Monday, 18 June 2007

Somaliland: A Case for Recognition by KAIPTC

“Somaliland: A Case for Recognition” 11 June 2007

KAIPTC and the Somaliland Representative in Ghana are organising a meeting entitled “Somaliland: A Case for Recognition” for the Parliamentary Select Committee on Foreign Affairs of Ghana on Thursday 14 June 2007.

KAIPTC/PR/18/07

KOFI ANNAN INTERNATIONAL
PEACEKEEPING TRAINING
CENTRE
PMB CT 210
CANTONMENTS
ACCRA
GHANA
Tel: 00 233 21 718200

11 June 2007

PRESS RELEASE

(Accra, Ghana) – The Kofi Annan International Peacekeeping Training Centre (KAIPTC) in Teshie and the Somaliland Representative in Ghana are organising a meeting entitled “Somaliland: A Case for Recognition” for the Parliamentary Select Committee on Foreign Affairs of Ghana on Thursday 14 June 2007.

On 18th May 2007, Somaliland marked the 16th anniversary of its independence from Somalia. The declaration of independence was founded on basic requirements of international law which include a permanent population, defined territory, a stable system of government and the capacity to enter into relations with other states.

For sixteen years, Somaliland has built up and projected a reliable domestic political constituency where the United Nations, the African Union and the Transitional Federal Government are struggling to overcome internal divisions and affirm national political influence.

However, Somaliland’s success story in establishing and maintaining a functioning constitutional democracy remains a better-kept secret and denied international recognition. Somaliland is vigorously pursuing its moral, if not legal, case for recognition at the African Union considered quintessential to recognition by the wider international community.

Journalists are invited to the meeting on Thursday, 14 June from 13.30-15:30hrs at Conference Room 3.

*****

For further information, please contact Angela Odai, Public Information Office, KAIPTC
tel: (+233-21) 718200, ext. 1203, cell: (+233-24) 4536934
Email: angela.odai@kaiptc.org


Source: Kofi Annan International Peacekeeping Training Centre (KAIPTC)
http://www.kaiptc.org/aboutus/news.asp?nav=7&news_id=37

German Parliament Passes Resolution On Somaliland's Recognition, Stability

The parliament is asking the government “to examine whether initiatives to advance the resolution of the question of an international recognition of an independent Somaliland appear useful

The Bundestag, German parliament

ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia, June 15, 2007 – The German Parliament on Wednesday passed a resolution, inter alia “asking the German Federal Government to work towards mitigating dangers for Somaliland’s stability that may arise from the current Southern Somali scenario”.

The parliament is asking the government “to examine whether initiatives to advance the resolution of the question of an international recognition of an independent Somaliland appear useful in the framework of a peace-advancing policy at this stage”. Furthermore, the parliamentarians have asked that the government to ask TFG interim president Abdillahi Yussuf not to take any unilateral steps that relate to this question and which could provoke a deterioration of security in the Republic of Somaliland.

Somaliland and Germany enjoy very healthy relations, strengthening economic ties. Germany is among the European countries which Somaliland’s banking system has established operational links with. Besides, the government of the republic Somaliland last year signed a joint venture agreement with German companies in the areas of cement production, coal powered electricity plant and a gypsum factory at the cost of 250-300 million USD.

It is to be recalled that Sweden just a few months back decided to consider Somaliland as a separate entity from Somalia and deal directly with Somaliland government when it comes to economic assistance.

Somaliland ’s President is currently on tour to Nordic countries, advocating the recognition of his country and foreign investments.

Somaliland is a de facto independent republic located in the Horn of Africa within the internationally recognized borders of Somalia. On May 18, 1991, the people of Somaliland declared independence from Somalia. However, it was not recognized by any other country or international organization. The Republic of Somaliland consists of six administrative regions with a governor as the highest-ranking leader of each region. •

Source: The Sub-Saharan Informer

http://somalilandtimes.net/sl/2007/282/1.shtml

Thursday, 14 June 2007

TEMPLATES FOR A NEW ZIMBABWE

Mail & Guardian
by Geoff Hill

19 April 2007

It is amazing how fast a country can heal under the right hands. A return to the economic prosperity of the mid-1990s, or even the early 1970s, may take time; Zimbabwe can come right.

People often cite Mozambique and Zambia as examples of basket cases that have been turned around, but I have not been impressed by either. The Portuguese, for all their errors, turned Mozambique into a major producer of cashews. They established world-class national parks and a good network of roads and railways. The late Samora Machel destroyed all that.

His successor, Joachim Chissano, worked hard to undo the damage, but the country still falls way short of its potential. Corruption is rampant, from village officials demanding bribes for cattle permits to big amounts changing hands for government contracts in Maputo. Mozambique has improved on the disaster created by Frelimo in its early days, but it is hardly an example to others.

Zambia was dragged down by the bumbling one-party state of Kenneth Kaunda. From 1992, his successor, Frederick Chiluba, corrupted what had been an honestly incompetent public sector. President Levy Mwanawasa is doing his best to make up for almost four lost decades since independence. By the end of his term in 2011, we might see Zambia as a new model for Africa to follow, but the jury is still out.

If I sound like an Afro-pessimist, nothing could be more wrong. There are countries that serve as examples of what can be achieved in a new Zimbabwe.

In 2004, I was in Kigali to report on the 10th anniversary of the Rwandan genocide. It was my first visit to Rwanda. What a surprise!

It's easy to imagine that the 10 weeks of slaughter in 1994 were the time when Rwanda collapsed, but the previous 32 years since independence from Belgium had been a disaster. Colonial infrastructure decayed, roads washed away, the forests were cut down. Rwanda quickly became a dictatorship with few economic prospects. The media fell under state control and personal freedoms withered.

In July 1994, Paul Kagame's forces overthrew the government in Kigali and stopped the genocide. They took command of a failed state -- littered with corpses. Today you would hardly know it. Step off the street into a call box and the phone rings out. Tarred roads link all parts of the country, investment is growing faster than anywhere else in East Africa, and the currency is stable.

As early as 2000, GDP had jumped by almost 50%. Rwanda is an easy place to do business and probably the most crime-free country in Africa.

These are the decisive factors in the transformation wrought by Kagame:
depoliticising the police and public service;
bringing talent home from exile;
punishing corruption;
creating a relatively transparent government;
fostering growth in the private sector;
minimising demands for "local ownership";
lifting most restrictions on foreign exchange; and
healing old wounds through legal trials for human-rights abusers.
These are all challenges that face Zimbabwe.

Rwanda is almost a textbook case to follow -- but not entirely. Kagame's biggest error has been to jail political opponents on spurious grounds. He has sought to limit freedom of the press by passing two acts of repressive legislation, provoking genuine resentment of his heavy-handed tactics.

There is a risk that these laws could undo Kagame's government. The example of Singapore suggests that authoritarian rule can last if there is sufficient prosperity so that people don't care. Not in Rwanda. At least a third of the country's population live on less than $1 a day. But, in spite of these mistakes, Kagame has forged a template for rebuilding a nation from scratch.

The other example is less known, but even more impressive. The former British Somaliland achieved independence in 1960 and, a week later, joined with Italian Somaliland in the south to create Somalia.

The marriage was a disaster, with southerners in Mogadishu dominating the government. Under the one-party rule of president Siad Barre, festering resentments culminated in genocide in the north of the country. When a coup dislodged Barre in 1991, warlords took over the south, and the country became partitioned.

Somaliland seized the chance to declare unilateral independence, on May 18 1991. To this day, no other nation formally recognises the government in Hargeisa. But most countries accept their passports. At Ghana's celebrations to mark the 50th anniversary of independence of March this year, Somaliland President Dahir Riyale Kahin was received with full honours accorded a head of state.

Somalilanders are rightly proud of their achievements. Whereas in Mogadishu, capital of Somalia, you can barely move without finding your path obstructed by an AK-47, the only rifles I saw in Hargeisa were in the hands of soldiers. They were courteous, disciplined and well turned out.

As in Rwanda, the phones work and roads are reasonably good. Private capital is pouring in, mostly from Somalilanders living abroad. Somaliland has a GDP more than double that of Somalia, which is, geographically, four times as large.

I was struck by the example of sound governance and administration in Somaliland when I covered its general election of September 2005. If only Zimbabwe could have an election like that -- with parties free to campaign, a total absence of intimidation, daily newspapers and even a TV station in private hands.

The achievement is especially striking, given the country's brutal history. On the sandy banks of the Maroodijeex River that runs through Hargeisa, I walked among thousands of human bones. These are the skeletons of men, women and children gunned down by Barre's troops.

Today those war criminals have retreated south of the Somaliland border. Unlike Rwanda, there have been few trials. The absence of justice leaves an air of unfinished business. Zimbabwe too will have to bring the killers and torturers to justice before lasting peace can be found.

There are other serpents in Somaliland. The environment has been ravaged. Read the accounts of district commissioners from the 1920s and Somaliland claimed a profuse variety of forests, savannahs and wildlife -- including the Big Five -- to rival Kenya.

Today almost the entire country has been stumped, top soil has washed into the Gulf of Aden and you would be lucky to spot a rabbit on the barren plains. Ironically, perhaps, Somaliland is luring displaced Zimbabweans to settle and set up an agricultural sector.

Doctors are in chronically short supply. Literacy rates are improving, but still below 50%. In common with Rwanda and Zimbabwe, research suggests that much of the population suffers from post-traumatic stress -- a measure of the brutality they have either witnessed or experienced.

Press freedoms are fragile. Earlier this year, Somaliland's leading independent daily newspaper, Haatuf, was closed down and four of its journalists jailed. Haatuf had published allegations of misuse of government property by the president and his family.

The journalists were "pardoned" after an outcry by human rights groups, but the incident has damaged the country's standing. Even so, political life in Somaliland is more democratic than in many Africa states. Administration is effective. From all I saw, the territory has a great future.

A new Zimbabwe can learn from these examples. There will need to be a return of exiles and their money and a rush of new capital. To achieve this, there must be freedom -- both political and civil, an end to corruption, a new police force and space for the media to operate without interference.

Can Zimbabwe be rebuilt in the short term? Yes, definitely yes! Rwanda and Somaliland are proof.

Geoff Hill is bureau chief Africa for the Washington Times and author of What Happens After Mugabe? (Zebra-New Holland)

Posted by Mrs A Ali

Tuesday, 12 June 2007

Somaliland Women from Togdheer are not happy with losing their woman representative in NEC

Baaq ay soo Saareen Haweenka Gobolka Togdheer

Burco (Jam)- Haweenka Gobolka Togdheer, ayaa baaq ay soosaareen ku caddeeyay siday uga xun yihiin xubintii ku lahaayeen Komishanka Dooroshooyinka Qaranka ee la laalay, waxayna tilmaameen inay tabayaan kaalintii ay kaga jireen Komishanka.

Waxay kaloo Haweenka Togdheer ku sheegeen baaqooda inay laga been sheegay geeddi-socodkii dimoqraadiyadeenna, isla markaana la wada ogsoon yahay in Haweenka Somaliland yihiin lafdhabarta bulshada, naftooda iyo maalkoodaba u soo hureen halgankii nabadeynta iyo horumarka dalka, waxay kale oo kaalin mug leh ku lahaayeen doorashooyinkii ka qabsoomay waddankeenna iyagoo ahaa codbixiyayaasha ugu badan.

Sida oo kale, waxay haweenku xuseen in la wada dareensan yahay ka maqnaashaha dumarka ee ka qaybgalka talada dalka, waxayna baaqooda ku soo gunaanadeen farriin ay u direen Madaxweynaha, Golayaasha Qaranka iyo Xisbiyada qaranka. “Waxaanu ka codsanaynaa Madaweynaha Somaliland Md.Daahir Rayaale Kaahin, Golayaashaa Qaranka iyo Xisbiyada Qaranka in dib loo eego kaalintii haweenku ku lahaayeen Komishanka Doorashooyinka Qaranka iyo sababta loo laalay xubintoodii, haddii ay sidaas u dhacdana ay muujinayso inaan haweenka waxba looga oggolayn ka qaybqaadashada talada siyaasadeed ee dalka.”

Baaqan ayaa ka soo baxay kulan ballaadhan oo haweenka Togdheer muddooyinkan uga socday Burco, kaasoo ay kaga hadlayeen sababta looga qaaday xubintii ay ku lahaayeen Komishanka Doorashooyinka Qaranka.

Source: Jamhuuriya Online
http://www.jamhuuriya.info/index.php?art_id=6635&categ=&expand=&file=view_article.tp


Monday, 11 June 2007

Chairman of SelectHouse-Committee for ForeignAffairs Says Qaran andOther PoliticalAssociations Should Be Allowed toRegisterForLocalAuthority Elections

Hargeysa, June 9, 2007 (SL Times) - The Chairman of parliament's Select House-Committee for Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation, Mr Hussien M Ige, in a press statement issued last Saturday said, "the law which regulates the registration of political parties, law No 14/2000, can not be considered obsolete until it is substituted and is replaced by another law. It should be legal for political associations to participate in local authorities elections."

The select House-Committee Chairman went on to say that "the obstruction of political associations' participation in local authority elections is unconstitutional." In his press statement, Mr Ige emphasized that Qaran and any other political association wanting to participate in the coming local election should not been seen as a threat to the country's current political scene, but should be considered as a continuation of Somaliland's newly found democratic legacy.

The statement read, "In recent times, Somaliland has witnessed a setback in achieving its democratic ideals. Ideals, which were the foundation of the current political establishment and institutions, the culture of consolidation and negotiation. Unfortunately, we have become to well aware that the country's institutions and political elite have become embroiled in mud-slinging and malicious political counter-accusations and mediocrity.

Take the current confusion, where a citizen of this country, who wants to take part in local and national elections is denied his right to do so by those who claim only 3 political parties can run for office in the local authority elections. This misconceived argument goes against the constitution and election laws.

In reference, the recent press statement made by Mr Saeed I Roble, Chair of the Select-House Committee for Internal Affairs mentions Law No 12/2000, the regulation of multi political parties, which states that Somaliland's political arena is an open for all arena, and that the 3 national political parties along with non-national political associations can register and compete for any local authority election taking place, and the first 3 to achieve 20% of the local authority election vote will qualify to the national status of a political party and will go onto to take part in the presidential election.

This rule ensures that a national party cannot be complacent in thinking itself a party for life, and that competition with new political parties and associations in local authority elections will make sure that it is a party of the people and not a party of the few. If 3 national parties are determined as parties for life, this eventuality denies the constitutional rights that citizens of this country have in democratic decision-making processes that are enshrined in the constitution in articles, 21, 22, 23 and 127.

Therefore, I urge all to respect the laws of the country and for the registration (as soon as possible), of new political associations. I hope that Qaran, and any other new political association, aspiring to participate in the local authority elections should not be feared or seen as a threat to the current political status quo, and should be given their constitutional right to compete in democratic elections. Those politicians creating confusion regarding newly-formed political associations should stop engaging in such activities that are detrimental to the wellbeing of this country and nation.

Source: Somaliland Times

http://somalilandtimes.net/sl/2007/281/3.shtml

Democracy challenged in Somaliland.

East Africa Policy Institute

There is a vigorous argument taking place in Hargeisa about the announcement of a new political association (QARAN) headed by veteran Somaliland politicians like Dr. Mohamed Abdi Gabose (former Interior Minister) and Mohamed Hashi Elmi (former Minister of Industry and Commerce). The big question mark is centered on the legality of establishing any new political association intending to become a political party when the Somaliland constitution allows the existence of only three national parties.

The government is vehemently opposed to this new development and points out to an article in the Somaliland constitution as supportive evidence for its argument. To be specific article 9.

Article 9: (Political System) clearly states that:

“The number of political parties in the Republic of Somaliland shall not exceed three”.

The artificial limit on the number of political parties have been chosen to avoid the experience of the early 1960s Somali Republic when a considerable number of political parties based on clan affiliations contested elections and created chaos, specially during and after the 1969 general elections.

Those who oppose the formation of this new political association point to this article to bolster their argument and assert their conviction that the matter is clearly decided since the number of allowed parties has been enshrined in the constitution, and the country has already chosen said parties.

Proponents and supporters of Qaran on the other hand insist that the constitution is on their side and point out that Articles 22 and 23/3:

1) “Every citizen shall have the right to participate in the political, economic, social and cultural affairs in accordance with the laws and the Constitution”.

2)”Every citizen who fulfils the requirements of the law shall have the right to be elected and to vote”.

Article 23/3 states “ Every citizen shall have the right, in accordance with the law, to form political, educational, cultural, social and professional associations”.

Articles 22 and 23 of part three in chapter one of the Constitution entitled: “The rights of the individual, fundamental freedoms and the duties of the citizen”.

This is important because along with democracy and the establishment of multiparty system in the country (article 9/1), the fundamental rights and personal freedom of the individual are the only articles in the constitution that cannot be amended by any branch of the government. This is noted on article 127 of the Constitution (the limits of amendments or corrections of the Constitution) which clearly states:

“No proposal to amend or correct the constitution shall be made if it includes a provision which is in conflict with:-

(c) Democracy and plurality of political parties.

(d) The fundamental rights and personal freedom of a citizen“.

Furthermore, article 21 emphasizes the implementation of the provisions present in all the fundamental rights granted to citizens such as the ones in article 22 and 23. It should also be interpreted in accordance to the international conventions which relates to such rights, and international covenant on civil and political rights.

Qaran is in agreement with the number of political parties allowed (3), but it is the permanency of the current one’s (UDUB,KULMIYE,UCID) that it finds as a restriction of the right of association enshrined as a fundamental right under Article 23(3) of the Constitution, as well as the international conventions which relate to such a right, such as Article 22 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICPCR) and article 10(1) of the African Charter on Human and People’s Rights.

So, how does one reconcile the appearance of conflict between article 9 in the constitution which permits the existence of only three national parties and the fundamental rights guaranteed for the individual in article 22 and 23?

This is where law No.14/2000 (the law of regulations of political parties) comes into play. This is not a new law, it is the same law used to conduct the last local election, and it is the same law which will govern the conduct of the next election, incidentally it also happens to be the only law protecting the rights of current political parties from the strong hand of the government. It clearly lays out the necessary steps needed that will allow qualified citizens to participate in the process which ultimately culminates in producing the final three political parties that will be eligible to run for the presidential elections. It should be noted that the presidential election cannot be held ahead or concurrently with the local (municipal) election, because, it is the local elections that produce the final three parties eligible to run for the presidential election in accordance to existing law.

Article 4 in law n. 14/2000 allows existing “parties” and newly formed political associations to have an equal opportunity to contest in every local (municipal) election. This law was written before we even had existing parties and it is a clear indication that once formed they (the parties) had to compete with each other as well as newly formed political entities vying to displace them in local elections.

In other words, the vetting process that produces the ultimate magical number (3) is the local electoral process, and here every citizen that fulfills the requirements established by the registering committee has an absolute right to run for office. Furthermore article 2 of law 14/2000 states that the S/Land government should always have a committee responsible for the registration of political associations and ratification of national political parties. It is the president’s responsibility to nominate such committee.

The previous committee was disbanded 6 months after the last election for budgetary reasons (it did not make sense to have someone on the payroll for five years and not have any duties to perform), but now that it is election time once again, nothing stops the president to perform his duty and nominate the next registering committee.

There are those that argue that law no. 14 was specifically designed for the first election and it is no longer valid. The trouble with that argument is that there is no evidence legal or otherwise to support it.

Three things must happen to make a law null and void:

· A new law which negates the existing one.

· A Supreme Court decision finding the existing law to be unconstitutional.

· A sunset provision within the original language clearly indicating that at a given time this law shall expire.

None of those conditions exist today, and what makes matters even more problematic for the government is that they (the government) used this very law no.14/2000 to deny the candidacy of an aspiring independent candidate (Mrs. Fawzia H.Aden) to run for president, because law no. 14 does not allow the election of an independent candidate. To use a law when it suits one’s goal and to negate that very law when it is no longer convenient makes one’s position less credible than it would be otherwise.

Those who believe that the introduction of new players in the political arena will be detrimental to their chances of being re-elected or might actually bring about the possibility of their parties loosing their coveted place among the chosen few will resist the interpretation brought forward by Qaran and its supporters. Those who believe otherwise will welcome this development.

The question the rest of us need to answer is whether the country is better off with three permanent parties, or whether our democracy is better served when the competition for office is wide open to all who qualify, and regular elections where no seat or party is safe from the will of the people is a reality and not just a dream in Somaliland.

East Africa policy Institute

http://www.eastafricapi.com/Oped/60_Qaran.htm

Veteran Politicians Rock Somaliland’s Political Landscape

"the constitution gives every citizen the right to form a political party"

Dr. M A Gabose (right) and M H Elmi, during Thursday's press conference

Hargeysa, Somaliland, April 7, 2007 (SL Times) – On Thursday, veteran politician Dr. Muhammad Abdi Gabose announced the formation of a new political party and said he had informed the ministry of internal affairs about the creation of his new political party. On Friday, the ministry of internal affairs issued a press statement in which it repudiated the claims of Dr Gabose and others who are involved with the new party, and said that the formation of a new party is a violation of the constitution of the country and there is no way it can allow it to happen. The statement of the ministry of internal affairs went to say that it will not allow a few individuals to break the laws of the land and create mischief in Somaliland’s political institutions, and that it will take firm action against those who take part in such things. The statement added, ‘according to the constitution of the country there can only be 3 political parties to enter local and presidential elections. Moreover, this so-called new party is illegal and will be disbanded by the ministry, and if those involved do not refrain from these illegal activities, they themselves will be brought before the law to face criminal prosecution by the state.’

Dr Gabose and the former Minister of Commerce and Industry, Muhammad Hashi Elmi, announced the inaugural of the Party for Peace and Development (SNPPD) during a press conference in Hargeysa. Dr Gabose was the former chairman of the defunct Sahan party which lost the 2002 local government election.

In his opening remarks, Dr Gabose said, ‘the new party is comprised of 55 members coming from a wide and divergent backgrounds and professions who were brought together by one unifying factor, which is, their earnest desire to develop the current stagnant state of Somaliland and its people.’

Dr Gabose explained that, “the new party will differ from the current political parties in many ways. First, the party leader/chairperson cannot run for the presidency. Second, the party will give women a greater role by setting aside a quota for women to take part in local government elections. We will prioritize the social issues affecting the nation, especially, health, employment, and education. We shall assist the diaspora in coming back and developing the country.”

Legality of new political parties

Dr Gabose stressed that the constitution gives every citizen the right to form a political party/organization.

He explained, “Articles 22 and 23 state that every Somaliland citizen has the right to participate in the country’s political arena, and is free to establish a political party, if they meet the registration criteria dictated by the law. These rights cannot be altered or changed by any government, parliament and court. The only way in which these articles can be changed or deleted from the constitution is through a referendum.”

Dr Gabose argued that by-law 14, passed by parliament for political parties, is the law, which initiated the formation and registration for KULMIYE, UDUB, ASAD and the others. “Has there been a new bylaw passed by parliament which replaced this one [14]? The answer is no. Article 21 of the constitution states that all those in authority, justice, parliament and the executive must abide by this bylaw (140)”, Dr Gabose asserted.

Dr. Gabose said that their party intends to take part in the up and coming national municipalities elections, scheduled to commence at end of the year.

Muhammad Hashi Elmi, the former Minister of Commerce and Industry who was sitting next to Dr. Gabose, commented on the role of the diaspora and Somaliland’s women. Mr. Elmi said, “the majority of our housing were built through the contributions of the diaspora, a great many of these are women. The same was true in our struggle to liberate Somaliland from Siyad Barre. Most of those who sacrificed their livelihoods were the diaspora. Those who contribute these days to society are the diaspora and women. They are the breadwinners in most households in the country and abroad. Our people in the diaspora contribute over $500 million a year to Somaliland. For these reasons, we believe there is a need to give the diaspora, and women in general, a larger say in running the country.”

Elmi, one of the founding members of the Somali national Movement and a long time political veteran of Somaliland politics, added, “we in this new party want to formulate a trade policy that lessens the country’s imports and increases its exports. We want to create employment for the many hundreds of thousands of students and those jobless in our urban centers by injecting cash in the manufacturing industry and small factories. We will open the cement factory in Berbera within 6 months if we are voted in power.”

Here are some questions and answers that took place in the press conference:

Q: ‘You were supposed to hold the press conference in Ambassador Hotel, as stated in your press invitation. What went wrong? Why have you changed the venue?’

A: You are right. We were supposed to hold the conference in Ambassador Hotel. We wanted this conference to be a large gathering, and we agreed to the number of people taking part with the owners and paid the money in advance. Unfortunately, at the last minute, we were telephoned this morning at 7 am and were informed by the hotel manager that he was visited by the chief of Somaliland police force, Mr. Muhammad Saqadi, who told him that the press conference is illegal and cannot be held in the hotel because the purpose of the press conference is to announce the formation of a political party. The police chief warned the hotel manager that it was up to him whether to allow the press conference to take place in the hotel or not, but there will be confrontations if it takes place because the government intends to stop the press conference. That is why we changed the venue of the press conference. We do not want confrontations with anybody, neither do we want to disturb the peace.

Q: ‘If the government rejects your application to register your party, what will you do?’

A: The thing is, this paper we have distributed to you (handout), contains the party’s constitution. Five months ago we presented it to the ministry of internal affairs. We said to the ministry that we consulted the most notable lawyers in the country, and we have been advised by them that the constitution and the bylaws relating to the formation and registration of political parties is still valid, the same as they were in 2002 local and presidential elections. We were given concrete legal advice by lawyers well versed in the constitution. We did this so to make sure that we were not contravening the law and not be labeled by our detractors as ‘disturbers of the law and peace’. We also took our organization’s constitution and the summaries written by our lawyers regarding the legal argument for new political parties to the General Attorney’s Office, the Supreme Court, the two houses of parliament and their house committees overseeing legal and judicial law concerns and to the National Election Commission. Neither the government nor these mentioned state institutions replied, instead they kept quiet for 6 months. This gave us a signal that it was permissible to form a new political party.

Q: ‘Once the hotel venue where you wanted to hold your press conference has been denied to you by the government, what chance is there for your new party being registered by the government?’

A: First, when you have a right for something, you should never lose sight of that right. There will be trials and opposition to you to get your rights. It will not be a smooth journey in getting your rights. The most important thing is to ask the question: “do you have the right or not?” If it turns out that you have the right, then all legal paths should be taken to achieve this right. In addition, we will educate the people about their rights and inform them of the illegality of the government’s actions. We will not change our cause. We will not be deterred by the government’s canceling of our press conference or the government’s propaganda. And we will not stop until we get the rights that the constitution has given us.

Source: Somaliland Times

http://www.somalilandtimes.net/sl/2006/272/1.shtml

Hargeysi Goormay? by Prof. Cabdisalaam Yaasiin Maxamed

Hargeysi Goormay …?
Prof. Cabdisalaam Yaasiin Maxamed

Hormood Maxamed Xaashow
Hargeysadan xaruunta ah
Adigaa habkeediyo
Hanaankeeda galayoo
Horena u maamulay
Ee dhowr hal oo su'aala ah!
Hargeysi goormay
Haraadtir biya leh
Ka haqa beeli?
Hargeysi goormay
Habeentire laydh
Ka haqa beeli?
Hargeysi goormay
Nadaafad haboon
Ka haqa beeli?
Hargeysi goormay
Laamida hilinka ah
Ka haqa beeli?
Hargeysi goormay
Hawgii caafimaad
Ka haqa beeli?
Hargeysi goormay
Horweynta cilimga
Ka haqa beeli?
Hargeysi goormay
Beeraha hadhaca leh
Ka haqa beeli?
Hargeysi goormay
Hibaaqa udgoon
Ka haqa beeli?
Hargeysi goormay
Shaqaale hawlkara
Ka haqa beeli?
Hargeysi goormay
Hantida dar u dhiga
Ka haqa beeli
Hargeysi goormay
Dar maatada haga
Ka haqa beeli?
Hargeysi goormay
Hirdheer dar higsada
Ka haqa beeli?
Hargeysi goormay
Hoos iyo kor dar u daya
Ka haqa beeli?
Hargeysi goormay
Hogaan toosan oon
Danteed halayn
Ka haqa beeli?

Democracy for the People by the People

This Blog has been initiated to test how far democracy for the people by the people in Somaliland can withstand the test of time.

This blog will be used to share resources on the role of women, recognition and democracy as outlined in the press releases available on the internet by the newly formed political party of Qaran.

Somaliland has moved on and can withstand new challenges to serve the nation as long as our leaders have the interest of Somaliland in their hearts.

Good luck to all.

God Bless Somaliland

Voice of Somaliland Women for Democracy and Recognition