World
A member of Parliament for Ethiopia’s Somali region killed by officer at Jigjiga Airport
Jigjiga – Ethiopia’s Somali regional lawmaker was killed in an officer-involved shooting at Garad Wiilwaal airport in Jigjiga city on Tuesday afternoon. According to witnesses, an airport security guard opened fire inside the airport, killing the Juweria Sub’is and injuring five others.
Many of the victims were travellers exiting the airport. The shooting resulted in suspended operations at Garad Wiilwaal airport. Liyu Police arrived at the airport and arrested the officer who was suspected of opening fire.
An eyewitness told BBC Somali that there was an argument between armed airport security officers before the shooting, although no clear motive has emerged.
Authorities do not believe that incident was terror-related. The deceased Member of Parliament, who was elected from the Dolo region, spent a lot of time working in humanitarian activities.
This story is developing, we will continue to update you.
Local News
Minnesota student gets top prize at the International Quran Competition in Kuwait
Minnesota’s Abdullahi Bashir Abdi won the full-Qur’an category for the 11th International Quran Competition in Kuwait.
The names of the final winners of the three categories were announced at a gala ceremony held in the hall room of Hotel Regency near Salwar on Wednesday morning. Hafiz Abdullahi Bashir won the top prize, awards, and honors for coming first in the full-Qur’an category. The top winners received cash prizes totaling 152,000 Kuwaiti dinars.
Competitions to recite Qur’anic passages are popular in the Muslim world. The Ministry of Religion of Kuwait oversees the international competition that started on October 13. Expert judges from Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Libya and Yemen served in this competition.Hafiz Abdullahi Bashir is a student of Tibyan Canter in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Hafiz Abdullahi was selected as the representative of United States of America. Abdullahi has won 1st place in the last 4 competitions that he has participated in making this the 5th in a row.
Somali News
Severe Drought in the Horn of Africa
Minneapolis, July 20, 2022 –
The Horn of Africa experiences two rainy seasons per year. The timing varies across the region,
but rains broadly fall from March to May. The lack of these rains in 2022 has been felt
particularly in equatorial parts of the Horn of Africa region, where the long rains contribute 70% of the annual total rainfall. Currently, 16.7 million people are projected to be in crisis (UNOCHA) or worse levels of high acute food insecurity solely due to the drought in The Horn of Africa.
Four consecutive rainy seasons have failed since late 2020, a climactic event not seen in the
last 40 years. This disaster is expected to be worse than the famine in 2011, when 260,000
people died in Somalia alone, 50% of those people being children under the age of 5.
Our Executive Director, Mohamed Idris, and Program Director, Jordan Greene, had the
opportunity to visit the Horn of Africa in June 2022. While in The Horn, they were able to witness firsthand the effects of the drought. It became apparent to Idris that the humanitarian situation in the horn of Africa region is alarming.
The latest Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report projects that global warming will negatively affect food systems in the region by shortening the growing season and increasing water stress. The combined population of Switzerland and Australia doesn’t add up to the 16.7 million people facing food insecurity in the Horn of Africa. The UNOCHA report further emphasized that the consequences of the prolonged drought conditions have extended to the loss of livestock, with 7 million deaths recorded so far. Another 22 million livestock are estimated to have been severely emaciated due to the drought.
The ongoing humanitarian crisis caused by the drought raises serious questions about future
food and water security in the Horn of Africa. The conditions have increased the workload for
women and female children who are responsible for providing water using donkeys or carrying it on their back; Access to water has increased to a walk between 3 – 5 miles each way. As a
result, female children drop out of school to assist their mothers with this burden.
ARAHA has launched a campaign to support families suffering from this drought. Our teams on the ground in the Horn of Africa allow ARAHA to know what supplies are most needed at this time and respond to the areas in the most need as fast as possible. These supplies include
rice/maize/wheat, cooking oil, evaporated milk, and water. According to our Program Director,
“We are able to distribute food baskets and non-food items for hundreds of drought-affected
families in The Horn of Africa. However, the needs are currently far beyond the resources we
have.”
ARAHA needs donations to continue providing immediate relief and aid to victims of
this disaster. The Executive Director of ARAHA urges donors to think about these families and
support ARAHA’s lifesaving work: “It’s a matter of life and death for these families. Let us save
families before it’s too late. ”
To donate, please visit www.araha.org/donate or text “ARAHA” to 44321.
If you would like more information about ARAHA’s current efforts in The Horn of Africa, please contact Jordan Greene, Program Director (jordan@araha.org), or Ashley Dial, Marketing Director (ashley@araha.org). To learn more about our relief campaign, please visit www.ARAHA.org.
About ARAHA:
ARAHA is a humanitarian non-governmental organization (NGO) that works in the Horn of Africa region, delivering essentials and developing opportunities. We have a diverse range of programs that brings life to our mission and adapts to the specific needs of each community in which it works. The organization aims to bring immediate relief to those in need throughout the Horn while simultaneously seeking to create the conditions for sustainable opportunity and self-reliance. In all programs ARAHA pursues, it seeks to responsibly enact its mission while delivering essentials and developing opportunities in communities across the Horn.
Somali News
UN congratulates President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud on inauguration
Mogadishu, 9 June 2022 – The United Nations in Somalia today congratulated President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud on his inauguration, and said it looks forward to working with his administration in support of achieving national priorities.
The inauguration ceremony for Somalia’s tenth president held in the venue known as ‘the hangar’ in the Aden Adde International Airport area of the capital, Mogadishu.
The event was attended by various regional leaders and representatives of the country’s international partners. Some of the visiting dignitaries spoke at the event – they included Kenya’s President Uhuru Kenyatta, Djibouti’s President Ismail Omar Guelleh, Ethiopia’s Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed; South Sudan’s Vice President Taban Deng Gai, and Egypt’s Prime Minister Mostafa Kamal Madbouly, among others.
Other countries represented at the inauguration included the United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Uganda, Burundi and Turkey. Representing the world body was Adam Abdelmoula, Deputy Special Representative of the UN Secretary-General, UN Resident Coordinator and Humanitarian Coordinator for Somalia.
In his remarks to the event, President Mohamud covered various topics, including peace and reconciliation efforts in Somalia, with the latter involving efforts to ensure respect for people’s rights, good relations with Somalia’s Federal Member States, a democratic system of governance and a just and fair judicial system. Protecting the environment and strengthen the country’s economy were also featured.
On the regional and global front, President Mohamud spoke about the need for cooperation to improve security in the Horn of Africa region, and enhanced trade and economic collaboration.
The worsening drought in Somalia was also highlighted. President Mohamud appealed to all Somalis and the international community to work together to help the millions of affected Somalis.
Earlier this week, UN humanitarian agencies warned that a historic fourth consecutive failed rainy season in Somalia, along with skyrocketing prices and an underfunded humanitarian response have resulted in a 160 per cent increase in the number of people facing catastrophic levels of food insecurity, starvation and disease around the country.
They went on to say that with no end in sight for the devastating drought affecting the country, the risk of famine looms larger than ever, and an urgent increase in support from the international community is essential to avert famine. Some 7.1 million Somalis – close to 50 per cent of the population – currently face crisis-level food insecurity or worse through at least September 2022.
CREDIT: UNSOM STRATEGIC COMMUNICATIONS
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