Visit www.soreel-mayas.com

Tag Archive | "Somalia"

Pirate payoffs feed big-money lifestyle in Somalia


Somalia Coast GuardsBy MOHAMED OLAD HASSAN, AP Writer | BOSSASO, Somalia – A parcel of land here that sold for $12,000 two years ago now costs more than $20,000. The price of a nice pair of men’s shoes has gone up from $20 to $50. The reason: pirates.

The influx of millions of dollars in ransoms has changed life in this coastal Muslim community, driving prices up and creating a schism between the pirate haves and have-nots. As piracy ramps up again with the end of the monsoon season, the lifestyle of the pirates — big houses, fast cars and easy drugs — is decried by both religious leaders and ordinary villagers.

“The use of drugs such as cannabis and the drinking of alcohol, sex and other obnoxious misconduct are now becoming common within the pirates, causing social problems,” said Sheikh Ahmed, a mosque leader in the town of Galkayo. “That is what is worrying us, a lot more than the risk they pose to the foreign ships and crew.”

Just last month, pirates were paid a reported $3.3 million to release 36 crew members from a Spanish vessel held hostage for more than six weeks. Pirates stand to make tens of thousands from the payment, money that will pulse through the community in gifts, loans and payments to family, friends and businessmen.
The European Union Naval Force says pirates now hold 11 ships and 264 crew members hostage off the coast of Somalia. There is little doubt that more ransom money is coming.

“There is mad money circulating here, and it affects everybody — directly or indirectly,” said Haji Said, a hotel owner.

A lone paved road passes through the middle of Bossaso, and hotels, businesses and new construction line its sides. SUVs and luxury vehicles from Asia ply the road with American, Somali and Indian music blasting from within.

The price of clothes, shoes and cosmetics is climbing, said Anshur Kamil, a businessman. Pirates don’t even have to pay upfront. Those holding ships hostage that haven’t yet received ransom can buy goods on credit — at elevated prices — and settle up their debts when the ransom money comes in, villagers say.

The pirates pay in dollars and don’t bother to haggle, said Khadra Abdullahi, a shop owner in Bossaso, a coastal town on the northern edge of Somalia across the Gulf of Aden from Yemen. “Sometimes they leave change behind, which shows that money is nothing to them.”
When villagers think the price of a cosmetic is too high, their reply is “we are not pirates,” said Abdullahi.
The closer to the pirate dens one gets, the higher the prices go. In the nearby town of Eyl, a cup of tea costs three times as much as in Bossaso. In Eyl, pirates pay $5 for a shoeshine, compared with 50 cents in Bossaso, said Hashim Salad, a store owner.

Two years ago, a teen named Adani lived on the streets of Bossaso. Now, at only 19 years old, he is a pirate and owns a big house and large truck. He says he has taken part in two hijackings that earned him $75,000, and plans to take part in one more high-seas heist.
“When you have nothing people despise you and if they see that you have money you will be respected,” said Adani, who gave only one name for fear of reprisals. “This next job will be my last in the piracy trade. I know it’s a big risk but I believe in gambling. If I win, I will get married and give up piracy.”

Roger Middleton, a piracy expert at the London-based think tank Chatham House, said the average ransom has risen from roughly $1 million last year to $2 million this year. He said pirates have been paid more than $100 million in the last two years, though he stressed that the number was an estimate only, and no one has hard figures.

“I’m sure there’s some resentment at the way pirates behave and the lifestyle they lead. It’s not a traditional or righteous one,” Middleton said.

Middleton also noted that pirate foot soldiers make not millions, but tens of thousands over a year. The big money goes to the bosses, he said, and they are likely to spend it overseas or invest it.
Clerics and village elders say they don’t approve of the pirate lifestyle. Teenagers threaten their parents that they will join the pirates if they don’t get their way, said a prominent Bossaso elder, Suldan Mohamud Aw-nor.

Marriage has also been affected by pirates with pockets full of cash. Hundreds of cars escort the bride and groom to the reception, where the house is crammed with expensive furniture, and the bride wears expensive gold jewelry, said Shamso Ahmed, the owner of a beauty salon. Thousands of dollars are paid to brides’ families as a dowry.
“Pirates do not waste time to woo women, but instead pay them a lot,” said Sahro Mohamed. “They did this to several girls I know.”

Article Source: Yahoo News

Popularity: 1% [?]

Posted in NewsComments (0)

Bin Laden calls for Somalia's President to be 'dethroned'


Osama bin Laden has urged Somalis in a new audio tape to topple the new President, who is already struggling to deal with insurgents.  Sheikh Sharif Ahmed, a moderate Islamist elected this year in the 15th attempt to form a government, has been trying to reach out to rebels who have waged a guerrilla war for the past two years and control large swaths of territory.

 

“The war which has been taking place on your soil these past years is a war between Islam and the international crusade,” Bin Laden said, according to al-Qa’ida’s English translation. “These sorts of presidents are the surrogates of our enemies and their authority is null and void in the first place, and as Sheikh Sharif is one of them, he must be dethroned and fought.”

 

The violence in Somalia has left more than 16,000 civilians dead since the start of 2007, driven more than a million more from their homes and left about a third of the population depending on food aid. Western security services fear Somalia could become a base for al-Qa’ida-linked militants.

 

Link to Article Source: http://www.independent.co.uk

Popularity: 1% [?]

Posted in NewsComments (0)

SOMALIA | Abducted UN staff released unharmed


NAIROBI, (IRIN) – Four UN staff members abducted by unknown armed men on 16 March in Wajid town, 340km northwest of the capital, Mogadishu, have been released unharmed some hours later, the UN confirmed.

The four were released late Monday night, according to a statement issued by the Office of the UN Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator for Somalia.
The foreign staff members, one from UN World Food Programme (WFP), two from the UN Development Programme (UNDP), and a Somali national, were abducted from a convoy travelling to the local airfield.
“I am very enormously relieved that our staff are free and safe,” Mark Bowden, the UN Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator, said in the statement. “The United Nations is very grateful for the efforts and intervention of the local authorities who used their influence and reach to ensure our dedicated staff were cared for and ultimately released safely and quickly.”
He added: “This is an important affirmation that the UN presence and its activities in Bakool and the surrounding areas are accepted and protected by the local communities and leaders.”
The four were reportedly taken by a clan militia, according to a local journalist, who requested anonymity.

“The militia was angry that members of their clan were not employed as guards; it was about resources, nothing else,” the journalist said.
He said it took the intervention of elders and Mukhtar Roobow, spokesman for Al-Shabab – which controls much of southern Somalia – to secure their release.
“The quick and positive resolution of this incident will ensure the aid operation can go on unhindered,” Bowden said. “Wajid has been a longstanding aid hub serving relief activities in Somalia.”

Some 3.2 million Somalis, almost half the population, are reliant on humanitarian aid, according to the UN. One in every seven children is malnourished and the vast majority of those needing aid are in the south-central regions of Somalia.

 

Link to Article Source:  http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=83513

Popularity: 1% [?]

Posted in NewsComments (0)

Ugandan peacekeeper, WFP worker killed in Somalia


By Abdi Sheikh

MOGADISHU (Reuters) – A roadside bomb killed a Ugandan soldier in Somalia’s capital on Tuesday and masked gunmen murdered a man working for the United Nation’s World Food Programme in the southwest of the Horn of Africa nation.

The killings come as Ethiopian troops who have been propping up an interim government and fighting Islamist insurgents for the past two years are pulling out of Somalia, saying their mission has been accomplished.

The withdrawal has fuelled fears of a power vacuum in a country where violence and chaos onshore have allowed piracy to flourish in the busy shipping lanes off Somalia’s coast.

More than 16,000 civilians have been killed since the insurgency started two years ago, a million Somalis have been displaced and a third of the population relies on food aid.
To read the full article go to http://af.reuters.com/article/ugandaNews/idAFL61720720090106

Popularity: 1% [?]

Posted in NewsComments (0)

Visit www.soreel-mayas.com
UNAA TIMES Online © 2012 | Soreel- Mayas GraFX | A Digital Media Solutions Company | www.soreel- mayas.com