Category: Somalia

  • Turkey to restore biggest mosque in Somalia

    Turkey to restore biggest mosque in Somalia

    Turkish teams will renovate the Central Mosque, which was damaged due to civil war, in the Somali capital of Mogadishu.

    somali cami1

    Turkish Religious Affairs Foundation (TDV) will restore the biggest mosque in Somalia.

    Turkish teams will renovate the Central Mosque, which was damaged due to civil war, in the Somali capital of Mogadishu.

    “There are 200 mosques that needed restoration in Somalia,” TDV’s international relations director Mustafa Tutkun told AA correspondent on Sunday.

    Tutkun said Somali executives asked Turkey to restore mosques, donate Korans and religious books, rehabilitate theological institutions, and educate Somali students.

    “We will restore the Central Mosque in line with its original shape,” Tutkun said.

    Tutkun said the foundation was planning to take 100 students to Turkey for education.

    “The students will first go to Koran courses and also learn the language, and then they will be sent to imam hatip schools (giving theological education),” he said.

    Tutkun also said the number of Somali students to be taken to Turkey would be raised to 250 by the end of this year.

    AA

  • Turkey Enters Foreign Aid Business

    Turkey Enters Foreign Aid Business

    Turkey Enters Foreign Aid Business

    By Ayla Albayrak

    As Turks returned Monday from a month of fasting and holidays over Ramadan, their government proudly declared the amount of aid they had gathered together to send to fellow Muslims in Somalia: More than $237 million.

    Aid campaigns are commonplace during Muslims’ holy fasting month Ramadan, in line with Islamic principles of charity, sadaka, to poorer fellow Muslims. And Somalia is suffering from a severe humanitarian crisis caused by draught and decades-long political conflict, so the aid was timely.

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    Reuters

    Turkey’s Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, top, and his wife, Emine Erdogan, visit a camp for displaced people in Mogadishu last month.

    But the scale of the government campaign and of the money raised was unusual for Turkey, which despite being one of the fastest-growing economies in the world can still be considered a developing country by many standards. Until recently, it had a rather small budget for foreign aid.

    The Somalia campaign was promoted personally by Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who also visited Somalia in August. He was followed by the main opposition party’s leader Kemal Kilicdaroglu. Huge Somalia posters covered buildings in main Turkish cities, and images of starved children filled Turkish TV screens as most of Turkey’s mainstream media flocked to the country to document the aid effort.

    “Our work to send aid to the friend- and brother-nation of Somalia will continue by land and sea,” the prime minister’s emergency management agency, AFAD, said in a statement Monday.

    More than Muslim principles of brotherhood are at work here. Last year, President Abdullah Gul spelled out Turkey’s ambition to raise its foreign aid game, boosting its aid budget above $1 billion as it sent support to Japan, Haiti, Pakistan, Palestine and Sudan, among others.

    “A great country,” Turkey’s President Abdullah Gul said, “used to be evaluated according to its GDP, its income per capita and its purchasing power parity. But actually, true greatness means being able to aid other countries in need in the name of humanity without waiting for anything in return.”

    Turkey has made no secret of its desire to increase its influence in the Middle East and Muslim Africa, much of which used to be administered by the Ottoman empire until its collapse early last century. Last year Turkey said it was increasing the number of its embassies in Africa to 30 from a dozen. Turkey also became a member of the African Development Bank.

    Turkey’s generosity isn’t so apparent when it comes to welcoming Somali refugees, though. Turkey only accepts asylum applications from European citizens. Those Somalis allowed to stay in Turkey while they complete applications for asylum in other countries aren’t allowed to stay in cities. They are sent to provincial Anatolian towns to wait.

    via Turkey Enters Foreign Aid Business – Emerging Europe Real Time – WSJ.

  • On Somalia Street, Istanbul, African migrants seek a new life

    On Somalia Street, Istanbul, African migrants seek a new life

    On Somalia Street, Istanbul, African migrants seek a new life

    Thomas Seibert

    Sep 5, 2011

    African immigrants on the streets of the Kumkapi district in Istanbul.  Kerem Uzel / Narphotos
    African immigrants on the streets of the Kumkapi district in Istanbul. Kerem Uzel / Narphotos

    ISTANBUL // When the muezzin’s call for the dhuhr prayer rang out from the Katip Kasim Mosque in a rundown neighbourhood of Istanbul this week, dozens of men arrived. But it was no ordinary crowd that gathered midday in the mosque: about half of the men were Africans.

    “Istanbul’s Mogadishu” is the name Turkish newspapers call the area around the mosque in the Yenikapi district close to the Sea of Marmara on the European side of the Turkish metropolis. The street in front of the 17th-century mosque, Katip Kasim Camii Sokak, has been dubbed “Somalia Street”, because the neighbourhood has become home for migrants from across Africa, many of whom do not have Turkish residence permits and face expulsion if arrested by the police.

    Some have been here for years.

    “I want to go to the United States,” said Ali, 39, from Senegal, who only gave his first name. Like other Africans in the neighbourhood, he declined to be photographed because of fear of the police. Ali said he had come to Istanbul two years before and was earning money by selling perfume on the street in upscale and tourist parts of Istanbul.

    “It is hard,” he said. “But I live together with friends, so it becomes a little easier.”

    The area around the mosque is also home to Kurds, Armenians and members of other minority ethnic groups. Streets are dotted with telephone shops offering cheap calls to African countries and to Asian nations. Laleli, a quarter frequented by Eastern European tourists for cheap clothes and other supplies, is just up the road. Turks share tea with Africans and Eastern Europeans at cafes that dot the sidewalks.

    On Somalia Street, Johnny Kitoko-Mboma, from the Democratic Republic of Congo, left a telephone shop and set out for home, a small flat he has been sharing with his wife and two young children since they arrived in Istanbul several months ago.

    “I am stuck here,” Mr Kitoko-Mboma said. “There is no work permit, there are no jobs, they do not give jobs to Africans.”

    Mr Kitoko-Mboma, 34, said he and his family left Kinshasa because of violence.

    “My mother and my father are dead,” he said, adding they were killed as a result of political strife. The family ended up in Turkey after a weeks-long journey that took them through Tunisia and Lebanon.

    Now his money was running out.

    “If I can find work, I want to stay here, but I have been told the Turks do not accept asylum seekers at all,” Mr Kitoko-Mboma said.

    Turkey’s asylum laws grant refuge only to migrants from Europe. Refugees from all other countries face expulsion if they do not register with the United Nations High Commission for Refugees.

    The commission tries to find countries willing to take them in, a process with an uncertain outcome that can take years. Refugees are allowed to stay in Turkey, but rarely are given work permits.

    Turkey is a major transit country for hundreds of thousands of migrants from Asia, the Middle East and Africa who want to get to the West but lack the necessary documents.

    There are no official figures for the number of Africans currently in the country, but Turks and Africans in Yenikapi agreed there are several hundred, if not thousands, in that part of Istanbul alone.

    While they wait, many Africans in Yenikapi try to get by on odd jobs and avoid the police.

    “Every now and then you find work for a few hours,” said Abdul, 28, from Eritrea. “It’s hard.”

    Not all Africans on Somalia Street are illegal migrants. Issa Konyate, a businessman from Senegal, said he had been in Turkey for a year and had travelled frequently between Istanbul and Dakar. He said he trades in textiles, managing several Senegalese football players in Turkey and had also helped Turkish entrepreneurs to set up a factory in Senegal.

    “It’s good business,” he said. “There are no problems.”

    Africa has been on people’s minds in Turkey recently. Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the prime minister, flew to Somalia and Kemal Kilicdaroglu, the opposition leader, travelled to a refugee camp in Kenya on separate visits. Turks donated US$200 million (Dh735m) in famine relief during Ramadan. Mr Erdogan has said Turkey would bring field hospitals to Mogadishu and rebuild schools and roads.

    Turkish residents on Somalia Street said they felt pity with the African migrants.

    “They are poor people,” said Salih Kartop, a Kurdish grocer in the neighbourhood. “Their countries are even poorer than Turkey. Some of them come in here and ask for a tiny piece of butter, not even a whole stick, because they cannot afford it.”

    Asked about news reports of fighting and heavy drinking among the Africans, Mr Kartop shook his head.

    “I haven’t heard anything like that, and I have been here for 10 years. Only people with money can make noise, if you don’t have money, what can you do?”

    Atam Donukok, a Turk of Armenian descent, said most Africans were “very, very good people, super people”, although some were engaged in petty crime and drug dealing.

    “But there are bad people everywhere, aren’t there?”

    [email protected]

    via On Somalia Street, Istanbul, African migrants seek a new life – The National.

  • Libya and Syria: The Neocon Plan to Attack Seven Countries in Five Years

    Libya and Syria: The Neocon Plan to Attack Seven Countries in Five Years

    Kurt Nimmo

    In the video below, former four star general and NATO commander Wesley Clark talks about the neocon plan to invade seven countries in five years. Included in the plan was an attack on Libya. Clark mentions the plan at two minutes, 26 seconds into the video.

    The video was recorded on October 3, 2007, at the Commonwealth Club of California in San Francisco.

    Clark’s revelation is nothing new, although it reminds us that the attack on Libya fits into a larger context and there are horrific conflicts to come if the globalists have their way.

    Following the election of Obama and a reshuffling of the same old deck in Congress in 2008, it was believed the bad old days of neocon wars were finally behind us. Obama said he would close down the wars and bring home the troops. Instead, he intensified the effort to spread chaos, mayhem and mass murder in the Middle East and South Asia, thus underscoring the fact there is absolutely no difference between Democrats and Republicans when it comes to creative destruction (it is telling that the neocon Michael Leeden has used the term – creative destruction is a Marxist concept).

    Clark has talked about the neocon plan on several occasions. He said the following during a speech at the University of Alabama in October of 2006, recounting a conversation with a general at the Pentagon:

    I said, “Are we still going to invade Iraq?” “Yes, Sir,” he said, “but it’s worse than that.” I said, “How do you mean?” He held up this piece of paper. He said, “I just got this memo today or yesterday from the office of the Secretary of Defense upstairs. It’s a… five-year plan. We’re going to take down seven countries in five years. We’re going to start with Iraq, then Syria, Lebanon, then Libya, Somalia, Sudan, we’re going to come back and get Iran in five years. I said, “Is that classified, that paper?” He said, “Yes Sir.” I said, “Well, don’t show it to me, because I want to be able to talk about it.”

    The neocons, of course, are merely one of a number of establishment factions, all of them reading from the same script. Obama’s attack on Libya and the impending attack on Syria under the ruse popularly known as the “Arab Spring” (pushed by elite NGOs and the CIA) is interchangeable with the Bush regime’s call to action against the Axis of Evil. The only difference between Democrat Obama and the (supposedly) Republican neocons (who have roots in Trotskyism) is that the neocons are decidedly Israeli-centric in their geopolitical stance.

    The global elite do not care about Israel or any other nation-state, but are not above using the neocons – who are highly organized and motivated (despite propaganda depicting them as inept) – in their quest to destroy Arab and Muslim nationalism that directly threatens their drive for hegemonic rule (in particular, Sharia law with its restrictions on banking poses a threat to the banksters).

    Syria is the next target followed by the big Kahuna, Iran. For the globalists, who are determined to wreck all nation-states and eradicate national sovereignty and borders, the fact this effort will precipitate the destruction of the “world’s policeman,” the United States, is an extra added bonus.

    Multiple wars in multiple and far-stretched “theaters” will ultimately bankrupt the United States, as Ron Paul and a handful of others have warned. Obama has made if perfectly clear that the U.S. will not leave Iraq and Afghanistan and plans to continue attacking Pakistan and failed states in Africa where the CIA cut-out al-Qaeda has appeared on cue.

    Wesley Clark’s warning is prescient, but nearly a decade too late. Clark is, at best,disingenuous because he himself a war criminal for the role he played in the slaughter of civilians in Yugoslavia.

    www.infowars.com, September 2, 2011

  • How Global Investors Make Money Out of Hunger

    How Global Investors Make Money Out of Hunger

    kids in hunger

    Speculating with Lives

    By Horand Knaup, Michaela Schiessl and Anne Seith

    In recent years, the financial markets have discovered the huge opportunities presented by agricultural commodities. The consequences are devastating, as speculators drive up food prices and plunge millions of people into poverty. But investors care little about the effects of their deals in the real world.

    The room in which the world’s food is distributed looks everything but appetizing. Bits of paper and disposable cups litter the trading floor at the Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT). Sweaty men in bright yellow, blue or red jackets walk around, seemingly oblivious of the debris beneath their feet, waving their hands, shouting and scrapping over futures contracts for soybeans, pork bellies or wheat.

    Here, in the trading room of the world’s largest commodity futures exchange, decisions are made about the prices of food — and, by extension, the fates of millions of people. Those decisions affect both hunger on the planet and the wealth of individual investors.

    For Alan Knuckman, there is hardly a nicer place than the CBOT trading floor. “This is capitalism in its purest form,” the commodities expert raves. “This is where millionaires are made.” The 42-year-old’s face shines with a boyish glow — perhaps because he has never stopped playing.

    Knuckman arrived here 27 years ago, and quickly advanced from his first job as a runner in the trading room to a trader. He worked for brokerage firms, soon established his own firm and is now an analyst with Agora Financials, a consulting firm specializing in commodities investments. He also writes a newsletter that offers investment tips. “I trade in anything you can get in and out of quickly,” he says candidly. “I’m here to make money.”

    ‘I Believe in the Market’

    How he makes money doesn’t make any difference to Knuckman. He draws no distinctions among commodities like petroleum, silver or food products. “I don’t believe in politics,” he says. “I believe in the market, and the market is always right.”

    How does he feel about exploding food prices? For Knuckman, they are purely a reflection of supply and demand. And speculators? They’re good for the market, because they predict developments early on. Is there excessive speculation? “I don’t see it.”

    It’s a surprising comment. Never before has so much cash flowed into financial transactions involving agricultural commodities. In the last quarter of 2010 alone, the amount of money invested in these commodities tripled compared with the previous quarter. There has been a lot of money in the market since the countries of the world tried to overcome the financial crisis with massive economic stimulus programs and bailout packages.

    Agricultural commodities attract investors who are no more interested in grain than they were previously in dot-com companies or subprime mortgages. They range from giant pension funds to small private investors searching for new, safer investment options.

    Satisfying the Demand

    The large index and agriculture funds now being offered by the banks seem to have come along just at the right time to satisfy this demand. All of a sudden, the world’s food supplies have become a tradable commodity, as easy to handle as stocks.

    The downside is that food prices are rising in parallel to the ravenous demand for agricultural securities. In March, the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) reported new record high prices, which even surpassed the prices during the last major food crisis in 2008. According to the FAO’s Food Price Index, overall food costs rose by 39 percent within one year. Grain prices went up by 71 percent, as did prices for cooking oil and fat. The index had reached 234 points in July, only four points below its all-time high in February.

    “The age of cheap food is over,” predicts Knuckman, noting that this can’t be such a bad thing for US citizens. “Most Americans eat too much, anyway.”

    For his fellow Americans, who spend 13 percent of their disposable income on food, the price hike may be an annoyance. But for the world’s poor, who are forced to spend 70 percent of their meager budgets on food, it’s life-threatening.

    Since last June alone, higher food prices have driven another 44 million people below the poverty line, reports the World Bank. These are people who must survive on less than $1.25 (€0.87) a day. More than a billion people are starving worldwide. The current famine in the Horn of Africa is not only the result of drought, civil war and corrupt officials, but is also caused by prohibitively high food prices.

    ‘Side Effects’

    Knuckman refers to the fact that the poorest of the poor can no longer pay for their food as “undesirable side effects of the market.” Halima Abubakar, a 25-year-old Kenyan woman, is experiencing these supposed side effects at first hand.

    She is sitting in her corrugated metal hut in Kibera, Nairobi’s biggest slum, wondering what to put on the table this evening for her husband and their two children. Until now, the Abubakars were among the higher earners in Kibera. The family managed to feed itself adequately with the monthly salary of €150 that Halima’s husband earns as a prison guard.

    But that has suddenly become difficult. The price of corn meal, the most important food staple in Kenya, is now at a record high after increasing by more than 100 percent in only five months. Potato prices went up by a third, milk is also more expensive, and so are vegetables.

    Abubakar doesn’t know why this is the case. She only knows that she suddenly has to pay close attention to how she spends the family’s meager daily food budget of about 300 shillings (€2.30). Her first step was to switch to a cheaper brand of corn meal. It doesn’t taste of much, but at least it fills one’s stomach. She sometimes goes without her own lunch so that her children can have enough to eat.

    List of Possible Reasons

    “More poor people are suffering and more people could become poor because of high and volatile food prices,” World Bank President Robert Zoellick said in April, describing the brutal effects of price increases on consumers in developing countries. The problem has many experts deeply concerned. The probable reasons for the price explosions are cited again and again at meetings and conferences. They include:

    • Climate change, which leads to droughts, floods and storm, and thus to crop failures;
    • The cultivation of biofuels, which takes valuable farmland out of food production;
    • The global population, which is growing too fast for agricultural production to keep up;
    • The emerging economies China and India, whose citizens are consuming greater quantities of higher quality food;
    • The rising price of oil, which makes it more expensive to produce and ship food products;
    • The rise in meat consumption, which means that more grain is needed for animal feed;
    • Decades of neglecting agriculture, especially in hunger-prone regions.

    All of these factors sound logical and plausible, and some undoubtedly contribute to the tense food situation. Yet they are not responsible for the excessive price hikes.

    Olivier de Schutter, the United Nations special rapporteur on the right to food, is one of the few who is trying to set the record straight. The production of biofuel and other “supply shocks” — such as crop failures and export bans — were “relatively minor catalysts,” he wrote recently. “But they set off a giant speculative bubble in a strained and desperate global financial environment.” He identifies the true culprits as major investors who, as the financial markets have dried up, have invested heavily in the commodities trade, expanding it beyond all proportion. According to de Schutter, excessive speculation is the primary cause of the price increases. Indeed, closer inspection reveals that the reasons cited to date for the price hikes on food products are somewhat dubious.

    • Part 2: Every Bubble Needs a Story
    • Part 3: Number of Speculators Will Continue to Grow
    • Part 4: ‘It’s the Government’s Responsibility to Feed People’

    www.spiegel.de09/01/2011

  • AFTER ISRAEL DEPLOYS WARSHIPS TO RED SEA, IRAN SENDS WARSHIP & SUB OF ITS OWN

    AFTER ISRAEL DEPLOYS WARSHIPS TO RED SEA, IRAN SENDS WARSHIP & SUB OF ITS OWN

    by Tiffany Gabbay

    IranWarshipCAIRO (The Blaze/AP) — An official Iranian news agency says Iran is sending a submarine and a warship to the Gulf of Aden and the Red Sea.

    Press TV quotes the commander, Rear Adm. Habibollah Sayyari, as saying the deployment will serve the country’s interests and “convey the message of peace and friendship to all countries.”

    The item on Press TV’s website Tuesday said the presence of the Iranian navy would “tighten security for all countries.”

    Sayyari said the ships would also fight against pirates.

    Somalia, on the southern coast of the Gulf of Aden, is a base for many pirate gangs. The body of water is south of Iran.

    Interestingly enough, however, Iran’s action comes on the heels of Israel sending two additional warships to the Red Sea border with Egypt following warnings that militants are planning another attack on southern Israel from Egyptian soil.

    www.theblaze.com, August 30, 2011