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Issue 138 Sep.13-19, 2004

Index

Headlines

- Somaliland's Independence Not Negotiable, President Kahin Tells UK Envoy

- Israel Thanked For hospitalizing A Somaliland Child
- A Combination Of Drought, Rising Food Prices and a Plunging Dollar Threatens The Livelihood Of Thousands
- Mutual Recognition of Israel-The Only Way Out

- Somaliland Representative In Addis Ababa Sacked

- Putting The Somaliland Case On The Back Burner: Isn’t That A Double Standard?

People

- From Dinwiddie To Ambassador In Djibouti

International News

-Militia Advances On Somali Port

- A love letter to Africa

- Italy Plays Role Of Europe's Immigration Gatekeeper

- Women Denied International Driving Licenses

- US Military Receives Education On Terrorism In Horn Of Africa

Peace Talks

- Include Morgan, Aideed demands

Daallo Airlines Flies You Everywhere

 

Editorial & Opinions

- Somaliland And Israel

- Dreams Of Today Could Be The Facts Of Tomorrow

- Graduation: Triumph Or Trauma?

- Sleeping or Losing Direction? A Reply to Hussein Bulhan

- The Do Nothing Syndrome

- The Leader Who Was Never Meant To Be


People

From Dinwiddie To Ambassador In Djibouti

McKenney native says role in African nation
not 'sleepy assignment'

DINWIDDIE, Sep 4, 2004 (Times-Dispatch) – When Marguerita Ragsdale was named U.S. ambassador to the African nation of Djibouti, she knew she'd be responsible for conveying the tiny country's interests to Washington.

But the new job offered a few surprises.

"I thought it was going to be a sleepy assignment," Ragsdale said. "Djibouti is small, I was thinking."

As it turned out, she said, "it wasn't a sleepy assignment, primarily because of our military presence."

A McKenney native and 1966 graduate of the old Southside High School, Ragsdale now lives in Djibouti, a country in northeastern Africa about the size of Massachusetts. The nation is home to a U.S. military base with 800 to 1,200 troops.

She spoke about her role during a recent visit to her hometown of McKenney in Dinwiddie County.

Ragsdale, 56, oversees operation of the U.S. embassy and security of its staff, which consists of 18 Americans, 150 locals and others from neighboring countries.

That means daily meetings with employees, industrial leaders and government officials.

Travels in armored vehicle
Ragsdale said she travels in an armored vehicle to ceremonial events such as private business openings or the launching of a small public library, projects that are typically $2,000 to $3,000 and financed through her office.

She sips tea and dines with local or foreign dignitaries while listening to their concerns and advancing U.S. government policies. She dismisses rumors and clarifies information to the government in Washington about developments in Djibouti.

Ragsdale has worked most of her life in foreign service but maintains close ties to McKenney. Her father, Vernon Ragsdale, owns a 90-acre farm in the rural town with a stated population of 472. Her mother is deceased.

Coming home is like vacation, Ragsdale said.

She grew up on her father's farm in a family of five girls. There she learned the value of hard work and education from her parents, she said.

"I learned to drive a tractor at 8 years old," Ragsdale said. "That's because we didn't have any brothers."

Vernon Ragsdale, who celebrates his 90th birthday this month, doesn't seem to mind that he had no boys to help him in the farm.
"You can't miss something you never had," he said. "I am proud of my girls."

Although the children learned to work hard, life was more than chores. Learning was a high priority.

"They were not educated themselves," she said of her parents.
Ragsdale graduated from American University in 1970 with a degree in journalism. She interned at United Press International but decided reporting wasn't her passion, she said.

"I wanted to learn more about the world," she said.

She went back to school and received a master's degree and doctorate in foreign affairs, with a concentration on the Middle East, from the University of Virginia. At the insistence of friends and family, she worked toward a law degree from Columbia University in New York.
Ragsdale has worked in various jobs for the U.S. government: as consul in Kuwait City, deputy chief of mission at the U.S. Embassy in Doha, Qatar, and deputy chief of mission at the U.S. Embassy in Khartoum, Sudan.

January swearing-in
She received news of her nomination as ambassador to Djibouti while working in Khartoum, she said.

Ragsdale was sworn in as ambassador for a two-year term in January. She oversees $27 million in U.S. aid, given three years starting in 2003. The money is being used for improving education and health care, she said.

In health care, there is a need to increase awareness about HIV and encourage the use of condoms, she said. HIV testing is limited in Djibouti. The country has about 37,000 people infected with HIV, according to the World Fact Book.

The United States also provides military training and helps Djibouti improve its defense against terrorism, Ragsdale said. As ambassador, she does not dictate what Djibouti's government does. She and her staff offer assistance, she said.

Djiboutians are warm, open-minded, proud and enterprising people who learn French in school, Arabic through religious education - Ragsdale is fluent in both - and Somali and Afar dialects at home, Ragsdale said.

"They do not strike me as people who would easily succumb to extreme ideas," she said. "They're far beyond that."

But Djibouti's borders make the country vulnerable to terrorists, especially from neighboring Somalia, Ragsdale said.
The economic and military-training aid from the United States is crucial in fighting terrorism, Ragsdale said.

A celebrity
"We have a view that if the people have a stake in their own government and in their own way of life, they're not going to support radical ideas and extremists," she said.

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Headlines

Somaliland's Independence Not Negotiable, President Kahin Tells UK Envoy

Hargeisa, Somaliland, September 11, 2004 (SL Times) – The President of the Republic of Somaliland, Dahir Rayale Kahin, has made it clear to the UK Ambassador in Ethiopia, Mr Bob Dewar, and the diplomats accompanying him, that Somaliland's independence is irreversible.



 

The president further told the envoy who is making his first trip to the country since being appointed ambassador, that Somaliland and Somalia could only hold talks and have relations as two separate states, each within its legal boundaries.

 

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Israel Thanked For Hospitalizing A Somaliland Child

Hargeisa, Somaliland, September 11, 2004 (SL Times) – Sultan Mahmud Sultan Ahmed Sheikh, one of Somaliland’s main traditional leaders and Mohamed Essa, a livestock merchant better known as Musbaar, have thanked Israel for allowing a 6 year old Somaliland boy to be treated in one of its hospitals.



 

The child was flown last month to Israel on an EL-AAL Airline’s flight. He underwent a delicate but successful medical operation for correcting malfunctions in the heart and one of his lungs.

 

Read full text...


A Combination Of Drought, Rising Food Prices and a Plunging Dollar Threatens The Livelihood Of Thousands

Traders Hike Food Prices As The Dollar Keeps Declining Against The SL Shilling

Hargeisa, Somaliland, September 11, 2004 (SL Times) – The livelihood of hundreds of thousands of people in Somaliland is being threatened by a combination of nation-wide drought, a fastly depreciating US dollar and rising food prices.

 

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Mutual Recognition of Israel-The Only Way Out

By Yusuf sheikh Sudi, Kuwait

I appreciated the courageous open letter addressed to Israel by Mr. Farah Ali Jama . It is a small step forward to discuss seriously our national issues, instead of focusing to meaningless inter accusations and counter accusations. Initiating a balanced and fruitful relationship with Israel is not a taboo. The major Muslim and Arab countries have already established close diplomatic relations with Israel. To name a few: Egypt, Turkey, Jordan, Morocco, Qatar, Indonesia, Bangladesh Mauritanian, Nigeria, etc. Saudi Arabia and the other Gulf States are ready to recognize if Israel establishes peace with the Palestinians.
 

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Somaliland Representative In Addis Ababa Sacked

Hargeisa, Somaliland, September 11, 2004 (SL Times) – The head of the Somaliland Liaison Office, Omar Haji Mahmoud (known as Omar Dheere) has been sacked. The Somaliland Times has learned that President Dahir Rayale Kahin replaced Oma Haji Mohamud with Yusuf Jama Burale, a retired diplomat who served as Somalia’s Ambassador to a number of countries during the era of Siyad Barre’s regime.

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Putting The Somaliland Case On The Back Burner: Isn’t That A Double Standard

By Yohannes Gebresellaie (Ph.d), Canada

It is time, therefore, that international agencies such as the AU, EU and UN do the right thing vis-ŕ-vis he Republic of Somaliland and the right thing is clear and unequivocal: not putting the Somaliland issue on the back burner. Instead they must put the case of Somaliland on the table and once and for all recognize the will of the people of Somaliland to live in peace and harmony within the community of nations.


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International News

Militia Advances on Somali Port

Mogadishu, September 6, 2004 (BBC) – Residents in the southern Somali port of Kismayo are reported to be nervous that forces loyal to warlord General Morgan are planning an assault.
At least 50 of General Morgan's heavily armed vehicles are reported nearby.

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A love letter to Africa

The Age, Australia - September 11, 2004 – Aidan Hartley's Zanzibar Chest is steeped in the horror of Rwandan genocide but an overarching love for Africa. He explains the paradox to Aviva Tuffield.

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Italy Plays Role Of Europe's Immigration Gatekeeper

Italy wants the rest of the Continent to stiffen border patrols and asylum guidelines.

ROME, September 9, 2004 (The Christian Science Monitor) – When a 9-year-old Somali girl named Asma arrived on the Italian island of Lampedusa in a rickety boat full of illegal immigrants earlier this year, she was in shock. She and her parents had watched helplessly as three of her siblings died during the dangerous journey across the Mediterranean from Libya.

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Women Denied International Driving Licenses

Jeddah, 8 September 2004 (Arab News) — The Traffic Department has issued a law forbidding the issue of international driving licenses to all women in the Kingdom, whether Saudis or expatriates, Al-Watan newspaper reported.

 

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US Military Receives Education on Terrorism In Horn of Africa

Washington, DC, September 7, 2004 (United States Department of State) – The threat of terrorism in the Horn of Africa is real, longstanding and growing, former U.S. Ambassador to Ethiopia David Shinn told military officers learning more about political conditions in Africa, but he added that U.S. programs are in place to counter the immediate threat to the region.

 

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Daallo Airlines Flies You Everywhere

www.daallo.com

 



 


Editorial & Opinions

Somaliland And Israel
 

Editorial
 

It doesn’t make any sense why none of the successive Somaliland governments tried to explore the prospects of establishing long-term mutually beneficial relations between Somaliland and the state of Israel. Our needs for reconstruction, development of our untapped natural resources and preservation of our security should have driven us to seek cooperation with a country like Israel.

 

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Dreams of Today Could Be The Facts of Tomorrow

By: Abdirisak Abadir Ibrahim

In my childhood, I dreamt of going to university and graduating one day. I used to say to my parents, “One day, I am going to university and I will have a university degree.” This was my dream. I was in elementary school when this idea first entered my mind.

 

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Graduation: Triumph Or Trauma?

By Said Mohamed Dahir, Borama, BBA

In a world, with its ups and downs, pleasure takes its way to redeem sorrow and sadness, removing bad experiences and life's predicaments, replacing traumas and nightmares with triumph and joy. Worries, by contrast...
 

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Sleeping or Losing Direction? A Reply to Hussein Bulhan

 

By: Ahmed Hashi (Dhimbil)

 

Hussein Bulhan’s recent article – this is his article that I have seen in the newspapers,
correct me if I am wrong

 

Read full text...

 


The Do Nothing Syndrome

By Aniis A. Essa, Washington DC
Experience has taught us not to be passive if we want to change our conditions. The gnawing question remains unanswered: how long are we going to remain indifferent while Rayale, Awil and others, are consuming our people and land.
 

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The Leader Who Was Never Meant To Be

Jamal Madar

More than one and a half decade ago during the heyday of Siad Barre’s military junta, I happened to be a witness to an awful but rather amusing experience that left an indelible mark on my memory.

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Peace Talks

Include Morgan, Aideed demands

Nairobi, September 6, 2004 (East African Standard) – Somalia presidential candidate Hussein Farah Aideed has called for the inclusion of General Morgan, another faction leader, in the new-look transitional parliament.
 

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Daalo Airlines

The Airline of the Horn of Africa

 

Day

Every Thursday

Flight No.

D3 178

Route

Hargeisa-Dubai

Flight Status

Direct Flight

 

523003 - Telesom, 53355 - Soltelco, 34460 - STC
ama mail to: hga@daallo.com

 


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