Opinions

Forces of evil collude against Somaliland gains

February 4, 2012   ·   13 Comments

OPINION | FEBRUARY 4, 2012

By Farid Adenese

Since the ascent of the Kulmiye government on to power, a great number of ‘evil’ forces emerged from all the dark corners of consciousness and sub-consciousness where they have been lurking in wait. All of these forces immediately changed shape and form from benign critics to malignant, killing salvos. Hitherto, good-natured opposition lunges and parries turned to razor-sharp blades which sweep away everything on its path with cutting edges that know no mercy. Elements of the Somaliland Diaspora immigrants are working hard to turn Somaliland into ill-conceived, satellite, NGO-like ‘states’ within a headless ‘state’ precariously seated in Mogadishu. Media ‘proponents’ broke into two halves: one suppressing all and everything that was good and great in Somaliland and the other half confused and bewildered knowing not where to turn to for unbiased sources – or the truth.

The Opposition

Led by a chagrined, embittered core of die-hards that appear to have not recovered from the ravages and disappointments of the last presidential elections, members of the Somaliland opposition are increasingly moving away from constructive criticism to incensing proclamations and threats against the system, against members of the government and against the sacrosanct sovereignty of the nation. The wildly sprayed out shrapnel remarks of some of them are not only damaging to the decency of the Somaliland customs and traditions, but are downright harbingers of unsubstantiated doom and destruction. Words such as “Somaliland back-tracks on sovereignty” or “Somaliland has seen no worse day” or “Somaliland needs to call clans together for national consultation’ contribute nothing to the psyche but disgust on how Machiavellian some of us can be to attain desired goals.

If, on another scale – on another occasion, the opposition opened the eyes of the government and the public on what was wrong or being done wrong laced with no malice in a matter-of-fact, brother-to-brother terms, a lot would have been achieved. Instead, the opposition is exerting inordinate, uncalled for pressure on a fragile system that only God knows how long it can hold. I do not believe that the demise of Somaliland is to the benefit of anybody but its enemies. One does not expect to find such an enemy in own fold. That is, from within.

Somaliland has so many hecklers against its principles and achievements of over twenty-odd years as it is. These past years were not spent unrecognized for no reason. People were actively barring that fact, and the opposition is lending its full support and strength to foes that are using them against their homeland – against everything that they stood for or upheld. To add fuel to the fire from within is nothing short of treason.

How can the current bane be reversed? It is easy. Preach tolerance in place of prejudice. Mend fences where cracks show. Follow the lead and point out the way where necessary. Find gratification in giving. Demanding is much less rewarding than participation in view to genuine, all inclusive development.

Regions split into “States”

Nearly three dozen so-called states sprung up in Somalia of the south in the last six months or so. This means, some regions split into several ‘states’, each of which claims a government on its own with a ‘president’, ‘vice president’, ‘ministers’, ‘parliament’, etc. More and more are expected to emerge. That is the way Somalis do things: smear your face with dung, and everybody follows suit. I never imagined I could – one day – be a witness to such a dismal erosion of all Somali values and norms.

The Diaspora, it is sad to say, has started this downward slide into oblivion, and they keep fueling it. It is indeed quite incomprehensible when somebody who had been living in the west for anything between 20 and 50 years claims president-hood over people he only knows by clan kinship. The few spatters of applause in the small gathering of people who hoist him to this farcical ‘honor’ is the nearest that he/she would ever get to the needs, dreams, aspirations, pains, tears, fears and hopes of real people – and these are not among the number that matters.

Now we have ‘states’ separated by thin lines of acacia trees. In the south. We now have ‘presidents’ living on dole abroad, and presidents closely guarded by sacrificial lamps from neighboring countries whose vested interests in Somalia has not yet fully emerged into the open.

And the world is watching. It is the same world that has been watching Iraq when tens of thousands of shells were raining on hapless civilians: killing them, maiming them. The carnage is still going on in other forms and guises. It is a world that has turned a deaf ear to the plight, the pleas and the dearly earned re-independence of over three million exemplary citizens of Somaliland. A world that has been pumping money and munitions into a Somalia where such only adds on to the greed and gluttony behind the mounted guns.

Media ‘Suppresses’

The old adage stands: the media is a double-edged sword. In Somaliland, only one edge works – back track on national gains, burn down the house and make it appear you had always been this inane, blathering, self-effacing, uneducated scribbler – which they can rise above of. It is like the media changed mode to ‘self-destruct!’ in mid-stride.

One sees headlines such as ‘Somaliland goes back on sovereignty’; ‘Silanyo fails’ on this or ‘government falls on its face’ on a daily basis. With some of the papers, vile language is a style adopted. With others, the more of an eye-sore a story is, the bigger the splash on the front page. Whose objectives does this serve?

Life is like a coin: heads and tails. In other words, to everything there are two sides – one sunny, one dark. Looking at things from their uglier angles is tantamount to denying nature of its shape and appearance.

Another anomaly is, nobody can correct the present-day Somaliland media. If you do so, you will stand accused of ‘media suppression’. Practitioners of this noble trade should remember the Somali proverb which says ‘a stone falls near, a word reaches far’. Vilifying one’s name or institution by publishing it or broadcasting it makes the perpetrator culpable. No one is above the law. Crying ‘wolf!’ will not make the ‘suppressor’ the ‘suppressed’. Like any other citizen the media practitioners and publishers are accountable for their actions and should own up to them when charged. A safe way out of such an un-dignifying, ongoing squabble is to stay on track: be objective, be responsible.

Somaliland has detractors that stop at nothing, know no bounds. It has only one radio – a radio that has a limited reach. It has only one television. The rest are either outright opponents of national interests or compromise objectivity by looking the other way, guising as ‘international’ stations. In addition to this, there is that great number of other Somali-speaking media outlets that would rather see Somaliland fall on its face than present its case to the international community.

In Somaliland, one daily wakes up to lies mounted on lies presented as facts. In today’s outlets, one has to rub own eyes to make sure that one is awake and is reading or watching a whole list of features against Somaliland, in Somaliland, written by ‘Somalilanders’. That is unacceptable in all standards. Learn from the democratic West: national interests supersede all other considerations – showing that freedom of expression is not an infallible, an ‘un-budgeable’ column of concrete but, instead, a flexible maxim that is designed to use discretion and common sense.

The panacea? True to Somaliland and Somalilanders, my friends in the media must consider this advice. Close ranks. Stand tall. Become visible. Make yourself felt. Face your foes. Save your face. Defend your beliefs. Cultivate friends. Save nationhood!

A Word of Caution

Let us all be kindly reminded that the Almighty strongly cautioned us against spreading the false, painted word. Look at Verse 6, of Surat Hujarat “Ye who believe! If a wicked person comes to you with any news, ascertain it lest ye harm people unwittingly, and, afterwards, deeply regret what ye have done”. The warning is for the unwitting ‘harmer’. Imagine for yourself what is in store for the witting oppressor, offender.

Surat Ibrahim (Abraham), Verse 6, is another very powerful reminder of what can happen to those who tread on the wrong path consciously and in denial of the bounties and virtues God so lavishly bestowed on us. It is when we recognize what is good and working for us that we can reach out for more. The All Rich, the Lord of Majesty and Generosity, Says “If Ye are Grateful, I will add more (favors) unto You; But if Ye Show Ingratitude, Truly, My Punishment is Terrible, Indeed”. There is no better note to live you with than this Verse.

Farid Adenese

farid.cadami@gmail.com

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Readers Comments (13)

  1. Omer Hussein Dualeh says:

    The ill-gotten and ungrateful individuals will not succeed to destabilize Somaliland, and the crescent will come to their door-steps Insha Allaah. You have said well my fellow countryman Mr. Farid Adenese, and as you said Allah has worn those who spread the false news.

    We shall be going to London and our heads are high. We will proof that we are "THE BEST KEPT SECRET IN AFRICA" to those attendees, and our hard-worn recognition will be accelerated by this Conference, while others will as usual kill each other as soon as they left that meeting.

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  2. British-Somali says:

    I personally think the problem stems from SL's hastiness in permitting free-press. For a nation so fragile to take such a bold step as to permit free-press is very dangerous. We look to the west and see how its working for them, but lets not forget our situation is not like that of their's. SL right now is in a situation closer to that of the gulf nations rather than the west and those measures that the gulf nations have implemented should be observed until things are more stable and once the government has more discreet influence over the media should it allow free-press.

    Then again, when your involved in politics things ain't always how they seem. You've got to think variables and statuesque. Certain questions need to be entertained, such as, can you claim to be a democracy without free press, how much did the promise to free press help the kulmiye party win the election and did the Kulmiye party anticipate that this could have happened,

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  3. Omer Hussein Dualeh says:

    The sick among us, like Salebaan Haybe is what this article all about, and he without knowing what the Author is talking he came on board as usual. We know you and we reserve the right to ignore whatever you say, because Somaliland is democratic country which allows people like to vomit the venom, that we are immune to it. Therefore, cry loud and say whatever you want. Somaliland is known by the International Community that it does not gag the press and it does not kill its people.

    We have been known the best kept secret in Africa, and you will not be able to change that even if you call, all you likes. I propose SomalilandPress to forbid this sick individual to contribute to the comments column.

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    • Gobaad says:

      Omer Hussein Dualeh, he is a shameless and dirty mouthed idoit who comes in this forum to heckle the flow discussion to derail its course. He is an ignorant alright who does not have the education or the intelligence to read such a great article and to learn from it. Cutting and pasting and even taking footages from the killing fields of Somalia and making it look like it happened in Somaliland an every day occurrence. They would stop at nothing to contaminate.

      Somalilandpress should block people Saleban Haybe who has nothing to add, but to use abusive and obscene languages.

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  4. Jans says:

    A Tale!

    Once a man came to the Buddha and insulted him vigorously, the Buddha just smiled knowing the man was full of hatred and simmering in jealousy.

    He said to the man if someone offers you a gift and you refuse who does the girl ultimately belong to?

    The man who was insulting said the one who gave it!

    The Buddha said your right, your insults, hatred, and jealousy only remain in your heart because I refuse your hatred, your bitterness!

    This is the disease that is eating away at those in Somalia and Somaliland is the wise Buddha basically holding their ground saying NO THANKS and moving on WITH LIFE!

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  5. Jans says:

    gift^ not girl

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  6. Yusuf says:

    @ Salebaan Haybe

    This is cheap propaganda. You are just cutting and pasting from the Human Rights watch pages of 1988 about the crimes committed by people like you during Siyaad Barre era. You are famous of all the things you have mentioned and these are well documented everywhere.

    Somaliland offered you a blanket amnesty for your crimes, therefore, do not make me pick up your atrocities file from the shelf. Be smart and do not talk about atrocities, unless you want me to dig your file.

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  7. Dhugtame says:

    I agree with the author 100%. However, I think at this moment in time we need to focus our energy on defending our sovereignty internationally.

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  8. Weerar says:

    Thanks Farid for raising sense of awareness about our misguided Media who fail to produce a unique product of Media suitable and acceptable to Somaliland standard and culture. Freedom of speech doesn't mean to cause Fitnah and spread lies and character assassination. The day Somaliland’s censor less, mindless, amateur media society will encounter public outcry unlike never before is not farfetched.

    Peace & Milk

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  9. Jans says:

    True! Its like Fox News all over the Somali news websites, they need to be held accountable for spreading lies about people.

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  10. Gobaad says:

    Saleban Haybe, you are a lair and a foul-mouthed, shameless individual. Every body knows that Somalilanders are dignified people and much more than to be accused of killings or rape. That is what you have done, and are still doing it to this day and recorded in the history books. If you think that your obscene language will stick or hurt the reputation of Somalilanders, you are wrong. Besides, we hold ourselves above that.

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  11. Gobaad says:

    Most of the media outlets owners are ignorants and do not know what is a good journalism or freedom of speech. They are like a loose canon in spreading lies and fitnah and I think the government has to refrain from taking them into custody when they spread false information, but to hit them hard where it hurts which their pocket. And that is to heavily fine them whenever they spread lies.

    Good job Mr.Farid. It is a great and well written article.

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  12. HMObsiye says:

    What you guys calls bias media is NOT media as the world knows it. unbiased, impartial, professional media. This is nothing but a one man/woman triable tabloid that write every nonsense things that they think they can fool people with.You can fool some of the people but, you can't fool all of the people.

    These so-called tabloid media can write what ever they wants however, those who can not differentiate between true journalism and tabloid media are themselves a crazy.

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