Archive for November, 2008


Students injured in clash with police

Amiin Mohamed – Somaliland

M.Amiin Jibril 

Berbera, June 21, 2007 (African Star) – Two students were injured when Berbera teenagers protested against a student removal from  Somaliland’s leaving school certificate examination. The incident occurred on June 21, 2007 at Bursade High school in Berbera.

 The student, Mohamed Ali, was ordered out of the class, by one of the teachers who were invigilating  the examination.

But few minutes later, a large  number of Berbera teenagers came to the school and stoned the police guarding outside the school. Police responded by firing shots in the air o disperse the crowds.

However, two people were injured in the head.

According to an eyewitnesses, Ahmed Hassan was one of the injured persons, went into casualty after police hit a gun on his head.

One of them was  taken to Berbera General Hospital.

The minister of Education Hassan Mohamoud Warsame, (pictured below) who was in Berbera intevened and managed to calm the situation.

It is not the first time that such an incident has taken place in Somaliland. In 2005  at least four people were shoot dead by the police, when they tried to enter Sh. Ali Jawhar Secondary School in Borame the capital of the western region of Somaliland, Awdal, 140km west of Hargeysa to help the students for the examination.

Somaliland Minister of Education, Hassan H. Mohamoud Warsame (Gadhweyne) stands with Bursade Students

Somaliland Minister of Education, Hassan H. Mohamoud Warsame (Gadhweyne) stands with Bursade Students

A Man Poisons His Friends In West Somaliland

M.Amiin Jibril – Somaliland

 

An Ethiopian National Abdi Muse Khadir, working a farm in Ged-Baladh Village of the 
border between Somaliland and Ethiopia was alleged that he poisoned his co-workers on 
Wednesday morning.
Mr Abdi was captured by the Somaliland police, when the villager notified the case.
According to Gabiley region Police Commissioner, Saleban Muse Hassan, at least five 
persons were poisoned and, two of them were dead on the spot, while the other three 
are hospitalized in Gabiley.
“The five persons were working with Abdi in a farm in that area”, Added the police 
commissioner.
“Mr Abdi was captured by the police and now he is imprisoned in Gabiley, and we are 
investigating the reason, but according to the first information we have got, Mr. Abdi was 
sacked from the job, with another person, who didn’t still find him, has made poison to 
their friends” says the Police Commissioner.
It was in October 2007, when a man named Ambe Abdillahi Omar poisoned his family, in 
Faraweyne district of south Hargeisa, because of jealousy he got for the marriage of his 
young brother, which caused the death of three of his family, including his brother who 
has wedded in that night as well as his mother and sister. Also four others were taken to 
Hargeisa hospital

Problems in the Somaliland public schools

Somaliland grade one school children sitting on the floor

Somaliland grade one school children sitting on the floor

Problems in the Somaliland public schools
M. Amin Jibril,
It was in 1991 when the Republic of Somaliland gained its independence from Somalia.
The new republic inherited a huge destruction of the whole country, after almost a decade of atrocities against its citizens by the dictatorial administration of Somalia.
Somaliland had been ravaged to the ground by forces loyal to the dictator, after indiscriminate bombardments were carried out on major cities as well as the rural areas in 1988.
The worst time was in May, 1988, when Somali National Movement forces entered and captured the military bases of the dictator inside the country. The government responded by attacking civilian residents in the major cities both through air and artillery bombardment.
This destroyed any building the country, including hospitals, schools and homes.
However, in 1991, some of the trained teachers came home, and started to teach under the trees and in the ruins of the school buildings.
Few years later things improved, some of the schools were rehabilitated by the government and the international aid organizations.
But in early days of the school, some students used to bring chairs from their homes. Others did not have chairs in their homes.
Some of the students used to share on armchair, while some others sat on the floor or on stones they brought from the ruins of the school buildings.
It was in 1993, when SOOYAAL VTC (an organization run by Mujaahidiin Veterans) distributed first chairs and tables to the schools of the whole country.
The situation improved with the construction of new schools.
But after 16 years, Somaliland school children are now experiencing the problems faced in 1991.
In Hargeysa, Somaliland’s capital, there are still schools where children sit on the floor.
Ahmed Dhagah Primary/Intermediate School has enrolled 1200 students. Each class contains more than 60 students.
More than 120 students have no chairs or tables and sit on the floor.
“Two classes Standard One have no chairs. Students sit on the floor” says Sa’id Ahmed the principal of Ahmed Dhagah.
“We sent an SOS for the building here (a place next to the school) an orphanage center, and they promised us that they will arrange some school chairs.”
This problem of shortage of chairs is not only at Ahmed Dhagah School in Hargeysa, but at a number of schools in the capital.
For example, one class was closed without chairs in May 31, school in Hargeysa, where students in at least two classes also sit on the floor.
“Two classes study without chairs. Meanwhile we closed one school without chairs, but the students of the two classes without chairs use stones collected outside the ruins of the previous dormitory houses for school girls,” says, May 31 Primary/Intermediate school principal, Mousa Abdillahi, speaking to Haatuf Media Network.
But Moussa told Haatuf that his school is not as full as Ahmed Dhagah, “Our school is not as full as Ahmed Dhagah, because 480 students adjusted in the morning studies, while in the afternoon there are 130 students,” said the principal.
Meanwhile, the principal speaking on the low number of students at his school commented “Our school buildings were engaged by the veteran orphan families, for sake of that, even though the enrollment applications are high, but we don’t have classes and chairs, so we don’t register more than the capacity of the school since 55 students fill up h each classroom”.
According to the principal, there are two obstacles to the primary/intermediate school children.
The quantity of students and the school capacity are far different to each, while some of the classes have not received any school chairs or enlargement of the schools even though the demand of enrollment increased each year. “Somaliland school enrollment increased 65% for the last two decades” Says, Somaliland Minister of education, Hassan H. Mohamoud (Gadhweyne) speaking University of Hargeysa’s first graduation inauguration in August 10, 2004.
According to Haatuf Daily (leading Somali Newspaper in Hargeysa), on August, 2007, on a news item entitled “Somaliland: There are schools without students and Students without Classes”, there are places where schools were built even though there is no demand of students. Meanwhile there are other students in the major cities of the country, where there is no school and the enrollment demand is too high.
“Dila which is situated in Awdal region of west Somaliland has two schools, each of it consists nearly twenty classes. One of the schools has no students, even though here in Hargeysa students sit per form chair more than 5 students” the newspaper said.
This was caused by International organizations and their local partners in the country, who built schools where there is no population, and the ministry of education approves these building projects without planning and assessment.
“Some of the problems in the Somaliland education is responsible by the International Aid organizations and Local NGO with the Ministry of Education, because there are schools built both west and east of the country where there is no enough population to build schools. Some of the places the population is pastoralists and move place to place in the country for grassing their animals based for the season. For sake of that its much needed to be assessed before schools were established”. Says Abdirahman Ahmed Shunuf the chairman of Gud-Gude Political organization, which calls free education for all, even though the organization has not yet run for elections, since it was engaged in politics on Last June, 2007, from working human train for the last two decades, used to be call “Somaliland Intellectual organization” . Some of its members decided this year to join in the political, claiming that there is a neglecting of the children future by the political parties.
It is the only political organization in the country calls free education for all.
Some of the problems in the Somaliland education is the fees taken by the public schools.
“It was in 1996, when school fees were imposed, since I was from poor family I tried to campaign against it, some of my classmates were arrested for this reason. However it continued and even today after 12 years later there are thousands of students who have no access to education because of lack of fees. For example the people who live in State House, Sheikh Nuor, Mohamed Moge, Stadium Etc (poor family dwellers in Hargeisa residents) have no access to schools. This is human right violation, where some children are paid $20 US per student for the private schools, while others haven’t had a penny. This can be translated without money is without education” Says, Mohamed, who is a supporter of Gude-Gude.
There are thousands of private schools in the major cities, some of them run the examination with public schools. But the students of these schools pay 10$ to 20$ per student. Most of the trained teachers of the public schools joined to the private school, reasoning for the poor salaries of the governmental schools.
Even though most of the trained teachers of the school were transferred to private schools, but the quantity of the student in the public and private are so different from each other. “We are 58 students in our class” says a 12 year student of School Of Tomorrow (Private) explaining his father to his education.
This is a sign for the average quantities of both private and public schools, because of them are full of students and it is difficult to teach more than 30.
“It takes to me whole day to check student’s exercises, because I teach more than 70 students” says a teacher in Sheikh Ali Ibrahim Primary/Intermediate School, Faisa Siyad.
the number of Somaliland high school drop outs increased for the last four years.
According to the reports made by the Ministry of education the High School drop outs has doubled for the last two years.
“I left the School on form 3, because you can’t endure sitting on the table on three periods without teacher. For example I used to go to school early in the morning, unfortunately the first three period teachers were absent, than the whole class comes out, than the head master beats and drop them back to class without teachers. Even some time one subject teacher may take 135 minutes for one class, because other two teachers are not in school. Then I decided to leave it, but my parents couldn’t able to pay the private school charges” Says Abdisalan Ibrahim, who drop out from Farah Omar Secondary school in 2006.
Meanwhile when the exam comes, the Public school children gains more mark than the Private school children which take with the High School leaving certificate exams.
“Ga’an Libah Secondary has got the first highest marks in the Somaliland High School certificate examination in this year 2007” Says, Da’ud Ahmed, the chairperson of the National Examination Board, declaring the National examination results in late August, 2007.
However, The Ga’an Libah Secondary School students experience the worst situation to be studied. In the School Compound there is a garage, which repairs cars inside the school compound. The Garage turns on in the morning high sound engines which causes sometimes that the students and the teachers may not hear each other.
According Haatuf Newspaper on December 24, 2007, the School Head Master Sa’id Talabo declined to comment, but some of the students told the newspaper that they complained both the Ministry of education and the Local Government to remove this garage out of their school and to rehabilitate their school fence, but non of them done nothing.
“The school compound is full of business shops, and the road which is full of cars in the study hours, as well as the garage engine sounds, are the problems study under Ga’an Libah Secondary school children” says the newspaper.
“The Minister of Education wrote a number of letter to the local government requesting that the garage should be removed out of the school, and on the last occasion, it was scheduled the garage should move on 15 days, but that hasn’t happen yet. On the issue of the fence, we localized the schools, so it is to the Ga’an Libah dwellers to rehabilitate their children’s schools with the partnership of both Ministry of education as well as the local government” Says, Ahmed Isse, who claimed the spokesperson of the Ministry of Education and the Private schools, in a statement published on Haatuf Daily Somali Newspaper on Thursday, December 27, 2007.
This problem will not only to the poor, people whose their children studies in public schools, but if it is not engaged today, there will be generation without school, or go out to the country to seek education and suicide their lives to cross the Mediterranean sea to reach Europe.
“If this kind of problems continues we will see our children immigrating out of their home country, and they will never be Somaliland citizens, they will be the citizens of any country that gives without charge education or quality education, while others may die in the oceans for seeking education. Even they can endanger Somaliland’s stability, because when they see that there is a classes of education, nothing wrong with them to be gangster like the ones who robes mobiles to the people in some areas of Hargeysa in the night ” Says Gud-Gude Chairman, commenting about this.
What so ever, Somaliland reached development to the education, it is the high time for Somalilanders to face the problems that their School children are facing, both the government, political parties, as well as the ordinary people to solve the problems.

http://www.chss.iup.edu/certj/Afristar2008/jibril.htm

The veteran suffers

The veteran suffers

By M. Amin
13 October 2007
Recently, Haatuf newspaper ran a series of articles written by one of its reporters, Mohammed Amin, on the plight of SNM veterans. The articles were originally written in Somali. The Somaliland Times is happy to publish excerpts from those articles after they were translated into English and slightly edited.
A/Rahman Isse Aw Ali, a disabled SNM veteran said:
“It was on the last days of 1990 in the western coast of Somaliland, when the enemy surrounded us, after a militia loyal to Djibouti that was on our side changed its mind and decided to join the enemy. We moved back and the anti aircraft as well as the machine guns were falling like rain. Suddenly, I was hit by a bullet on the back. I fell on the ground. When I realized that I can’t stand up, I thought it was better to die than be paralyzed. My friends tried to take me. But I fought against them. Someone called Nassir, whom I was told is now in Hargeysa shouted and insisted , ‘We will not leave him, even if he is shooting us, we have to take him, because he is one of our heroes, and I don’t want the enemy take him wounded.’
Nasir took me away by force. I was dropped on a war truck. After two days we reached Diridawa of Ethiopia. I was hospitalized for two days. There were Cuban doctors in the hospital, but the day the doctor was supposed to see me, I was told that they got in an accident. The next day I was told that the doctors left the country and the Mengistu regime was overthrown.
There were Ethiopian doctors, but before they saw me, I received information that the SNM had captured the country as whole and health facilities were re-established.
Since Ethiopia was a foreign country I and my family thought it is better to go to Somaliland, instead of being here Diridawa. I and a group of wounded Mujahidins were taken on a truck from Diridawa to Harta Sheikh, where we were dropped in the Ethiopian Military camp in there (Harta Sheikh is a village near the border between Somaliland and Ethiopia, which, after 1988, became a large refugee camp).
This was the end of the illusion about health care being available in Somaliland. There was no health care in Somaliland. That was the reality. Consequently, each of us was taken from the Ethiopian army camp by his own family. Everyone was taken to his place of origin
I lived in that situation for the last two decades. However, last May I got so sick, because I was infected in the paralyzed area of my body. I was in Hargeysa Group Hospital. They took different medical tests, but they said all the tests were negative, so I came home. But dear Amin (the journalist) even though I am feeling pain, let me tell you I shall get back my health.”
That was what disabled veteran A/Rahman Isse Aw Ali told Haatuf reporter, M. Amin, on Tuesday. But despite his optimism, the disabled veteran did not get better. Actually, a few days later, he got worse. He was hospitalized again in Hargeysa Group Hospital last Saturday.
“I was transferred from the previous ward to here. The doctor told me to leave because he can’t help me. And I am here now, but none of the doctors ever see me, all of them say they can’t help me, except taking some blood tests. They tell me you have diabetes. I can’t eat, because whenever I try to eat I vomit. But don’t worry, I shall get my health back, and you will see me better Insha Allah. Please go to your office and to your work,” said A/Rahman Isse Aw Ali on Tuesday evening. He went into a coma on Wednesday and died on Thursday.
Veteran’s death
Part 2
SNM veteran A/Rahman Isse Aw Ali suffered a lot. He died of negligence. But he is not the only disabled veteran who silently suffered in the country for whose sake he lost his health, the country fro whose sake he gave so much. Thousands of disabled SNM fighters are living in horrible conditions.
This is a series of articles which shed light on the miserable living conditions of SNM guerrillas who became disabled in Somaliland’s war of liberation against Siyad Barre’s dictatorial regime.
According to a medical report issued by the Hargeisa Group Hospital Manager, Dr. Yasin Arab, eighty per cent of handicapped former SNM guerrillas who were examined by him are at risk of dying from serious infections caused by staying immobile or in bed for too long. These veterans or Mujahidins live with their family and do not get any support from the state they fought for or the Somaliland public.
Neglect by SNM Leaders and the Public
Part 3.
According to Mohamoud Ahmed, an arm-handicapped veteran who records the terrrible circumstances that his fellow veterans are going through, there are some who live in animal quarters in a goat home in Hargeysa city. “Even though they were heroes when they were in the frontlines, today they are suffering in our society. For example I know Mujahid (X) who was a hero during the war and who now lives in the goat camp,” said Mohamoud Ahmed with tears in his eyes.
Days, months and years passed since Somaliland was liberated from Siyad Barre’s regime. Somaliland government was set up by the SNM as well as the traditional leaders in the Buroa conference in 1991. In this conference, it was agreed that SNM war veterans should get priority in government employment. The conference also decided to give assistance to the orphans of SNM as well as the handicapped veterans.
Historical rights of the veterans
Part 4.
Abdirahman Ahmed Ali, the SNM chairman was elected the first president of the new Republic of Somaliland for a two-year term. The charter of the new state stipulated that the government should hold elections in the country within these two years. But this did not happen. When the governments’ two years term ended, it passed the power to the Guurti in a conference held in Borama in 1993. In the Borama conference, a new government was elected that was led by Mohamed Ibrahim Egal who was not an SNM member. The Borama conference again confimed that SNM war veterans should be given the same priorities and opportunities mentioned in the Buroa conference. But in this conference it was added that the other militias who supported Siyad Barre’s army should be given the same right, since they believed that they were defending their rights. However, Egal’s government extended no opportunities to the SNM or the other militias. Egal died in South Africa in 2002, and his vice president became the president of Somaliland. The new president, Dahir Rayale Kahin, used to be a colonel in Siyad Barre’s army.
During President Egal’s term, Somaliland acquired a new constitution. In this constitution, SNM veterans were not given any rights. The only functioning institution for SNM orphans and its disabled was SOOYAAL, which was founded by Yusuf Abdi Gabobe, an intellectual as well as an SNM leader. This organization was set up in 1991, and provided valuable services to a wide variety of SNM veterans, especially the disabled and the orphans. SOOYAAL used to teach skills to veterans so they could get jobs. The only skilled workforce that was produced in the country during most of the nineties were trained in SOOYAAL.
The Proxies Move Against Gabobe
Unfortunately, in mid 1997, President Egal who hated to see any independent and successful program in the country that was not controlled by him, decided to oust Yusuf Gabobe from SOOYAAL’s leadership. But since Egal was not an SNM member and could not openly interfere in SNM affairs, he decided to intervene by proxy through using former SNM members who were in his government. By utilizing dirty tricks, bribes, and SNM politicians, Egal was able to oust Yusuf Gabobe from his position as chairman of SOOYAAL. Among the SNM politicians who acted as Egal’s proxies against Gabobe is the current foreign Minister of Somaliland Abdillahi Mohamed Du’alle.
The replacement of Gabobe handicapped the institution, and after him, it collapsed. Gone were all the training and services it used to provide the war veterans. SOOYAAL now exists only in name.
Veterans hang between life and death!
Part 5
“We were the ones who led these veterans into war, and it is our responsibility to help them today. We should call the public to support both the handicapped veterans and the children of martyrs. The inhuman conditions they live in should not be tolerated. We need to come together to discuss this sad situation and find a solution,” says Abdillahi Hussein (Dhega-weyne), an SNM leader.
The fact of the matter is that the SNM passed power to those who fought against them and were in Siyad Barre’s army. Saying this does not mean singling out Rayale or his clan but rather to point out the irony that about eighty percent of Somaliland’s current ministers were supporters of the late dictator, Siyad Barre, and they belong to all clans across Somaliland.
Source: Somaliland Times

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.