type shitOur smoke should be with these people not ourselves I would say take them to xabsi and rough them up then deport but if they come back 7.62s will too
And we keeping the women![]()
type shitOur smoke should be with these people not ourselves I would say take them to xabsi and rough them up then deport but if they come back 7.62s will too
And we keeping the women![]()
Blame remittances! These kids are getting their next pay from a relative back home who’s working 50+ hours a week and charging their kid rent to pay for their lazy assesWhy cant the youth get up their lazy arses and work? it should be mandatory to work.The more they come the more an invasion can take place. At least Bixi deported them in great numbers Cirro is lazy and not compatible to serve anything. No other region in Somalia has this problem.
Stop the fearmongering, these Oromos for the most part fleeing due to the economic situation in Ethiopia; the government should deport them if they entered illegally, the real story about that video is below in the video description.
The Sheek Bakrii Saphaloo Script was created in 1956 by Sheikh Bakri Sapalo (1895-1980), an Oromo scholar, poet and religious teacher from Ethopia also known as Abubaker Usman Odaa. It is used to write Oromo, a Cushitic language spoken in Ethiopia, Kenya, Somalia and Egypt. The script is also known as the Saphalo script or Qubee Sheek Bakrii Saphaloo. It was designed specifically for Oromo phonology, and is an abugida, like the Ge'ez script which is used to write Oromo. There are individual letters for consonants which are modified to indicate the vowels attached to them. Unlike in the Ge'ez script, there are no inherent vowels associated with the consonants.
An important Oromo Sheikh who fled the tyranny of Haile Selassie’s regime in the late 1970s and later died in Somalia in 1980 is proof of the Oromo struggle against oppression, not of any imagined “takeover.”At first, the script was widely accepted in the Haraghe region of Ethiopia, but the Ethiopian goverment were worried it would make the Oromo self-aware and endanger the unity of the country. So they tried to suppress it, and placed Sheikh Bakri Sapalo under house arrest in 1965. Sapalo wrote a short book entitled Shaldaa in his script about the oppression of the Oromo people. This is one of the few texts in the script. Sheikh Bakri Sapalo fled to Somali in 1978 after the overthrow of Haile Selassie in Ethiopia. He lived in a refugee camp there and was not allowed to publish his writings. He died in 1980 at the age of 84.
That friend fed you xenophobic exaggerations. Most Oromo migrants in Somaliland and Somalia do petty work like car washing, shoe shining, or other menial tasks, and many survive through begging. The so called “housemaid” jobs are not ones Somalis usually take unless absolutely necessary. In fact, Somalis often employ them out of kindness, but there is no “takeover” happening.I dont like to fearmonger and I had also assumed this was a heavily exaggerated issue. But I talked to a friend who recently got back from hargeisa after not visiting in several years and he was shocked. They've basically taken all the low paying jobs and they're everywhere like this is not a joke. Basically every coffeehouse he went to the works were all oromo. All the housemaid type jobs have also been taken by them since they're willing to do it for less pay.
The crazy thing is that nothing can be done about this since somalis are so miskeen and will look at you funny for hassling people.
Could never be me.Blame remittances! These kids are getting their next pay from a relative back home who’s working 50+ hours a week and charging their kid rent to pay for their lazy asses
I told you the truth and what people are talking about on Somali social mediaAn important Oromo Sheikh who fled the tyranny of Haile Selassie’s regime in the late 1970s and later died in Somalia in 1980 is proof of the Oromo struggle against oppression, not of any imagined “takeover.”
This @moosaid account was made recently with the clear aim of provoking people and spreading targeted misinformation. I strongly suspect it is yet another disgruntled user behind a series of burner accounts, since the pattern is consistent: constant doom posting or recycling of bad opinion pieces and hysteria found online.
Distorting the actual realities on the ground by vommitting posts on the internet doesn't actually make them come true. It doesn't alter whats actually happening.
That friend fed you xenophobic exaggerations. Most Oromo migrants in Somaliland and Somalia do petty work like car washing, shoe shining, or other menial tasks, and many survive through begging. The so called “housemaid” jobs are not ones Somalis usually take unless absolutely necessary. In fact, Somalis often employ them out of kindness, but there is no “takeover” happening.
View attachment 371545
They are also subject to routine deportations and evictions, often unannounced police round them up and return them in caged vehicles on a monthly or even weekly basis. The numbers are not large; at most a few thousand are in Somalia, with only a few hundred youth crossing at any given time. They often cite security reasons for deportations
In Djibouti, the numbers appear higher, but many of those counted as “Ethiopian” are actually Afar or Gadabursi/Issa who live on both sides of the border. Others who cross into Djibouti often move inland temporarily to escape the summer heat and later return.
The main reason Oromos pass through Djibouti, Somaliland, and Puntland is to use them as transit routes toward Saudi Arabia and the UAE.
View attachment 371549
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Somali territories are not their end destination mostly just a stopover. They are fleeing economic hardship, not pursuing any invasive agenda.
View attachment 371547
If anything, the risks they endure on the journey, including abuse and death, make it clear they are escaping desperation, not seeking dominance.
View attachment 371548
If anything, the risks they endure on the journey, including abuse and death, make it clear they are escaping desperation, not seeking dominance.
In fact, Somalis often employ them out of kindness, but there is no “takeover” happening.
Listen to the man being interviewed in the first video if you understand Somali:I told you the truth and what people are talking about on Somali social media View attachment 371555
This is the same man who was in hargeyasa saying
Hargeisa was my ancestors land
and Everyone is talking about foreigners controlling the job market in Somaliland.
They are not deported, but the corrupt immigration police take some money from them and release them.
Oromos don't work in small businesses now. No construction work, houses, hotels, roads, even government work is being done by them now.
There is popular anger in Somaliland. Arabs and Indians have taken control of crafts and medicine. The Oromo have taken control of simple businesses and construction. The Chinese have taken control of mining, and none of them pay taxes. The people do not benefit from them at all, and unemployment is on the rise.
Wax faham nio!?
And all of them don't respect the people. You see what the Oromo are doing, and the Yemeni who was in Somaliland and described us as slaves, and what the Indians and the Pakistani and Arab doing with our women If you had dhiig and love for your country, you would want these people deported or strict laws imposed on them.
Blame remittances! These kids are getting their next pay from a relative back home who’s working 50+ hours a week and charging their kid rent to pay for their lazy asses
You can see this in another 2020 survey . Remittances played a very small role for most peoples incomes. It's only like a small portion like 3-14% of their income in most places so by and large when its received its treated as a supplemental income.
Households mostly relied on wage labor or small businesses.
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Overall only 8% of rural and urban population counted on remittances as their main source of income.
26% of rural households rely on agriculture and fishing and 16% rely on small businesses.
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This doesn’t support your position. If anything, it should be prevented so that countless young Oromos don’t embark on a journey that could end up costing them their lives. This is from the article you shared:
“It’s a hazardous ordeal: 558 deaths were recorded last year, mostly caused by drownings. Overcrowded and unseaworthy vessels capsized on at least six occasions in 2024, and smugglers have also been known to throw people into the sea.”
There is clearly a moral imperative to stop these crossings. The only reason Somaliland is now the route of choice is because the authorities in Djibouti and Yemen tightened controls. Same article again:
“In 2023, about three quarters of the crossings into Yemen occurred via Djibouti. But owing to tightened security and increased patrols by Djibouti and Yemeni coast guard vessels, an increasing share of migrants had switched by the end of that year to crossing from the port of Bosaso, in the Puntland region of Somalia.”
“In 2023, about three quarters of the crossings into Yemen occurred via Djibouti. But owing to tightened security and increased patrols by Djibouti and Yemeni coast guard vessels, an increasing share of migrants had switched by the end of that year to crossing from the port of Bosaso, in the Puntland region of Somalia.”
Nothing to do with kindness, businesses will do anything to pay workers even less than they already do. This is objectively not a good thing for citizens. They’re laying off workers in Europe/America and hiring Indians who will work for as low as 1/10th of the going rate. Should we just accept a race to the bottom because other people are more desperate than you?
From what I’ve seen, most of the head positions like managers, architects, and engineers are run by Somalis. The majority of the laborers are also locals, working either as permanent contractors or on daily wages. When foreign workers are brought in more recently, it’s usually because local companies need to meet specific client demands that require specialized skills not yet widely available in the local workforce. It’s less about outsourcing and more about bridging the current skills gap.
In fact, Somalis are doing the jobs just alongside some foreigners brought in to support specific technical tasks or help transfer knowledge.
We’re seeing the same pattern in Garowe. One local company director summed it up well:
"Iftin currently employs 17 foreigners and 10 locals on permanent contracts. When a project is under construction they hire more locals on daily wages"
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That ratio speaks volumes. The use of foreign workers is likely to shrink over time as Somalia invests more in vocational and technical education that directly responds to market needs. We’re not avoiding labor, we’re building up the skills to do it all ourselves.