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Issue 404

Front Page

News Headlines

Somaliland Representative In France Undergoes Surgery

Sultan Abdirizaq Sultan Abdillahi Arrives In Somaliland

Southern Leader Accuses Puntland Of Being The Mother Of Piracy

Saeed Abdi Gabobe Talks About Al-Falah’s Programs

COOPI & Borama Hospital’s Management Honor Staff

Somaliland Readies For Presidential Election

Rising Numbers Of Illegal Immigrants Enter Somaliland

Residents Of Eastern Somaliland Town Express Concern About Low Flying Planes

Local and Regional Affairs

Water Flows Again For A Somaliland Community

Al-Shabaab Threatens To Attack Uganda, Burundi Capitals

US Drones Protecting Ships From Somali Pirates

African Union Adopts Treaty On Internal Refugees

Rapists, Hunger And Hyenas Attack Somalia's Displaced Women

Somali General Confirms Kenya Recruiting Soldiers

Somali Prime Minister And UN Top Official Open New High Level Committee

Billy Ray To Write Movie On Captain Richard Phillips

Somalia: Puntland Investigating "Flying Poachers"

Kenya: Stop Recruitment Of Somalis In Refugee Camps

Somalia Says Forces Ready To Take Capital, South

Funding Shortfalls May Threaten Critical Humanitarian Assistance In Somalia

World Press Freedom Index - Somalia In 2009

Djibouti Rejects Alleged Destabilization Role In Somalia

Shift Aid Base From Nairobi To Somaliland, Puntland And Other "Safe" Areas, Urges UN Official

Pakistan Tied With Somalia For Highest Deaths Of Journalists

Editorial

Somaliland Inches Closer To Presidential Election

Features & Commentary

Somaliland, The Unrecognized State

Educating Students Worldwide

The New U.S. Sudan Policy: A Preliminary Review

The Horn Of Africa - Prologue To A Tumultuous Year

A Window Into East African Refugees’ Pain

In Somalia, A New Template For Fighting Terrorism

International News

Microsoft Rolls Out Windows 7

US 'Overshoot' Plane Data Checked

Ghana: Ace Journalist Wins Natali Award

Former Nurse's Aide In US Becomes Ugandan King

NATO Allies Back Obama's Revised Missile Defense Plans

Opinion

London: UDUB, Somaliland’s Ruling Party, In Disarray

Somaliland: The Impartial Vantage Point Of The Registration Fiasco

Somalia: Al-Shabaab—“If Your Breasts Ain’t Bouncing, You Must Get Whipped”

Remembrance Day For Those Who Lost Their Lives For The Sake Of SL Independence

Illegal Immigration (Tahriib); A Journey Through Hell Without Hope!!!

Downsize Cabinet: Suggestions To The TG In Somalia

Open Letter To President Obama

Re: 2010 Terror Plot

Somalia: Puntland Investigating "Flying Poachers"

Nairobi, October 24, 2009 – Authorities in the self-declared autonomous region of Puntland, northeastern Somalia, are compiling data on foreign helicopters said to be poaching and stealing wildlife from the area while at the same time scaring off the farm animals. 

"We have been getting reports in the past few months of unidentified helicopters swooping in from the sea and attacking and taking wildlife," Abdiqani Yusuf Ade, Puntland's Environment Minister, told IRIN. 

He said the authorities did not have a clear picture of “who was involved or from what countries”. 

Ade said Puntland was calling on countries whose forces were stationed off the Somali coast as part of the anti-piracy efforts to stop the poaching if they were involved. 

He said the authorities had asked residents in the coastal villages to take photographs of the helicopters. "We are trying to get visual evidence to show the world. If the information we are getting is correct, what is happening is illegal," he said. "These forces are here to fight piracy; they should not be poaching our natural resources." 

Noise pollution 

Abdiaziz Aw Yusuf, the district commissioner of Jariban, near the area where the helicopters are alleged to be poaching, told IRIN it had been going on for some time. "They usually operate in an area between the coastal villages of Eil Danan and Dhinowda Digdigle." 

He said the helicopters scattered the wildlife and once they had landed, two or three men captured the animals. He said the most common game in the area was gazelle and ostrich. 

Yusuf said the noise of the helicopters was affecting the local population and their livestock. Many were lost after being frightened by the planes and stampeding. He said some had been eaten by predators. 

"We have forwarded our complaints and what information we have collected to the Puntland government," Yusuf said. 

Easy access 

Ahmed Aden, an elder in Garad town, 5km south of the area, told IRIN the helicopters came from ships that could be seen from the land. 

Aden said because the area was flat and grassy, it was easy for the helicopters to land. He said the dust raised disoriented the animals, allowing the men on board to capture them. 

"It has become normal to see them on a daily basis," Aden said. "They [foreign forces] claim to be guarding against pirates but who is guarding us and our resources against them?" 

ah/mw

Source: IRIN, October 22, 2009


 


 











 

 


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