alt-right abdis rejoice! british gov deports bajunis to their bantu homelands of kenya & tanzania

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Wardheere

Qolana Janno qolana naar
Imagine being shook by a few strays chanting BLM thinking they're destroying your culture.
Brother, you're disrespecting our culture by even insinuating that bs.

Wallahi some of these guys are the weakest people on Earth.
I dont know how they picked uo the white alt right narrative of white people being under threat. Copy paste
 

Wardheere

Qolana Janno qolana naar
Good start, deport them all. We got too many non somali minorities in somalia. Each one on its own might not be an issue, but imagine in 20 years time, the whole country will look multicultural with so many different looking people. nah fam, send them back. bantus, xamara cads, banjuns all of them.
If you were in somalia and you said something like one of ur clansmen will shoot you for being an idiot
 

Jeesto

VIP
Somali Refugees Are Being Deported to Kenya and Tanzania

It's not difficult to empathise with failed asylum seekers. The usual story is as follows: flee your home country and put yourself in the hands of people traffickers, risking your life to travel thousands of miles – only to find your plea for asylum falling on deaf ears. Then, after becoming the unwitting star of a government PR drive to appear tough on immigration, you're either detained indefinitely or put on the next flight back to wherever it is you spent so much time and effort fleeing. Now imagine all that, but with the threat of being deported to a country that you don't even come from.


This miserable chain of events is what's happening to the hundred or so Bajunis currently seeking asylum in the UK. Hailing from islands off the coast of southern Somalia, they spent the majority of their time in their home country fishing, and the rest of it being the victims of tribal persecution and threats from the militant Islamist group Al-Shabaab.

Having sought asylum in the UK, the Bajunis are facing possible deportation to Kenya and Tanzania – countries where they have no heritage or current familial links. This is because the Home Office is refusing to acknowledge the Bajunis' Somali identity, thanks to the results of Language Testing for the Determination of Origin (LADO) tests – a type of "forensic linguistics" designed to assess the validity of nationality claims.

The Bajunis I spoke to told me that these decisions were made on the basis of their interviews with language analysts, and claimed that they had to speak mainland Swahili, rather than their mother tongue of Kibajuni.

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Three Bujani refugees (Photo via Bajuni Campaign)

The Unity Centre in Glasgow, a charity that has assisted the Bajunis with their asylum claims, alleges that the Home Office's LADO reports have dismissed official academic guidelines and independent expert findings. They argue that political decisions are being made through the use of evidence from Sprakab, the Swedish company that conducts the reports. The centre believes that this is far from a bureaucratic mistake, and instead a way of getting around the legal barriers – under EU human rights law – involved in sending people back to war-torn Somalia. Essentially, it would seem that the Home Office wants rid of the Bajuni refugees, and – unable to deport them back to their home country – are making selective use of Sprakab analysis in order to send them elsewhere.


According to Jasmin Sallis, one of the centre's organisers, "It is a deliberate tactic. It is no coincidence that the Home Office insists these Somali Bajunis are from countries with no barriers to deportation. Lack of objective knowledge of the Bajuni Islands and differences between individuals from the mainland is a key reason the Home Office's tactics work so well towards this minority group."

When I chased up the Home Office to ask about Sprakab and its reports, it refused to comment on individual cases, but did confirm that the company has worked for them since 2000. Sprakab also failed to comment on the questions I asked them.

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A Bajuni fishing boat, photo taken on an old camera phone

"It's a huge waste of taxpayer money and resources," said Brian Allen, who is an expert witness in the tribunal courts for Bajuni language testing. Having seen over 400 Sprakab reports, he criticised their methods, saying that obscure and misleading questions are often asked in Kenyan Swahili, rather than Kibajuni.

"You have to bear in mind that the Bajuni are a remote people, and not formally educated," he told me. "They aren't going to answer questions [about] the names of parliamentarians or the names of mainland landmarks." Referring to Sprakab's testing methods, Brian said, "It's unprofessional and intimidatory. Not only do the interviews not speak to the Bajunis in their native tongue, but a lot of the interviews were quite aggressive.


"There's a huge lack of transparency, and complete anonymity for Sprakab analysts, whom the Home Office are keen on supporting," Allen added. "It makes it very difficult to understand how testers come to their conclusions, or the qualifications they have in the first place." Surprisingly, Allen says that, in a rare conversation with one of the company's managers, they told him that their reports shouldn't be used as an authority to make asylum decisions.

And it's not just Allen who has questioned Sprakab's practices; Alison Harvey, the legal director of the Immigration Law Practitioner’s Association, said, "Language analysis cannot tell you a person’s nationality. It is relied upon by those who prefer the comforting certainties of pseudo-science to the responsibility of exercising judgement and weighing the evidence in a particular case."

Bajuni%20house%202.jpg

A Bajuni hut

Regardless of this expert criticism, language analysis remains a vital device in deciding the future of the Bajunis, most of whom are currently on limited support on the condition that they are making preparations to deport themselves. Nineteen-year-old Abdul Rahman, who left the islands after losing his uncle, told me that, despite attempts to prove his Somali origin, the Home Office still expects him to go to Kenya.

When I asked about the testing, he told me the Sprakab analyst didn't speak Kibajuni to him, but the Kenyan dialect Swahili, while the questions asked were so vague that it proved "[the analyst] knew nothing about Somalia". He added, "They try to trick you into telling them the answers they want to hear."


Like a number of other Bajunis, Abdul receives a very small allowance each week to spend on necessities, putting him in a better situation than the few who refused to accept voluntary deportation and have been left to rely on the help of charities and refugee organisations.

Difficult as life in the UK is for the Bajunis, accepting deportation isn't really an option, considering – as I was told – they are regularly subjected to beatings and lootings by gangs, and in some cases even rapes and murders. Mohammed (a pseudonym), one of the Bajunis I interviewed, left the islands in 2006 after his family "couldn't take it any more", first seeking refuge in Kenya, before eventually coming to the UK.

"They killed most of my family while they slept, and we used to hear rumours that they terrorised other island communities, too," he said. "I wanted to stay in my home for as long as possible, but we didn't have any guns or real weapons. I had no other choice but to leave." He said of his time in Kenya, "Those who went to Kenyan refugee camps were ignored most of the time – given little food and water, too. They didn't like us at all, and would only give orders in Swahili – a language that the refugees had no knowledge of. They had to learn it to survive."

Unfortunately for the Bajunis who made it here, the UK has only been a little more hospitable. But in spite of all the difficulties, The Unity Centre's Bajuni Campaign remains optimistic. According to Jasmin, "As the campaign has gained an online presence, contact by other Bajunis also facing disputed nationalities in Germany, The Netherlands and the Republic of Ireland has been made. The desirable outcomes are very basic: the right to work, and the right to be recognised as Somalian."

https://www.vice.com/en_uk/article/wd4d94/the-bajuni-somalis-are-being-deported-to-countries-that-arent-their-homes
 
If you were in somalia and you said something like one of ur clansmen will shoot you for being an idiot
bantus don't like my clan. If i was in somalia, I'd lead the genocide myself. :mjpls:
when I go back, I'll clear anyone who isn't ethnically somalia out of jubaland.
 
Sxb, we have Somali farming tribes like Rahanweyn who are landheere in southern Somalia and many other Somali tribes that practise agriculture. We just need to turn our Somali nomads into urban dwellers or farmers through education while the all Bantus living in Somalia will be forced to return back to their homeland in Southeast Africa.
we have vast farm lands in south with not enough farmers ,its wiser to keep some bantus as they are hard working and expert at farming. we must also keep an eye on their population the one child policy should be practiced on them.
 
Why am not surprised you kufar obviously religion plays a role in everything all Muslims are brothers regards to background, the moral character of Somali bantu is so different due to Islam so you won't hear them practicing superstitious stuff like albino hunting. You are one big liar by the way where is the evidence I asked for? :ulyin:


Everything inside of the line is considered Bantu according to 70% of sspot:gaasdrink::farmajoyaab:
2psls91.png
 

Vanguard

Fino alla morte
LOL I have an alt right Twitter account. Follow my saxibyal. @RealRedKeyMon. Get at me and we will make a Twitter gc with all alt right Somalis in

You dumb c*nt, this is not something to brag about. You basically have a bunch of cadaan-ismood losers who want to keep Somalia homogenous from their parents basement in Sweden or America in one big group chat :snoop:

I bet this nacas and his friends have nothing going on in their lives beside harassing people on the internet
 

Do-I-Look-Somali

Make me some Cambulo tonight.
bantus don't like my clan. If i was in somalia, I'd lead the genocide myself. :mjpls:
when I go back, I'll clear anyone who isn't ethnically somalia out of jubaland.
Bro you won't do shit. You'll just cause even more chaos, but I'd like to see you try that. Internet thugs :mjlol:
 

Huncho

Blac Youngsta's brother
Bantus will take over Southern Somalia soon enough.They should wipe out Southern Somalis for mistreating them :manny:
 

OmarAli

Tall, Brown-Skin Caucasian
You dumb c*nt, this is not something to brag about. You basically have a bunch of cadaan-ismood losers who want to keep Somalia homogenous from their parents basement in Sweden or America in one big group chat :snoop:

I bet this nacas and his friends have nothing going on in their lives beside harassing people on the internet
LOL suck your mum this is all fun and games. Xalimos are always ganging up on faraxs 24/7 so it's only right we make an alliance and hit back. All Twitter Somali girls know each other somehow.


You're probably those pricks who advocate black lives matter and want bantus to sweep across Somalia. f*ck you!
 

OmarAli

Tall, Brown-Skin Caucasian
Bantus will take over Southern Somalia soon enough.They should wipe out Southern Somalis for mistreating them :manny:
They are a complete minority there. Ethnic Somalis outnumber them a lot. You oromo negro, stop trying to motivate your bantu relatives.
 
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