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Somalia’s Parliament Ratifies African Children’s Charter

Wednesday  1 October , 2025 {HMC} In a historic development, the House of the People of the Federal Parliament of Somalia has ratified the African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child, marking a major step forward in protecting and promoting children’s rights across the country.

The ratification vote saw 130 members in favor, 10 against, and 5 abstentions, reflecting broad parliamentary support for strengthening legal frameworks that safeguard the welfare of Somali children.

The African Charter, a key regional treaty, sets standards for the protection, development, and well-being of children, ensuring that their rights are recognized and respected across participating states.

Parliamentary leaders hailed the ratification as a milestone for Somalia’s legislative commitment to children’s welfare, emphasizing that the move aligns with the country’s broader efforts to promote social development and uphold human rights.

The Ministry of Family and Human Rights Development is expected to lead efforts in implementing the Charter, translating the legal commitment into policies, programs, and tangible improvements for Somali children.

 source sonna

{DAAWO MUQAALKA} Mareeykanka oo hakiyey Qeeyb kamid ah shaqooyinkiisii Soomaaliya.

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Arbaco 1 October  2025 {HMC}  Mareeykanka oo hakiyey Qeeyb kamid ah shaqooyinkiisii Soomaaliya.

 

HOOS KA DAAWO WARARKII UGU DAMBEEYAY

{DAAWO MUQAALKA} Mareykanka oo qaaday howlgallo ku wajahan Soomaalida ku nool Minnesota

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Arbaco 1 October  2025 {HMC} Mareykanka oo qaaday howlgallo ku wajahan Soomaalida ku nool Minnesota

 

HOOS KA DAAWO WARARKII UGU DAMBEEYAY

Kenya Navy hosts Indian Squadron in Mombasa to bolster cooperation

Wednesday  1 October , 2025 {HMC} The Kenya Navy hosted four vessels from India’s First Training Squadron during a four-day port call in Mombasa, underscoring deepening naval and cultural ties between the two nations.

The Kenya Defence Forces (KDF) said the visiting ships—Indian Navy Ship (INS) TIR, INS SHARDUL, INS SUJATA, and Indian Coast Guard Ship (ICGS) SARATHI—were part of the Indian Navy’s Overseas Deployment for Autumn Term 2025.

During the visit, the Indian delegation, led by Acting High Commissioner to Kenya Sushil Prasad and Defence Attaché Captain Velagada Shirdikant, paid a courtesy call on Kenya Navy Commander Major General Paul Otieno at Navy Headquarters in Mombasa.

“Discussions centered on strengthening maritime security cooperation and reaffirming the longstanding naval partnership between the two navies,” KDF said in a statement.

A deck reception hosted aboard INS SHARDUL on September 26 brought together senior officials, including Mombasa Governor Abdulswamad Sheriff Nassir, Taita Taveta Governor Andrew Mwadime, Major General Otieno, and senior Kenya Navy officers.

The visit also carried a strong element of cultural diplomacy and public engagement.

Kenya Navy and Indian Navy bands staged a joint performance at Mama Ngina Waterfront during World Tourism Day celebrations, while a yoga session aboard ICGS SARATHI promoted wellness and camaraderie among Indian crew members and Kenya Navy officers.

According to KDF, the port call provided practical sea training for Indian naval cadets, while reinforcing cooperation in maritime security and expanding cultural exchanges across the Western Indian Ocean.

 source hiiraaan online

Somalia to start first oil drilling with Türkiye’s support in coming months, president says

Wednesday  1 October , 2025 {HMC} Somalia will begin drilling its first oil block in the coming months as part of a wider push to harness natural resources and modernize its economy, President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud told lawmakers on Monday.
Speaking at the opening of the 7th session of the House of the People and the Upper House, Mohamud said the initiative follows seismic surveys carried out in October 2024 by the Turkish research vessel Oruç Reis in areas where Türkiye holds offshore exploration licenses.

The partnership deepened earlier this year when the Turkish Petroleum Corporation signed an agreement with Somalia’s Ministry of Petroleum and Mineral Resources to explore three onshore blocks covering roughly 16,000 square kilometers. The deal was signed in Ankara by Turkish Energy and Natural Resources Minister Alparslan Bayraktar and Somali Petroleum Minister Dahir Shire Mohamed.

“This is a significant step for Somalia to fully harness its natural wealth and transform it into economic opportunity and social progress,” Mohamud said.
Beyond oil, the president announced plans to establish Africa’s first satellite launch station with Turkish support. He said the project is part of a broader infrastructure push that includes building new roads, airports, and seaports aimed at positioning Somalia as a regional hub for trade and technology.
Mohamud also highlighted improvements in national security, noting that the federal government now covers the salaries of about 100,000 soldiers, civil servants, and teachers entirely through domestic revenue. He credited recent tax reforms and legislation passed by Parliament that secured international debt relief and advanced constitutional reforms that had stalled for years.
“Our commitment is to use the wealth God has blessed Somalia with to drive growth and stability,” the president told Parliament. He pledged to continue dialogue with political stakeholders and citizens to strengthen unity and maintain momentum in the state-building process.

 

 source hiiraaan online

Thousands of jobs at risk in Africa as US trade deal expires

Wednesday  1 October , 2025 {HMC} Workers and industry are bracing for the end of a longstanding U.S. trade agreement that gave African exporters preferential treatment and now leaves businesses vulnerable to new competitive pressures and tariffs.

The African Growth and Opportunity Act will terminate as scheduled Tuesday amid uncertainty over renegotiations and the looming impact of new tariffs announced by the White House in April.

AGOA is a multilateral trade agreement that has given thousands of products from qualifying African nations duty-free access to U.S. markets since 2000.

A key example of the deal’s impact can be found in Kenya, where it has allowed the country’s textile and apparel sector — makers of jeans, for instance — to effectively compete with Asian exporters such as in Bangladesh and Vietnam.

“If AGOA goes away we have zero chance to compete with the Asian countries,” said Pankaj Bedi, owner of United Aryan, an apparel manufacturer in Nairobi that exports Levi’s and Wrangler jeans to the U.S.

Textile and apparel exports from Kenya to the U.S. have grown from around $50 million when AGOA was first introduced to around $500 million today.

“I will be asking (Trump) for the U.S. to consider seriously renewing and extending AGOA for at least a minimum of five years,” Kenyan President William Ruto said last week at the U.N. General Assembly. “It is a platform that connects Africa and the U.S. in a very fundamental way.”

AGOA had also given African countries hope that major elements of their export economies would be exempt from blanket tariffs of 10% — and in some cases much higher — announced by the U.S. earlier this year.

Kenya is already paying 10% on non-AGOA exports, which are not many. Kenyan manufacturers will struggle to compete with rivals in Asia, even though some Asian countries may face a higher U.S. tariff, because of the limited domestic supply chain in Kenya where most of the raw materials are imported, as well as higher energy costs, lending rates, and operating expenses.

Ruto and other African leaders are pushing for a last-minute renegotiation of AGOA while also scrambling to sign new bilateral agreements with the U.S. They are doing so amid a period of seismic change in global trade dynamics and with a White House that shows a mixed commitment to Africa.

“African countries including Kenya must be alive to the possibility that AGOA won’t be extended, AGOA won’t be remodified, and … America won’t be interested in having a trade pact,” said Raphael Obonyo, a public policy expert at UN Habitat.

Ruto said last week that Kenya and the U.S had made “good progress” toward a bilateral agreement that could be signed by the end of this year.

AGOA has mostly benefitted African economies in both big and small industries. The agreement has helped both the continent’s largest exporters — Nigerian and Angolan oil, South African autos, and Kenyan clothing—as well as some of its smallest economies where exports are highly concentrated, such as Lesotho and Eswatini.

Some African economies, like Nigeria and Lesotho, are likely to face “notable adverse effects” from the end of AGOA and new U.S. tariffs, researchers at the German Institute of Development and Sustainability wrote in a brief.

While there may be limited macroeconomic effects across Africa as a whole from changes to U.S. trade, these assumptions “likely understate the full impact of new Trump-era tariffs and do not capture the indirect effects like reduced foreign investment, weakened supply chains, rising poverty, or the loss of capacity-building,” the researchers added.

AGOA-dependent industries likely employ some 1.3 million people whose jobs are now at risk — in countries where many people have few if any other options in the case of sudden unemployment.

In Kenya, more than 66,000 people, many of them women, were employed through now-vulnerable textile and apparel exporters to the U.S. In the garment districts of Kenya’s bustling capital, job cuts and fears over livelihoods have already begun.

United Aryan said this week that it will shed some 1,000 jobs or 10% of its workforce amid trade uncertainty.

“There is no way we can survive,” added Bedi, who is also the apparel export sub-chair at the Kenya Association of Manufacturers.

For Julia Shigadi, a machinist at United Aryan, the end of AGOA is an existential threat.

“This has been my bread and butter,” said Shigadi. “I only depend on this job—so if it is gone, it means my life is gone too.” 

 source hiiraaan online

Djibouti to deploy additional troops to support Somalia’s fight against AS

Wednesday  1 October , 2025 {HMC}  Djibouti has pledged to send more troops to Somalia to help counter the persistent threat of  as  on Tuesday, reaffirming its long-standing role in regional peace and security.

Djibouti’s Permanent Representative to the United Nations, Mohamed Siad Doualeh, announced the commitment in his address to the UN General Assembly. He said his country welcomes Somalia’s progress in state-building and security but warned that significant challenges remain.

As part of the effort, Djibouti and Somalia have signed a new bilateral agreement allowing for the deployment of additional Djiboutian troops.

 

The forces will bolster ongoing operations against al-Shabaab and support stabilization efforts under the African Union Support and Stabilisation Mission in Somalia (AUSSOM).

Doualeh urged the international community to step up assistance for Somalia, stressing that terrorist attacks continue to threaten civilians, security forces, and humanitarian operations.

Djibouti has been a troop-contributing country since the African Union first deployed peacekeepers to Somalia more than a decade ago, maintaining a key role in operations to stabilize the Horn of Africa nation.

 source hiiraaan online

Attorney General refers child abuse case to Banadir court

Wednesday  1 October , 2025 {HMC}  Somalia’s Attorney General has referred the case of Ali Abdi Sheikh Khadar, also known as Dhegadiish, to the Banadir Regional Court after he allegedly buried a young child alive, filmed the incident, and shared it on social media.

In a statement on Tuesday, the Office of the Attorney General said the court, after reviewing preliminary evidence, ordered the defendant to be held in temporary detention while investigations continue.

“The Office, in fulfilling its responsibility to protect and respect the dignity of Somali children, sends a strong warning to anyone who violates children that strict action will be taken against them, and they will be brought before the competent Court,” the statement read.

The Attorney General’s Office urged the Somali Police Force to intensify efforts to curb crimes committed on social media, particularly those violating children’s fundamental rights.

The Office reiterated its commitment to prosecuting child abuse cases and warned that anyone found guilty would face justice.

The development follows the arrest on Monday of seven youths in Mogadishu who filmed themselves engaging in dangerous knife play in public stadiums and posted the footage online, prompting widespread public concern.

 source hiiraaan online

{DAAWO MUQAALKA} “MW Xasan ma tagi karo Kismaayo isago aan ka garaabin waxi ka dhacay J/Hoose iyo Gedo’X/Cumar Yuusuf

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Arbaco 1 October  2025 {HMC} “MW Xasan ma tagi karo Kismaayo isago aan ka garaabin waxi ka dhacay J/Hoose iyo Gedo’X/Cumar Yuusuf

 

HOOS KA DAAWO WARARKII UGU DAMBEEYAY

{DAAWO MUQAALKA} Jabuuti oo Ciidamo usoo Direeyso Soomaaliya.

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Arbaco 1 October  2025 {HMC} Jabuuti oo Ciidamo usoo Direeyso Soomaaliya.

 

HOOS KA DAAWO WARARKII UGU DAMBEEYAY