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Voting Progresses Well in Somaliland’s First Multi-Party Election |
Monday April 14, 2003
Yusuf A. Gabobe
Hargeisa (SL Times): Voting has been in progress today in Somaliland’s multi-party presidential elections, the first of its kind since the country withdrew from a 30 year union with Somalia and proclaimed independence in 1991.
Hundreds of people including women and members of minority groups stood since dawn in long queues in front of polling stations awaiting to cast their votes.
The polling began at 6:00am and over one million voters were expected to cast their ballots. The three candidates contesting the country’s top job are Somaliland's incumbent president and UDUB party Chairman, Dahir Rayale Kahin, Ahmed Mohamed Silanyo, KULMIYE party boss and former leader of Somaliland resistance against dictator Siyad Barre’s rule, and Faysal Ali Warabe, a returnee from the Diaspora who recently founded the UCID opposition party.
With one hour to go before the polling came to an end at 6:00 P.M., voting has reportedly gone peaceful at polling stations throughout the country.
Voting didn’t take place in some parts of Sool region, including the provincial capital Las-Anod. In the Sanag region, five polling stations were not opened in time.
According to the National Commission Electoral Chairman Ahmed Haji Ali, plans for holding election at these localities have been canceled at the last minute due to delay in forwarding the electoral material intended for polling stations there.
Teams of international observers are in Somaliland to scrutinize the polling. The largest observer mission has come from South Africa, the current chairman of the African Union. The South African delegation consists of 12 people who represent various institutions in that country including the South Africa Electoral Institute.
A mission led by Swedish Liberal party parliamentarian Birgitte Ohlosson has also arrived. Accompanying her are Peter Schuckink Kool and Hanad Mohamed Abdi, also from the Swedish Liberal party (Folk Partiet). Other delegates include a Canadian Parliamentarian, diplomats from the UK and USA as well as representatives of organizations in Ethiopia, Norway, Holland and a number of other countries. The process is also being observed by experts from the EU.
Local observers have predicted a hot contest between incumbent President Rayale and KULMIYE candidate Silanyo. Though being a sitting President may work for Mr. Rayale’s favor, however the election is expected to be a close race between him and his major opponent, Mr. Silanyo.
Rayale and his running mate Ahmed Yusuf Yasin were predicted to carry the votes in the two regions of Awdal and Sahil, their respective birth places while Sillanyo was expected to emerge as top winner in his hometown Buroa, Togdheer.
There were also indications that people who have stayed undecided until the last minute might have increasingly voted for UCID’s Faysal Ali Warabe. |
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| Feature |
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Somalia And
Survival In The Shadow Of The Global Economy (Part 6)
Special Guest Writer for the
Somaliland Times, Prof. William Reno, Northwestern University
[Continued from the previous
issue]
"The geographic, sectoral and political distribution of aid, however, shows that most Somalis benefited very little as aid, not just from
[Barre's]
Italian patrons, became a major source of corruption and kickbacks to regime
favourites."
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Headlines
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UK Support For Somaliland Presidential Election
"The UK is looking forward to the establishment of a political entity in the south of Somalia and hopes that the reconciliation process in the south leads to conditions for a dialogue with Somaliland" - Myles Wickstead, British Ambassador to Ethiopia
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Mistakes by Interior Minister to Cost UDUB Votes
Hargeisa (SL Times): In a series of politically sensitive blunders committed in the last few days by Somaliland's Minister of Interior, Ismail Adam Osman, the government-controlled UDUB party has reportedly witnessed large scale desertions by its supporters in the northern sections of Hargeisa city which are considered the most densely populated residential areas in the capital.
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Terrorists Use Somalia As Hub
Edith M. Lederer
United Nations, April 3, 2003 (AP) - Somalia has served as a transit point for international terrorists but its local militant groups appear to be less of a terrorist threat than feared, a U.N. panel said in a new report.
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| International
News |
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Iraqi President Appears In Public Walkabout
Baqdaad (Al-Jazeera): In what may be a show of defiance aimed at silencing critics, Iraqi President Saddam Hussein appeared on Iraqi television on Friday visiting a residential area in Baghdad.
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US Commander Relieved Of Post In Iraq
SOUTH EAST OF BAGHDAD - A US commander who led a fierce push by Marines through southern Iraq towards Baghdad was relieved of his post Friday for an undisclosed reason, a US military spokesman said.
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Fierce Clashes For Control Of Baghdad Airport
Baqdad (Al Jazeera with agency inputs) - Residents fled their homes near Baghdad’s Saddam International Airport on Friday, seeking shelter in the city center after US forces staged a fierce attack to seize the airport complex.
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History Warns Cost Of Urban War Is High
The lessons of urban warfare reach across thousands of years, and all the way to the gates of Saddam Hussein's Baghdad.
Ancient Greece, Second World War Stalingrad, Somalia and Chechnya in the 1990s: all have seen armies pull back into cities and wait for an enemy to wade into hostile territory.
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Killing The Few To Liberate The Many Is A Line Most Iraqis Reject
Iason Athanasiadis (Al Jazeera with agency inputs) - The killing of at least seven Iraqi civilians, all women and children, at a US checkpoint has prompted renewed speculation that the Anglo-American forces are losing the battle for "hearts and minds" in Iraq.
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Britain, US Drift Apart
Zeina Khodr (Al Jazeera with agency inputs) - Britain and the United States seem to have different views on how a post-war Iraqi government will be run.
British Prime Minister Tony Blair made clear Iraq after Saddam Hussein should be governed by the Iraqis themselves.
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| Peace
Talks |
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TNG Says It Will Not Leave Kenya Peace Conference
NAIROBI, 31 Mar 2003 (IRIN) - A spokesman for TNG Prime Minister Hassan Abshir Farah said on Monday that Somalia's Transitional National Government was not planning to leave peace talks in Nairobi, Kenya, despite a meeting in Mogadishu at the weekend between the TNG and faction leaders.
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SRRC Opposes Harmonisation Committee
NAIROBI, 2 Apr 2003 (IRIN) - The Somali Reconciliation and Restoration Council (SRRC) has strongly objected to the recent creation of a Harmonization Committee (HC) by the Inter-Governmental Authority on Development's (IGAD) Technical Committee steering the Somali peace talks being held in the Kenyan capital, Nairobi, according to a senior SRRC member.
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Billy Connolly in an African Hospital |
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BBC ONE
The 200-bed hospital in Hargeisa, the capital city of Somaliland, is a huge, rambling colonial building. The little equipment it has is from another era. It's the hospital time forgot. This is a place in the grip of grinding poverty, a place where people living on the edge often go over it. And every day adults and children die needlessly because of a lack of the most basic of resources. This documentary will tell real stories of life and death and see how Comic Relief money is helping people come back from the edge of existence.
As Billy says, this is not a "Feel good Nicey Nicey Film."
By donating to Comic Relief, you can help improve people's health in Somaliland: find out how.
Comic Relief, registered charity 326568 |
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Health
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Drug:
The Double Edged Knife (Part 3)
Mohamed H. Dahir (Chairman, Pharmaceutical Association Of
Somaliland)
I don’t want to be an alarmist, since there already is an overabundance of people proclaiming disaster around every corner, but I do intend to make people aware of the properties of some of the things we consume so casually. I am definitely not a food freak or on a puritan trip suggesting that you stop smoking or chewing Qat or drinking. However, I want you to be aware of what you expect when your doctor gives you something to take.
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Cholera Outbreak Confirmed In Mogadishu
NAIROBI, 3 Apr 2003 (IRIN) - An outbreak of cholera has been confirmed in the Somali capital, Mogadishu, an official of the World Health Organisation (WHO) told IRIN on Thursday.
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Daktari: The Flying Doctors Of East Africa
Joe De Capua
Washington, April 04, 2003 - In 1957, three doctors - all plastic surgeons - began what was then called "The Flying Doctors Service of Africa." They were the first to bring reconstructive surgery to East Africa. Using light airplanes to travel to remote areas, they treated problems ranging from burns to congenital deformities. Now one of those doctors has written a book about their experiences.
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| Editorial
& Opinion |
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The International Community and Somaliland's Presidential Elections
Several European countries spearheaded by Britain have decided to contribute £ 200,000 - 250,000 in support of presidential elections to be held in Somaliland on April 14, 2003. The amount could be termed as only modest if weighed against the magnitude of assistance needed by the country’s National Electoral Commission. But this support from the international community has a wider symbolic importance for Somaliland. The move indicates a shift in the previous position of the international community, or at least some of its members, who used to ignore Somaliland’s self-made achievements in such areas as peace and reconciliation, disarmament, governance and democratization.
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Taking the Tiger by the Tail: The National Electoral Commission and the Presidential Elections
Rakiya A. Omaar
I am looking forward to 14 April, in common with most people living in Somaliland. It will be the first time ever that I vote in my homeland. Having missed the December municipal elections, the prospect of taking part in a free and fair election to choose the next president of Somaliland will not only be a new experience, but given what it has taken us to get here, a deeply rewarding one. The people whose job it is to ensure that the elections fulfill our expectations are the six men and one woman who make up the National Electoral Commission (NEC). Their task is not an enviable one, given the unique circumstances of Somaliland.
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Put The Brits In Charge - The Best Postwar Iraq Plan
Khalid Kishtainy
With the collapse of Saddam Hussein's regime now a matter of time, the coalition led by the United States should get its act together and come up with a clear and realistic plan for the postwar period. In this context, the Americans would be well advised to listen to their British allies who have deep knowledge and experience of Iraq, a country that they created in the first place.
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Worse Than War
War kills, but Saddam's "peacetime" regime is even more
bloody
Marvin Olasky
In 1951 Douglas MacArthur told Congress that "Old soldiers never die, they just fade away." In 1954 Bing Crosby sang in White Christmas, "What do you do with a general when he stops being a general?" Today, the answer is obvious: Old generals don't fade away, they go on cable networks and complain about current strategy, often kissing up to media pessimists by acting like Boston Red Sox fans who yell "Down the drain" after the first inning.
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War Is Ugly; Do We Need To See It Up Close On TV?
Steve James
NEW YORK, April 3 (Reuters) - All war, all the time - 24-hour coverage of the conflict in Iraq might be good TV, but is it good journalism?
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Aerial War Has a Short, Nasty History
Mahmood Mamdani
When US Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld promised an aerial war on Iraq that would "shock and awe" the world, he displayed a keen sense of military history, but not quite of America's soft political underbelly.
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40 Million Africans Face Starvation
Ifeanyi Asogwa
Poor farming practices, persistent crop failure and conflict have been identified as factors leading to the worsening situation of famine and drought in sub-Saharan Africa. The development prompted the coming together of African organizations and American officials to look for ways to help protect about 40 million Africans who are currently at the risk of starvation.
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Somaliland And The Crises In Puntland
Politicians in Somaliland are making political hay about the crisis in Punt land and its spillover into Somaliland sovereign territory. The intent is clear: connect the governing party UDUB, in some surreal way with the problems in Puntland and by extension suggest that UDUB and, clearly, President Rayyale, have bungled the issue. Showing Somali Landers another reason not to vote for UDUB and President Rayyale.
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