Thursday, November 28, 2013

Gardarradda ka socota Puntland, yaa loo Maxkameyn doonaa?.

Gardarradda ka socota Puntland, yaa loo maxkameyn doonaa?.

50 Tikniko ah iyo 1000 askari in lagu soo weerarro Taleex, waa garadarro aan loo meel dayin, dadka reer Puntland ee dhaqan-xumadaas daawanaya, kana aamusanna waa kuwo aan aayahoodda u baqeyn.

Waxaan u arkaa inuu yahay FAL fuleynimo, oo aan salka ku hayn Islaamnimo, Soomaalinimo iyo Tolnimo midna.

Waxay dadntu ku jirtaa in si deg deg ah loo joojiyo, caalamka la ogeysiiyo in dadkii falkaas geystey aan meeshaas looga harrin.

Shir baa nin Isim ah iclaamiyey, wuxuu yiri aan isu nimaadno Majeerteeno, oo aan ka xaajoonno arrimaha ka taagan cariga Dhulbahante, oo aan iyaganna kala xaajoono.

Kuwa wax magarad, aan marnaba ka fakarin aayahay ummaddaan tolka oo wadda dagan baa waxay hor-is-taageen in shirkaasi dhaco, ilaa ay u habar wacdeen dawladdo shisheeye ah, si loo baajiyo.

Marka maxay ka fakarayeen?. Maxay ka cararayeen?. Yeeyse u cararayaan?. Miyeeysan inaba darreen lahayn?.

Kuwa gardaraddaan loola tageynna waa in ay sii damiirnimo leh, u hubiyaan in maxakamadda adduunka la gaarsiiyo falkaan aan bini'aadnimadda meella ku lahayn.

Wa Billaahi Towfiiq.
Ahmed M. Yassin

Ruthless Massacre in Taleh by Faroole's Brutal Buthers.

Letter of Condemnation of the ruthless massacre in Taleh by Faroole’s brutal butchers

28/11/213
 
We are writing to express our strongest condemnation of the recent brutal attack and invasion of Puntland Forces against the innocent Khatumo people in their own soil. The barbaric military apparatus supported the political establishment in
 
Puntland-Garowe have waged a vicious war planning to disrupt the popular will of Khatumo People.
Puntland has waged several attacks to Khatumo State of Somalia in recent months. The first attack was carried out by the savage forces of Puntland lead by his Vice President and stooge Abdisamad Ali Shire who is originally from Taleh and acted as an ordinary visitor to his hometown. But, he was a wolf in a sheep’s skin and charlatan who was manipulating and undermining the unity of the citizens of Taleh at which he could not succeed.

In early November, 2013, the Puntland forces of aggression have beaten unarmed innocent and heroic women travelling within their own SSC territory towards Taleh, the capital of Khatumo State.
On November 27, 2013 The Puntland Military has brazenly attacked the Khatumo forces who were travelling within their SSC land toward the capital city of Khatumo State of Somalia. The savage attack was rebuffed and defeated.

The next day, early in the morning of November 28, 2013 a very heavily mechanized military with a strong fire-power of Faroole’s forces from Puntland have invaded Taleh, the capital of Khatumo State and started killing indiscriminately

civilian innocent men and women and destroyed their homes and businesses. There are confirmd reports by an eye-witness on the ground at Taleh city that over 20 men and women have been massacred and more than 50 people including children were wounded in the first wave of this barbaric invasion.

The citizens and particularly women, children and elderly men have fled the city to save their lives. There are thousands of Taleh citizens who are displaced and are deprived of their right to live in their homes. Others are hiding in fear in their homes and cut off from all life-lines. Children are starving and dying in this general havoc that gripped Talex City.

One of the shocking behaviors of Faroole Forces was the random killing of innocent men,women and children. This men and women had taken no part in the war between Khatumo forces defending their city and Faroole aggression forces. Another savage behavior is that the corpses are rotting in the streets of the city because; they don’t allow the bodies to be buried. But the terrorists, far from being ashamed of their act, were proud of this massacre and claimed victory while their media are publicizing these malicious, evil and inhuman acts. The SSC people of Khatumo are horrified by the brutal deeds of Faroole forces.

In light of these savage attacks, one cannot but wonder why the Federal Government of Somalia is reticent about this bitter and frightening reality. Khatumo State of Somalia notes reports of the ruthless attacks on innocent civilians and we condemn these acts of brutal butchers. Are not Khatumo human rights being violated by the most notorious forces of Faroole?

The violations of the rights of territorial integrity and killing innocent people of Khatumo State by Faroole’s notorious forces are in contravention and contrary to the principles of peaceful co-existence between the two states and should be halted. We refuse to tolerate Puntland’s thuggish brutality against our people and government and vowed to defend our territory and the fundamental human dignity of our people. At this juncture we would like to mention that the general masses and Government of Khatumo State of Somalia are shocked and shattered by this brutal massacre perpetrated by the savage forces of Puntland. Our people all across the Khatumo State have raised the strongest voices and condemnation and are mourning thetragic loss of these innocent civilians massacred.

We believe that the forces of Faroole’s terrorist attacks can do nothing to derail the Khatumo people’s government. Further, the attacks and invasion of Faroole’s forces is a miscalculation of Khatumo’s power and raised the chance that could lead to a military clash and all-out war between the two states-Khatumo State and Puntland. From now on, the Khatumo State of Somalia is taking all conceivable measures to provide utmost protection and defense of the SSC territory and people.
Khatumo Forum for Peace, Unity and Development

info@khaatumoforum.org
www.khaatumoforum.org

No Immunity.............No Impunity for Berlusconi.

http://transparency.org/news/feature/berlusconi_no_immunity_no_impunity

Bitter divisions between top Somali leaders.


Muqdisho, November 28, 2013 -

Bitter divisions between Somalia's top leaders threaten internationally-backed efforts to battle Al-Qaeda-linked insurgents and end decades of anarchy in the war-torn nation, experts warn.
Prime Minister Abdi Farah Shirdon, who has been in office for just over a year, is facing a confidence vote in parliament this week after he resisted President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud's demand that he resign.
The precise cause of the power struggle is unclear, but politicians have pointed to wrangling over alleged corruption, personal loyalties as well as Somalia's complex clan politics, where each community expects to be represented in the corridors of power.

"The prime minister told us he is at loggerheads with the president over several issues including who should be in cabinet," said MP Mohamed Yusuf.
The government, which took power in August 2012, was the first to be given global recognition since the collapse of the hardline regime in 1991, and billions in foreign aid has since been poured in.
But fighting over who gets what job appears to have become the number-one priority in a badly fractured country desperately in need of a strong central government and struggling to cast of its image as a failed state.
The political squabbling follows the resignation earlier this month of central bank governor Yussur Abrar -- the second to step down during this government -- complaining she had been pressurised to sign off on corrupt deals, claims the government denied.

Her predecessor, Abdusalam Omer, resigned his post in September amid accusations by United Nations experts the bank had become a "slush fund" for political leaders with millions of dollars siphoned out, claims that were dismissed by the government.
Sources close to the office of the prime minister claimed the president had barred all central bank signatories -- including Shirdon -- from withdrawing cash amid widespread allegations of graft.

"International backers are still behind the government because it is effectively the only option, and they do provide a chance to continue the push back against Al-Shebab," said a Western official.
The Al-Qaeda Shebab rebels still control large swathes of rural Somalia.
The Western official said the optimism that greeted the appointment of the new government is now "being tempered with reality".

"It is worrying, since they appear more and more to be following the example of their TFG (Transitional Federal Government) predecessors," the official said.
During the TFG's eight years in power, progress was stalled by political infighting -- with loyalties often aligned along clan lines and development frozen by rampant corruption.
 
Behind the scenes diplomacy


Mogadishu's government, selected in a UN-backed process in August 2012, was hailed as offering the best chance for peace in a generation.
British Prime Minister David Cameron, speaking in May, said then that the steps forward had "exceeded all expectations".

But Shebab insurgents, breakaway regions, rival clans and rampant insecurity have conspired to ensure the Horn of Africa nation remains saddled with its basket case image.
Sources close to Shirdon say the latest power struggle broke out between the president and the prime minister in September following a proposed cabinet reshuffle, with Mohamud apparently furious after Shirdon wanted to sack three of his key allies including the powerful interior minister.

Mohamud demanded Shirdon resign but the prime minster has refused.
"The president won his position by election, while the prime minister was nominated by the president," said MP Abdirahman Hosh Jibril.

"The decision of the president did not come overnight, we have been asking for change for a long time... the prime minister can still refuse to resign but he should come in front of the parliament."
Behind-the-scenes efforts by foreign diplomats to broker a deal between the two have so far proved fruitless, and a majority of lawmakers now appear to back the president's bid to sack the prime minster, but others fiercely oppose it as unconstitutional.

"The president has the power to nominate the prime minister, but does not have a constitutional right to ask for the prime minister to submit his resignation," said Mohamed Yusuf, another MP.
Shirdon earlier this month confirmed a "rift" with the president, but claimed the argument was related to "constitutional issues not political", in a statement urging citizens to have "confidence in their leaders and lawmakers... to solve the misunderstanding".

Parliament speaker Mohamed Osman Jawari has also tried to play down the rift.
"Lawmakers must not exaggerate the issue of the rift between the president and the prime minister," he told reporters. "All issues must be brought to parliament for discussion before rushing to decisions."
But without resolution, political divisions could impact efforts to battle Shebab rebels.
The African Union force that fights alongside government troops is awaiting reinforcements to
 
Source: AFP

Wednesday, November 27, 2013

Can Somali Government be trusted?.

A diplomatic spat has erupted in Brussels between a high Somali official and the EU commissioner for development over the level of foreign aid given to the wartorn African country.

Fawzia Yusuf Adam, Somalia's minister of foreign affairs and deputy PM, said that her country had received "nothing from the European Union - only promises".

Reacting to earlier remarks by Adam, EU commissioner for development Andris Piebalgs told IBTimes UK exclusively: "I'm very upset because that is false.

"The political process starting in Somalia is not only because of political abilities but investment in different parts of Somalia which brings people to support the federal government," he said during a private meeting at the European Development Days in Brussels.

"We have a substantial development project in parts of Somalia. We disburse nearly €50m and the biggest parts goes to areas such as Somaliland, Puntland, in education, rural development, healthcare, access to water. Lots of money being invested.

"She's right we don't channel any money to federal government but that's because in order to use that you need public finance management and an accountability system and today that's not the case," he went on.

"I pledged to work with the government as close as a I can and I will honour it. We bring very substantial support to Somalia, although we don't channel any money through the government."
The European Commission provides development aid in Somalia under the 10th European Development Fund (EDF). The total allocation for Somalia for the 2008-13 period is €521m.
The EU support supports Amisom (the African Union Mission in Somalia), which aims to create the conditions for peace and stability, and has channelled €594m into it.

Adam said that Somalia had been pledged €1.8bn in a conference in September but claimed "so far, we have received nothing".

"We ask European countries to honour their pledge," she said. "We are looking forward to see that [for it to be] realised for development reconstruction and security.
"During the previous transitional government, €200m was pledged in 2010 but we never received it. We want friends to honour their pledge so that we can build our country."
To report problems or to leave feedback about this article, e-mail: g.mezzofiore@ibtimes.co.uk
To contact the editor, e-mail: editor@ibtimes.co.uk

Yussur Abrar and Thuli Madonsela: Africa's Female for future.

Yussur Abrar and Thuli Madonsela: Africa’s Female Whistleblower



Wednesday, November 27, 2013

By Bashir Goth

It was always my belief that if Africa were to change its bad reputation as the citadel of corrupt politicians and a haven for mismanaged foreign aid; it would have to be the continent’s women that lead the way.

And this is exactly what happened over the last month when two women of character, Yussur Abrar of Somalia and Thuli Madonsela of South Africa, have stunned the male-dominated corruption infested political systems of the two countries with their fearless actions.


Yusur Adan Abrar, an international banker with three decades of experience in banking, insurance, telecommunications and finance consultancy, was appointed as Somalia’s first female governor of the Central Bank in September 2013, a time when the international community pledged $2.4 billion to fund Somali's infrastructural and fiscal reconstruction.


As a professional banker, Abrar knew very well the task ahead of her. To put simply it was the establishment of a comprehensive regulatory framework for the country’s financial system and to make the Somali Central Bank accountable for every dollar that reaches its coffers.

However, what she did not anticipate was that the government had appointed her as a ploy to use her stellar record to hoodwink the donor community by using her signature to legitimize shady financial dealings.
Abrar’s goal of cleaning the system had become an affront to the Somali politicians’ old norm of stealing and enriching themselves on foreign aid and the country’s tax revenues.
Soon after she stepped into the building of the bank she was given orders and threats to sanction dubious deals. She was not given enough time to even review the demands and explore if she could find any legal loopholes that could allow her to find a legitimate compromise.  All her attempts to win the President’s support and to enlighten him about the irreparable damage that sanctioning such deals could cause to the government’s credibility fell on deaf ears.


But instead of being enlightened by Abrar’s relentless efforts to highlight the need to follow sound financial regulations, the acolytes at the government’s corruption alter tried to convert her to the Somali way of doing business and to wean her from what they saw as her unflinching adherence to ‘western values’. As she bluntly put it in her letter of resignation to the President, she said: “The message that I have received from multiple parties is that I have to be flexible, that I don't understand the Somali way that I cannot go against your wishes, and that my own personal security would be at risk as a result.”
According to the information I received, even President Hassan Sheikh Mahmoud himself had at one point accused Abrar of acting like an American: “Ma Maraykan baad iskaga kaaya dhigaysaa.. Are you trying to act like an American to us?” As the Somali proverb says: Madax meel meel la taabto oo sarreeyaa ma jiro… There is no place higher than the head to reach…” Instead of showing leadership and supporting Abrar in her honest efforts to restore badly needed accountability to the country’s financial system and safeguarding the resources of the Somali people, the President was in a crusade to re-educate her to the African culture of corruption, the Somali way of Qaataye –Qaado ( I rob and you have your share)

NGO CULTURE VS CORPORATE CULTURE

Ironically, there is an element of truth in the President’s unbecoming expression. Yes, there was a clash of culture and goals between Abrar and President Mahmoud’s administration. Abrar, with her extensive experience in western corporations, her goal was to apply these standards to make the country’s banking system acceptable to donor nations and to enable the country achieve economic recovery.

“When I accepted this role, I did so with the interests of the Somali people in mind. Having worked at senior levels at some of the largest financial institutions in the world, I was looking forward to the opportunity to lend my skill sets to rebuild the Central Bank and improve the lives of our people, as the Central Bank is key to the development of the economy. Undoubtedly, economic recovery is critical to this recovery from both a fiscal and security perspective,” She wrote in her letter of resignation.

However, Abrar’s corporate culture, professional perspective and patriotic goals seemed so alien to President Mahmoud and his underlings who were trained in the NGOs culture of trickle-down economy, albeit in African context, to which the late eminent American economist John Kenneth Galbraith had explained as an approach that emerged during the depression and was also called “the horse- and-sparrow theory” which  meant: “If you feed the horse enough oats, some will pass through to the road for the sparrows.” And this is exactly the culture and mentality of the African politicians and particularly the Somali political elite who practice the principle of “me first,  crumbs for the rest.”

Strangely enough, even those western educated Diaspora returnees who serve for the President as ministers and advisors fall into this category. Writing to me from New York, a friend of mine Dr. Nimo Bokore, had correctly put this in perspective: “Lately,” she said, “I began to worry about the current scramble for Somali blood money. Will the elite, the well educated Diaspora men and their counterparts going back to politics to pay off their mortgages lead us to nationhood? Or they are just engaged in their own temporary gain ‘Geel Dhac’?”

It is indeed this Geel Dhac “looting camels” culture of the Somali political elite that clashed with Abrar’s financial ethics that she learned in the upper echelons of grand institutions.
This was not lost on Abrar as she so clearly expressed in her carefully written letter that she was not worried about the threats she received more than she was worried and frustrated by the President’s lack of support: “I am the least concerned about the security threat, but I am truly disappointed that I have not received your support and leadership on this matter so that I could objectively perform my duties.”

EXPOSING BUSINESS OF POVERTY

Since Abrar’s resignation, the Somali people and indeed the international community have yet to hear a plausible explanation from President Mahmoud’s government on the damaging information that came in Abrar’s resignation letter other than pitiful denials that carry no facts to clear their position.
After many missed opportunities which led Somalia to become a dangerous place for world trade and security, the international community decided to give President Mahmoud and his government a chance regardless of the corrupt and illegitimate way that he had come to power. With his baby face, ever-present smile, and soft-spoken style, President Mahmoud has won a certain degree of trust. And due to our strong longing for a functioning and recognized Somali government, we all ignored the early voices such as that of the satirical Somali poet and academician Mahmoud Togane, who warned us against the wolf hiding in Mahmoud’s sheep’s clothing in an interview he gave a short time after Mahmoud’s election.  We also understandably dismissed the sharp criticisms that Professors, Samatar and Glaydh, leveled against Mahmoud, due to their known political inclinations.


But thankfully it took an honest woman like Abrar with no political ambitions of her own to expose that the president’s pose was not more than a façade aimed at buying trust.
Whether the international community heeds Abrar’s wakeup call is yet to be seen. But it is reassuring to know that Abrar’s resignation had already rattled the donors’ trust. Reuters quoted one senior European diplomat saying: “What [Abrar's resignation] has done is woken up a lot of people,” said one senior European diplomat. “The notion that there is a blank check for Somalia, that's over. There's got to be results for money.”

Well said, but the Somali people need more than rhetoric and the best thing that could result from this fiasco is to deposit international aid to Somalia in an escrow account and to appoint Abrar or a person of her caliber as a financial czar to oversee the fair distribution of donor funds for the development of the Somali people.
However, if the track record of the relations between donor nations and corrupt African leaders could be taken as an indication, President Mahmoud’s administration would receive no more than a friendly censure for its behavior. And this explains why the government doesn’t look shaken by what would have been a damaging incident to any decent administration.


Nevertheless, Abrar should have no regrets even if donor nations decide to continue dealing with Mogadishu government. It will only show once more how much the international community works hand in glove with corrupt African leaders in entrenching “the horse- and-sparrow theory”. No wonder that it is often said poverty is big business.
MISS MANDOSELA: PRESIDENT ZUMA’S NEMESIS

Elsewhere, Thulisile Madonsela, a human rights lawyer, equality expert, and South Africa’s Public Protector, is facing stiff resistance from ministers close to President Jacob Zuma not to publish her findings in an investigation of renovating the president’s retirement home with $30 million. 

Miss Madonsela who has in her record as one of 11 technical experts who participated in drafting of the final constitution of South Africa in 1994-5, insists that she would go ahead to make the report public regardless.
The multi-resident estate, known as Zumaville, which is reported to have underground rooms, medical facilities, football fields, a theatre, and a helipad, is located in an impoverished neighborhood.  And President Zuma just like President Mahmoud had the audacity to speak: “passionately of his inability to sleep peacefully knowing that there are people still living in shacks in his wealthy nation.”
Now, we can understand when Abrar laments what she could have done if she was allowed to capitalize on the momentum she started in gaining the trust of international financial institutions by saying: “I can only imagine what could have been achieved provided I had your support to perform my duties objectively. Your excellency, while I am disappointed by this lack of support, I am more disappointed for the Somali people who would have benefited the most from these and future contributions.”


We can equally understand, if President Mahmoud curses Abrar for not allowing him to have his own Damujadidville; a clash of two irreconcilable cultures, indeed.
Being the people’s mules for so long who carried loads on their back and children in their bosom and belly, while at the same time tilling the land, African women have come of age and have another burden to carry today; to cleanse the continent of its corrupt male leaders.

It is reported that Dr. Kuwama Nakrumah, Ghanian Independence leader and an admired African hero, once said that the “black man is capable of managing his own affairs”? I beg to differ with him by saying: “Yes indeed, Mr Nakrumah, the blackman is capable of managing his own affairs; but his own personal affairs only in fattening himself, but it is the black woman who is capable of managing the affairs of the continent and rectifying the historical mistakes that men have committed against the poor people of Africa.” Viva Yussur, Viva Miss Madonsela, and viva all conscientious women of Africa.

Monday, November 25, 2013

Name Them! Shame Them! (for Yussur Abrar) By: Prof. Mohamud Siad Togane

Name Them! Shame Them! By: Prof. Mohamud Siad Togane
Last update 24-11-13

NAME THEM! SHAME THEM!
(For Ussur Abrar)

Somalis!
From the way you walk
From the way you talk
From your gait
I can tell
One day
You will be ruled
By thieves!
By thugs!
                                          …Farah Sefay

The beginning of wisdom is to call things by their proper name.
                                        …Confucius
The Mogadishu kleptocracy is a government in name only . . its continued existence rests only on the blind willingness of international backers to believe that a fantasy is real.

…the United States and other donors continued to put money towards the mortars and machine guns that would buy another stay of execution for the besieged members of Somalia’s official national government.
                      … Jay Bahadur

Naming overcomes Evil.
                                                  . . . Madeleine L’Engl
I am going to name them!
   I am going to shame them!
      
I am going to nail them!
I am going to nab them!

You know them
I know them

I am going to name the rapists of our Motherland

Yussur Abrar outed them!

Yussur Abrar named them!
Yussur Abrar shamed them!
Yussur Abrar nailed them
Yussur Abrar nabbed them!

Yussur Abrar named
Musse Ganjab
Who was once my friend
In Tanzania
Where he was once a penniless beggar!
But
Who is now gangster billionaire in Jo’burg!
But
Who is now the Godfather
Of the Ali Gaaf Goofy Klan

The Klan of Hassan Qassaaye Qoslaaye!

Just like Yussur Abrar
I hereby break my silence
For silence means consent!
And the Mafioso Goofy Ali Gaaf doesn’t have my consent!

So
I am going to name them!
I am going to shame them!

I am going to nail them!
I am going to nab them!

Because
Edmund Burke is right
Evil flourishes when good men do nothing

Because
Leonardo da Vinci is right
He who does not punish evil
Commands it to be done

Again
Again & Again

Because
Our Prophet Muhammad is right
Who commanded the Good
Forbidding Evil
Who teaches us that

If you see Evil
Change it with your hand
 If you cannot
 Then change it with your tongue
If you cannot
Then curse it in your heart

So
I am going to do something!
I am going to open my big mouth!

I am going to name them!
I am going to shame them!

I am going to nail them!
I am going to nab them!

Here are the names of the thieves
Here are the names of the thugs
Here are the names of the rapists
Here are the names of the Tuugatha
Who have taken Somali for a ride
Big time!
Who daily torment
Who daily rape
Our Motherland

Here are the names of

Ill Brutto
Ill Cane
Ill Cattivo

Ill Ladrones
Ill corrotto
Ill disonesto,
Ill venduto

Mohamed Ali America
The Rer Mattaam Thieving Ambassador
Who is well ensconced in
Nairobbery! 

Qadiijo Osobleh
Naagta Tuugta ah ila Qabta!
Help me catch the thieving bitch!

Engineer Ayno
Tuuga Qabta!

Buri Hamza
Tuuga Qabta!
Catch the Barawaani Bandito!

Hassan HO Holo
Tuuga Qabta!
Catch the thief who pretends to be
The President of Somalia

Jibril Ibrahim Abdulle
Tuuga Qabta!

Ali Mahdi
Tuuga Qabta!

Sharif Bijole
Tuuga Qabta!

Shariif Sakiin
Tuuga Qabta!

Ina Salad Heir ‘Air Boy
Tuuga Ill-Jex ah ila Qabta!

These are only a fraction 

Of the Kleptocrats
Of the Kakatocrats
Of the Dollarocrats

Of the Crassitocrats
Of the Yahootocrats 
          
Of the HabarKintiriocrats                                                                          Of the Habarkuulaytocrats
                   Of the kakistocrats
                                         Of the kalabtocrats
                                          Of the Calibantocrats
                                        
                                          Of the Cannibalitocrats
                                           Of the Talibantocracy
                                           Of the Coonatocracy
Of the Kakatocrats                                                                                                                   
Of the Mullahtocrats

Who daily steal the milk
Out of the mouths of starving Somali babies

These are the ones who make Somali mothers
Weep & Wail!
Everyday!

So
I am going to do something!
I am going to open my big mouth!

I am going to name them!
I am going to shame them!

I am going to nail them!
I am going to nab them!

Tuugatha ila qabta!

Help me catch the thieves!

Ghedi Giaour
The Harta Abgal crony of
Ali Khalif Galayrd
Ali Baba & his forty thieves!

Ghedi
Aren’t you the one
Who stole millions from the Somali nation
Who blew his own horn
Who bragged

I am only 50 years old
And
I have 50 million dollars!

Forgetting to add
I stole
Every cent
Every penny
From the Somali people
With the assistance of Uncle Sam
And his United Nations!
And his international community!

So
I am doing something!
I am opening my big mouth!
I am naming them!
I am shaming them!

I am nailing them!
I am nabbing them!

I am blowing the whistle on them
I am dropping the dime on them!
I am blowing them all away out of the water!

Tuugatha ila qabta!
Help me catch the thieves!
These thieves
These thugs

These are the Ill-Jex
These are the Cyclops
These are the Evi-eyed ones
These are the Cyclops of Somalia

Who boast just like the Cyclops of ancient days:

I sacrifice to no god
Save myself
And to my big belly
The greatest of all deities

These are the ones
      Who daily beg God praying to endue them with
Cag aan joagsanayan!
Carab aan hishoanayn!
Caloal aan dhergayn!
                           A foot of false pride that never ceases
From committing mischief murder mayhem!
A tongue that doesn't know
                              What shame or embarrassment is!
And the belly
                                         Of an unbeliever
                              Of a greedy gut
                                                         That is insatiable!
These greedy ones are goners
For a man taken by Greed is
As goner as a man taken by the sword!
Yussur Abrar proved what everybody knows
That Somalia’s so-called president
Hassan HO!
                             Is
                                                                      Tuug!
                                  A thief!
                                                 A thug!
Sister Yussur had told us so!
That Somalia is a nation that has fallen among thieves!
Somalia is today a satellite of Uncle Sam
And Uncle Sam even tries to seduce God
according to Malcolm
Yes, America has that seductive power of economic dollarism
You can cut out colonialism imperialism and all other kind of ism
But it’s hard for you to cut that dollarism
When they drop those dollars on you
                                                You’ll fold though
DOLLAROCRACY is America’s gift
                                                               To the world
                                                               To Somalia
Dollarocracy is the name of the American empire!
But
Somalia has two deadly weapons
Somalia has two things going for her!
1. Allah
2. Fearless Somali women!
Like Yussur Abrar!
So
Fight the corrupting dollared dollied damn
Babylon Whore
Called America and her running dogs!
               Follow the Example of Yussur Abrar!
Name them! Nail them! Nab them!
                     Shame them! Shut them down!
Tuugatha inala qabta!

Help us catch the thieves
Help your courageous sister
Help your sister Yussur Abrar!
                  
                         …Mohamud Siad Togane