Saturday, October 29, 2011

NUMBER OF UN-ASSISTED RETURNS TO AFGHANISTAN DROPS IN 2011

NUMBER OF UN-ASSISTED RETURNS TO AFGHANISTAN DROPS IN 2011
New York, Oct 28 2011  2:10PM
The number of Afghan refugees returning home has dropped substantially this year, with some 60,000 repatriating in the first 10 months compared to more than 100,000 over the same period in 2010, the United Nations refugee agency <"http://www.unhcr.org/4eaa9d119.html">reported today.

"The lack of livelihood opportunities and shelter, as well as insecurity are the most frequently cited reasons for not returning," Adrian Edwards, spokesperson for the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), told a <"http://www.unhcr.org/4eaa8ad99.html">news conference in Geneva.

As part of UNHCR's voluntary repatriation programme, which is now in its 10th year, refugees coming back to Afghanistan receive an average of $150 per person to cover transport as well as the initial cost of settling back home.

The Government and its partners are working to ensure sustainable reintegration, but Afghanistan's capacity to effectively absorb additional returns is limited, said the agency.

"Some families who returned this year will need additional support to make it through the winter," Mr. Edwards noted. "Many others don't have land, shelter, schools and health care. These families need job opportunities to become self-sufficient."

This year's returnees included 43,000 from Pakistan, about 17,000 from Iran and less than 100 from other countries, according to UNHCR.

Pakistan is currently home to 1.7 million Afghan refugees, many of whom who have lived in exile for more than quarter of a century. Half this population is people born outside Afghanistan and do not own property there. The number of Afghan returnees from Pakistan was 59 per cent lower than last year, said the agency.

Meanwhile, the number of returns from Iran is double to that of last year, when 7,500 Afghans were assisted home.

"The reason for the increase in voluntary assisted returns from Iran appears to be due to economic pressures and the discontinuation of subsidies on basic goods and services by the Iranian Government," said Mr. Edwards.

Since March 2002, UNHCR and its partners have assisted 4.6 million Afghans in repatriating, mainly from Pakistan and Iran. In total, 5.7 million Afghan refugees have returned from Pakistan and Iran, representing nearly a quarter of Afghanistan's population.

Nearly three million registered Afghan refugees remain in exile in the region today, including 1.7 million in Pakistan and one million in Iran. UNHCR is calling for international support to help returnees settle back in their homeland.

ICC PROSECUTOR IN CONTACT WITH QADHAFI’S SON ON POSSIBLE SURRENDER

ICC PROSECUTOR IN CONTACT WITH QADHAFI'S SON ON POSSIBLE SURRENDER

The Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court (ICC) said today his office is in indirect contact with Saif al-Islam Qadhafi, son of the former Libyan leader, on his possible surrender to face charges for crimes against humanity.

"Through intermediaries, we have informal contact with Saif," Luis Moreno-Ocampo said in a statement. "The Office of the Prosecutor has made it clear that if he surrenders to the ICC, he has the right to be heard in court, he is innocent until proven guilty."

In June the ICC issued arrest warrants for Colonel Muammar al-Qadhafi, his son and the country's intelligence chief, Abdullah Al Sanousi for their roles in attacks against protesters, hundreds of whom are confirmed to have been killed since opposition forces rose up against the regime as part of a wider pro-democracy movement across North Africa and the Middle East.

Muammar al-Qadhafi was killed last week in his hometown of Sirte during the final days of the eight-month-long conflict. Mr. Moreno-Ocampo said his office is galvanizing efforts to carry out the arrest warrants against the other two men.

He also noted reports that there is a group of mercenaries who are offering to move Mr. al-Islam to an African country not party to the 1998 Rome Statute that established the ICC. His office is exploring the possibility of intercepting any plane within the airspace of a State party to make an arrest, said Mr. Moreno-Ocampo.

"This is a legal process and if the judges decide that Saif is innocent, or has served his sentence, he can request the judges to send him to a different country as long as that country accepts him."

The Prosecutor has stated in the past that while Libya is not a State party to the Rome Statute, it has the primary responsibility to carry out the arrest warrants in compliance with the relevant resolution of the Security Council, which referred the situation in the country to the ICC.

Libya's National Transitional Council (NTC) on Sunday declared the full liberation of the country, just days after the death of Mr. Qadhafi. The North African nation now faces a host of challenges, including organizing an electoral process, establishing public security and starting a reconciliation process.

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

ARAB SPRING HIGHLIGHTS REJECTION OF CORRUPTION, SAYS UN ANTI-CRIME CHIEF


ARAB SPRING HIGHLIGHTS REJECTION OF CORRUPTION, SAYS UN ANTI-CRIME CHIEF
New York, Oct 24 2011  5:10PM
Corruption is a serious impediment to reducing poverty and achieving development goals, the head of the United Nations agency anti-crime agency <"http://www.unodc.org/unodc/en/frontpage/2011/October/arab-spring-highlights-peoples-rejection-of-corruption-and-cry-for-integrity-says-unodc-chief.html?ref=fs1">said today, adding that this year's uprisings in the Arab world highlighted the anger within societies at this scourge.

Yury Fedotov, the Executive Director of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), said the Arab Spring was "an emphatic rejection of corruption and a cry for integrity," as he addressed the opening of the fourth session of the Conference of the States parties to the UN Convention against Corruption, in Marrakech, Morocco.

"At the movement's centre was a deep-seated anger at the poverty and injustice suffered by entire societies due to systemic corruption," he added.

The meeting, which runs until Friday, brings together more than 1,000 delegates from 129 countries to review the implementation of the convention and to discuss ways to better tackle corruption around the world, including how to prevent it, its impact on development and how to recover illicit assets.

Corruption is a phenomenon found in all countries, according to UNODC. However, evidence shows it harms poor people more than others, stifles economic growth and diverts desperately needed funds from education, health care and other public services. The World Bank says an estimated $1 trillion gets siphoned off through bribes every year.

"Universal primary education cannot exist if bribes are needed to enter children into school systems… Reductions in child mortality are more difficult where payments are required to obtain medical assistance," said Mr. Fedotov.

He stressed that everyone has a role to play in preventing corruption, a global threat and serious roadblock to economic development.

"All of us must contribute to a culture of integrity. The eyes previously closed to corruption must become the open eyes of justice and equality."

The convention, which came into force in 2005, is the only legally binding universal anti-corruption instrument. It obliges States to prevent and criminalize corruption, to promote international cooperation, to recover stolen assets and to improve technical assistance and information exchange in both the private and the public sectors.

The treaty sets out provisions enabling countries to detect and recover money stolen through corruption. UNODC works with the World Bank through the Stolen Asset Recovery (StAR) Initiative to help countries trace, confiscate and recover stolen assets.

A study released today by the Initiative shows how most large-scale corruption cases involve the use of legal entities to conceal ownership and control of proceeds of corruption. It also calls on policymakers to take steps to improve transparency to reduce opportunities for wrongdoing.

Mr. Fedotov said that the StAR Initiative is sending out a very clear message: "There can be no safe havens for stolen assets."

Sunday, October 23, 2011

Bury Gaddafi with dignity

Opinion
Bury Gaddafi with dignity

Gaddafi's body should be treated with dignity in order to send a message to other dictators and future generations.

Hamid Dabashi- Aljazeera 





Colonel Gaddafi should get a funeral befitting of a fallen head of state, author says [GALLO/GETTY]

The unseemly pictures and videos circulating the internet capturing the final moments of Gaddafi's life should be the last signs of indignity that Libyan people would ever see marking their historic revolution. Future generation of Libyans, the children of these very freedom fighters, deserve better.

Reports indicate that Colonel Gaddafi's body is in the possession of authorities from the National Transitional Council (NTC). They must see that he gets a proper and dignified funeral, befitting a fallen head of state.

The body now in possession of NTC authorities is not just the remains of a fallen dictator to be violated freely on the battlefield of a cruel history. It is also the body-politic of future Libya. The triumphant euphoria of Libyans feasting on their victory, richly deserved, must not be marred by the undignified pictures of abusing the image they will most remember and tell their grandchildren for an entire history yet to unfold.

Treat Gaddafi's body with dignity not because he deserved it. But because the Libyan people need it. They must commence the rest of their history with a sense of self-dignity, of triumphant pride. That self-dignity is now determined by how they will treat the dead body of Colonel Gaddafi.

Treat that body not as the fallen tyrant deserved, but as the future of your children deserves.

Shakespearian dilemma


There is a scene in Hamlet where the bereaved Prince turns to the conniving Polonius asking him to treat a group of actors visiting the Elsinore with dignity and generous hospitality. "Good my lord," Hamlet says, "Will you see the players well bestowed? Do you hear, let them be well used, for they are the abstract and brief chronicles of the time. After your death you were better have a bad epitaph than their ill report while you live."

These days are indeed "the abstract and brief chronicles of the time" for future Libyans, for the future of the Arab and Muslim world. They should treat the fallen tyrant not "according to his desert," but after their own honor and dignity.

Follow Al Jazeera's ongoing coverage

Let the pictures and videos of a proper burial and a dignified resting place for Colonel Gaddafi fill the schoolbooks in which future generations of Libyans will read their Arabic alphabet and learn the dignity of their parentage.

The man was a relic, a frightful echo from a past, a monster not entirely of his own making. Heads of state, who in some cases enabled the dictator, are now rejoicing in his downfall.

How unseemly were the scenes of US President Obama, or UK Prime Minister Cameron, rejoicing in Gaddafi's downfall. But as Omar Mukhtar says in a key scene in the late Mustapha Akkad's Lion of the Desert (a film about rebels fighting the Italian invasion of Libya) when refusing to kill a captured Italian soldier, "they are not our teachers".

Western intervention

Obama's administration still has to answer for the American weapons sold to Gaddafi when he was in power. There are even darker tyrannies in Bahrain and Yemen that Obama helps keeping in power. And his chief ally in the region, Saudi Arabia, is not exactly the beacon of liberty.

These are the days from which the foundational myth of the future Libya is made. Future generation of Libyans, the children of these very Libyans that have earned their freedom, demand that Gaddafi be buried properly, with dignity befitting a head of state.

Let the dignified burial of Gaddafi be the farewell ceremony for NATO. Libyans owe NATO nothing. NATO just destroyed the weapons that Europe and the US had sold Gaddafi's regime.

The dignified burial of Gaddafi would also be a signal to the world at large that the Arab Spring is in charge of its own destiny—that Arabs and Muslims will not join Obama and Cameron in "rejoicing" the demise of a postcolonial monster created by European colonialism and American imperialism in the first place. American and British professors at Harvard, Princeton, Johns Hopkins, and London School of Economics beatified and celebrated the monster — lucratively.

It is imperative for the future of the Arab Spring that the hopes and aspirations of these revolutions determine the course of action rather than the NATO alliance who will be paving the way for European and American oil companies.

The proper burial of Colonel Gaddafi would also provide a signal to other remaining dictators in the region. They too must see a safe and sane way out of their bloody deeds. They too must be given the chance to recognise the world has changed— that we are not going to repeat the vicious cycle of one brutal downfall after another. All the tyrants of the region, from Iran to Syria, from Bahrain to Yemen, must be able to see a dignified way out, without NATO intervention.

As Obama, Cameron, and Sarkozy think of how to turn the Arab Spring around and to their advantage, and as European and American oil companies think of the lucrative contracts shining forth from Tripoli, Libyans, Arabs, and Muslims, must think of the enduring sense of dignity that the Arab Spring has in store for the future of their children.

Bury Colonel Gaddafi in a manner befitting the dignity of Libya, the pride of Arabs and the faith of Muslims.

Hamid Dabashi is Hagop Kevorkian Professor of Iranian Studies and Comparative Literature at Columbia University in New York. He is the author, most recently, of Shi'ism: A Religion of Protest (Harvard University Press, 2011).

The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily represent Al Jazeera's editorial policy.

Saturday, October 22, 2011

Gaddafi's death breached the law, says Russia

Gaddafi's death breached the law, says Russia

World Reaction

By Shaun Walker in Moscow


As politicians in Western capitals were taking quiet pleasure in the capture and killing of Colonel Muammar Gaddafi yesterday, opinions elsewhere were divided.

In Moscow, Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said that the Geneva Conventions had been breached with the killing of Colonel Gaddafi.

"We have to lean on facts and international laws," Mr Lavrov said. "They say that a captured participant of an armed conflict should be treated in a certain way. And in any case, a prisoner of war should not be killed."

Russia has been critical of Nato military action in Libya, saying that it has gone well beyond the stated mission of saving civilian life. The main concern for Moscow now is whether the new Libyan authorities will honour contracts signed by the Gaddafi regime. As well as the oil and arms trade, Russian Railways had secured a £2bn contract to construct a railway line between Sirte and Benghazi. Moscow recognised the National Transitional Council as the official government of Libya last month and said it expected all existing contracts to be honoured.

China, which like Russia abstained in the Security Council vote on whether to use force against Colonel Gaddafi's troops, was quicker yesterday to change its tune. Beijing initially refused to support the rebels and had been highly critical of the bombing campaign. But as realities on the ground altered, in recent weeks the Chinese government had started to engage with the rebel movement.

"A new page has been turned in the history of Libya," a foreign ministry spokeswoman, Jiang Yu, said yesterday. "We hope Libya will rapidly embark on an inclusive political process ... and allow the people to live in peace and happiness," she said.

A sign of the official policy change could be discerned in the language that Chinese state media used to refer to Colonel Gaddafi. Newspapers and agencies run by the state, which had previously referred to a "Middle East strongman", had yesterday made a small but significant change to their phrasing, calling him a "madman" instead.

Reaction from other enemies of the US was varied. Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez described the dead dictator as a "martyr", while Iran's foreign ministry tried to banish any parallels between the Libyan revolution and anti-government protests at home. "Despots and oppressors throughout history have no fate other than destruction and death," a spokesman said. He called Colonel Gaddafi's killing a "great victory" but added that all foreign forces must now pull out of the country.

And the eccentric Russian politician Kirsan Ilyumzhinov, who is also the head of the World Chess Federation, said that Colonel Gaddafi's death was a "tragedy" but that he died as a martyr and would be reincarnated.

Mr Ilyumzhinov made a surreal mission to Tripoli in June, where he met with Colonel Gaddafi as an unofficial mediator and played a game of chess with him. Yesterday, he said in a Russian newspaper interview that he had spoken to the Libyan leader numerous times on the phone since. He claimed that Colonel Gaddafi had not been scared of death: "Not a bit! He believed in reincarnation."

Friday, October 21, 2011

IRAN: UN HUMAN RIGHTS EXPERT STRESSES NEED FOR DIALOGUE

IRAN: UN HUMAN RIGHTS EXPERT STRESSES NEED FOR DIALOGUE

An independent United Nations human rights expert on Iran today stressed the need for constructive dialogue with the country's authorities, adding that he was encouraged by Tehran's stated willingness to cooperate with him as he carries out his mandate.

"I believe that we will be able to have a constructive dialogue, especially since the delegation of Iran here in New York indicated Iran's willingness to cooperate with my mandate by providing me with the information that would be relevant to the reports that I subsequently produce," Ahmed Shaheed, the Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Iran, told reporters at UN Headquarters a day after he presented his first <"http://www.un.org/Docs/journal/asp/ws.asp?m=A/66/374">report to the General Assembly's third committee, which deals with social, humanitarian and cultural affairs.

He said he hoped that Iran's cooperation with his mandate will include a full-access visit to the country to enable him to travel to places of interest and meet with people he decides to speak with to gather information.

Mr. Shaheed emphasized, however, that he will not be deterred in the event that Iranian authorities do not engage with him.

"I will continue in a very transparent manner to speak to reputable NGOs [non-governmental organizations], speak to a wide range of Iranian nationals, as I have already done, and continue to gather information about the human rights situation in Iran," he said.

"My conviction is that Iran cares [and] needs to be seen in a better light," said Mr. Shaheed, adding that he believed that the most effective way to influence Iran to improve its human rights record is to engage with the authorities there.

In his report to the General Assembly third committee, Mr. Shaheed voiced concern over reported violations in Iran's judicial system, citing practices such as torture, cruel or degrading treatment of detainees, and the imposition of the death penalty without proper safeguards.

He also identified denial of access to legal counsel and medical treatment, and widespread use of secret and public executions, as other issues of concern. He cited reports of capital punishment in juvenile cases, and the use of the death penalty for cases that do not meet the level of serious crimes by international standards, he said.

He said Iran's record seems to have gained particular attention because of the country's "lack substantive cooperation with the UN human rights system and because of the existence of frequent reports of suppression of those self-correcting mechanisms that deprive Iranians from freely seeking redress or reform within the parameters of their human rights."

The "self-correction mechanisms" that are suppressed include free and fair elections, denial of freedom of expression and assembly, allegations of depravation of the right to education, harassment and intimidation of religious and ethnic minorities, human rights defenders and civil society and religious actors.


Thursday, October 20, 2011

Analysis: Arab aid and the West - "two china elephants"


 IRINnews logo
humanitarian news and analysis
a service of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs
Analysis: Arab aid and the West - "two china elephants"

lead photo
KUWAIT CITY/DUBAI, 19 October 2011 (IRIN) - Among the aid agencies that poured into Somalia after famine was declared in July were organizations such as the Arab Federation of Doctors, the Mohammed Bin Rashid Establishment of the United Arab Emirates, and the Deniz Feneri Association of Turkey.

They came with their own style.

The Saudi National Campaign for the Relief of the Somali People, a project of King Abdullah, sent planeloads of food, including jam and cheese. The International Islamic Relief Organization (IIRO) sent 600 tons of dates. Turkey's IHH (Foundation for Human Rights, Freedoms and Humanitarian Relief) even ventured outside Mogadishu into territory considered a no-go zone for most international aid organizations because it is not under government control.

They also came with a lot of money.

In an emergency meeting in August, the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), pledged US$350 million for Somalia - "numbers we dream of", one UN aid worker in Mogadishu said - though it is still unclear how much of this is new funding.

Turkey says it has collected more than $280 million for the Somali effort,  while Saudi Arabia's contribution to UN agencies alone was $60 million, and Kuwait, a country of 3.5 million, contributed $10 million. The United Arab Emirates (UAE) Office for Coordination of Foreign Aid, too, received confirmation of $62 million in contributions to the Horn of Africa emergency.

Gulf countries were able to raise funds with remarkable speed and ease. In the span of three hours, a TV telethon in Qatar raised nearly 25 million riyals ($6.8 million). In a couple of weeks, Kuwait's International Islamic Charitable Organization (IICO), raised 80,000 dinars ($290,000) in cash by asking for donations in malls, while aid telethons in the UAE reportedly raised an additional $50 million for the Horn of Africa.

With many Western donors cutting budgets amid fears of another recession, this region has gained influence in aid, especially in countries with large Muslim populations. Both in terms of funds and action on the ground, the effort in Somalia has put Muslim and Arab donors and organizations onto centre stage.

But their relationship with the broader humanitarian system has been limited at the best of times, and rocky at the worst. For example, most OIC funds for Somalia are not being channelled through multilateral mechanisms, like the UN-administered Consolidated Appeals Process.

Players from the region say they are accustomed to working on their own - due to a history of mutual mistrust, a lack of awareness on both sides, and a perception by some Muslims and Arabs that they are better placed to help under certain circumstances.

The UN is now actively trying to improve that relationship, but the road to cooperation and coordination faces many challenges.

How did we get here?


The history of mutual mistrust between the predominantly Western aid system and its counterpart in the Muslim and Arab world is long, say analysts.

"These are two china elephants looking at each other," said Abdel-Rahman Ghandour, development and humanitarian worker, and author of Humanitarian Jihad: Investigation into Islamic NGOs. "They see each other; they know that they're there; but they can't move towards each other," he told IRIN.

Some Muslim aid workers see in the UN system a certain arrogance. "They don't want to understand us," one Muslim aid worker said. Others speak of undertones of neo-colonialism in the way aid is delivered and in the relationship between the Muslim aid community and its Western-dominated counterpart.

"They only involve us when it suits them," the aid worker told IRIN. Often, he added, they are invited to meetings and conferences as "an afterthought".

"You feel you're being used like window dressing," he said. "Things are hatched and cooked in the West and then brought to people to eat."

''Everyone knows they're [engaging with us] for the money, not for unity ... Islamic NGOs were a black box that nobody wanted to touch''
Some NGOs from the Arab and Muslim world are afraid of being "swallowed up" by the UN system and don't feel confident they can engage with the UN on an equal footing.

"It's not about experience," one Arab aid worker said. "The UN has the experience and the upper hand when it comes to everything - information, communication, movement on the ground. There's no question. But to give them money and let them implement activities, we have to rest assured that we'll like what comes out in our name."

He called for a kind of code of ethics or framework of understanding that would outline what both sides mean by certain fundamental principles and outline boundaries of action.

For example, terms like women's empowerment need to be defined, he said. "How we understand it is not how the UN understands it," he added. Organizations from this part of the world would fear partnering with the UN if women's empowerment is understood to mean "removing the hijab [covering a woman's hair], destroying the family institution and throwing religion out the window."

Some aid workers and donors from the Muslim and Arab world are also sceptical of the real motivations behind the Western system's desire to partner with them.

"Everyone knows they're [engaging with us] for the money, not for unity," another Muslim aid worker said. "Islamic NGOs were a black box that nobody wanted to touch," he said. "Then they [the UN] realized they were missing out."

Others do not easily differentiate between the UN Security Council, which has authorized Western interventions into Muslim countries and is seen to be unwilling to tackle the Palestinian question, and humanitarian aid agencies like the World Food Programme (WFP) or the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF).

For these reasons, many Red Crescent societies in the region, according to one senior aid worker, sometimes try to avoid working with the UN system. "We try to coordinate with - and not be coordinated by - the UN because of neutrality issues," he told IRIN. "The UN is not considered to be a neutral organization, especially in a conflict set-up."

Technical standards

Some Muslim organizations have been doing emergency relief work for decades. But many others had until recently focused more on developmental work - building schools and mosques or helping orphans.

And they have ramped up activities. The Qatar Red Crescent, for example, has seen its annual international budget jump from less than $250,000 to more than $45 million in the last decade, according to Khaled Diab, its international cooperation adviser. Turkish NGO IHH, which used to operate projects of $600-700,000 dollars a year for the Horn of Africa has increased its budget to more than $20 million - one of its biggest campaigns ever, according to its vice-president, Hüseyin Oruç.

But the UN and the broader humanitarian system have their reservations too. And with the influx of programming have come some clashes of ideology.

"Their awareness and subscription to commonly-understood best practice isn't necessarily there," one senior Western aid worker said of NGOs from the region, citing neglect of environmental impact or nutritional balance as examples. Distributing powdered milk, for example, is no good in an area where there is no clean water, while dates are not ideal in cases of malnutrition because they are high in sugar, low in nutrition, and hard to digest.

Other humanitarians say aid workers from the region do not follow normal security procedures. The aid worker in Mogadishu told IRIN that many of them have a "naïve view" that "nobody would hurt a fellow Muslim".

"I worry we'll see a Muslim aid worker being shot," the Mogadishu aid worker said. "It's a huge concern for all of us."

Lack of coordination?


There are also complaints about lack of coordination. The Red Crescent societies, said one aid worker, send in piles of goods without coordinating with the humanitarian community or checking the needs outlined in the Consolidated Appeals Process.

Planeloads of food arrive from the Gulf - much of the assistance from the region comes in the form of food aid - and "we have no idea where it goes," the Mogadishu aid worker said. Much of it is sold by its recipients on the open market because the value of some of the food, like jam and cheese, is so high, he added.

The 9/11 attacks also affected the relationship.

"A lot of Western charities are still afraid of being associated with Islamic charities because of the stigma that hangs over their heads since September 11th," the author, Ghandour, said.
 
US laws about the financing of "terror" have further complicated the relationship between Muslim charities and the West because NGOs working in designated "terrorist" countries, like Iran and Burma, or areas controlled by organizations like militant group al-Shabab - deemed a "terrorist" organization by the US - fear being accused of complicity and so keep quiet about their activities.

Financial transactions to fund work in these areas through the conventional banking system are not possible and the movement of large sums of cash could create problems with some governments.


Photo: Heba Aly/IRIN
Gulf dignitaries attend the opening of a meeting in Kuwait City organized by OCHA, Direct Aid and the International Islamic Charitable Organization
"They can't afford to be transparent," said Haroun Atallah, finance and service director at UK-based Islamic Relief Worldwide. "How do you expect them to be transparent if it could come back and bite them?"

Some Muslim and Arab NGOs see close dealings with the UN as possibly jeopardizing their access in al-Shabab areas, and so they keep their distance.

Understanding each other

But observers say mutual mistrust stems from a lack of insight on both sides.

"There is still a lack of in-depth knowledge and understanding about the culture of emerging donors towards giving," according to the Global Public Policy Institute (GPPi), which is currently researching the universality of humanitarian donorship.

Part of the reluctance on the part of Muslim organizations to broadcast their actions comes from a culture that sees charity as something private and humble - that should not be paraded in front of everyone for recognition.

"We do things without saying that we're doing it. It is part of Islamic culture," said Naeema Hassan al-Gasseer, a native of Bahrain and assistant regional director of the World Health Organization (WHO) for the Eastern Mediterranean.

Similarly, many NGOs from the Muslim world do not understand the UN. Acronyms like UNHCR and WFP can be unfamiliar terms. One Muslim aid worker described the UN as having a "branding problem". Many aid workers from the region have never heard of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) - charged with coordination of all aid in emergencies - and have no idea what its cluster system is.

"We have become, as a system, so jargonized, so inward looking in terms of how our system works, that hardly anyone else understands it," Ghandour said.

"The discussions about humanitarian assistance are still taking place in rather exclusive clubs," GPPi research associate Claudia Meier told IRIN.

And "if you want to be a member of that, you need to play by the same rules and speak the same language," Ghandour said. "Not everyone has the will or capacity to do it."

UN officials acknowledge, for example, that few senior UN staff speak Arabic.

Coordination has also been a challenge logistically. In Saudi Arabia, for example, "it's difficult to identify who is responsible for which decisions, because decisions are usually taken at very high levels, usually at the Office of the King, known as the Royal Court," Meier said, based on the Institute's case study on Saudi Arabia.

At the field level, many Muslim aid workers are willing to coordinate, but simply don't know how to do so.

The Mogadishu example

Mogadishu is an example of the complexity of the relationship. There, the OIC has opened a coordination office and created an alliance of 27 organizations that operate across the country, including areas in the south controlled by al-Shabab.

The OIC conducts agency meetings and has set up a mini-cluster system - with the Arab Medical Union (also known as the Arab Federation of Doctors) leading work in the health sector and the Qatar Red Crescent leading the food distribution effort.

While OCHA has expressed its satisfaction with the move, some UN officials told IRIN of a concern - especially at headquarters - that the OIC is trying to create a parallel coordination structure.

But the OIC said it was not in competition with the UN.

"No one will say that we'll do better than the UN in humanitarian [work]," Atta Elmanan Bakhit, OIC assistant secretary-general for humanitarian affairs, told IRIN. "You have the know-how. You have more means. You have more access. You have a long history in humanitarian [work]. The main [player] in humanitarian [work] will be always the UN."

Ahmed Adam, head of the OIC's Mogadishu office, said one of the aims of the OIC was to fill the gaps left by the UN with regard to inaccessibility of aid to certain areas of Somalia that are off-limits to international UN staff.

"UN coordination is facing difficulties in covering most of the affected areas due to security challenges," he told IRIN. "That is why we are trying to play a complementary role in order to improve the humanitarian activities. We are sharing information and challenges with OCHA in our regular meetings. The cooperation between the OIC and UN agencies is addressing the problems that the humanitarian actors are facing, particularly in this emergency period."

Rapid growth

Addressing this coordination problem has become an increasing priority, given the recent explosion of involvement in aid by the region.

"We are seeing a gradual but steadily increasing engagement by Middle Eastern countries in international humanitarian action, both as donors and as policy supporters," said Robert Smith, chief of the Consolidated Appeals section at OCHA.

In a shifting aid landscape that increasingly features non-Western states like Brazil and India, a collection of Arab donors (Saudi Arabia, UAE, Qatar, Kuwait and Oman) account for nearly three-quarters of the contributions by countries not included in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) Development Assistance Committee, giving more than $3.2 billion in aid in the last decade, according to a report by Development Initiatives, a research and advocacy organization.

"Gulf countries are leading an important new phase in humanitarian affairs," Emergency Relief Coordinator and Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs Valerie Amos told an information sharing meeting in Kuwait in September, noting the humanitarian community was facing "unprecedented challenges - many in the Islamic world."

Many of the crises of recent years have affected Muslim people, including the Bam earthquake in Iran in 2003, the Southeast Asian tsunami of 2004, the Pakistan earthquake of 2005, the attack on Gaza in late 2008, and the flooding in Pakistan in 2010. In all of these crises, Muslim and Arab donors contributed significantly.

"These states want to position themselves regionally and in the international arena as contributors to the humanitarian effort, seeking recognition as rising - if not equal - powers on the world stage," Meier said.

In 2008, the OIC created a humanitarian affairs department. The same year, the UAE created an Office for the Coordination of Foreign Aid. Qatar has appointed a state minister for international cooperation.

In recent years, the UN's efforts to engage this part of the world seemed to be paying off.

According to Smith, member states of the OIC have contributed $594 million to appeals for humanitarian aid to Muslim countries in the last decade.

In a sign of increased willingness to channel funds into multilateral agencies, Saudi Arabia gave WFP half a billion dollars in 2008 during the global food crisis. In 2010, it was the largest single contributor - globally - to the Haiti emergency response fund, with $50 million. In 2011, Kuwait gave a record $675,000 to the Central Emergency Response Fund, whose advisory group it and Qatar are now members of.

Somalia changes aid dynamic?

But the famine in parts of Somalia seemed to have changed the dynamic. If aid is counted as a percentage of GDP, several Middle Eastern countries have been more generous than so-called traditional donors, but contributions to the multilateral system have been limited.

The $60 million contributed by Saudi Arabia to WFP and WHO for the Somali crisis was "a start" according to WHO's al-Gasseer, but was not the multilateral engagement UN agencies were hoping for.

Of the $62 million UAE donors have reported to the government Office for the Coordination of Foreign Aid as contributions to the Horn of Africa emergency, only $10,000 are recorded as having been channelled multilaterally, through the International Federation of the Red Cross.

''We need to learn from UN experience ... We need the help of UN. We cannot deny that''
Instead, observers say, competing powers like Qatar and Turkey have seen humanitarian involvement as an opportunity to pursue foreign policy interests and flex their muscles. In a recent article in ForeignPolicy.com, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan boasted of the more than $280 million worth of donations for Somalia that were collected in Turkey in the last month.

And in the midst of their efforts on the ground, coordination has not always been a priority.

"All the people on the ground are very busy," Oruç of Turkey's IHH told IRIN. "They couldn't find time for cluster meetings."

Others acknowledged that a culture of working with others simply did not exist: "It's a new thinking, at least in the Gulf," WHO's al-Gasseer said.

She pointed to another problem as well: Charitable giving is a requirement in Islam, but people often want to give their zakat, or charity, to something tangible.

"Everybody we talk to [wants] to build hospitals, because hospitals are a physical, visible thing. And distributing medicine is something everybody likes," she told IRIN. But in their rush, many of the NGOs and charities do not consider whether there are staff to man the hospitals, enough storage space, electricity, how materials will be distributed and to whom, she said.

In Somalia and Libya, she said, this has resulted in hospitals being built next to one another, medication expiring, and an excess of services in one area while others are neglected altogether.

"If we don't take a serious step, the result will be very, very dangerous," she told fellow Arab participants of the conference in Kuwait.

Moving forward

Despite the challenges, there are renewed efforts now to reopen dialogue between both sides. NGOs from the region have acknowledged that they have lacked professionalism in the past. They believe their cultural and religious background gives them a unique ability to help, and have appealed to the UN to build their capacity.

"Arab and Muslim organizations have got the access which others do not have and the culture which others do not have. What we need is to equip them to become permanent international players," Hany El-Banna told conference participants. He is head of the Humanitarian Forum, an organization that aims to improve dialogue between organizations from Muslim countries and their counterparts in the multilateral system.

"We need to learn from UN experience," the OIC's Bakhit added. "We need the help of UN. We cannot deny that."

"Greater inclusiveness would make the humanitarian system more legitimate," GPPi wrote in its research. "It would also provide the humanitarian system with a broader range of cultural knowledge and thus support dignified and effective interaction with affected populations and governments."

In the aftermath of the pro-democracy protests of the Arab Spring, such engagement is all the more important.

"The uprising in the Arab world requires new ways of thinking and working, greater collaboration with NGOs and civil society from the region and support from regional organizations such as the OIC and [League of Arab States]," Abdul Haq Amiri, head of OCHA's regional Middle East and North Africa office, wrote in the July issue of the Humanitarian Exchange magazine.

"We should make an effort to meet these organizations on their own terms, listen attentively to their interpretation of humanitarian affairs and, importantly, speak their language."

ha/eo/cb



Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Netherlands: PVV proposes to punish Morocco for not accepting deported Moroccans

 

Netherlands: PVV proposes to punish Morocco for not accepting deported Moroccans

Via De Telegraaf (Dutch):

PVV parliamentarian Sietse Fritsma suggested to Minister Gerd Leers (Immigration and asylum) that if Morocco continues to refuse to accept illegal Moroccans deported from the Netherlands, the Netherlands should not let Moroccan ships and planes into the country.

The problem with deporting rejected asylum seekers is that their country of origin often refuses to cooperate in their return. Asylum seekers without a passport need new travel papers.

The opposition factions are not taking Fritsma's idea very seriously. Leers didn't want to speak about measures against uncooperative countries, but he did say that refusal could have consequences for eventual development cooperation.

Leers did respond favorably to Fritsma's proposal that a refugee will be forced to sign a document on his arrival stating his country of origin and where he's going if his asylum request will be rejected.


View article...

Sunday, October 16, 2011

IRISH PRESIDENT VISITS HER COUNTRY'S TROOPS SERVING WITH UN MISSION IN LEBANON

 IRISH PRESIDENT VISITS HER COUNTRY'S TROOPS SERVING WITH UN MISSION IN LEBANON
New York, Oct 15 2011  1:10PM
The President of Ireland, Mary McAleese, today visited her country's troops serving in the United Nations peacekeeping force in southern Lebanon, and laid a wreath at the memorial dedicated to the 47 Irish soldiers who have died in the cause of peace there.
Ms. McAleese was welcomed at Camp Shamrock, the Irish contingent's base in the town of Tibnin, by Major-General Alberto Asarta Cuevas, the commander of the UN Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL), who is also the head of mission.
She reviewed a guard of honour and later visited a position of Irish troops on the Blue Line, which marks the line of withdrawal of Israeli forces from Lebanon. She also toured the Orphanage in Tibnin. President McAleese had previously visited Irish troops in Lebanon in 1997 at the beginning of her term in office.
Maj-Gen. Asarta thanked the President for her country''s support of UNIFIL. "Contribut
ions to UNIFIL by Ireland and other nations are vital for us to effectively implement our mandate and to maintain peace and security in southern Lebanon," he said.
"Irish troops and their sacrifices in UNIFIL have always been a source of inspiration to those who served in this land. Their dedication to their mission of peace and to the people who hosted them even in the most difficult times is still etched in the memories of the people of the south," Maj- Asarta added.
Ireland was one of the first contributors to UNIFIL, providing troops since 1978. The Irish soldiers were withdrawn in 2001 and returned in 2007-2008 before being pulled out again, although Irish officers continued to serve at UNIFIL Headquarters in Naqoura. Since July this year, Ireland has once again deployed a battalion of 453 soldiers.
UNIFIL currently has about 12,000 troops from 36 countries and an estimated 1,000 civilian national and international staff.


Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Daily Hadith Narrated: Nafi, 12-10-2011

بِسۡÙ…ِ ٱللهِ ٱلرَّØ­ۡÙ…َÙ€ٰÙ†ِ ٱلرَّØ­ِيمِ
Peace and blessings be upon the Beloved Prophet Muhammad,
As-salamu-alaikum your daily hadith from ahadith.co.uk

Daily Hadith, 12-10-2011

Narrated: Nafi
Ibn 'Umar said, "The Prophet arrived at Mecca and sent for 'Uthman bin Talha. He opened the gate of the Ka'ba and the Prophet, Bilal, Usama bin Zaid and 'Uthman bin Talha entered the Ka'ba and then they closed its door (from inside). They stayed there for an hour, and then came out." Ibn 'Umar added, "I quickly went to Bilal and asked him (whether the Prophet had prayed). Bilal replied, 'He prayed in it.' I asked, 'Where?' He replied, 'Between the two pillars.' "Ibn 'Umar added, "I forgot to ask how many Rakat he (the Prophet) had prayed in the Ka'ba."

UN HUMAN RIGHTS OFFICE DISTRESSED BY SAUDI EXECUTIONS

UN HUMAN RIGHTS OFFICE DISTRESSED BY SAUDI EXECUTIONS
New York, Oct 11 2011 10:10AM
The United Nations human rights office today
<"http://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=11481&Lan
gID=E
">said it is deeply distressed by the recent execution in Saudi Arabia
of 10 men, eight of whom were foreign migrant workers, and called on the
country to establish a moratorium on the use of the death penalty.

The eight Bangladeshi migrant workers were beheaded in public in the
capital, Riyadh, on Friday after they were found guilty of killing an
Egyptian in 2007, according to media reports. Three other Bangladeshis were
sentenced to prison terms and flogging in the same case.

The Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) noted that,
of the at least 58 people reportedly executed in Saudi Arabia this year, 20
were migrant workers.

"We call on the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and all other States that still
maintain the death penalty to respect international standards that provide
safeguards to ensure protection of the rights of those facing the death
penalty," said OHCHR spokesperson Rupert Colville.

He told a news conference in Geneva that about 140 of the 193 UN Member
States are believed to have abolished the death penalty or introduced a
moratorium, either legally or in practice.

"We call on the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia to join these States and establish a
moratorium on the use of the death penalty," said Mr. Colville.

UNHCR: Multiculturalism good and inevitable

UNHCR: Multiculturalism good and inevitable



Via news24:

UN refugee agency chief Antonio Guterres on Monday called on states not to succumb to rising xenophobic pressure and turn refugees away, saying that multiculturalism is not only good, but inevitable.

"In my view, multicultural, multi-ethnic, and multi-religious societies are not only a good thing, they are inevitable," said Guterres.

"Building tolerant and open communities is a slow and delicate process. But non-discrimination is a core human rights principle, and it is the duty of all states to acknowledge and give effect to it.

"Refugees cannot become collateral damage of anti-immigrant attitudes and policies," stressed the UN High Commissioner for Refugees.

(source)

 

Switzerland: Mayor resigns over threats after praising immigration

Switzerland: Mayor resigns over threats after praising immigration

Via the Local:

The mayor of a small town in northern Switzerland has left office after positive comments he made about immigrants were met with insults and threats directed at his family.

Josef Bütler, the mayor of Spreitenbach, made the decision after he discovered that defending the integration of immigrants in Switzerland can turn into a nightmare. More than half of the town's 11,000 inhabitants are of foreign origin.

On August 24th, Bütler participated on the TV show Schweiz Aktuell. Asked about the high proportion of foreigners in Spreitenbach, the Christian Democract praised the coexistence of Swiss and foreigners and said that for him immigration represented a "challenging enrichment."

(source)

 

ISRAEL MUST PREVENT SETTLER ATTACKS AGAINST PALESTINIAN VILLAGES, SAYS UN

ISRAEL MUST PREVENT SETTLER ATTACKS AGAINST PALESTINIAN VILLAGES, SAYS UN
New York, Oct 11 2011 12:10PM
The United Nations human rights office <"http://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=11481&LangID=E">called on Israel today to stop attacks by settlers against Palestinian civilians in the occupied West Bank, citing a spike in violence in recent weeks resulting in serious physical injury, property loss and damage.

"More needs to be done to effectively prevent attacks by settlers against Palestinian civilians and, when they do occur, they should be properly investigated by the Israeli authorities," The Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) spokesperson Rupert Colville told a news conference in Geneva, urging the Israeli Government to fulfil its obligation under international human rights and humanitarian law.

"Victims should also be appropriately compensated for their losses. With the olive harvest season beginning in a few days time, we urge the Israeli authorities to take effective measures to stop attacks by settlers in the occupied West Bank."

Mr. Colville voiced particular concern over the village of Qusra, in the northern West Bank, which has been targeted by settlers at least six times in the past six weeks, with attacks taking various forms that are emblematic settler violence throughout the West Bank, including the torching of a mosque and the felling of hundreds of olive trees.

Two of the most recent examples included the shooting dead of a Palestinian civilian by an Israeli army soldier on 23 September, he noted. On the same day, two Palestinian minors were detained for two hours during which they were allegedly beaten up and humiliated by soldiers before being released.

In the early morning of 6 October, villagers discovered that at least 200 trees belonging to four different families had been cut down, depriving them of their main source of income. Qusra villagers have already lost access to hundreds of acres of land due to settlement expansion and erection of outposts.

A <"http://unispal.un.org/UNISPAL.NSF/0/9203BF56676BB1BE852577C7004C1632">report by the Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon entitled "Israeli settlements in the occupied Palestinian territory, including East Jerusalem, and the occupied Syrian Golan," is due to be released in the next few days, detailing continued Israeli settlement construction and its impact on the human rights of residents including settler violence and the lack of accountability.

The report was prepared by the UN human rights office in the occupied Palestinian territory in cooperation with various other UN entities.

Last month, a group of UN rights experts <"http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=39828&Cr=palestin&Cr1=">urged Israeli authorities to prevent settler attacks and called for an immediate end to the demolitions of Palestinian-owned houses and other structures in the West Bank, including East Jerusalem.

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Qatar gave $500 mln to help with budget, says Egypt

Qatar gave $500 mln to help with budget, says Egypt 
'Pakistan Times' Monitoring Desk

CAIRO (Egypt): Egypt's finance minister, who has been negotiating with Gulf Arab states for financial assistance, said on Sunday that Qatar had given a grant of $500 million to support the budget which has ballooned as a result of political turmoil.

Hazem el-Beblawi said last week he was negotiating with Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates for funds worth close to $7 billion. He also said he was considering International Monetary Fund financing that Egypt previously turned down.

Egypt's economy, which had been growing robustly before the popular uprising earlier this year, was hit hard by the protests, which prompted foreign investors to withdraw funds and saw major revenue sources like tourism suffer. "They transferred $500 million as a grant to Egypt," Hazem el-Beblawi told Reuters, adding that the Qatari funds had been transferred in the past week or so. "It is a grant for budgetary support," he added.

Egypt forecasts a budget deficit of 8.6 percent of gross domestic product in the financial year to June 2012. Economists say the estimate may prove optimistic. Khaled al-Attiyah, Qatari minister of state for international cooperation, told Al Jazeera satellite channel that Qatar's aim was to offer direct support for the budget and loans at very low rates to deal with the immediate economic issues, as well as to offer investment. He mentioned two projects in port cities, one in Port Saeed and the other in Alexandria. "These two projects will provide hundreds of thousands of job opportunities," he said.

Egypt reached a $3.2 billion deal with the IMF earlier this year, but the previous finance minister opted in June not to move on with it, partly because the ruling military council did not want to build up debts. Yields on Egyptian treasury bills rose last month to levels last seen during the global financial crisis in 2008. They have since eased but traders have said Egypt needs external funding to prevent yields surging further.

________________________________

Sunday, October 9, 2011

Wall Street protesters have little faith in US democracy

Syria's 'Butcher of Hama' living in £10 million Mayfair townhouse - Telegraph

Syria's 'Butcher of Hama' living in £10 million Mayfair townhouse - Telegraph: "The massacre of civilians in the rebellious Syrian town of Jisr al-Shughur has awoken terrible memories for the people of Hama, 60 miles to the north, where up to 40,000 people were killed during an uprising in 1982."

US warns fans in Kenya about attacks

US warns fans in Kenya about attacks
NewsCore

American citizens and foreigners in Kenya were being warned Friday that an al Qaeda affiliate in neighboring Somalia is planning to target locations broadcasting sporting events, a US official confirmed to FOX News Channel.

9/11: TEN YEARS LATER

The terrorist attacks of 2001 touched the sports world in many ways. View our full tribute to the 10-year anniversary of Sept. 11.

The feared attacks from al Shabaab, which was behind suicide attacks last year at venues in Uganda broadcasting World Cup soccer matches, could target places showing the Rugby World Cup, with finals matches commencing Saturday and running until October 23, and a soccer match between Kenya and its western neighbor Uganda being played Saturday.

The Uganda strike by al Shabaab, which killed 76, was considered an indicator that the group was going "more global" in its targeting and may be capable of hitting US targets, FOX reported.

An alert by the US embassy warned, "The US Embassy in Nairobi has received credible information about a potential threat to Americans and other foreigners linked to international sporting events, such as the Kenya-Uganda football match on Saturday, October 8, or the upcoming Rugby World Cup.

9/11: TEN YEARS LATER

Sports paid tribute to 9/11 in a variety of ways. Relive them here.

"American citizens are urged to avoid public venues, such as sports bars, night clubs, and restaurants, which will be broadcasting these games, as well as public transportation, such as buses, to and from the events."

ABC News reported that Usama bin Laden had urged al Shabaab to target the US after learning that a number of US-born Somalis had joined the organization. They include Alabama native Omar Hammami, also known as Abu Mansoor al Amriki, an al Shabaab spokesman who is wanted by the FBI for "terrorism violations" including "providing material support to terrorists."

Saturday, October 8, 2011

Khudbadii Jimcaha Ee Sheekh Aadan Siiro Oo Maanta


Khudbadii Jimcaha Ee Sheekh Aadan Siiro Oo Maanta Cinwaankeedu Ahaa Nabadgelyada Iyo Qiimaheeda (Dhageyso).


Hargeysa(Ramaas) Okt.07, 2011 – Sheekh Aadan Maxamed Xiiray «Aadan Siiro», ayaa maanta khudbadii Jimacaha ee uu ka jeediyey masaajidka Quba ee magaalada Hargeysa, ku soo qaatay Nabdgelyada iyo qiimaha ay u leedahay Bulshada Islaamka ah.

Khudbadii sheekh Aadan maanta jeediyey oo dhamaystiran halkan ka dhageysta:

http://samotalis.blogspot.com/


--
Posted By Blogger to SAMOTALIS at 10/08/2011 04:19:00 PM

The End of Al-Shabaab in Somalia

The End of Al-Shabaab in Somalia

by Dr. M. Omar Hashi

The abhorrent terrorist attack on October 4th, 2011 against Mogadishu students signals the end of Al-Shabaab terrorists.

For the Somali youth that have been killed and also those who are now fighting for their lives in Ankara's hospitals, let the word finally listen to Turkey and Prime Minister Recep Tayyip ErdoÄŸan to act in ending the appalling crimes against humanity in Somalia. Today, the so called International Criminal Court in the Hague and the Arab League sits paralyzed to even condemn Al-Shabaab for its brutal and unprovoked massacres in Mogadishu.

Al-Shabaab's logic

Basically, the Al-Shabaab logic is similar to that of the AMISOM occupiers. Both groups are vehemently anti-Somalia in orientation. Secondly, both Al-Shabaab and AMISOM calculate that peace and normalcy in Mogadishu will directly end their reign of terror and respective cash-flows.  Furthermore, since Turkey and the Organization for Islamic Conference (OIC) have become involved in helping the oppressed Mogadishu people, many Somali communities in the Diaspora have equally become inspired to help provide humanitarian support to their country.

Instead of embracing all of these Islamic principles of mercy and peace, the Al-Shabaab terrorist leaders and their Al-Qaeda backers in Somalia have responded by launching cruel bombings, beheadings, and unprovoked attacks against civilians. The aim is to keep Somalis fearful about a peaceful future for their country.

Unfortunately, the international community's apathy to the suffering of Somali victims helps to reinforce a defining characteristic of the Al-Shabaab terrorists:  unbridled criminality. The depraved Al-Qaeda inspired Al-Shabaab terrorists are deficient of any decency or shame when it comes to causing the mass murder of innocent civilians. However, the terrorist Al-Shabaab leadership finds itself in serious trouble. The Al-Shabaab has become isolated from the local population since they are not from Mogadishu and have no grassroots support among the resident clans.

In Mogadishu and throughout Southern Somalia, the people's daily condition is changing for the better as peace, development, and humanitarian assistance pours in from Turkey and other friendly Islamic nations. Clearly, Somali people with help of Turkey are beginning to believe in the possibility and potential of peace in Somalia.  Naturally, this development is a direct threat to both the criminality of the Al-Shabaab terrorists and AMISOM occupiers who rely on Western funds in their so called "War on Terror" on Somali civilians.

Why Al-Shabaab Fears Turkey

What's more, since the humanitarian situation has recently improved in Mogadishu, the Al-Shabaab terrorist leadership is very fearful and apprehensive about Turkey's growing involvement to end the famine and rebuild Mogadishu. The Al-Qaeda controlled leadership fears Turkey for many reasons. First, Turkey is a friendly Islamic nation, which also has a lot influence within the Muslim world. Turkey also has a powerful military. Therefore, the Al-Shabaab gangs fully understand that they cannot attack Turkey without paying serious consequences. As a result, Al-Shabaab has instead decided to declare an Open War against Mogadishu civilians who seek Turkish humanitarian assistance and scholarships.

In addition, the wider Southern Somali population has begun to reject Al-Shabaab's brutality completely. Most Southern Somali communities in Mogadishu are very appreciative of Turkish humanitarian assistance.  Making it even worse for the terrorist Al-Shabaab leadership, those foot soldiers that originally came from Mogadishu have begun to leave. These brainwashed child soldiers have been used to commit bloody crimes against their own people for far too long. Sadly, the so called Al-Shabaab leadership only wants to use these individuals to destroy their clans and also to sacrifice them to get money from Al-Qaeda.

Conclusion

In-order to end hopelessness and misery in Somalia the Al-Qaeda controlled Al-Shabaab leadership must be put on trial for their crimes against the Somali people in Mogadishu. Al-Shabaab leadership does not have any public support among Southern Somalis, so they now feel that they must continue committing daily crimes and brutality to stay relevant in Mogadishu. Consequently, the Al-Shabaab terrorist attacks against Somali students will only sow the seeds of their imminent destruction.  There is no politics or reason in killing innocent and impoverished Somalis. The continuing outrages and barbaric beheadings of Mogadishu residents further exposes to the world why Al-Qaeda controlled Al-Shabaab terrorists have now become the ultimate scourge of peace in Somalia.

Ultimately, it is the foreign Al-Qaeda masters living in the Middle East who direct them to continue to kill and behead hundreds of innocent Somali women, children, the elderly, religious scholars, medical doctors, and intellectuals. The Al-Shabaab is in no way or shape fighting for Somalia. They hate Somalia and are truly shameless hypocrites who posses no understanding of basic Islamic tenets, morality, or nationalism. In fact, the Al-Shabaab along with AMISIOM has chosen to hold the Somali nation as captives for the slaughter.

________________________________
Dr. M. Omar Hashi
E-mail: wadijir@hotmail.com

Friday, October 7, 2011

DEATH TOLL FROM SYRIAN VIOLENCE TOPS 2, 900, UN HUMAN RIGHTS OFFICE SAYS


DEATH TOLL FROM SYRIAN VIOLENCE TOPS 2,900, UN HUMAN RIGHTS OFFICE SAYS

The death toll from months of violent clashes between Syrian Government forces and pro-democracy protesters has now climbed to 2,900, the United Nations human rights office said today.

Rupert Colville, a spokesperson for the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), said the total number has passed 2,900, "according to the list of individual names we have been compiling." Previous estimates had placed the toll at about 2,700.

Senior UN officials have repeatedly voiced concern about the situation in Syria, where large-scale protests calling for greater freedoms have been held since March – part of the so-called Arab Spring movement that has affected much of North Africa and the Middle East this year.

Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has stressed that the violence and suffering in Syria is unacceptable and must end, and that the international community has a moral obligation to try to prevent further bloodshed.

The Human Rights Council has ordered a commission of inquiry into the violence after an earlier OHCHR fact-finding mission outlined a series of Government abuses ranging from murders, enforced disappearances, the deprivation of liberty and torture.

On Tuesday, the Security Council did not adopt a draft resolution that strongly condemned Syrian authorities for their crackdown after Russia and China exercised their vetoes.

Representatives of Russia and China said the draft text as it stood would exacerbate tensions rather than lead to a resolution of the crisis.

A spokesperson for Mr. Ban said yesterday that the Secretary-General regretted that Council members have not been able to agree and hoped they would overcome their divisions and find a collective way to address the situation.

Daily Hadith, 06-10-2011

سۡÙ…ِ ٱللهِ ٱلرَّØ­ۡÙ…َÙ€ٰÙ†ِ ٱلرَّØ­ِيمِ 
Peace and blessings be upon the Beloved Prophet Muhammad, 
As-salamu-alaikum your daily hadith from ahadith.co.uk

Daily Hadith, 06-10-2011

Narrated: Said
Abu Shuraih said, "When 'Amr bin Said was sending the troops to Mecca (to fight 'Abdullah bin Az-Zubair) I said to him, 'O chief! Allow me to tell you what the Prophet said on the day following the conquests of Mecca. My ears heard and my heart comprehended, and I saw him with my own eyes, when he said it. He glorified and praised Allah and then said, "Allah and not the people has made Mecca a sanctuary. 

So anybody who has belief in Allah and the Last Day (i.e. a Muslim) should neither shed blood in it nor cut down its trees. If anybody argues that fighting is allowed in Mecca as Allah's Apostle did fight (in Mecca), tell him that Allah gave permission to His Apostle, but He did not give it to you. The Prophet added: Allah allowed me only for a few hours on that day (of the conquest) and today (now) its sanctity is the same (valid) as it was before. So it is incumbent upon those who are present to convey it (this information) to those who are absent." Abu- Shuraih was asked,! "What did 'Amr reply?" He said 'Amr said, "O Abu Shuraih! I know better than you (in this respect). Mecca does not give protection to one who disobeys (Allah) or runs after committing murder, or theft (and takes refuge in Mecca).

Thursday, October 6, 2011

SUDAN: UN WARNS OF LOOMING FOOD CRISIS IN BLUE NILE AND SOUTHERN KORDOFAN STATES

SUDAN: UN WARNS OF LOOMING FOOD CRISIS IN BLUE NILE AND SOUTHERN KORDOFAN
STATES
New York, Oct 5 2011 10:10AM

The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) today called for
urgent action and funding to prevent a looming crisis in Sudan's Blue Nile
and Southern Kordofan states, where the latest fighting combined with
erratic rainfall has doomed next month's harvest.

The two regions, which lie on the border between Sudan and the
newly-independent nation of South Sudan, have been the scene of deadly
fighting in recent weeks that has displaced tens of thousands of people. UN
officials have called on all parties to cease hostilities and to ensure
access so that humanitarian workers can reach those who need help.

FAO <"http://www.fao.org/news/story/en/item/92491/icode/">said in a news
release that at least 235,000 people in both states need help given that
food availability there is forecast to be "significantly reduced" following
renewed fighting between Sudanese Government troops and the Sudan People's
Liberation Movement-North (SPLM-N).

The fighting has disrupted the major crop season in Blue Nile and Southern
Kordofan - two of Sudan's main sorghum producing areas, according to the
Rome-based agency.

In South Kordofan, people fled at the start of the planting season and were
unable to sow seeds, while in Blue Nile, fighting erupted later in the
season so seeds were planted but people were forced to
<"http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=39594&Cr=kordofan&Cr1=">aband
on their crops.

"The latest fighting coupled with erratic rainfall means next month's
harvest is expected to generally fail," it stated.

The shortage of food stocks has already led to a doubling of prices, which
are expected to continue to rise steeply.

The agency also pointed out that seasonal livestock migration has been
disrupted in both states causing large herds to be concentrated in small
areas along the border.

"This is causing overcrowding and could lead to outbreaks of livestock
disease," said Cristina Amaral, Chief of FAO's Emergency Operations Service.
"Tensions between farmers and nomadic herders over water and land access may
also be exacerbated."

All international aid agencies have been barred from Blue Nile, so the true
scale of the situation there is unknown, the agency said. Meanwhile, a small
FAO team of national staff is currently on the ground in South Kordofan.

Although their office was looted they were able to distribute seeds and
tools to 20,000 vulnerable households in the calmer areas. "This timely
support will help provide food for those most in need," stated the agency,
which is seeking some $3.5 million for its operations.

RUSSIA AND CHINA VETO DRAFT SECURITY COUNCIL RESOLUTION ON SYRIA

RUSSIA AND CHINA VETO DRAFT SECURITY COUNCIL RESOLUTION ON SYRIA

China and Russia today vetoed a draft resolution in the Security Council
that had strongly condemned Syrian authorities for their violent crackdown
against pro-democracy protesters this year and called for an immediate end
to human rights abuses.

Nine of the Council's 15 members voted in favour of the draft text, there
were two vetoes, and four countries abstained. A veto by any one of the
Council's five permanent members – China, France, Russia, the United Kingdom
and the United States – means a resolution cannot be adopted.

The draft resolution had voiced deep concern over the recent violence in
Syria and strongly condemned "the continued grave and systematic human
rights violations and the use of force against civilians by the Syrian
authorities."

Urging "all sides to reject violence and extremism," the text called for "an
inclusive Syrian-led political process conducted in an environment free from
violence, fear, intimidation and extremism, and aimed at effectively
addressing the legitimate aspirations and concerns of Syria's population."

An estimated 2,700 people have been killed in Syria since mid-March when the
protest movement began, part of a wider uprising across North Africa and the
Middle East this year. Senior UN officials, including Secretary-General Ban
Ki-moon, have repeatedly voiced concern about the situation.

Speaking after today's vote, Russian Ambassador Vitaly Churkin said his
country did not support the regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad but
the draft resolution would not promote a peaceful resolution of the crisis.

He said the issue was not a question of wording, but "a conflict of
political approaches" on how to end the crisis.

Mr. Churkin said the majority of Syrians wanted gradual political change,
rather than quick regime change, and the text also did not adequately take
into account the behaviour of extremist groups in opposition to Syrian
authorities.

China's Ambassador Li Baodong said that while his country was highly
concerned about the violence in Syria, the text as it stood would only
complicate existing tensions.

He said the draft was overly focused on exerting pressure on Syria, and
included the threat of sanctions, which would not resolve the situation.

Ambassador Gérard Araud of France expressed deep disappointment that the
draft resolution had not been adopted, and said his country and other
co-sponsors had made repeated attempts in recent days to alter the text to
meet the concerns of other Council members.

Mr. Araud said the opponents of the text were going against the spirit of
the Arab Spring movement.

US Ambassador Susan Rice voiced outrage that the Council had not adopted the
text and said those countries which had not supported it would have to
answer to the Syrian people.

She said it was a "ruse" to suggest that the resolution would lead to
military intervention in Syria.

Also addressing the Council today, Ambassador Bashar Ja'afari of Syria said
the draft resolution reflected the biased attempts of some Western countries
to undermine his country's authorities.

He said the legitimate needs and aspirations of the Syrian people had been
misused by some domestic groups, with the support of foreign elements, to
provoke external intervention.

The countries voting in favour of the resolution were Bosnia and
Herzegovina, Colombia, France, Gabon, Germany, Nigeria, Portugal, the United
Kingdom and the US. The countries abstaining were Brazil, India, Lebanon and
South Africa. The draft resolution had been co-sponsored by France, Germany,
Portugal and the UK.

INDEPENDENT UN GROUP ON ARBITRARY DETENTION CONCERNED OVER PRACTICES IN GERMANY

INDEPENDENT UN GROUP ON ARBITRARY DETENTION CONCERNED OVER PRACTICES IN GERMANY

The United Nations independent working group on arbitrary detention today voiced <"http://www.ohchr.org/en/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=11472&LangID=E">concern over Germany's preventive detention system, citing the practice of depriving some people of their liberty after serving their prison terms because they are considered a "danger to society."

The UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention also drew attention to "the significantly disproportionate number of foreign detainees or Germans of foreign origin" in the country's jails.

At the end of its first official visit to Germany, the UN expert body urged the authorities "to ensure that its institutional and legal framework regarding deprivation of liberty fully conforms to the human rights standards enshrined in its legislation and in international human rights standards."

During visits to German detention facilities, the Working Group interviewed several detainees under the preventive detention regime and found that retroactive provisions present serious problems that can result in indefinite detention of convicts. This was further supported by interviews with officials in federal and state ministries, prosecutors, prison officials and judges.

"Preventive detention violates the ban on retroactive criminal punishment in international law, particularly when this punishment was not foreseen in a convict's sentence," said El Hadji Malick Sow, the current chair of the Group.

Another member of the Group, Mads Andenas, noted that the use of preventive detention in cases of people considered to have social disorders would not be in conformity with national and international human rights standards.

"The detention of foreigners due to illegal border crossing, coupled with harsh sentencing, raises again the issue of proportionality and how this needs to be carefully addressed and remedied by the Government," said Shaheen Sardar Ali, a member of the Working Group. She suggested that immigration detainees be kept in centres designated for such purposes and not in prisons.

Nonetheless, the Group noted several good practices in Germany, such as the establishment in Hamburg of an independent special commission for investigating police officers for alleged misconduct or alleged ill-treatment.

The removal of the obligation to disclose the identity of children of irregular immigrants receiving emergency medical treatment by teachers and hospital authorities is also a positive change in the law, they observed.

The Group visited detention facilities and held meetings with federal and state authorities in Berlin, Hamburg, Karlsruhe and Stuttgart. It also met with members of civil society, and held confidential interviews with 69 detainees in various detention centres.

It will present the full report of its findings in Germany to the UN Human Rights Council in March next year.

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Somaliland’s Goodwill and Sharif Ahmed’s bad intensions

Somaliland's Goodwill and Sharif Ahmed's bad intensions
Abdulaziz Al-Mutairi  

It's abhorrent that the President of Somalia's TFG Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed to be the first high ranking to meet  the fugitive Somali-American warlord Suleiman Essa Ahmed on 12/9/2011.  The US authorities interrogated the warlord over his illegal and armed activities in the south-eastern parts of Somaliland including Buuhoodle village. The FBI accused the warlord of organizing and sponsoring terrorist group "SSC" which is trying to  fight Somaliland Army. The group has links with Al-Shabab, where they receive training on explosive and suicide bombing.  In other hand, formation of new warlords in the region will be undermining the efforts of the international community to end the violence and 'warlordism' in former "Somalia". As we know, the international community spend time and money to eliminate the warlords and to stabilize the former "Somalia". The new warlord Suleiman Essa Ahmed is working tirelessly to destabilize Somaliland democracy and security. 

  "Somalia's" TFG President Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed met the fugitive Somali-American warlord Suleiman Essa Ahmed in Mogadishu and agreed upon certain points, which undermines the sovereignty and security of Somaliland. The points include direct relationship between TFG and "SSC". Sheikh Sharif Ahmed government will provide financial and military aid to the terrorist group in order to disturb the development in Somaliland, particularly its eastern regions.   Moreover, "Somalia's" Interim Prime Minister AbdulWali Mohamed Ali (Gaas)  - who represent bogus "Puntland" interests - was present in the meeting with "SSC".  The meeting, clearly, was an attempt to destroy. However, "SSC" is too weak to carry out its new obligations against Somaliland.   The meeting, also, discussed restoration of failed theory of "Somaliweyn" which is to unite all Somali speaking communities in East Africa under "Somalia". This theory was first adopted in last century by the "Somalia" government and it led invasion  of Ethiopia and bad diplomatic relation with Kenya.  According to the theory, Ethiopia and Kenya must give up from its Somali ethnic groups and large portion of their territories.   Somali ethnic groups occupy large parts of Ethiopia and Kenya. The independence of Djibouti and Somaliland ruined the theory, as both are mainly Somalis. Such deceitful meeting between TFG President Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed and fugitive warlord Suleiman Essa Ahmed, who has links to Al-Qaeda's wing in Africa – Al-Shabab – coincided a time that Somaliland delegates are distributing aid to the displaced people in Mogadishu. The goodwill of Somalilanders led fundraising campaigns to help the Somalians devastated by the hunger. Somaliland donated $700,000 in aid to the people of "Somalia", which puts Somaliland at the highest donations between the African countries. The statistics showed South Africa after Somaliland with $500,000.  Unfortunately instead of gratitude and appreciation, TFG President is sponsoring terrorists to undermine the people of Somaliland.  The leading regional money transfer company – Dahabshiil who hails from Somaliland – donated $100,000 in the fundraising, which is lifts the total money donated by Somalilanders to $800,000. 

The government of Somaliland handed over the money at a time thousands of Somalilanders where in need for aid, but the magnitude of the devastation in "Somalia" was higher compare to Somaliland. The newly elected government of Somaliland led by President Siilaanyo has taken bold political risk in the aid, as the opposition accused of donating while Somalilanders are in greater need. It is unfortunate and disappointment to the people of Somaliland to realize that TFG President Sheikh Sharif  and his prime minister are  working on failing Somaliland, where Somalilanders are helping the poor people of their countrymen. As sensible leader, it is your duty to help your people at hard times, instead of betraying those who step forward to help your countrymen. Furthermore, the supporters of terrorist warlord Suleiman Essa Ahmed collected thousands of dollars across the world, in order to fight Somaliland, and did not donate to the people of "Somalia" who are suffering from droughts. The Somali diaspora that supports the warlord called raised money to purchase illegal weapon against Somaliland in the black markets, while people are dying for hunger in "Somalia". The so called "Puntland" has revenues including piracy ransom and revenues from Bosaso seaport, however, until today, the region did not help the drought hit regions of "Somalia" – countrymen. The civilians in Mogadishu, mainly the inhabitant tribes of Banadir region, are very peaceful and thankful to those who help them in the difficult days. The Somaliland delegates were received at the airport with warm reception, which illustrates the appreciation of the people of Mogadishu. 

 It's obvious and clear to everyone who follow the politics in "Somalia", that problem makers are mainly from "Puntland" and Al-Shabab, where "Puntland" imposes preconditions to every peace conference and transitional governments. The people of Somaliland thanked to their brothers in Mogadishu for the reception, and promised to be supportive until the people of  "Somalia"  particularly Mogadishu get peace and back to normal life. Somaliland could, also, help Somalia in restoring peace if "Somalia" recognizes Somaliland. 
The people of Mogadishu know that former leader of "Puntland" Abdullah Yusuf  send troops  as tool of revenge against the people of Mogadishu, as they know that Somali nationalism is not by words but in heart. The people of Mogadishu realized the hypocrisy of "Puntland", while the free people of Somaliland are busy with helping people in refugee camps in Kenya particularly Dadaab near Somalia border. Somaliland is and will always be supportive to the people of   "Somalia".  

Monday, October 3, 2011

Hadithy of the Day: O people, your wives have certain rights over ....

Prophet Muhammad (sal Allahu alaihi wa sallam) said: "O people, your wives have certain rights over you and you have certain rights over them. Treat them well and be kind to them, for they are your partners and committed helpers." [Tirmidhi]

Fair dealings and good behaviour is necessary towards everyone, but the Prophet (sal Allahu alaihi wa sallam), mercy for all mankind, emphasized it especially towards women. A man is rewarded for every morsel of food that he puts into his wife's mouth. The best sadaqah is that which is spent on one's family and kindness to the wife is an aspect of faith. Aisha (radi Allahu anha) reported Allah's Messenger as saying, "Among the believers who show most perfect faith are those who have the best disposition, and are kindest to their families." [Tirmidhi]

Aisha (radi Allahu anha), the Prophet's wife, is one of the most famous women in Islamic history. She was gifted with outstanding intelligence and memory, and is considered to be one of the most reliable narrators of ahadith of the Prophet (sal Allahu alaihi wa sallam).

 

 

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