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International Women’s Day Celebrated in Somaliland

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HARGEISA, 14 March 2010 (Somalilandpress) – As in every year on March 8th—International Women’s Day—the Academy supported Moonlight Girls Association, a Borama-based non-governmental girls’ organisation, to organise and facilitate a commemorative event for this global celebration at Rays Hotel of Borama, the capital city of Somaliland’s Awdal region.

The event, which has been gaining national significance thanks to the contribution of local initiatives, was well-organised much to the delight of all in attendance. Bands of beautiful girls draped in the national flag opened the celebration with a remarkable rendition of Somaliland’s national anthem.

Awdal’s regional and district authorities including the mayor of the city, Mr. Abriahman Shideh Bileh were among the dignitaries attending the event. Also in attendance were: Interpeace’s regional focal point for gender mainstreaming, Mrs. Nuria Abdi; respected women leaders in the community; women representatives of the three political parties; and, students from Borame’s Amoud and ELLO American Universities.

Speaking at the event, the mayor of Borame Mr. Abdirahman Shideh said “Today we are celebrating women, the backbone of our society.” Excited, the mayor reinforced his point by asserting the famous adage “Behind every great man, there is a great woman.”

Moonlight’s chairwoman followed the mayor’s speech with a presentation of that illustrated the organisation’s activities and challenges faced in particular on women’s advocacy.

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The event was concluded with a debate in which a panel of women—one from the Diaspora, two university graduates and one presently attending university—discussed why young girls are less likely to enrol in school than their young male counterparts. The panel stimulated an active and heated debate on the social, economic and cultural challenges that the young girls in this country face in either enrolling in schools or further pursuing their education.

Borame was not the only Somaliland city celebrating this important day. The Ministry of Family Affairs and Social Welfare (MFA&SW) collaborated with NEGAAD and SONYO, women and youth umbrellas respectively, in hosting an event at Hargeisa’s “Garden of Liberty”. High ranking officials from the government including the Minister of Youth and Sports were among the delegates attending this event.

Celebrations, however, did not stop there, as Hargeisa’s Ambassador Hotel was the site of further commemorative event also hosted by the MFA&SW. The highly anticipated event brought together authorities from the government and leaders of opposition parties as well as the Speaker of the House of Representatives.

International Women’s Day is celebrated around the globe since 1977

Contributed by:
Adnan Abdi Hassan
Hargeisa, Somaliland

2010 Fiscal Year: A Time To Remember The Late CA, Ali Gulaid

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HARGEISA, 15 March 2010 (Somalilandpress) – It was a sunny morning; I went to Crown Hotel in the west side of Hargeisa. I had, in that place, an appointment with Ali Gulaid (may Allah bless him).

It was now fifteen minutes before the appointment time. I sat in one of the huts in the hotel and asked a waiter walking there in my sight to get a cup of lipton tea and a small bottle of water for me. As I was sitting for a while, I saw a well-dressed, tall and slim man with a cow-boy-like hat, a black paper file and an eye glass. He was now stepping towards me. Because, he did not see me before, I stood up with an open face and a smiling to show him that I am the one with whom he had the appointment.

We shook the hands gently. As we greeted each other and were about to sit down, three men came us and greeted Ali. They had a joke with him. One of the men told Ali that he heard Ali’s father to joke a something, which Ali and the men all laughed at. The man added that Ali’s father was very social and compassionate.

After the men left us, we kept on our conversation. I at first briefed him on my education and how I am going to shape my academic future. I handed over the outline and contents of my research paper to him. He took his eye glass which at that time lied on the table and had a glance at it. He focused on the technicality and the coherence of the paper. He rejoiced saying to me ‘this is the standard of writing a final year paper’. Ali did not expect that students in the local universities could write such a proper, well-mannered paper. (By this I do not mean that my paper was perfect but on the contrary, it was a common paper that is written by any ordinary pupil)

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Getting down to the gist of my article, I could today say that my remembrance of Ali Gulaid results from the fiscal time of 2010 in which the central government still did not submit its budget to the parliament for approval. Ali Gulaid (may Allah bless him) used to portray a scientific analysis and critique about the Rayale’s administration financial plans. One of the notable remarks, he used to demonstrate was the failure of the government to come up with responsive and workable national budget through which it can develop the nation and respond to the socio-economic needs of Somaliland. To quote Ali’s last 2009 Budget Critique: The revenue of any budget is an educated guess based upon projections of the current, past and of course the future economic conditions. When the revenue to be received is estimated, the expenditure is decided upon the needs. In this stage of determining the expenditure to be incurred, prioritization of the existing needs is an important factor. This professional and conventional practice does not appear in minister Awil’s proposal.

It is obvious from this 2009 government budget that there are misstatements and intended errors. It is not only this year but every year there are many errors and deceptions in the budget. For example, the people with disabilities and orphans of SNM veterans are allocated for an impossible amount which is not given to them. The allocations for the presidential palace utility expenses and the industry society trainings are counterfeit (see below for more description) Therefore, I will hereby analyzing the Rayale’s Administration Budget Proposal to the parliament. What critique could be made against it? It is reflecting from the national socio-economic needs? It is correct, complete, consistent and accurate?

Let us eventually ask my precious readers, who is to fill the gap, and keep the constructive criticism on in order to awake our unorganized government? Is it suitable to leave this indispensable practice alone and forget about telling those who are in charge of handling our interests about our needs? Are there not heroes who are committed to take that responsibility over his/her shoulders?

I am sure that there uncountable number of intellectuals and heroes like Ali who have the same feelings and patriotism. I believe that heroes never die. By this I do mean, the state of heroism lasts for ever.

Written by:
Saeed Mohamed Ahmed
Youth activist,
saeedalimizy@hotmail.com
Hargeisa, Somaliland

___________________________________________________________________________________________
Views expressed in the opinion articles are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of the editorial

East Africa is next hot oil zone

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NAIROBI,  (Somalilandpress) — East Africa is emerging as the next oil boom following a big strike in Uganda’s Lake Albert Basin. Other oil and natural gas reserves have been found in Tanzania and Mozambique and exploration is under way in Ethiopia and even war-torn Somalia.

The region, until recently largely ignored by the energy industry, is “the last real high-potential area in the world that hasn’t been fully explored,” says Richard Schmitt, chief executive officer of Dubai’s Black Marlin Energy, which is prospecting in East Africa.

The discovery at Lake Albert, in the center of Africa between Uganda and the Democratic Republic of Congo, is estimated to contain the equivalent of several billion barrels of oil. It is likely to be the biggest onshore field found south of the Sahara Desert in two decades.

Tullow Oil, the British exploration company backed by a $1.4 billion loan from the Royal Bank of Scotland, says its Ngassa field in Uganda may be the biggest find in the Lake Albert Basin to date with up to 600 million barrels.

Tullow has discovered reserves equivalent to around 2 billion barrels of oil in Uganda in the last four years. Most of the initial finds in East Africa were made by independent wildcatters like Tullow and another British firm, Heritage Oil, run by former mercenary Tony Buckingham.

Now the majors are moving in. Heritage recently sold its 50 percent share in two Lake Albert Basin fields to Eni of Italy for $1.5 billion.

Eni said the two blocks have the potential to produce 1 billion barrels and is fighting it out with Tullow for control of the reserves on the Ugandan side of Lake Albert.

The Italian company is busy expanding in sub-Saharan Africa and has interests in Angola, Nigeria, Gabon, Mozambique and the Republic of Congo.

The Ugandan government is negotiating with several majors with the financial clout to handle the enormous investment required to develop these emerging fields.

Front-runners reportedly include China’s state-run CNOOC, Total of France and Exxon Mobil of the United States.

Andarko Petroleum Corp. of Texas says it has hit a giant natural gas field off the coast of Mozambique, a former Portuguese colony that became independent in 1975. Norway’s Statoil is drilling in Mozambique’s Rovuma Basin.

Since the 2006 find at Lake Albert, one of the Great Lakes of Africa strung out along the Great Rift Valley, there have been at least 15 confirmed major strikes in the region.

The Indian Ocean island of Madagascar contains “enormous reserves,” according to Tiziana Luzzi-Arbouille of IHS Global Insight consultancy of London.

“What happened in Uganda made it easier for smaller companies to raise funding,” said Tewodros Ashenafi, head of Southwest Energy, an Ethiopian company exploring in the Ogaden Basin in the east of the country.

This is a vast 135,000-square-mile territory in landlocked Ethiopia that is believed to contain sizable reserves of oil. It is estimated to hold 4 trillion cubic feet of natural gas as well.
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Malaysia’s Petronas, which recently acquired major blocks in Iraq, signed an exploration agreement with Addis Ababa in August 2007.

The main problem for the oil industry is that the Ogaden, like many parts of Africa, is a conflict zone, as it has been pretty much since the Cold War in the 1970s. This is one reason why exploration has been so tardy.

Separatist rebels of the Ogaden National Liberation Front have warned oil companies to keep away and in April 2007 attacked a Chinese exploration group, killing 74 people.

Petronas is also exploring in the Gambella Basin of western Ethiopia.

Somalia has been torn by wars between feuding militias and clans since dictator Siad Barre was toppled in 1991 but it is also considered to hold considerable oil reserves.

A 1993 study by Petroconsultants of Geneva concluded that Somalia has two of the most potentially interesting hydrocarbon-yielding basins in the entire region — one in the central Mudugh region, the other in the Gulf of Aden.

That was one of 10 such basins across Somalia, southeast Ethiopia and northeast Kenya.

More recent analyses indicate that Somalia could have reserves of up to 10 billion barrels.

But exploration remains an extremely hazardous undertaking. And it’s likely to become more so as the country becomes a major focus for U.S. counter-terrorism operations against al-Qaida and its affiliates who are dug in there.

Source: UPI, 14th March 2010

SOMALIA: "British Couple Wounded" – Pirates

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MOGADISHU, (Somalilandpress) — Somaliland MP said he has received information that one of the British couple held in Somalia was seriously wounded by the Somali pirates after a gun-battle, Somalilandpress reports.

Speaking by phone, spokesman of the militia, Mr. Ali Gedow told Somaliland MP, Mr. Ahmed Mohamed, that Rachel Chandlers has been shot and in a serious condition after rival militia groups fought over the couples.

The spokesman did not give any further details however he said he was going to check on her condition but never returned. Since then several attempts to call him back later failed after he did not answer the number he called from.

“I’ve been trying to call him since we spoke but he is not responding to my calls,” Ahmed said. “I do not know what happened to him,” he added.

Mr. Ahmed Mohamed managed to speak with Rachel last month through one of the captives who then continuously call Mr. Ahmed for the issue concerning the hostages. This came after the Somaliland MP made an appeal to the Somali militia to release the British couples.
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Mr. Ahmed said he did not get any support from the British government regarding the two elderly couples and appeals to the pirates in the past month to free the Chandlers has felt on deaf-ears. He told Somalilandpress, that during his discussion with the kidnappers, he made it clear that he was doing this as a humanitarian purpose and he has no intention of paying them any ransom.

It is not clear if Rachel is really wounded or if it is a game from the captors to again get the attention of the world to get paid for the release of the couple.

The British couple, Rachel and Paul Chandlers, from Tunbridge Wells, Kent were kidnapped four months ago by Somali pirates while sailing at sea off the Seychelles on their way to Tanzania.

You can listen to Mr. Ahmed and the rest of the interview (Somali):
[audio:nacnac.mp3]

Somalilandpress, 14th March 2010

SOMALIA: Tensions high in Bossaso as president shakes up intelligence agency

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BOSSASO (Somalilandpress) — Tensions are said to be high in Bossaso, the commercial hub of Puntland, after a sudden shake up at the top echelon of Somalia’s semi-autonomous region’s security establishment.

Puntland President Abdirahman Mohamed “Farole” issued a presidential decree, dated March 12th, ordering the replacement of the former chairman of Puntland Intelligence Service (PIS), Osman Diana, and appointing Qardho based, Col. Ali Mohamed Yusuf “Binge”.

The president also added that the agency has been renamed Puntland Intelligence Agency and Puntland Security Force ( PIA/PSF).

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According to local reports, Mr Osman refused to step-down and has since seized full control of PIS’s second office in Lanta Hawada neighborhood in the port city of Bossaso.

The reports added that forces loyal to Osman Diana have imposed a curfew in parts of the city over night while shutting off electricity.

The reports added that Mr Farole is concerned about PIS’s independent role and wants the agency directly under the government. Mr Farole also accuses the agency of abusing it’s powers because of foreign influences, including illegal arrests.

It is not clear how the issue will be resolved or if Mr Osman Diana will step down.

The PIS, which functions independently was established almost a decade ago and is considered the most powerful institution in Puntland. The PIS is said to receive at least 50 per cent of Puntland’s annual income as well as funds from Western intelligence services.

Mr Osman Diana was appointed as the head of the agency by the former Puntland leader, Gen. Muse Adde and was the chairman since 2004.

Somalilandpress, 14th March 2010

Somaliland: Telcom Job Vacancy "SOFTWARE ENGINEER / PROGRAMMER"

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SOFTWARE ENGINEER / PROGRAMMER

Job Title Software Programmer / Analyst Division/Department Information Technology
Salary Grade/Band   Reports to Head of IT Department
Location / Based in Hargeisa (Somaliland) Position IT Executive
Opening Date   Closing Date  

SUMMARY

U-Tell FZC is looking for young, talented, analytical software engineer / programmer for their Information Technology division. Short listed candidate will have to perform variety of software development and programming assignments.

Required knowledge and skills must have good practical understanding of object oriented concepts, Web Services, Socket Programming, Interface Programming, and Database Programming with experience of implementation in Java.

.NET (ASP.NET/VB.NET/C#) and, Visual Basic 6. Candidate must have good practical skills in web applications development.

Experience of Telecom IT Applications (Billing, Rating, Mediation, CRM) etc. is plus

PRIMARY RESPONSIBILITIES

1.      Code, test and troubleshoot programs utilizing the appropriate hardware, database, and programming technology.

2.      Refine data and format into final product.

3.      Maintain and modify programs; make approved changes by amending flow charts and design documents, develop detailed programming logic, and coding changes.

4.      Test and develop programming modifications.

5.      Write new program code using prescribed specifications.

6.      Evaluate simple interrelationships between programs such as whether a contemplated change in one part of a program would cause unwanted results in a related part.

7.      Analyze performance of programs and take action to correct deficiencies based on consultation with users and approval of supervisor.

8.      Confer with users to gain understanding of business requirements. Resolve questions of program intent, data input, output requirements, and inclusion of internal checks and controls.

9.      Write and maintain programming documentation.

10.  Assist personnel of other departments as a computer resource.

11.  Evaluate business requirement with respect to the defined business processes

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REQUIREMENTS

The programmer must have 3+ years’ experience with:

·        Visual Basic .NET / C# / ASP.NET and Visual Basic 6, including the use of program “classes” and creation of DLL’s

·        SQL Server databases, SQL 2000/05/08, ADO.NET, Data Access Classes.

·        Web Services, Windows Services

·        Windows 2003 Server and Windows XP / Vista / Windows 7

·        SourceSafe, Crystal Reports, SQL Server Reporting Services

·        Microsoft Project or Rational Rose.

Knowledge of following protocols and data formats is desired:

·        ASN. 1, Binary Data, ASCII, XML based markup formats

·        SS7 Signaling, SMPP 3.4, SNMP, HTTP, FTP, SOAP, CORBA,

Experience with the following is desirable but not required:

·        MS Word, MS Excel, MS Exchange

·        Networking/LANs, TCP/IP protocol

·        Software for home infusion/pharmacy/medical operations or billing/claims.

WORKING CONDITIONS

Working conditions are normal for an office environment. Duty requires extensive work using a computer. Responsibilities may require evening and weekend work in response to needs of the systems being supported.

Location Office is the Jigjiga-yar Filage near SUNSHINE SCHOOL Over that Contacta US:- These Phone’s and E-mail’s

65200021 telcom

4428087 telesom or

E-mail: abdinasir@telcomsomaliland.com

 

Send your C.V Following Addresses
jobs@utellfzc.com
+252 65200360
+252 65200021
+ 252 65200011

Abdinasir D. Guled
NSS, IN, |& SMSC  Manager
Telcom Hargeisa
Mob:    +252-65200021
Office: + 252-2-300071
E-mail: Guled_cabdi@ Hotmail.com
abdasir2009@gmail.com
abdinasir@telcomsomaliland.com
Location: Now in Hargeisa.

SOMALIA: Twenty killed in Mogadishu fighting

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At least 20 civilians were killed and scores wounded after fighting between Islamist insurgents and the Somali government forces erupted in the Somali capital, Mogadishu. Rebels have stepped up attacks in various parts of the city in recent weeks and government forces have responded with shelling.

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SOMALILAND: Somaliland's Healer of Women

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Edna Adan Ismail had wanted to build a hospital since she was 11 years old. Today, her facility in Hargeisa saves women’s lives every day—and has reduced the maternal mortality rate by one-fourth.

As an 11-year-old growing up in Somaliland, then a British protectorate, Edna Adan Ismail had a powerful dream. “I wanted to build a hospital,” she recalls. “One that my father would like.” Edna’s dad was a widely beloved but overworked doctor in a poorly equipped government hospital with little medicine, and she lent a hand when she could. “My playground was the hospital,” she says, “and my father was my hero. I’d cut up sheets for bandages, wash the forceps. I wished I knew more to be able to help him out.”

“I sold everything I had, recycled my whole life. I am just a crazy old lady!”

It took more than half a century, but her dream has come gloriously true. The Edna Adan University Hospital in Hargeisa has just celebrated its eighth birthday–a 50-bed facility that is the largest privately built hospital in Somaliland. And it wasn’t just Ismail’s money that made it happen. “Every brick that was laid, every nail that was pounded, I was there,” she says proudly. “I sold everything I had, recycled my whole life. I am just a crazy old lady!”

Hardly. Despite her own privileged circumstances, young Edna faced the same discrimination that kept the entire region’s women down: no schools for girls. “It wasn’t right to teach a girl,” she said, explaining the tradition. “They thought nothing good would come of it. Who would ever want to marry a girl who read and wrote?” So the child who was so taken with medicine—“I saw my first birth and my first death before I was a teen. I felt I’d been given a small peephole into what the world looked like”—was sent away to school, and ultimately became the first female in her country to win a scholarship to England. There she studied nursing and midwifery, and came back home in 1961 as the first qualified Somali nurse-midwife. That’s the first ever.
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Once again she had to confront centuries of bias against girls. “I would ask them to come help me register the patients, and I’d have to get permission from their fathers. They’d say, ‘I don’t want my girl to work in a hospital and catch diseases.’ Or, ‘Will she be working with men?’” Slowly, Ismail prevailed.

Even as her life expanded into the public realm—her husband became Somaliland’s prime minister–she continued to work in another hospital, proudly donning her uniform to teach and to deliver babies. “I was teaching the young women how to talk to patients, to pregnant women, to respect human rights and dignity.”

Revolution interrupted her work, and she spent several decades with the United Nations. By the time she returned to Somaliland in 1997 and started building the hospital, she was so well respected, she joined the new government, ultimately becoming Foreign Minister. Today, she says with confidence, “I am my own minister.” But she continues to work for her people, training, in addition to nurse-midwives, lab technicians and the first pharmacists in her country. “The government isn’t doing it,” she tells me. “The biggest gift I want to leave behind is not a building, but the skills I leave with the women. I want to train 1,000 midwives.”

Her progress so far is astounding. Since the hospital opened, they have delivered more than 9,500 women and lost only 39. “That’s 39 too many,” she laments, nonetheless delighted that they have reduced the maternal mortality rate by one-fourth. In 1988, the last time a study was done, there were 160 deaths per 10,000 births in Somaliland, making it the third worst in the world. “Women are dying of complications nobody is picking up,” she explains. “Because nobody is there to support them, care for them, or deliver them. They are getting infected, torn apart. No woman should die of childbirth, because modern obstetrics has ways to save them.” The challenge: “ignorance, poverty, and harmful traditions.”

Those are also the culprits in her other lifelong cause: ending the practice now called Female Genital Mutilation. When she started speaking out–to the embarrassment of her husband–it was simply Female Circumcision. “No one would talk about it then. I was the first Somali woman to pick up a microphone.” And despite all the publicity in recent years she says, “We have not cracked the surface of it. I am giving out a document at the conference showing a new survey of 4.000 women. Of them, 97 percent, shamefully, had been cut. After 34 years of campaigning. We’re nowhere near winning that battle.”

But Edna Adan Ismail takes comfort that now, “we have the whole world talking about it, it’s out of the closet.” And she’s working on a new project, a picture book in the Somali language to illustrate the pros and cons (with emphasis on the cons) of the practice.

“It will be one more gun that we haven’t used before,” she announces with confidence.

Crazy old lady, indeed.

by Lynn Sherr

Lynn Sherr is a former ABC News correspondent, author of Failure Is Impossible: Susan B. Anthony in Her Own Words and Tall Blondes, a book about giraffes. She is also co-editor of Peter Jennings: A Reporter’s Life. Her most recent book, a memoir—Outside the Box: My Unscripted Life of Love, Loss and Television News—is out in paperback.

Source: The Daily Beast, 13th March 2010

US Has No Plan To "Americanize" Somalia Conflict

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Washington, 12 March 2010 (Somalilandpress) – The United States on Friday denied coordinating plans by Somalia’s embattled government to launch an offensive against Islamist fighters, saying it had no plans to “Americanize” the conflict.

Assistant Secretary of State Johnnie Carson described as inaccurate reports suggesting that U.S. officials were ready to get more militarily involved as Somalia’s government fights the Islamist al Shabaab, which has been linked to al Qaeda.

“The United States does not plan, does not direct, and does not coordinate the military operations of the TFG (transitional federal government) and we have not and will not be providing direct support for any potential military offensives,” Carson said.

Carson told a news briefing the United States had provided limited military support to the transitional government, but that almost all of this was channeled through an African Union peacekeeping effort.

Al Shabaab Islamist fighters attacked government positions this week seeking to seize the advantage before a long-awaited government offensive to drive them out of Mogadishu, the capital.

Somalia has lacked an effective central government for 19 years. Western and neighboring countries say it has become a sanctuary for militants.

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Carson said the United States had provided about $185 million over the last 19 months to support African Union peacekeepers and about $12 million in direct support to the Somali transitional government.

“The amounts of money that we’re talking about are really relatively small,” he said. Funds were spent on communications equipment, uniforms, and to support training of government soldiers by other African countries.

The United States also provides about $150 million in food aid to Somalia. This has been complicated by a U.N. World Food Program’s decision to suspend work in much of southern Somalia due to threats against staff and al Shabaab demands for payments for security.

Carson said the United States continued to seek an “inclusive” political resolution to Somalia’s crisis and believed that the transitional government, which only controls a portion of Mogadishu, was best placed to promote one.

“The TFG has demonstrated an enormous capacity to survive,” he said.

Source: Reuters

More Than 50 Killed in Somalia Fighting

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Mogadishu, 12 March 2010 (Somalilandpress) – Heavy fighting continued to rock Somalia capital of Mogadishu for the third day running, the fighting is between the Somalia insurgent group of Al- Shabab and the transitional federal government troops allied to Sheikh Sheriff Sheikh Ahmed administration.

The total number of deaths reported as at now stand at 50 and the casualties has reached 100 and more are still being reported. Witnesses sat that heavy shelling and gunfire between Al-Shabab and government forces in the north of the capital.

The war started in Wardigley district near the Somalia capital Mogadishu, sources say.

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Other towns that have witnessed the heavy fighting include Hawl-wadag, Wardigley, Hodan and most of the areas were the mortars targeted were the different sections of Bakara market.

The UN estimates that 3.7 million Somalis, approximately half of the country’s population are in dire need of humanitarian assistance.

Somalia has been without a functional government since former President Siad Bare was toppled by Mogadishu warlords.

Reported by:
Abdulaziz Billow Ali
Nairobi, Kenya