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Issue 405

Front Page

News Headlines

Ethiopia Upgrades Its Trade Office In Somaliland To A Consulate

Somaliland Election Commission Sworn

Somaliland: A Beacon Of Hope

Somaliland Women Demand Their Rights

Sheikh Sharif’s Parliamentarians Ask For Asylum In Europe

Muna Asayr Jama Draws Attention To The Plight Of Homeless Children

RDF To Help 70 Potential Employees In Finding Jobs

Somaliland Citizen Says Saudi Authorities Confiscated His Property And Appeals For Help

Local and Regional Affairs

Somaliland Leader Calls For War On Shabaab

Somaliland Gets First Debit Card Service

Somali Man Aged '112', Weds Girl, 17.. And Plans To Have Children

Networking Horn Of Africa For Climate Change Action

Somalis Rally To Denounce Israel Raid

Yemeni Security Arrested Somalis Suspected Of Being Al-Qaeda Members

Djibouti: EASBRIG To Hold Joint Exercises In Djibouti

Radical Somali Youth Potential Threat To National Security: RCMP Commissioner

Senior U.S. Official For Refugees Concludes Africa Visit

Pirates Demand $7 Million For Yacht Couple, Britain Says

Militants Beat Women In Somalia

Uganda: Somalis Rush To Register

Woman Struck And Killed As Husband Watches

Uganda Tightens Security Following Al-Shabaab Threat

Navy Federal Celebrating A Truly Remote ATM

Arab League Makes Little Headway On Somalia Talks

Editorial

The Upgrading Of Ethiopian Representation In Somaliland Is A Step In The Right Direction

Features & Commentary

Implementation Of The Six-Point Agreement And Learning From Our Recent Experience

Somaliland: A Year From The Terror Attack

Somali Road Trip To Islamist Heartland

Women Football Vastly Growing In Djibouti

How To Stabilize Horn Of Africa

PolicyWatch #1593: Militias And Insurgency In Somalia

International News

Clinton Wants More Action On Al Qaeda

Facebook Wins $711 Million From Spammer

Honduras Reaches Deal On Political Crisis

Iran Sends Mixed Signals On Nuclear Deal

Obama Consults Military Leaders, Nears Afghan Troop Decision

Opinion

Somaliland: A Shinning Example To All Somalis

An Open Letter To Newly Elected National Elections Commission!

What Soap Opera Or Musalsal Does To Our Society!

We The People Of Idiots!

Somaliland Gets First Debit Card Service

To help individuals and businesses make and receive payments
Hargeysa, Somaliland, October 31, 2009 (SL Times) – Dahabshiil, the largest international money transfer business in the Horn of Africa, has launched the first ever debit card service in Somaliland and Somalia to help individuals and businesses make and receive payments.
The service, called Dahabshiil eCash, will enable customers to pay for goods and services at any shop, restaurant, hotel or petrol station that is an official Dahabshiil merchant and has a point of sale terminal on the premises.
Abdirashid Duale, CEO of Dahabshiil, said: "We are delighted to be the first company in the region to provide our customers with the facility to make and receive payments via debit card. This underlines our intention to be at the forefront of the region's banking and money transfer sectors.
"We believe Somalis here have the same needs as people in the UK or America and that's why the debit card will make their lives easier. We hope Dahabshiil eCash will help create a cashless society.
"While the central focus of Dahabshiil eCash is the customer, it is great that local businesses and the Somali economy will reap the benefits of the service too."
Dahabshiil eCash is available to all customers with a Dahabshiil account and debit card transactions are made via internet connection, which means that the money is transferred from the card holder's account to the merchant's account immediately.
The debit card requires both PIN and signature authorization and all transactions are protected by the industry standard SSL 128 bit encryption.
A cash-back service is also available for Dahabshiil customers so that they can add an extra amount of money to the total purchase price of a transaction and receive the cash, along with their goods, should Dahabshiil branches be closed.
Dahabshiil plans to expand its eCash service to utility providers and major educational institutions in Somalia to allow students to pay for tuition fees.
It will also incorporate the eCash service into its worldwide remittance business, providing its customers with a more secure, accessible and protected service for receiving remittances from friends and family living in abroad.
Abdirashid Duale continued: "Transferring remittances is a lifeline for many people in the developing world whose friends or family live in Europe and regularly send money home.
"Access to payment services like these will help to bridge the digital divide among Somalis and will revolutionize the way they make and receive payments with each other and with the world."
In 2004, the World Bank estimated that remittances worth about $1billion (GBP610 million) a year reached Somalia from emigres in Britain, the United States, Sweden and the Gulf States.
Dahabshiil eCash was launched at the Ambassador Hotel in Hargeisa, on 27 October 2009.
Source: Dahabshiil, 30 October 2009













 

 


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