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Fanatics' return to city feared.

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(SomalilandPress)One of the most visible leaders of an Al Qaeda-affiliated terrorist militia in Somalia spent a year in Toronto ingratiating himself into the Somali immigrant community as a convert to Islam.

Omar Hammami – known to followers as Abu Mansour “Al-Amriki” (the American) – ate at Somali restaurants and prayed in Somali mosques. He married a Toronto woman of Somali origin and had a daughter with her.

Then, after learning Somali ways, he left to join the Horn of Africa’s top terror group, Al-Shabab, to wage Islamic jihad and recruit other foreign nationals to the cause, say former friends and relatives speaking publicly of the terrorist’s Toronto connections for the first time.

“He betrayed us,” says a former friend who worked with Hammami at a Weston Rd. pizzeria. “For a man to be saying that, Islamically, it is okay to be killing innocent people – and yesterday you fed him bread and welcomed him into your houses – it kind of shatters you.”

Five ethnic Somali men disappeared from Scarborough this fall, all friends believed recruited into Al-Shabab. Three are said by family associates to have since phoned home from Somalia. No direct connection to Hammami is known but in the Somali community his Internet postings are notorious.

On a 2008 recruitment video, referring to one of his dead fighters, Hammami says, “We need more like him.

“So if you can encourage more of your children and more of your neighbours, anyone around, to send people like him to this jihad, it would be a great asset for us.”

A least 20 young men have left Minneapolis, Minn., for Al-Shabab in the last 18 months. One of them is confirmed to have blown himself up with a car bomb in the Somali port town of Bosasso. Five others are said by relatives to be dead.

Other young men have left from Boston, Columbus, San Diego and Seattle. Others have joined from Australia and the United Kingdom.

The suicide bomber who killed three government ministers and at least 16 others at a graduating ceremony for doctors and engineers last month in Mogadishu was recruited from Denmark.

Hammami himself is said to have been wounded in fighting late last year.

Al-Shabab’s stated goals are to take power from the fragile government backed by African Union troops and turn Somalia into an Islamic state friendly to Al Qaeda. Ultimately, its leaders say, the aim is to establish a global Islamic state.

“We are striving to establish the Islaamic Khilaafah from East to West,” Hammami writes in an Internet posting of Jan. 8, 2008, “after removing the occupier and killing the apostates.”

For Torontonians, al-Shabab recruitment presents another terrifying possibility: A fanatic returns to explode himself in a crowd.

Or as RCMP Commissioner William Elliott put it in October: “The potential follow-on threat is Somali-Canadians who travel to Somalia to fight and then return, imbued with both extremist ideology and the skills necessary to translate it into direct action.”

Omar Hammami is 25 years old. He grew up in Daphne, Ala., just outside Mobile.

His mother is Baptist by religion. His father is Shafik Hammami, a Syrian-born engineer with the Alabama transportation department and president of the Islamic Society of Mobile. Reached by phone last week, he refused comment.

Although Hammami grew up Baptist, he converted to Islam in the late 1990s while attending Daphne High School.

“He had tons of friends,” fellow student Shellie Brooks told Fox News four months ago, “and of course things changed a bit when he converted because his beliefs changed.”

In September 2001, Hammami had just started computer science studies at the University of South Alabama – and been elected head of the Muslim Student Association – when Al Qaeda launched its suicide attacks on the United States.

“It’s difficult to believe a Muslim could have done this,” he told the campus newspaper at the time.

At the end of 2002, he dropped out of school.

How he spent the next two years is not known but in the fall of 2004 he arrived in Toronto from Ohio, says one of his best friends from the period.

“He was interested in finding a large Muslim community,” says the friend, a Somalia-born Torontonian who asks to be identified only as Abdi, because he says he fears Al-Shabab.

Of any Toronto immigrant community, the city’s 80,000 Somalis are the most visibly Muslim, he says, especially the women who copiously cover themselves.

Together, Abdi and Hammami took jobs briefly at a dairy distribution company. Afterward they moved to 1 Pizza & Fish & Chips, on Weston Rd. north of Lawrence Ave. W.

“I became very close to him,” Abdi says. “We talked a lot about religion. I knew a lot of his beliefs and ideology.”

Hammami considered himself a Salafi Muslim, seeking to practise Islam as people did in the seventh and eighth centuries. But he was not extremist, Abdi says.

“The man I knew did not believe in suicide bombings,” he says. “He did not believe in carrying weapons and fighting among the Muslims. He did not believe in calling people disbelievers just because they had a dispute with you.”

On the other hand, Hammami was “easily irritated,” the former friend recalls.

“There was one incident at the pizza place when a Somali singer placed a (concert) poster in the window,” he says. “In a split second, (Hammami) removed it.

“To me, that is immaturity, not extremism,” Abdi says. “Rather, he should ask permission to the owner saying, `You know, brother, (music and partying) is not according to tradition.'”

At some point early on, at an Islamic conference, Hammami met Sadiyo Mohamed Abdille. He was 20, she was 18.

“His face, it was a bit fanatic,” recalls Mohamed Salad, the girl’s father, of the day Hammami asked permission to marry her.

Salad despises fanatics. In Somalia, he rose to become an army colonel under military dictator Siad Barre. He was training in San Antonio, Texas, when Barre was ousted in 1991 and with no reason to return home Salad came to Toronto.

“If we had been in Somalia, I would have refused (permission to marry),” says Salad, now a coffee house owner on Lawrence Ave. W. “But I thought, `This is Canada. I am Canadian. Daughters decide what they like.'”

In June 2005, the couple left for Cairo. Hammami told people he wanted to study Islam at Al-Azar University.

That summer the baby was born. In September, Hammami told his wife they were going to Somalia but she balked. She phoned her father, who helped her and the baby return to Toronto.

Speaking for the woman, Scarborough lawyer Faisal Kutty would say only that his client legally separated from Hammami in June 2007, has had no contact with him for more than two years and “has fully co-operated with Canadian intelligence officials on this.”
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The RCMP, CSIS and Canada Border Services Agency refused comment on the case, other than to say, in the words of a CSIS spokesperson, “We are well aware of the situation in Somalia and its impact on Canada.”

Hammami arrived in Mogadishu in late 2005, only to be arrested as a spy by leaders of the Islamic Courts Union, says Abdi, who has been tracking his former friend through personal networks.

But Hammami’s credentials checked out. The Union, on its way to controlling much of the south in 2006, assigned him to its youth wing – Al-Shabab. Its leader, Aden Hashi Ayrow, sent him to Raas Kamboni training camp at the Kenyan border.

“He began to rise in the ranks,” Abdi says. (A U.S. air strike killed Ayrow on May 1, 2008.)

In October 2007, Hammami appeared, his face covered, on an Al Jazeera TV report, still accessible on YouTube, about Al-Shabab’s and Al Qaeda’s “common goal.” The report identified him as fighter and military instructor “Abu Mansour the American.”

In May 2008, he starred in a 31-minute Al-Shabab video, face plainly visible, leading what he called an ambush against invading Ethiopian troops near the south-central city of Baidoa.

“The only reason we are staying here away from our families, away from the cities, away from, you know, ice, candy bars, all these other things, is because we are ready to meet with the enemy,” he tells his fighters, presumably English-speaking foreigners like himself.

In April 2009, the ambush video went mainstream. Fox News and other media outlets reported on it. In September, Al-Amriki was identified as Hammami, prompting his indictment in Alabama on terrorism charges.

By then, Hammami had issued an anti-Western diatribe called “The Beginning of the End,” still on YouTube, his answer to U.S. President Barack Obama’s Cairo speech, “A New Beginning.” Human rights, Hammami claimed, go against Islamic traditions such as stoning, cutting off hands and giving a woman no choice but to wear a headscarf.

Also by then, Kenya’s Daily Nation had reported that “Abu Mansur al-Meriki” had become No. 2 commander of an Al-Shabab unit of 180 foreign fighters led by Kenyan national Saleh Nabhan. (A U.S. helicopter raid killed Nabhan on Sept. 16 near Barawe.)

In September, an undated Al-Shabab video “At Your Service, Osama,” showed Hammami leading military exercises.

Abdi says he heard in October that Hammami had been fighting near the Ethiopian border, and is recovering in hospital from bullet wounds and mental problems.

In Toronto two weeks ago, the Somali Canadian National Council brought together 150 community members to condemn Al-Shabab recruitment in Toronto.

“Until now we’ve been afraid to speak out,” the group’s president Abdurahman “Hosh” Jibril said in an interview. “Now we’ve reached the point of no return.”

Kawnayn “U.K.” Hussein, host of “Midnimo (Unity)” Thursdays at 10 p.m. on Radio AM530, provided key research for this story.

Source: Thestar

YOUTH: The Ambassador of Future

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Many times, when asked about youth and the true meaning it has, brains may go void. Impossibility is that we could not find a common understanding of what it is all about.

I am surprised when I see someone as old as forty-five claiming to be youth! If our forty-five is still youth, what about our twenties! Doesn’t it mean, “youth has no age” as Pablo Picasso once said? However, my concern is not to define youth nor to pin-point their life-long gains, but rather to shed some  light on the challenges youth of today face almost all the time.

Youth is such a treasure to our nation. We could imagine how aching it is when we lose the things we hold dear of which youth is the number one. The tragic incident that took place in Hotel Shambo has touched my feelings so much so that I thought I was among those killed. It completely left me traumatized.
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While I was reading the coverings about that unpleasant moment, I came across the headline, “They Killed My Hope“. Once I finished the whole story narrated by Hawa Siyaad, the mother of a 24-year-old final year medical student, it was like watching a horror movie. This very agony has engulfed her first-born baby. Her only light was snuffed out and was butchered on her witness. What so heartbreaking! Young people are ended such unholy ways nowadays.

Likewise, thousands of our young people dreaming of better life abroad often drowned in oceans around Africa. Their flesh and bones have been favorable food to sharks and barracudas. These youth whom we believe in are the candle of tomorrow’s darkness but they simply risk their lives and run away from their homelands in search of the  “American Dream”. They are mostly young men and women who lost hope and direction in life.

Little do they realize that their destiny has already been written by Allah and whatsoever they dream to have is under His command. We are shamefully alerted by the crocodile tears we shed for our loved ones. It has just been like this for the last two decades. This is not permissible whilst there is humanity that teaches us to feel for one another.

More emphatically, there are so many other problems that youth of today face from day to day bases that need to be addressed urgently. It will not be unfair if I say youth have lost trust in the older generations but I will say this, the youth of today lack role models and voices to represent them. If it would have been there, say one or two, then they are not with us today. The cream has traveled the furthest of distance and lives in the other corners of the world. Truth be told, youth have rarely seen a perfect role models in our society in today’s generation.

More so, this reminds me of another story. Happiness is to my Kenyan classmate who recounted his success story in writing with me as he is about to publish his first book, “The Power of Thinking Big“. He once told me, “the pens and pads will no longer matter much unless we find decent role models whom we put our trust and surrender for help.”

By the way, this is not an extraordinary example, but the paramount of him per se, is that the part models played in his life has shaped almost his way of thinking. On the contrary, a good number of Somali youth are taking the bitterness of what they call role models, the warlords and the like.

Notwithstanding, we always blame “everyone” for our bafflement and shortcomings in life. Our scapegoat is the government which we accuse for not providing us decent jobs and lazy lifestyle. To me, this is not very true because there has never been a government in the history of mankind that has employed her all populace. That is impracticality! It is only here in Africa that we think our governments as source of income when in fact the matter is totally different.

In conclusion, we need to be little bit more creative and join hands together in order for us to we work for the betterment of ourselves and that of our country.

Let’s embrace our old generation, show them respect and that we can dream big and think beyond the imagination’s reach. Let’s prove that we can accomplish a near miracle goals in life. Let’s all stop the excuses that there will be a “coming hour”. What a “coming hour” youth? We all know in no doubt that life’s choices are limited. Here, there are only two options: to either choose to live in prosperity or poverty. Remember the decision is yours. So take the right one my dear youth and hopefully the light will shine on us on the end of the tunnel and our country will be forever grateful to our generation.

By Abdikadir D. Askar (exclusive to Somalilandpress), 4 January 2010

Abdikadir D. Askar is a youth activist based in Uganda. He writes both in English and Somali. He wrote about political and social matters thus far. He can be reached at siraskar@live.com.

Askar

Cartoonist’s Would-be Killer Targeted Clinton

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NAIROBI, 4 January 2010 (Somalilandpress) – The Danish-Somali man arrested for attempting to kill a Danish cartoonist was arrested in Kenya last year on suspicion of plotting an attack on visiting US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. He was, however, released without any charges being filed and deported to Denmark.

Denmark’s second largest newspaper, Politiken, reported in its Sunday editions that the Danish intelligence services knew the 28-year-old Somalia-born man was held in Kenya on terrorism related charges last September.

But Denmark’s ambassador to Kenya, Bo Jensen, told the news agency Ritzau the man was arrested in Kenya for immigration offences. He said Kenyan authorities never told the embassy he was suspected in any terror plot.

Danish police are investigating reports that the man, who was shot twice after entering the home of cartoonist Kurt Westergaard while armed with an axe, was deported from Kenya last September shortly after Mrs Clinton’s visit for the Agoa conference.

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The suspect was on Saturday charged with attempted murder, wheeled into the Aarhus court on a stretcher, covered with white hospital blankets and with a towel around his head to prevent him from being recognised. Remand judge Kristian Richter has issued an injunction against naming the man and has remanded him in custody for four weeks, two of which are to be in isolation.

According to politiken.dk’s reporter at the scene, the 28-year-old was weak and pleaded not guilty to the two counts of attempted manslaughter brought against him. He is described as having a crew-cut and with a small goatee. His arm was in a thick bandage and his leg in a splint.

Special safe

Westergaard told his employer, the Jyllands-Posten daily, that he had locked himself and the grandchild in a special safe room as the intruder shouted “revenge” and “blood” and tried to smash his way into the house. “My grandchild did fine,” he told the newspaper. “It was scary. It was close. Really close. But we did it.”

Mr Westergaard incited widespread outrage in the Islamic community after publishing cartoons considered derogatory to the religion. He has since had to live under police escort.

Politiken reported operatives in the Danish Security and Intelligence services had confirmed that the suspect is the same man who was arrested in Kenya by Anti-Terrorism Police Unit (ATPU) detectives on suspicion of a plot against Mrs Clinton.

He was reportedly sent back to Denmark after the ATPU detectives did not find evidence to charge him in court. According to the man’s passport, he was in the country on a two-month tourist visa and had been on holiday in Nairobi and Mombasa before he was arrested and detained briefly.

The suspect in Danish custody was arrested in Kenya at about the time security services revealed a planned terror attack on installations including two five star hotels in Nairobi targeting foreigners.

Source: Daily Nation

SOMALILAND: New ministers sworn in

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HARGEISA (Somalilandpress) — The Somaliland Presidential spokesman, Mr Saed Adani Moge  issued a press release on Monday endorsing a government reshuffle that saw nine ministers joining President Dahir Rayale’s team, as incumbent ministers were replaced.

The nine ministers were sworn in before the President and Vice President by the Chief Justice of the High Court, Mr Mohamed Hersi Omane.
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The government shake-up, which was expected in recent weeks, comes after a week when number of ministers past away while incumbent ministers were either entrusted with new portfolios or dismissed.

Ahmed Adan Ismael was offered the State Foreign Minister replacing, Mr Saed Mohamed Nur, who past away on Thursday night in Hargeisa.

Muse Abdi Mohamud takes over the Water and Mineral Resources portfolio replacing Mr Qasim sh Ibrahim, who died in November in Mecca [Makkah].

The other Ministers that were reappointed to fill other portfolios included:

Farhan Jama Ismael – State Interior Minister
Saleban Warsame Guled – Minister of Defense
Abdi Hersi Duale – State Fishery Minister
Abdi Yusuf Adan – Minister for Youth and Sports
Mohamed Yusuf Osman – Minister of Resettlement
Hussein Aynan Farah – Minister of Relations with Houses of Parliament
Mohamed Ahmed Farah – Deputy Tourism Minister

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Source: Somalilandpress, 4 January 2010

Burao: Steps Towards Development

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BURAO (Somalilandpress) — On 28 December 2009, Burao Local Authority has commenced a new project in which new asphalt roads will be implemented inside the city, these two roads will also connect east and west-main roads of the city.  It is the first time a project of this magnitude has been implemented in the city since the collapse of the former Somali military regime in 1991.

A number of equipments, including bulldozers, dump trucks and shove loaders were moved to north of city up to the newly appointed District of Qoyta, which is about 25km out side the main centre of Burao.

Prior to the selection of this location [Qoyta], the mayor of Burao, Mr Mohamud Ahmed Hassan surveyed various suburbs in the city to find a suitable location to house the workers and equipment.

While on a visit, I asked the mayor, how he plans begin the project.

In which he replied: “I just bought this bulldozer that arrived in pillaged condition from an individual. I searched for it’s spare parts, I found some parts from old scrapes of bulldozers and others I personally ordered them from Addis Ababa.  Once we completed building the bulldozer, we were able to clear the land for the roads.”

Mr Mohamoud said, his staff have prepaid every thing to make this project possible but he urged the residents, in particular the business community to help and contribute.

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The people of Burao explicitly appreciated the local authority’s commitment and vision for social and public services. Meanwhile the Mayor has been awarded a local excellence prize at Barqawo Hotel last night. Most of the workers at the mayor’s office are seen as active and  energetic staff who have great passion for their city and people.

Mr Ahmed, the Director of Finance also said Burao Municipality has expanded and rehabilitated a number of other roads that were either closed or too narrow for modern traffic.

It is worth noting that this project means great deal to the people of Burao as well as Somaliland because often this unrecognized republic lacks the financial and equipment to construct fully paved roads and similar infrastructure.

In addition to that, the city has progressed in different ways, merging new modern hotels and beautiful buildings which are erected in the heart of it, attraction, beauty and decoration of the city is expanded for example Barqaawo2 is one of fascinating buildings consist 3 upstairs containing Hotel, Restaurant, Meeting Halls and College, and also City Plaza Hotel is located east of Burao and Egal Hotel at North. And so many are employed

Finally it is my pleasure,  to call upon all citizens, living here and abroad to take a role in this project, which has proved to be difficult to implement by public institutions without the support of it’s people.  Similarly such improvement has been presented currently in capital city of Hargeisa, sharing with public and some residential areas, and they contributed imperative role in many roads.

The assumptions that Burao city is violent and divided is rather a deception. I have been here now nearly two months and I was proved wrong. There is sense of self-liberty, brotherhood and optimism in Burao. Burao is unique in comparison with other main cities that I had experience.

For instance Burao does not exploit donkey cart water carriers, in the word fattened donkeys in the city are less utilized, man-made wheelbarrow comprise of two small wheels pushed and driven by men carrying with at one time least six plastic cans used and gives the water to the city. When I asked one of the district council, why the city doesn’t make use of donkeys, replied me “we don’t drink donkey’s water it farts on” it may be the high engrained with life stocks prompted them to hate single usage of donkey, particularly camels

o High hospitality and trustful people, I perceived in the city respect, openness and frankly welcome which roots back ancestral valuable cultures, which means pure Somaliland traditions they still related to unlike any other city I ever go.

o It is a city where tribal affiliations in any public operation still visible, it is a place where you can meet yet high rank officials overtly discussing and arguing about share of their lineage tribes or clans even overly published vacant position for national, international institutions despite tough examination must hardly be passed by the applicant.

However Burao joined highly decent and strenuous work performances in recent times and has  huge potential to become an economic powerhouse. And also explicit and plain words exchanged by from subordinates to heads its strongest terms.

Burao like many developing cities is under threat because many skilled youth are migrating else where creating a brain-drain which in tern has created a slow development and progress. The wealth of nations and cities are measured by content of knowledge inherent in that society and Burao will invest greatly on similar projects and the youth.

Mustafe Hassan Ahmed (suxufi)
Email: msuxfi@gmail.com

Dubai set to open World's tallest building

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DUBAI (Somalilandpress) — In recent years Dubai has grabbed the headlines with audacious offshore islands, rotating buildings and a seven star hotel. On Monday it opens the world’s tallest building, Burj Dubai.

It’s about twice the height of the Empire State Building, you can see its spire from 95km away and the exterior is covered in about 26,000 glass panels, which glisten in the midday desert sun.

The design of the building posed unprecedented technical and logistical challenges, not just because of its height, but also because Dubai is susceptible to high winds and is close to a geological fault line.

“You have the solutions for it but you always wonder how it will really work,” Mohamed Ali Alabbar, chairman of Emaar, the developer behind Burj Dubai told the BBC.

“We have been hit with lightning twice, there was a big earthquake last year that came across from Iran, and we have had all types of wind which has hit us when we were building. The results have been good and I salute the designers and professionals who helped build it.”

West to East shift

One of the companies behind the Burj was the Canadian-based wind engineering firm RWDI. Extreme wind speeds on the ground in Dubai can reach 50km an hour. At the top of the building it can be three times as fast.
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Wayne Boulton, general manager of RWDI’s wind engineering team in the Middle East, explains how they tested the building for wind resistance.

“We constructed a scale model and put it in a wind tunnel,” he says. “In the wind tunnel we are able to test a number of different wind speeds and directions. We can test the pressure you would get on the surface of the building under normal conditions and also under more extreme events.”

Standing at over 800 metres, Burj Dubai has easily smashed the previous world record, Taiwan’s Taipei 101, which is 508 metres high. The last couple of decades have seen a shift in the building of skyscrapers from the West to the East. Four out of five of the world’s tallest buildings are in Asia and the Middle East.

World's tallest buildings (Source: Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat)

“It comes down to confidence,” says Andrew Charlesworth from property consultants Jones Lang LaSalle. “A lot of these emerging economies see themselves as important players in the world and want to show they can deliver these sort of projects.

“The wealth of the world is shifting from the West to the East and emerging economies want to highlight their future expectations in terms of where they are gong to be positioning themselves globally.”

White elephant?

Dubai is a city of superlatives, where everything has to be the biggest and the boldest. But like many of the world’s past tallest buildings, Burj Dubai was planned and built during the boom years, and finished during a property crash. The Empire State Building was completed during the Great Depression in the 1930s and the Petronas Towers in Malaysia during the 1990s Asian financial crisis.

This has led many to question whether this latest record breaker is a white elephant. Though Mohamed Ali Alabbar argues it is anything but.

“As of today we have sold 90% of the building and we expect it to be 90%-occupied,” he says. “We were lucky to make more than a 10% return. Originally we thought we’d be lucky to break even, because we can make so much money from the land around Burj Dubai which is a 500-acre site.”

BURJ DUBAI IN NUMBERS
95: distance in km at which its spire can be seen
504: rise in metres of its main service lift
57: number of lifts
49: number of office floors
1,044: number of residential apartments
900: length in feet of the fountain at the foot of the tower, the world’s tallest performing fountain
28,261: number of glass panels on the exterior of the tower

The fact that the developer has made a profit on its $1.5bn (£928m) investment has been helped by the fact that it bought the land with equity and not cash, and that it pre-sold most of the apartments and offices before the property crash.

Investors have already handed over 80% of the value of the apartments and offices, and will pay the remaining 20% on moving in. And in contrast to many unfinished developments in Dubai, the default rate among investors has been low.

But for investors, it has been a mixed picture. Fortunes have been won and lost on the Dubai property market, which has collapsed in spectacular fashion. Like many properties here, Burj Dubai was sold “off-plan” or before the building was completed. Offices and apartments went on sale in 2004 and most were snapped up by both local and international investors in just two days.

Mohamed Abdul Hadi is one local investor who made millions out of Burj Dubai long before the building was completed. “In 2007 we bought three floors on Burj Dubai,” he told the BBC. “The first investor paid 2,500 UAE dirhams ($680; £420) per square foot. We bought at AED 3,500 and one year later we sold at around AED 5,000. Look at the profit, where else can you have this but Dubai? And with no taxes.”

Oversupply

But those who invested late will be nursing large losses, according to Saud Masud, a real estate analyst at Swiss investment bank UBS. “Late stage investors may find this a lot more challenging because property prices in Dubai have come down by 50% and we think prices are likely to go down another 30%,” he says.

Workers put the finishing touches on the Burj Dubai

During the peak of construction, there were 12,000 workers on site

“We have an oversupply in the property market today. We think it will reach 25% to 30% vacancy rates for residential property in a year’s time, and for commercial property it’s already 40%. Burj Dubai is not immune to that.”

The landscape of Dubai has changed dramatically over the last two decades. Sheikh Zayed Road is the 12-lane super-highway which runs through the city and is named after the UAE’s founding father. Twenty years ago there were just a few tall buildings here, now there are hundreds, all jostling for space. But in the three years that I’ve been here, the frenzied pace of construction has slowed down and many cranes now stand idle.

Developers are holding back on new multi-billion dollar flagship projects and focusing on finishing existing projects instead. About $190bn worth of Dubai real estate projects are currently on hold, according to Middle East Economic Digest. As in many parts of the world, banks are reluctant to lend and investors are reluctant to spend. Burj Dubai could mark the end of an era for skyscrapers in the Gulf – at least in the short term.

Sources: BBC News, 4 January 2010

Somaliland Democracy

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HARGEISA (Somalilandpress) — Presidential elections in the breakaway republic of Somaliland scheduled for the year 2008 have been postponed thrice now. That delay has caused friction between President Dahir Riyale and the opposition.

Somalilands neighbours have been keenly following the unfolding events amidst concern that delaying the elections further may trigger trouble in this region that has enjoyed relative peace while the rest of Somalia remains at war. Yassin Juma reports.

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Source: NTV Kenya, 4 January 2010

Somaliland, Putland in border row

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LAS ANOD (Somalilandpress) — While the rest of Somalia remains in turmoil , Puntland and Somaliland regions have been enjoying relative peace.

But a border dispute between Puntland and Somaliland is now threatening that peace. Yassin Juma was in the disputed region to find out just who is in control.

Source: NTV Kenya, 03 January 2010

SOMALILAND: More livestock leave for Kingdom while emergency aid arrives for Ethiopia

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BERBERA (Somalilandpress) — A large livestock vessel has left the port town of Berbera last night bound for the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia after removing an 11-year ban on livestock imports from Somaliland.

On its maiden voyage, the MV Bader III, a converted cattle ship built in France was carrying 24-thousand livestock consisting of sheep, rams and goats. The ship was also carrying one-thousand camels.

This is the second shipment of livestock to the Kingdom since the Hajj pilgrim.
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Saudi Arabia, along with UAE account for 90 per cent of Somaliland livestock exports. Before the lift of the Saudi embargo, Somaliland exported about two million sheep to the United Arab Emirates, Yemen, Djibouti and Ethiopia. More than 250, 000 head of cattle and camels are annually sold in the country. Somaliland livestock exports are said be worth $250 million.

Suleiman Al Jabiry, a Saudi livestock investor, completed a $5-million quarantine centre in the port city in early 2009. Many Somaliland traders were originally opposed to the facility and Al Jabiry Company but last night a statement containing the names of twenty-six local investors was issued hailing Mr Al Jabiry as “companion”.

The investors said Al-Jabiry Company revived Somaliland’s livestock that was hampered through years of lack of investment, insufficient trained manpower and the absence of a relevant legal and regulatory framework to enforce rules and regulations, health standards and quality control that led to the embargo being imposed.

Thousands of more livestock are expected to be shipped to the Middle East in the coming weeks from Berbera.

In 2003, MV Bader III came under-fire from Australian animal welfare groups insisting that the ship lacked basic animal care. “Troughs too high for majority of sheep and sheep under watered and underfed,” they said in a letter to the Minister for Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, Mr Kimberley (Kim) Maurice Chance.

Here in Somaliland, a beacon of stability in the troubled Horn of Africa is an unrecognised state, the economy is largely based on the sale of sheep, goats, camels and cattle and no one dares to question animal welfare.

Somaliland public simply sees it as trade and certainly they do not have the options and luxury Australians have. Survival is the key and livestock is the major repository of individual and national wealth.

Aside from livestock, the port also handles food aid and other cargo bound for landlocked Ethiopia and is currently busy unloading four shipments of food aid. An official from World Food Program, the world’s largest humanitarian agency told local reporters that WFP hopes to deliver 30,000 tonnes of food aid each month bound for Ethiopia.

The transportation of the emergency aid was awarded to local Somaliland logistics company called Towfiq.

Berbera corridor handled 84, 000 tonnes of international food aid for Ethiopia in 2009.

Source: Somalilandpress, 3 January 2009

In Pictures: Somalia's Al-Shabab forces show power

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Somalia’s Islamist hardline, Al-Shabab group parade through the streets of northern Mogadishu on Friday 1st of January to show their new fighters as well as military might as they pledge to retake regions they lost to other groups.

They added the new fighters were trained in particular to root out the AMISOM forces currently stationed in the capital – who they say are ‘the enemies of Allah’.
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The group also said they were ready to send combatants to Yemen’s Al Qaeda groups should the US carry out attacks and urged other Muslims to join.

Sources: Reuters (Feisal Omar / Mogadishu) + NTV Kenya + AP Photo (Farah Abdi Warsameh)