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An Eye For An Eye, As Somali Boy ‎Executes Father's Killer
ISSUE 224
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This Week's Somaliland News

Headlines

Counterfeit Money Trial Opens For ‎Abdillahi Yusuf’s Son-In-Law In Dubai

Somaliland Legislators Defend ‎Independence, Ties With Ethiopia‎   

Gareth Evans Appointed to UN ‎Genocide Panel

Kenya To Fight Piracy Off Somalia's Coast‎

Hundreds Protest Water Price Rise In ‎Somaliland‎‎

‎South African Independent Online ‎Examines Efforts To Address ‎HIV/AIDS In Somaliland‎

Regional Affairs

Kenya: Auditor-General Exposes ‎Major Abuse Of Public Funds

Sana’a Alliance To Demand Lifting Of ‎UN Arms Embargo On Somalia‎

Ethiopian Ex-Fighters Demand Compensation‎

Militia Clash At Somali Government ‎Base Baidoa

Good Prospects In Africa-India Trade ‎Relations: Zenawi‎‎‎‎

Special Humanitarian Envoy Says Ethiopia ‎Has Lessons To Share With Its Neighbors

Special Humanitarian Envoy Attends ‎‎‘Historic’ Pastoralist Gathering In Ethiopia‎‎‎‎

Somalia Reconciliation Efforts Launched ‎In Baidoa‎‎

Somalia Cautious On Reports U.S. ‎Funds Fighting‎‎

Editorial
Special Report

International News

Blair Reshuffles Cabinet After Election Losses

Britain Plans To Deport Nearly All ‎Foreigners Convicted Of Crimes

yaan Hirsi Magan Ordered Out Of ‎Secure Home‎‎‎

Alleged Pirates Freed After US Declines To ‎Prosecute‎

'WPC Murder Suspect In Somalia'‎‎‎

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

African Cooperation Growing on Anti-‎Terrorism, U.S. Report Says‎‎

Blair’s Spokesman On John Prescott

Food for thought

Opinions

The Day of Somaliland Students Died ‎Young: Any Hero To Revive?‎‎

The Budget Of Somaliland Fiscal Year 2006

Very Interesting Findings Of The ‎Qur’an......Miracles‎‎

Leadership Forum For Advancing Inter-‎Faith Dialogue to Prevent Conflict‎‎‎‎‎


By Simon Freeman and agencies

Mogadishu, May 3, 2006 – A Somali teenager publicly hacked his father's killer to death in a punishment sanctioned under Islamic law, heightening Somalia's status as a failed country in the eyes of the West.


Hooded and bound, Omar Hussein awaits his execution (shabellenews.com)

Hundreds of people gathered in Mogadishu to watch the court-ordered execution. Witnesses said that Mohamed Moalim, 16, approached the condemned man Omar Hussein, who was hooded and tied to a pole, and stabbed him repeatedly in the chest, neck and head.


A bloody act of vengeance: 16-year-old Mohamed Moallim takes a knife and stabs the man who killed his father

Hussein had been found guilty of murdering the boy's father, a teacher,   in a similar manner two months ago. The execution was the first to be held in the Somalian capital for a decade and was hailed by local Islamic spiritual leaders as a sign that order was being restored.

The execution was carried out as the British Home Office faced mounting pressure over its decision to spare Mustaf Jama, a Somalian convicted of robbery, from deportation three months before he allegedly shot dead a policewoman, Sharon Beshenivsky, 38, in November last year.

After carrying out the killing, Mohamed Moalim calmly told: "My father’s killer is now gone. I am happy now because I killed the man who killed my father."

Sheikh Ibrahim Mohamed Nur, an imam in the Bermuda district of the capital, said: "Islam is the only solace to the overcome the difficulties we are facing. The justice of Allah has been implemented and there is no better justice than what Allah recommended."

"The public is aware from today on that killers won’t go unpunished as they did in the past," he said.

A young bystander who gave his name only as Mohamoud said: "You cannot stop violence by another sort of violence."

Graphic photographs of the spectacle were posted on Somali internet sites. It came amid rising fears of an escalation in the tensions between militia loyal to the courts and an alliance of warlords devoted to curbing their influence.

Western intelligence agencies are growing increasingly concerned about the creeping influence of al-Qaeda on lawless Somalia, where Islamic extremists are believed to be harboring senior figures from the terrorist network.

John Reid, the Defense Secretary, said today that Jama, still wanted over the Beshenivsky murder, had not been deported to Somalia because an immigration panel had considered it was simply too dangerous.

"When he came out he was considered for deportation but in Somalia the government had fallen apart, it was being controlled by warlords and there was a threat that if he took a plane into the capital, Mogadishu, not only would he have been blown out of the air but the pilot of the plane would have been," Mr. Reid said.

"So it was decided on balance they should not deport him in this case."

Mogadishu’s Islamic courts came into existence law in 1994, three years after the mainly Muslim country of 10 million was plunged into anarchy when Mohamed Siyad Barre's 22-year presidency was brought to an end after two years of civil war.

In 1995, they ordered the stoning to death of several people convicted of adultery and the amputation of limbs for thieves but Tuesday’s killing was believed to be the first public execution in a decade.

Source: Times Online

 


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