Funny how you oppose NATO bombing, yet praising the man who flattened Somaliland’s cities, bombed civilians, and committed a genocide. That’s a disgrace to any claim of principle.
He was one of the worst human beings, and may he burn in jahanam.
In a shocking and unprecedented move, Somalia’s government has reportedly ordered the killing of anyone accused of supporting Somaliland in Mogadishu. Mass arrests are underway, with detainees allegedly tortured in custody. This is state terror, and the world must condemn it.
@SomalisVoices@ahmednasirlaw Now everyone is busy changing the narrative to fit their own agenda. Somaliland chose their interests as people like everyone else.
@georgegalloway@georgegalloway you have no idea what you're doing and saying. Read the history first sir.
The more you suppress self determination the faster you gona collapse that is the history lesson
First & Early African Independence Dates:
• Somaliland — June 26, 1960
• Madagascar — June 26, 1960
• Somalia — July 1, 1960 (inherited the UN seat originally granted to Somaliland)
• Tanzania — Dec 9, 1961
• Rwanda — July 1, 1962
• Burundi — July 1, 1962
• Uganda — Oct 9, 1962
• Kenya — Dec 12, 1963
• Mauritius — March 12, 1968
• Comoros — July 6, 1975
• Seychelles — June 29, 1976
• Djibouti — June 27, 1977
• Eritrea — May 24, 1993
*Somalia never gained independence as a separate colonial state. It inherited—and still occupies—the UN seat originally granted to the independent State of Somaliland in June 1960, a status added without a lawful, ratified union and maintained through international inertia.
Did you know? Somaliland was the first East African country to gain independence—before regretfully joining Somalia.
First & Early African Independence Dates:
• Somaliland — June 26, 1960
• Madagascar — June 26, 1960
• Somalia — July 1, 1960 (inherited the UN seat originally granted to Somaliland)
• Tanzania — Dec 9, 1961
• Rwanda — July 1, 1962
• Burundi — July 1, 1962
• Uganda — Oct 9, 1962
• Kenya — Dec 12, 1963
• Mauritius — March 12, 1968
• Comoros — July 6, 1975
• Seychelles — June 29, 1976
• Djibouti — June 27, 1977
• Eritrea — May 24, 1993
*Somalia never gained independence as a separate colonial state. It inherited—and still occupies—the UN seat originally granted to the independent State of Somaliland in June 1960, a status added without a lawful, ratified union and maintained through international inertia.
Your Excellencies @DannyDanon@michaelgwaltz as the UN Security Council convenes its emergency session on this matter, The Republic of Somaliland respectfully encourage you both to reference these historical facts and Israel’/ US leadership in upholding realities on the ground while fostering regional peace.
Thank you for your commitment to principled and fact-based diplomacy.
🧾Receipt.⬇️
@FerrariHaych @zoomafrika1 Now is inseparable from past. You will never understand now in separation from past brother and that is where the problem lies when its come to somali issues.
The State of Somaliland gained independence in 1960—and in just five days, 35 countries extended full diplomatic recognition, including heavyweights like the 🇺🇸 USA, 🇬🇧 United Kingdom, 🇮🇱 Israel, 🇨🇳 China, 🇪🇹 Ethiopia, 🇫🇷 France, 🇬🇭 Ghana, 🇱🇾 Libya, and the 🇷🇺 Soviet Union.
Then, pursuing the dream of a "Greater Somalia," Somaliland voluntarily united with Italian Somalia on July 1, 1960. That union collapsed into decades of chaos, civil war, genocide against Somaliland, by a failed state plagued by Al-Shabaab terrorists and pirates.
So why does the world—especially the UN—still bind peaceful, democratic Somaliland to this toxic marriage?
The union was never properly ratified, brought only suffering, and Somaliland has earned its freedom.
It's time to dissolve the failed union and recognize reality. Justice delayed is justice denied.
Receipts 👉https://t.co/aI7ATIWibK