Somaliland’s three-year-long drought has crippled the economy of the breakaway,semi-desert territory

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Bohol

VIP
23rd Jul, 2017

Somaliland’s three-year-long drought has crippled the economy of the breakaway, semi-desert territory in the Horn of Africa.



A former British colony, Somaliland gained autonomy from Somalia in 1991 but has yet to gain membership to the United Nations. Around 2 million people, nearly half its population, have been affected by the drought.

Authorities in Somaliland, which borders Djibouti, Ethiopia, Somalia and the Gulf of Aden, say that 80 percent of the livestock has died and that people have left the driest areas and settled in camps where aid is delivered.

“There was no rain in my area; the livestock had nothing to eat,” Faduma Abdelahi, who has lived on windy plains for the last two months, told FRANCE 24. “The animals were hungry, they were weak, they could not move and they died. The drought just went on and on and on.”

Those in the camps receive about a hundred dollars a month from non-governmental organisations that is transferred to their mobile phones.

Mowlid Mudan, from Save the Children Somaliland, told FRANCE 24 that the camp where he works makes cash transfers to 770 families.

The vast majority of families in Somaliland depend on cattle to make a living. As so many animals have died, the market price of a goat in Burao — the capital of the Togdheer region and Somaliland’s second city — has tripled. Subsequently, sustainable living has become impossible for countless families.

“We stand at a critical point in history,” UN Emergency Relief Coordinator Stephen O’Brien told the UN Security Council in March, in reference to the risk of famine in Kenya, Yemen, South Sudan and Somalia. “Already at the beginning of the year we are facing the largest humanitarian crisis since the creation of the UN,” he added.

Somaliland’s foreign minister has blamed the international community’s refusal to recognise the state 26 years after it declared independence for the territory’s ailing economy.

“Lack of recognition is proving a major problem,” Saad Ali Shire, Somaliland’s foreign minister, told The Guardian in May. “We do not receive bilateral aid. All aid goes to the third parties via the UN. If we were recognised, we could receive aid bilaterally, and attract international investors — so creating a more resilient economy that is less dependent on livestock.”

The country’s leaders believe that if they can persuade one swing state in the African Union, such as Ghana, to recognise the country, the rest of the international community would follow, according to The Guardian.

France24


https://qarannews.com/somalilands-t...-semi-desert-territory-in-the-horn-of-africa/
 

Noir

Isaaq Elitist
“Lack of recognition is proving a major problem,” Saad Ali Shire, Somaliland’s foreign minister, told The Guardian in May. “We do not receive bilateral aid. All aid goes to the third parties via the UN. If we were recognised, we could receive aid bilaterally, and attract international investors — so creating a more resilient economy that is less dependent on livestock.”

Fucking burn in hell for all eternity for all the traitor trash that brought us in this horrible situation by joining an union with a cancerous enemy state!:noneck:
 

Gambar

VIP
I see they're still using the recognition excuse. I'm sure if these government officials weren't getting their monthly checks they'd shape up quick.
 
23rd Jul, 2017

Somaliland’s three-year-long drought has crippled the economy of the breakaway, semi-desert territory in the Horn of Africa.



A former British colony, Somaliland gained autonomy from Somalia in 1991 but has yet to gain membership to the United Nations. Around 2 million people, nearly half its population, have been affected by the drought.

Authorities in Somaliland, which borders Djibouti, Ethiopia, Somalia and the Gulf of Aden, say that 80 percent of the livestock has died and that people have left the driest areas and settled in camps where aid is delivered.

“There was no rain in my area; the livestock had nothing to eat,” Faduma Abdelahi, who has lived on windy plains for the last two months, told FRANCE 24. “The animals were hungry, they were weak, they could not move and they died. The drought just went on and on and on.”

Those in the camps receive about a hundred dollars a month from non-governmental organisations that is transferred to their mobile phones.

Mowlid Mudan, from Save the Children Somaliland, told FRANCE 24 that the camp where he works makes cash transfers to 770 families.

The vast majority of families in Somaliland depend on cattle to make a living. As so many animals have died, the market price of a goat in Burao — the capital of the Togdheer region and Somaliland’s second city — has tripled. Subsequently, sustainable living has become impossible for countless families.

“We stand at a critical point in history,” UN Emergency Relief Coordinator Stephen O’Brien told the UN Security Council in March, in reference to the risk of famine in Kenya, Yemen, South Sudan and Somalia. “Already at the beginning of the year we are facing the largest humanitarian crisis since the creation of the UN,” he added.

Somaliland’s foreign minister has blamed the international community’s refusal to recognise the state 26 years after it declared independence for the territory’s ailing economy.

“Lack of recognition is proving a major problem,” Saad Ali Shire, Somaliland’s foreign minister, told The Guardian in May. “We do not receive bilateral aid. All aid goes to the third parties via the UN. If we were recognised, we could receive aid bilaterally, and attract international investors — so creating a more resilient economy that is less dependent on livestock.”

The country’s leaders believe that if they can persuade one swing state in the African Union, such as Ghana, to recognise the country, the rest of the international community would follow, according to The Guardian.

France24


https://qarannews.com/somalilands-t...-semi-desert-territory-in-the-horn-of-africa/
This is true , so many of my relatives in Badhan and towns around there have moved to Bosaaso due to the drought. Inshallah it will get better.
 

Noir

Isaaq Elitist
Us landers are a resilient bunch,we overcome the impossible time and time again!
Hopefully soon this will become another Somaliland succes story.:siilaanyosmile:
May the hope of the horn keep fighting!:samwelcome:
 

Gambar

VIP
“Lack of recognition is proving a major problem,” Saad Ali Shire, Somaliland’s foreign minister, told The Guardian in May. “We do not receive bilateral aid. All aid goes to the third parties via the UN. If we were recognised, we could receive aid bilaterally, and attract international investors — so creating a more resilient economy that is less dependent on livestock.”

Fucking burn in hell for all eternity for all the traitor trash that brought us in this horrible situation by joining an union with a cancerous enemy state!:noneck:
Us landers are a resilient bunch,we overcome the impossible time and time again!
Hopefully soon this will become another Somaliland succes story.:siilaanyosmile:
May the hope of the horn keep fighting!:samwelcome:
Aren't you a gaal? You'd be in prison. :mjlol:
 
Nobody is ever going to recognise them, why bother creating more paperwork to give the same foreign aid? It's nonsensical from a Western viewpoint.

Either prove you're different and create your own economic prosperity or shut up and stand in same old order.
 

Bohol

VIP
Nobody is ever going to recognise them, why bother creating more paperwork to give the same foreign aid? It's nonsensical from a Western viewpoint.

Either prove you're different and create your own economic prosperity or shut up and stand in same old order.


Co-sign.
 

Noir

Isaaq Elitist
Aren't you a gaal? You'd be in prison. :mjlol:
Love for my country and people is far greater than my dislike for their Muslim practices.
No matter their feelings towards us gaals,I will always support Somaliland<3
Country comes first,Clan comes seconde,Believe comes third!

Nobody is ever going to recognise them, why bother creating more paperwork to give the same foreign aid? It's nonsensical from a Western viewpoint.

Either prove you're different and create your own economic prosperity or shut up and stand in same old order.
How can we do that when we can't legally attract investors?
We are unrecognized country,which means everything is practically fucking hard to accomplish because it would be seen as illegal by the country that company comes from.

Somalia wasted so much aid money and is still lower ranked than us economically.
Why continue waste money on a corrupted country full of warlords,pirates and terrorist? Is the west that retarded? Or they want to make Somalia into another Iraq?:ayaanswag:
a is so uneducated,its not even funny.They will never form a decent country.:noneck:
 

El padrone

Hedonist, Depressive realist, Existential nihilist
Insha allah Sland will diversify ita economy away from livestock which is causing the poverty. by 2030 we will be in middle economy. mark my words
:fittytousand:
 

El padrone

Hedonist, Depressive realist, Existential nihilist
Aren't you a gaal? You'd be in prison. :mjlol:
Shes HA gaal. not bad really. I have noticed Gaal/liberal muslim lander is more patriotic than a muslim lander, because the later would sell out shankaroon to arabs and bit soft with our somali enemies.
 

Gambar

VIP
Love for my country and people is far greater than my dislike for their Muslim practices.
No matter their feelings towards us gaals,I will always support Somaliland<3
Country comes first,Clan comes seconde,Believe comes third!


How can we do that when we can't legally attract investors?
We are unrecognized country,which means everything is practically fucking hard to accomplish because it would be seen as illegal by the country that company comes from.

Somalia wasted so much aid money and is still lower ranked than us economically.
Why continue waste money on a corrupted country full of warlords,pirates and terrorist? Is the west that retarded? Or they want to make Somalia into another Iraq?:ayaanswag:
a is so uneducated,its not even funny.They will never form a decent country.:noneck:
They'll execute you for being gaal. :comeon:
 

El padrone

Hedonist, Depressive realist, Existential nihilist
They'll execute you for being gaal. :comeon:
Nah we are all closeted gaals to be honest. Personaly i will take responsibility of her wellbeing. noir seems a beautiful woman, i might as well be her man to protect her inside subeeriya house kingdom.
 

El padrone

Hedonist, Depressive realist, Existential nihilist
SL imams are fighting obesity while the ppl starve. welp.
the assholes embezzled the draught money estimated to be around 10 fuckin million dollars. it was planned to restock the draught victims with livestock and farms.

this is why you shall never a trush a sheekh.
 

Agent 47

21st Divsion of Somali National Army
23rd Jul, 2017

Somaliland’s three-year-long drought has crippled the economy of the breakaway, semi-desert territory in the Horn of Africa.



A former British colony, Somaliland gained autonomy from Somalia in 1991 but has yet to gain membership to the United Nations. Around 2 million people, nearly half its population, have been affected by the drought.

Authorities in Somaliland, which borders Djibouti, Ethiopia, Somalia and the Gulf of Aden, say that 80 percent of the livestock has died and that people have left the driest areas and settled in camps where aid is delivered.

“There was no rain in my area; the livestock had nothing to eat,” Faduma Abdelahi, who has lived on windy plains for the last two months, told FRANCE 24. “The animals were hungry, they were weak, they could not move and they died. The drought just went on and on and on.”

Those in the camps receive about a hundred dollars a month from non-governmental organisations that is transferred to their mobile phones.

Mowlid Mudan, from Save the Children Somaliland, told FRANCE 24 that the camp where he works makes cash transfers to 770 families.

The vast majority of families in Somaliland depend on cattle to make a living. As so many animals have died, the market price of a goat in Burao — the capital of the Togdheer region and Somaliland’s second city — has tripled. Subsequently, sustainable living has become impossible for countless families.

“We stand at a critical point in history,” UN Emergency Relief Coordinator Stephen O’Brien told the UN Security Council in March, in reference to the risk of famine in Kenya, Yemen, South Sudan and Somalia. “Already at the beginning of the year we are facing the largest humanitarian crisis since the creation of the UN,” he added.

Somaliland’s foreign minister has blamed the international community’s refusal to recognise the state 26 years after it declared independence for the territory’s ailing economy.

“Lack of recognition is proving a major problem,” Saad Ali Shire, Somaliland’s foreign minister, told The Guardian in May. “We do not receive bilateral aid. All aid goes to the third parties via the UN. If we were recognised, we could receive aid bilaterally, and attract international investors — so creating a more resilient economy that is less dependent on livestock.”

The country’s leaders believe that if they can persuade one swing state in the African Union, such as Ghana, to recognise the country, the rest of the international community would follow, according to The Guardian.

France24


https://qarannews.com/somalilands-t...-semi-desert-territory-in-the-horn-of-africa/
"semi-desert territory in the Horn of Africa":cryinglaughsmiley:
 
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