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Somaliland Politician Visits Minneapolis

ISSUE 218
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Index

This Week's Somaliland News

Headlines

Somaliland Warns Puntland Either To Withdraw ‎Militia Forces Or Face Immediate Consequences‎

Press Release By Somaliland Foreign Affairs

3 Sisters Suffer From An Unknown Disease‎‎‎‎‎‎ ‎‎‎‎‎

Ali Mazrui To Wind Up Visit To Somaliland Today‎

“It Is Only Fair That I Raise The Question Was ‎It My Gender, My Clan Or Was It The Political ‎Affiliation Of My Husband” Amina Weris‎‎

Circumstances, Today In Somaliland!‎

The First Football World Cup For ‎Nations That Do Not Exist

Regional Affairs

More From Baidoa

Ikran Haji Daud: A Symbol ‎Of Hope For Many Women‎

UNESCO Builds New Offices And Classes For ‎Amoud University‎

Around 90 Die In Somalia Militia Battles‎

U.S. Navy, Suspected Pirates Clash‎‎‎

Ethiopian Airlines To Begin Flight To South Sudan

KHAT’S NO WAY TO GO‎

IGAD Regrets Failure To Deploy ‎Peacekeeping Force In Somalia

Ethiopia Does Not Benefit From Camels: Official

Editorial
Special Report

International News

International Day For Elimination ‎Of Racial Discrimination

Feed Gunmen To Save Somalia, East Africa Urges‎‎‎‎‎‎‎

Somalia: Humanitarian Response Fund‎‎‎

EU Offers Regional Body Sh344m

Somaliland Politician Visits Minneapolis

Young Muslim Women Wear 'Aussie Hijab'‎‎

Somaliland Congress must be fair and ‎acknowledge their mistakes‎‎

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

After 3 Years, Somalis Struggle To Adjust To U.S.‎

Altering The Hijab To Rules Of The Game

Student Rock Around-The-Clock‎‎

NORDEM Report 03/2006‎

Case Study Report

The Ticking Bomb:‎ The Educational Underachievement of Somali Children in the British Schools

Opinions

Congratulations To Somaliland Parliament ‎For Silencing Budget Nay-Sayers

Somaliland Is Being Sold‎‎‎

A Word Of Encouragement And ‎Inspiration To My Beloved Somaliland‎

Stealing My Fish, Adding Insult To ‎Economic Injury‎‎‎


By Somalilandtimes network

Minneapolis, MN, March 2006 – Just seven months ago, Ikran Hagi Daud Warsame was a full-time housewife and a bread-winner for her 18-member household in Borame, a remote town in the mountainous border between Somalia and Ethiopia. Little did she know that her next move would take her all the way to the White House for a full-fledged dinner with President Bush and First Lady Laura Bush—something no Somali president has done in decades.

Warsame, the mother of nine, made history last year when she became the first democratically elected woman to the 82-member, male-dominated Somaliland parliament. The only other female member in the parliament is appointed.

She explained her rapid and unlikely political ascent and described the current state of Somaliland during a March 19 meeting in Minneapolis with some of those who financed her campaign.

“We’re in peace and prosperity, and we hope the same thing for [Somalia],” she said, standing before a giant Somaliland flag “We need the Diaspora communities to return and invest in our country.”

Yusuf Budle, chairman of Kulmiye Committee in Minnesota, a group of supporters from Ms. Warsame’s political party and co-organizer of the event, says that they are proud of her. “We supported her campaign with money and moral,” he says.

Recognizing Somaliland

Somaliland, a breakaway enclave of Somalia, declared unilateral independence from the rest of the now-ruined republic in 1991, and maintained relative stability, good governance, and free elections. No government has recognized Somaliland as a nation, but the State Department has touted its model more than once.

In fact, the State Department has done more than touting by issuing Warsame’s visa to the U.S on a Somaliland-issued travel document.

“That is a positive gesture,” says Warsame “But I’m more concerned with introducing Somaliland to our neighbors first, then to America.”

That’s because when she met with a Kenyan counterpart in Washington, D.C., during a Women’s Democracy Network conference early this month and introduced herself as a Somaliland MP, she received a blank stare and a painful question “Where is Somaliland?” And when she explained, the Kenyan MP replied “I only heard of Somali MPs staying at 680 hotel in Nairobi and not paying their bill!” (She’s referring to the prolonged stay of Somali parliamentarians in Kenya almost two years ago.)

Warsame, out of dismay, extended an official invitation to all five delegates from Africa at the conference to Somaliland.

She was among 30 “accomplished women leaders” from around the world who gathered for the three-day conference sponsored by International Republican Institute (IRI) to “foster relationships” and “share experiences.”

IRI, a congressionally funded nonprofit, nonpartisan organization dedicated to advancing aspiring democracies has done a “comprehensive political assessment in Somaliland” in 2002. Among other programs, the organization helped the parliamentary elections in which Warsame was elected.

‘Kingdom of men’

To get on the ballot, Warsame had to penetrate multiple layers of social and cultural hurdles. First, she had to coax her own family to help her talk to the powerful tribal elders.

“My husband was supportive,” she said “and he’s the most important person.”

After securing the green light from most of her family, she had to cajole tribal elders, an exclusive-men’s club, to “allow” her to seek party nomination.

She got lucky.

But then, her party, Kulmiye, the main opposition party, had to assess the risk involved, provided that they desperately wanted to control the parliament and couldn’t afford to lose her seat.

She got lucky, again.

But just after she was cleared to put her name on the ballot, conservative clerics intervened, citing a revelation banning women from assuming high public office. But moderate clerics came into her defense, though they reiterated that women can’t run for president.

Finally, she had to convince the largest and the most skeptical group of people: the voters who never experienced something like this. Warsame, a former teacher and a caretaker of two orphans, said that she turned to the people she built a rapport with: women and youth.

“I focused on the youth and told them to vote for me since only 35 years and older person could run,” recalls Warsame, “and I think they did vote for me.”

On election day, the unexpected happened; Warsame survived what she characterizes as the “kingdom of men” and became the first elected women in Somaliland and, perhaps, some say, in the entire history of greater Somalia.

Even after becoming a busy legislator in Hargeysa, the capital of Somaliland, Warsame allocates time to mother her relatively young children. On Wednesday evenings, the start of a weekend in that part of the world, she commutes three hours back to Borame over extremely rough roads.

Political ambitions

Warsame, who serves on the rules and regulations committee of the parliament, says her biggest political ambition is conducive to restoring women’s rights and family justice.

“I’d like to end the guilt-assumption of women at court of justice and in the society at large,” she says. “Quite honestly, I’m fascinated with the betterment of women.”

So fascinated with women that she is a reminiscent of Arraweelo, a feminist medieval queen who took over power from tainted men and reduced them to render household services while establishing a women-dominated monarchy in what is Somalia today.

Before returning to Somaliland later this month, Warsame has speaking engagements lined up for her in Chicago and Columbus on an itinerary that included Washington and Dallas.

By Abdirahman Ceynte


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