of these trials have been politically motivated and marred by serious due process violations," Laetitia Bader, a Human Rights Watch researcher on Ethiopia, told IRIN via email. "The Muslim leaders and others, should be immediately released unless the government can produce credible evidence of unlawful activity. The fact that many of the detainees have been in detention for over three months without charge does raise questions about the existence of such evidence."

Rights groups also say journalists covering the protests are being increasingly harassed. In October, police briefly detained Marthe Van Der Wolf, a reporter with the Voice of America as she was covering one of the protests at the Anwar Mosque, and according to the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), told to erase her recorded interviews.

"Ethiopian authorities should halt their harassment of journalists covering the country's Muslim community and their intimidation of citizens who have tried to speak to reporters about sensitive religious, ethnic, and political issues," CPJ said in an October statement. [ http://www.cpj.org/2012/10/ethiopia-briefly-detains-voice-of-america-correspo.php ]

The government denies violently suppressing the protests, and says "one or two of the protests were extremely violent (with police killed)."

Activists and rights groups are concerned about references to "terrorism" in the charges. "The charges contain similar allegations used to prosecute dissident journalists and opposition leaders in the past few years... the leaders of the Muslim protest are just the latest victims of the regime's war against dissenting voices," said Jawar Mohammed.

"In fact, many of the Muslim scholars and spiritual leaders being accused of such conspiracy to create an Islamic state have written and publicly spoken advocating against any form of extremism, emphasizing that Ethiopia is a multi-faith country where secular state is indispensable for co-existence," he added. "The irony is that these Muslim leaders, many of them, are followers of the Sufi tradition and have a proven track record of actively fighting against infiltration of the community by extremist elements."

What is the extent of the protests and violence?

The demonstrations have continued for close to a year, and show no signs of abating. During Eid Al Adha celebrations in late October, tens of thousands of Muslims took to the streets to celebrate the holiday; after the prayers, they staged protests. "We have nothing to kill for. but we have Islam to die for," read some of the protesters' banners.

The arrest of an Imam in the Oromia region back in April led to clashes that left four dead, while the country's federal police clashed with protesters at Addis Ababa's Grand Anwar mosque on 21 July.

In October, in the Amhara Region, three civilians and one police officer were killed when protesters stormed a police station where a religious leader was jailed, said Communication Affairs State Minister Shimeles Kemal. On 29 October, federal prosecutors charged the jailed activists and others with terrorism; a group of 29 people are accused of aiming to establish an Islamic state, undermining the country's secular constitution.

How might resentments play out?

In a report [ http://www.crisisgroup.org/~/media/Files/africa/horn-of-africa/ethiopia-eritrea/b089-ethiopia-after-meles ] released shortly after Meles's death, the think tank International Crisis Group warned that the new government would find it difficult to deal with grievances in the absence of "any meaningful domestic political opposition".

"Resentments would likely continue to be turned into ethnic and religious channels, thus undermining stability and, in the worst case of civil war, even survival of a multi-ethnic, multi-faith state," the authors said.

kt/kr/cb

[END]

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Somaliland: 17 Universities Registered Nationwide

Somaliland: 17 Universities Registered Nationwide
Monday, 12 November 2012 19:08

UB is the only institution offering Vet Medicine courseUB is the only institution offering Vet Medicine courseBy: Yusuf M Hasan

HARGEISA (Somalilandsun) – Media houses have been disallowed from advertising for unregistered universities.

The ministry of education has instructed bosses of all media houses to coordinate with the department of higher education in order to ensure that they only post advertisement for registered universities.

A press statement released by the Director General of Higher Education Mr Kadar Ahmed Diriye, the ministry of education informed that despite the multitude of universities operating in the country only 17 are registered.

The DG said that the ministry has a policy on higher education that is geared towards ensuring the quality of education as well as the institution itself which is established through registration.

Said he,DG Khadar Ahmed says only 17 universities registeredDG Khadar Ahmed says only 17 universities registered "The education ministry is only able to monitor those institutions of higher learning which are duly registered and licensed"

The ministry which reiterated the importance of media houses cooperation named the following institutions of higher learning that are duly registered and which media houses are allowed to advertise for,

No Name of Institution and Location

1. Amoud University Borame

2. University of Hargeisa

3. Gollis University with Campuses in Burao, Berbera & Hargeisa

4. Admas University College Hargeisa

5. Burao University BuraoHargeisa University has highest Graduates annualHargeisa University has highest Graduates annual

6. Nugal University Las-Anod

7. Eelo American University Borame

8. International Horn University Hargeisa

9. Addis Ababa Medical College Hargeisa

10. Tima'ade University Gabile

11. Hope University Hargeisa

12. Sanaag University Erigavo

13. Abaarso Tech University Hargeisa

14. Alpha University College Hargeisa

15. New Generation University College Hargeisa

16. Edna University Hospital Hargeisa

17. Bader College

While this is the first time for the ministry of education to publicize such a list it is imperative that the government act expeditiously as pertains to the other many universities where thousands of Somaliland youths are currently pursuing their studies.

The quality of education offered by both the registered and unregistered universities as well as the instructors need proper monitoring by the ministry's Commission of Higher education thus ensure that we do not produce graduates who are academically half-baked.

Despite the fact that all the regions have at least one university thus ease of access to higher education, the courses offered remain suspect considering that we are graduation over 2000 fresh jobseekers of whom approximately 10% are absorbed by the local market with the rest left to waste time in coffee houses or endanger their lives while pursuing illegal immigration in the Sahara desert.

Of the 10% who manage to find jobs immediately around 5% are science based graduates mostly medicine while the rest are business and administration graduates. With these figures it is obvious that the ministry needs a rethink on how to entice more Somalilanders in the pursuit of science based studies and decrease the over 75% that pursue business and administration thus an overflow.

It has become fashionable for citizens to complain that expaAmoud is the oldest & only University offering post-graduate studiesAmoud is the oldest & only University offering post-graduate studiestriates are occupying positions which rightfully belong to locals but what is not mentioned is that the expatriates are here because their particular skills are not available in the country because the multitude of institutions are in competition to provide business administration and ICT courses only.

We need polytechnics that provide not necessarily degrees but diplomas and certificates in studies pertaining to Nutrition, Mechanics, Draughtsmanship, Clinical officers, Plumbing, Electronics, Accountancy, Secretarial, etc. these are the jobs that drive a nation forward.

Meanwhile why is the Marine University in Berbera not registered not to mention Lucy University and Somaliland University of Science & Technology-SUTECH both in Hargeisa?

What of the very suspicious one year old SAVANAH University in Burao which has also opened a medical facility that employs expatriates only both as medics and tutors?

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Thursday, November 8, 2012

Somaliland Journalists: New Media Law Ends Freedom of Press in Somalila

Somaliland Journalists: New Media Law Ends Freedom of Press in Somaliland
Wednesday, 07 November 2012 10:10

SOLJA claims the new law contradicts Somaliland's constitutionSOLJA claims the new law contradicts Somaliland's constitutionBy: Staff Writer

HARGEISA (Somalilandsun) - The Somaliland Journalists Association (SOLJA) is worried that the recently passed law for the National Intelligence Agency by the two houses of the Somaliland parliament may have a negative impact on the freedom of Somaliland's independent media.

In a statement released on November 6, 2012,SOLJA calls on Somaliland president Ahmed Mohamed Mohamoud Silanyo to amend article 7 paragraph 11 of the new law, which states that NIA has the right to censor the media equipments. SOlJA's Chairman Hassan Mohamed Yusuf believes that this will give a chance the NIA to censor the independent media, which is opposite to the Somaliland national constitution as well as the Somaliland press law, which the president promised to implement during his campaign in the election in 2010.

SOLA also claims that more than 100,000 Somalilanders have lost their lives to have a freedom of speech and self determination. ''If the president of Somaliland signs this law accepting the censorship, he will be remembered the man who burried the freedom of speech after twenty years of independence.''

SOLAJA calls on countries friendly to Somaliland, as well as human rights organizations in the world, and independent media watch dog organizations to encourage the president of Somaliland to amend this law of censorship.

Sunday, November 4, 2012

Somalia: M/s Fozia Appointed Deputy Prime Minister

Somalia: M/s Fozia Appointed Deputy Prime Minister

A beaming Fozia Yusuf Haji Aden asumes PM office in MogadishuA beaming Fozia Yusuf Haji Aden asumes PM office in MogadishuBy: Yusuf M Hasan

MOGADISHU (Somalilandsun) – A new administration has been inaugurated in Somalia

The prime minister of Somalia Abdi-Farah Shirdoon 'Saeed' has announced a 10 member cabinet of ministers that includes the first woman to hold the post of deputy prime minister and minister of foreign affairs.

The ten ministerial appointments are:

1. M/s Fozia Yusuf Haji Aden –Deputy Prime minister and minister of foreign affairs.

2. Abdilahi Abyan Nuur- Minister of Justice and religious endowment.

3. Abdihakim Haji Mahmud Fiqi- Minister of Defence

4. Abdikarin Hussein Guleid – Minister of Interior and National Security.

5. Mahmud Hasan Suleiman- Minister of Finance and Planning

6. Abdilahi Ilmooge Hirsi- Minister of Broadcasting and Information

7. Abdirizaq Omar Mohamed – Minister of Natural Resources

8. Muhdin Mohamed Kalmoye – Minister of Public works and Reconstruction

9. Maryan Qasim – Minister of Development and social Welfare

10. Mahmud Ahmed Hasan – Minister of Commerce and Industry.

This cabinet of ministers which is also very small as compared to past ones and includes two women happens to be mainly composed of new faces thus a sure sign that president Hasan Sheikh Mahmud is intent on a complete facelift.

This intent was originally discerned by the president's appointment of Prime Minister Shirdoon who is himself a new face in the country's political and public administration scene.

The appointment of interest here is that of M/s Fozia Yusuf as deputy premier and foreign affairs ministers. While she is the first woman to hold those posts in the history of Somalia she also happens to be originally from Somaliland where her political designs were nabbed after her NDB party was denied approval to contest imminent local council elections.

Somaliland: No lip service on Sovereignty, forces, logos, emblems ironic

Somaliland: No lip service on Sovereignty, forces, logos, emblems ironic

Editorial Somaliland Press

DSCN1475

Yes, it is truly so far so good for the directions and steps taken by Somaliland Forces, especially the police sectors.
We indeed have gone a long way since the Ina-Gurey days. However what is upper most in the minds of real patriots, as concerns our security apparatus, is the fact surrounding the emblems and logos of our forces.

Is it not quite shocking that as day in day out, month after month, year after year, and up-to now, two decades later, when we see a new flag or uniform (belts), we only see the sickly Somalia regime's security forces' dressing logos and emblems! Is it not the main thing our parliamentarians, ministers or forces commanders should have long ago dealt with, and seriously at that?

How then can we be held serious and not seen as to be giving lip service to our re-assertion of independence? How then can we top up and seal the last cork of our jubilation if not by discarding the most sensitive logos of the former Somalia regimes?

Why should the old emblems be a cross to carry whence it ain't ours?

If we changed the money, national flag, passport and national emblem, why not those of the logos of our security forces?

Does it cost more money to paint our police vehicles with new logos? With all respect due and with all senses and nerves of unblemished real patriotism, we ask the departments concerned to see and deem this matter as the national security one it is and, please, to do the necessary.

Ironically, one look at the caps, belts and vehicles of our security forces and the mind races back to the dark ages hence renders teeth to grind with charging.

On the other hand we stand by the forces in commemorating and celebrating their 19th year auspicious occasion since re-establishment.

At the same time we commend them on the noble work they do tirelessly with stark patriotism without grumbling.

In the same breathe we call upon members of the public and the government at large to help them such their tasks may be eased.
Wouldn't their morale be boosted a thousand folds with new logos and emblems?

Yes, we believe so.

By M.A EGGE

Friday, November 2, 2012

SOMALIA: Mogadishu IDPs suffer extortion, eviction

SOMALIA: Mogadishu IDPs suffer extortion, eviction

MOGADISHU/NAIROBI, 1 November 2012 (IRIN) - Already struggling to access sporadic humanitarian assistance, internally displaced people (IDPs) in the Somali capital Mogadishu are also facing eviction by returning landowners and unscrupulous camp "gatekeepers" who siphon away what little aid is received, a new report says.

"When [insurgent group] Al-Shabab gave up control of the Somali capital, militia leaders, politicians and influential landowners re-consolidated their control over various parts of the city. This control extends to the displacement camps where international humanitarian assistance is directed," notes the report, Gatekeepers and Evictions: Somalia's Displaced Population at Risk [ http://refugeesinternational.org/sites/default/files/110112_Gatekeepers_and_Evictions%20letterhead.pdf ], by Refugees International (RI).

"On site, camp 'gatekeepers,' connected to these local powerbrokers through a complex network of influence, regularly demand a portion of the aid that displaced people receive as 'rent'."

While some gatekeepers provide security in exchange for payment, others treat IDPs "as commodities for their own personal gain", the report says.

Lack of management

RI says the gatekeeper system emerged from "remote-control" service delivery, in which international humanitarian agencies provided assistance through local NGOs, during the years Mogadishu was highly dangerous to operate in.

A June 2012 report by the UN Monitoring Group on Somalia and Eritrea found that aid agencies working in Somalia "encountered a variety of sophisticated strategies to attract, control and divert humanitarian assistance". "The most pervasive and subtle of these involved the role of IDP camp managers and district officials as 'gatekeepers' to control physical access, manage aid resources and prevent effective monitoring of the use of aid," it found.

Aid agencies say despite the withdrawal of Al-Shabab from Mogadishu in 2011, several militia groups continue to operate in the city. This insecurity and the lack of organizational structures within the camps continue to make it difficult to provide a steady stream of support.

"Access to the IDPs remains difficult because of poor security, and humanitarian services are there but irregular. IDPs are coping by setting up bases in several settlements to access all services," Kilian Kleinschmidt, deputy humanitarian coordinator for the UN in Somalia, told IRIN.

"One major shortcoming has been the lack of management and administrative structures within the IDP settlements, many of which are controlled by unscrupulous NGOs and gatekeepers, who may divert funds and supplies [intended for] the settlements. Some have even been known to set up fake camps, organizing for people to be there when aid agencies are visiting when in actual fact no one lives there," he said.

Tough conditions

"Our shelters, which we build ourselves, cannot even protect you from environmental factors like wind and sun, let alone provide our security. Besides this, it is overcrowded, and one is not even able to get enough space to cook or boil water," said Asha Ahmed, an IDP in Mogadishu.

Healthcare in the camps is also hard to come by. "My womb is in critical condition after I gave birth to a dead infant earlier this year, and I am fearing that this may affect my other subsequent pregnancies," Amina Osman told IRIN.

Thousands of IDPs recently demonstrated in Mogadishu to demand better service provision and housing.

"The demonstration was about long-standing issues, and the IDPS are right to express their feelings. We hope that once the [political] transition comes to an end and the government falls into place, humanitarian issues will not be forgotten," Kleinschmidt said.

"There needs to be a joint effort between line minsters, district commissioners, political leaders, humanitarians and other key stakeholders to ensure sustainable provision of services to the IDPs in Mogadishu."

He stressed the need for proper policy on IDP settlements, without which humanitarian action would continue to be "sporadic and unpredictable".

There are no concrete population statistics on the number of IDPs in Mogadishu, but a 2012 survey by the International Committee of the Red Crescent estimated that the number could be as high as 400,000, with 15 percent being urban poor originally from the city.

"IDPs are living in very bad conditions with few humanitarian standards met. We had hoped that many would return after the end of the 2011 drought, but that has not really happened since many of the IDPs found livelihoods in the booming city," Kleinschmidt said.

"When AMISOM [the African Union Mission in Somalia] took Afgooye [a town 25km west of Mogadishu] in February, many of the IDPs there moved to Mogadishu; many of them have joined the IDPs within and on the outskirts of the city."

Better aid monitoring

The RI report also highlights eviction as a major problem faced by Mogadishu IDPs.

"As Mogadishu develops, businessmen, returning members of the Somali diaspora and government officials are all seeking to reclaim land where IDPs have settled," it states. "Both Somalia's new government and its donors must ensure that any urban planning and development takes into consideration the impact on IDPs."

The report urges the UN and international NGOs to increase their presence in IDP camps and improve their monitoring of aid delivery, recommending that donor nations increase their funding for monitoring and evaluation. It also says the new Somali government "must hold local officials to account for the theft of aid and prevent any forced evictions of displaced persons or communities that violate international humanitarian law".

Kleinschmidt noted that several UN agencies and international NGOs were increasing their presence within Somalia. He said 14 UN agencies and NGOs have started reorganizing one of the largest and most notorious IDP settlements, organizing the services' shelters in a structured manner to promote ease of access.

"Now that most of the city is fairly accessible, mapping of settlements and service provision is ongoing. while an interagency effort has begun profiling the city's IDP population to better understand who they are," he said.

Improving security in the camps is also crucial for the expansion of humanitarian assistance. "Security is a precondition for the provision of services. We need stronger policing around the camps. AMISOM police is working with local police to address the issue of militias in the city who are responsible for insecurity. The return of the rule of law is crucial. UNDP's rule of law programme, in cooperation with the humanitarians, is trying to ensure that security in IDP settlements is provided by police," he said.

"The solution is not to pour more food and supplies [into the city] if they are not going to reach their intended beneficiaries but to change the security and governance paradigm," Kleinschmidt added.

kr/hb/rz

[END]

SOMALIA: Floods displace thousands in Somaliland

SOMALIA: Floods displace thousands in Somaliland

HARGEISA, 2 November 2012 (IRIN) - Heavy rains have displaced thousands of people in the mid-eastern regions of the self-declared republic of Somaliland, says a senior official.

"More than 3,000 to 4,000 families in nine villages of Togdheer Region displaced by heavy rains last Friday [26 October ] need immediate assistance," Abdo Aayir Osman, the governor of Togdheer Region, told IRIN by telephone from the regional capital Burao. He added that at least three people had died after their homes flooded.

The floodwaters have also damaged foodstuffs in stores in Qori-Lugud District and areas such as Daba-Qabad, Tallo Buuro, Bali-Alanle and Gubato. Some 7,000 to 9,000 heads of livestock drowned, Osman said.

The chairman of Somaliland's Environment Research and Disaster Preparedness and Management Authority, Mohamed Moussa Awale, however, estimated a lower number of displaced families: about 600 families in the regions of Sahil and Togdheer.

In Sahil Region's capital Berbera, several old buildings collapsed, and some traditional Somali huts were also destroyed, Awale said, noting that Somaliland's Red Crescent Society had distributed tents to the affected people there.

Qori-Lugud mayor Said Mohamoud Sheikh Abdi told IRIN that most of the houses in the district were destroyed after a water storage dam there was breached, flooding settlements from 26 to 27 October. Floodwaters reached about two feet above the ground level.

About 2,800 people there are now in need of shelter, food and non-food items, according to the district's officials.

The eastern and mid-western regions of Somaliland have received erratic rains in past couple of years. "It is the first time such rains [have been] received in the last 12 years," said Mayor Abdi.

Nimo Mohamoud Mohame, a mother of nine, was among those whose families have been forced out by the flooding. "After several hours of rain, our house [a traditional Somali hut] was filled with water, and we sought refuge near the near hills," she said. "Now we are at a hill called Bali-Hassan [5km north of Qori-Lugud], and we need food, shelter and household items because all of our households were [destroyed] by the floods."

Officials are also concerned about possible outbreaks of waterborne disease. "[A] number of toilets collapsed, and there is fear of the outbreak of cholera if we do not act now. The displaced need water chlorination, water pumps, plastic sheets, utensils, blankets and foodstuff," Omar Jama, chairman of the local NGO Taakul Somaliland Community, told IRIN.

maj/aw/rz

[END]