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FAAH_FAAHIN Isrisaaseyn Sababatay dhimasho iyo Dhaawac oo ka dhacday Baladweyne.

Axad  28 Sep 2025 {HMC} Faah faahino Dheeraad ah ayaa laga helayaa is risaaseeyn kooban oo Maanta ka Dhacday Magaalada

Dad ku larisa Dareeska Ciidamada Millatariga Soomaaliya ayaa is risaaseeyntaan waxaa ay ku Dhax martay Bartamaha Magaalada Baladweyne Gaar ahaan Agagaarka Suuqa Daraawshta halkaasi oo ay Ganacsiyo kala Duwan ay ku lee yihiin Qaar kamid ah Shacabka Baladweyne

Ugu yaraan 2 Qofood oo uu ku jiro Madixii Maaliyada Garoonka Diyaaradaha Baladweyne Cabdullaahi Diiroow ayaa ku Dhawaacmay is rasaaseeyntan ka Dhacday Magaalada Baladweyne kuwaasi oo haatan Xaaladooda Caafimaad lagula tacaalayo Qaar kamid Isbitaalada Magaalada

Majirto wax war ah oo kasoo Baxaay Maamulka Magaalada Baladweyne iyo Kan Gobolka Hiiraan oo ay kaga hadlayaan Dagaalkii koobnaa ee Magaalada,

Mudooyinkii ugu Dambeeyey Baladweyne waxaa kusoo badanayey Dadka Sita Hubka Nuucyadiisa kala Duwan kuwaas oo Dhibaatooyin ay ku qabaan Shacabka Majirto wax tallaabo ah oo Arintaas laga Qaaday.

{DAAWO MUQAALKA} Wararkii ugu waa weeyn Soomaaliya iyo Caalamka 28-09-2025

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Axad 28 Sep 2025 {HMC} Wararkii ugu waa weeyn Soomaaliya iyo Caalamka 28-09-2025

HOOS KA DAAWO MUUQAALKA

Somali Ambassador to Kenya Congratulates Dekadaha FC on Historic CAF Confederation Cup Victory

 Sunday 28 Sep 2025 {HMC}The Ambassador of the Federal Republic of Somalia to Kenya, Amb. Jabril Ibrahim Abdulle, congratulated Dekadaha FC on booking their place in the next round of the CAF Confederation Cup after a historic performance at Kasarani Stadium.

Ambassador Jabril said the team’s resilience, talent, and belief had lifted the pride of Somalia onto the continental stage. He added that as Dekadaha prepares to face Zamalek in Cairo, the entire Somali nation stands firmly behind them with prayers and support.

He also commended Sudan’s Al-Zamala team for their sportsmanship and dedication, noting that African football is not only about competition but also about unity, respect, and shared passion for the game.

source sonna   

Finance Minister Holds Fruitful Talks with Saudi Deputy Finance Minister on Economic Cooperation

 Sunday 28 Sep 2025 {HMC}The Minister of Finance of the Federal Government of Somalia, H.E. Bihi Iman Egeh, accompanied by a delegation on an official working visit to Riyadh, held a fruitful meeting today with the Deputy Minister of Finance of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, H.E. Abdulmuhsen Bin Sa’ad Alkhalaf, and senior officials from the Saudi Ministry of Finance.

The discussions focused on strengthening economic cooperation between the two countries. Minister Biixi outlined Somalia’s development project investment plans, including in infrastructure, marine resources, livestock, agriculture, and energy sectors.

Both sides agreed to advance these discussions to a technical level to achieve tangible results.

source sonna

    

Speaker of the Parliament receives UK Ambassador to discuss bilateral ties

 Sunday 28 Sep 2025 {HMC}The Speaker of the House of the People of the Federal Parliament of Somalia, H.E. Sheikh Aden Mohamed Nur (Madoobe), received the United Kingdom’s Ambassador to Somalia, Charles King, at his office. The meeting focused on strengthening and accelerating bilateral relations between the two countries.

Ambassador King expressed his appreciation to the Speaker for the warm welcome and emphasized that during his tenure, he has focused on enhancing cooperation and relations between Somalia and the UK. He reaffirmed the UK government’s commitment to further strengthening diplomatic ties and sustaining its support for Somalia.

Speaker Sheikh Aden Mohamed Nur thanked the UK government and the people of the United Kingdom for their continuous support to Somalia, particularly in development, security, and state-building.

The Speaker also briefed the Ambassador on the activities of the House of the People and ongoing progress in the country, noting that the Parliament will focus in the coming week on reviewing and finalizing the national constitution.

Finally, Speaker Madoobe affirmed the Somali government’s commitment to holding one-person-one-vote elections, restoring citizens’ constitutional rights to directly elect their leaders.

source sonna

      

Somalia arrests European national of Somali origin in human trafficking crackdown

Sunday 28 Sep 2025 {HMC}Somali authorities have detained a Somali-origin individual holding European nationality suspected of participating in a human trafficking network targeting young Somalis, the Immigration and Citizenship Agency (ICA) said Thursday evening.
The suspect was flagged during a border screening after advanced document verification systems detected discrepancies in travel records. Officials said the arrest was part of a wider government effort to curb illegal migration and dismantle transnational crime rings exploiting Somali youth.

In a post on X, the ICA said “Using advanced document verification tools, the Immigration and Citizenship Agency identified a Somali-origin individual holding European nationality suspected of trafficking youth. The suspect was handed over to CID for further investigation.”

The ICA’s ability to identify discrepancies likely stems from its recent integration with Interpol’s I-24/7 platform, launched in June through a U.S.-backed program connecting Somali airports to global watchlists.
ICA officials said the suspect has been transferred to the Somali Police Force’s Criminal Investigation Department (CID) for questioning and legal proceedings. Authorities have not released the individual’s name or nationality, citing the sensitivity of the ongoing investigation.
Investigators believe the suspect i
s linked to a cross-border trafficking syndicate operating between the Horn of Africa, the Middle East, and parts of Europe.
The arrest follows a crackdown announced in May, when Attorney General Suleiman Mohamed unveiled new prosecution mechanisms after Somalia joined the UN Convention Against Transnational Organized Crime.
Human trafficking remains a growing threat in Somalia, where unemployment and insecurity continue to drive many young people toward smugglers offering false promises of work abroad. In the first quarter of 2025 alone, the ICA said it prevented 124 young Somalis from embarking on unauthorized journeys to Europe, Asia, and Africa.
The International Organization for Migration (IOM) has warned that criminal networks profit from vulnerable migrants who often face detention, abuse, or death along the route.
The Somali government has urged citizens to avoid irregular migration routes and report suspected traffickers. Officials said enhanced border controls and international partnerships are essential to dismantling trafficking operations active across the region.
The CID is expected to release additional details once the investigation concludes.

 

source hiiraan online

Russia secretly recruits 22 Kenyans to fight war in Ukraine

Sunday 28 Sep 2025 {HMC}Kenyan police said they rescued 22 people from an alleged human trafficking ring that was secretly funneling citizens to Russia to be deployed in the war against Ukraine.

The operation followed an intelligence-led raid on a residential apartment in the Athi River area on the outskirts of Nairobi. Investigators seized recruitment materials, travel documents, and job offer letters during the raid.

One suspect accused of coordinating the trips was arrested and brought to court, where he was ordered detained for 19 days as police pursue further investigations.

Officials said the man had allegedly arranged for the victims to travel to Russia in September and October.

How They Were Lured to Russia

 

According to detectives, the victims revealed they had signed contracts with an unnamed overseas employment agency and were promised jobs in Russia.

They had been instructed to pay up to Ksh2,331,000 for visas, travel, accommodation, and other expenses, with some already depositing as much as Ksh194,250.

Authorities said the recruits were being processed for Russia and ultimately intended to be deployed in Ukraine, echoing reports of similar schemes targeting citizens from Turkmenistan, Cuba, Sri Lanka, and several African nations.

The development comes amid growing alarm over Kenyans lured abroad under the guise of employment, only to end up as mercenaries in Russia’s war.

A young Kenyan athlete was captured by Ukrainian forces and claimed he had been tricked into joining the Russian army. “I am Kenyan, don’t shoot,” he reportedly pleaded upon capture.

Kenya’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said it is investigating reports that other citizens trafficked to Russia may now be prisoners of war in Ukraine. Ukrainian officials have confirmed that combatants from Africa, including Somalia, Sierra Leone, and Togo, are being held in POW camps.

Russia Embassy Response

The Russian Embassy in Nairobi, however, rejected reports linking Moscow to recruitment efforts in Kenya.

In a statement, the embassy said a Russian national questioned by Kenyan police had no ties to the Russian government and denied claims of official involvement in trafficking or conscription.

“As of today, the Embassy has no official information from the local authorities about any claims against the Russian citizen or his activities.”

Despite these denials, law enforcement agencies in Kenya warn that a disturbing trend is emerging.

“The diplomatic mission remains open to constructive interaction with Kenyan state authorities on issues concerning the stay of Russian citizens in the Republic of Kenya, including ensuring their compliance with both local and Russian law, and will continue its work to protect the rights and interests of Russian citizens.”

Many of those who return from Russia come back injured, traumatized, or do not return at all.

Authorities urged Kenyans to be cautious about overseas job offers, as investigations continue into the possible sale of citizens into slavery for the Russian army.

source hiiraan online

African forensics embrace AI as ‘key player’ with global backing

Sunday 28 Sep 2025 {HMC}As forensic science advances across Africa, leaders from Somalia and The Gambia see artificial intelligence (AI) as a potential “key” game-changer, though progress remains heavily reliant on training, resources and international support.

“In terms of AI, it is a new era in Somalia,” said Col. Muhidin Ahmed Osman, head of the Police Criminal Investigations, highlighting that the technology enables facial recognition from video footage and helps organize evidence collected in investigations. Though still in its early stages, AI is already assisting investigators by making it “easier” and “faster” to conduct and advance their work.

Muhidin Osman shared those insights with Anadolu at the 20th International Forensic Medicine Days in the Turkish resort city of Antalya, which brought together nearly 800 experts from 27 countries to examine the advancements AI is poised to bring to forensic science, with African nations among participants.

Somalia’s forensic journey began in 2016, when the country built its first forensic laboratory and relied entirely on manual investigations.

“Since that, we structured our forensic lab in Somalia, then we trained our officers in different departments or units. One of them is digital forensics, the other one is fingerprint,” as well as plastic and DNA samples, said Osman.

Despite the advances, AI use in Somalia remains limited to the physical identification of suspects, and the country still lacks in-house DNA analysis capacity. Samples are collected and sent to partner laboratories in South Africa for processing. Somalia also shares biometric data with the neighboring states of Kenya, Ethiopia, South Africa and Uganda, enabling cross-border tracking.

Osman emphasized the transformative potential of AI. “If we initiate such kind of artificial intelligence in our forensic lab, everything will be done faster … it will change our day-to-day,” he said, stressing that he is confident that even the suspect will be easier to identify and trace, including movements and crimes they have committed.

He added that Somalia is actively seeking AI tools to integrate into its future investigative workflow.

Foreign support has been crucial to the development of Somalia’s forensic technology capabilities.

Osman noted that the US provides significant backing, embedding experts and mentors within the country’s forensic laboratory. Collaboration also extends to the FBI, the African Union, the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, the European Union and Interpol. US assistance at the lab supports the analysis of explosives in terrorism investigations, while digital evidence is sometimes sent abroad for processing, underscoring the vital role of international partnerships in strengthening Somalia’s forensic infrastructure.

‘AI is the way for the new world … to get the dream come true’

In The Gambia, Fa Kebba Darboe, head of the country’s forensic medicine institution, spoke candidly about the current state of forensic capabilities. “Currently, we are not yet at the level of AI. We are basically manual steel. However, … AI is in the pipeline, it is in the thinking, but not yet actively in use,” he said.

Despite the limitations, Darboe acknowledged AI’s transformative potential in crime-fighting. “It (AI) will be a key player,” he stressed.

“We have the interest in advancing our DNA lab and, of course, developing into forensic ballistic examinations and questioned documents. Currently, we are constrained with DNA,” Darboe explained. “We want to advance in the area of sophisticated DNA examination,” he added, pointing out that AI use would have made DNA analysis much easier.

Darboe said that following the fall of Yahya Jammeh’s regime in 2017, there was an urgent need to provide redress to the families of missing persons. The Truth, Reconciliation and Reparations Commission was established, and officers with limited skills assisted in its work. The main challenge was the “identification of victims,” which relied entirely on manual methods, primarily perpetrators’ confessions.

Since most cases involved skeletal remains, identifications were often speculative. Darboe emphasized that expertise in skeletal analysis and digital identification would have been far more effective, as manual methods alone were insufficient for DNA analysis.

On the regional front, The Gambia is leveraging partnerships through Senegal, Ghana and the West African Network of Forensic Officers (WAFNET). “Where you lack the ability to examine … you sought for the cooperation of the other,” Darboe noted, highlighting the importance of cross-border collaboration while AI and technological upgrades are developed.

The lack of specialized personnel remains a key bottleneck, said Darboe. “We are only 15 personnel,” he said.

“We really needed enhancement in the capacity of more training in specialized areas … Specialization is a problem in the Gambia,” he noted, stressing the need for political commitment. “We will accelerate this with the political players to get the dream come true … AI is the way for the new world.”

He hopes to establish training exchanges with countries like Türkiye in ballistics, toxicology and anthropology.​​​​​​​ 

source hiiraan online

Somali President joins Trump at White House dinner marking UN’s 80th anniversary

Sunday 28 Sep 2025 {HMC} Somali President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud attended a White House dinner hosted by U.S. President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump in honor of visiting heads of state during the 80th anniversary of the United Nations.

Mohamud joined world leaders for a commemorative photo with Trump and his wife after being invited to the official gathering, which celebrated cooperation among UN member states and called for renewed efforts to promote peace, development and the fight against global challenges.

The dinner, a long-standing U.S. tradition coinciding with the annual UN General Assembly in New York, came weeks after Trump referred to Somalia as “a corrupt country without a government,” remarks that drew criticism in Mogadishu.

Earlier in the week, Mohamud addressed the UN General Assembly, highlighting the difficult circumstances Somalia has faced and outlining progress his administration says it has achieved — from improving security and fighting terrorism to strengthening democratic governance and advancing constitutional reforms.

source hiiraan online

Capacity Fix: Cutting AOG time for Somali operators as East Africa’s MRO squeeze intensifies

Sunday 28 Sep 2025 {HMC} East Africa’s maintenance capacity is shifting fast. In July, Ethiopian Airlines opened a major expansion of its MRO complex in Addis Ababa, adding a two-bay widebody hangar, a component repair workshop and a central warehouse in a project valued at more than $150 million. The carrier now counts eight hangars on site, with the build-out designed to handle more third-party work across the region.
That’s welcome news, but it also spotlights a tough reality: demand is rising even faster. AFRAA projects African airline traffic to grow from 98 million (2024) to 113 million (2025), a 15% jump that strains hangar slots, parts pipelines and skilled labour. Global MRO spend has already surpassed $114 billion (2024) and is forecast to reach $156 billion by 2035, a “super-cycle” driven by higher aircraft utilization, aging fleets and supply-chain friction. Engine shop turn times are at historic highs due to parts and labour shortages—delays that cascade into schedule cuts and missed revenue.

For Somali carriers flying 737 Classics, Dash-8s and Fokkers, every hour counts. AOG costs can run €10,000–€150,000 per hour depending on aircraft, route and disruption scope. At the same time, regulators expect stronger safety systems and cleaner paperwork. With Mogadishu FIR restored to Class A airspace, authorities and partners are watching compliance and reliability even more closely across the corridor to Nairobi, Hargeisa and beyond.

What this means for Somali operators

  • Slots will be tighter. Regional capacity is growing, but demand (traffic + deferred maintenance) is growing faster. Plan earlier, certify locally where you can, and remove avoidable findings before an aircraft ever hits the hangar.
  • Paperwork is now a commercial lever. Robust Safety Management Systems (SMS) aligned with ICAO Annex 19 help unlock insurance, financing and codeshares—and de-risk board decisions.
  • Turboprops are a lifeline for thin routes. On short sectors, aircraft like the ATR 72-600 can emit about 45% less CO₂ than similar-size regional jets—freeing cash for maintenance and training.

Danan’s capacity fix: 3 moves you can make this quarter

1) A 48-hour Reliability & SMS Gap Audit
We baseline your fleet against Annex 19 expectations—hazard reporting, assurance, training logs, and corrective-action closeout—then deliver a prioritized punch list your quality manager can execute. This reduces audit findings before you request slots and improves your insurability.
2) Avionics uptime blitz on the usual culprits
We tackle quick-win AOG drivers with on-ramp diagnostics and line-fit training: pitot-static leak checks, RVSM validations, transponder/TCAS tests, VOR/ILS, radio altimeters, EGPWS, and monthly nav-database updates—plus wiring inspections and mod packages that cut nuisance write-ups. (These are Danan’s core training and troubleshooting specialties.)
3) Parts and shop-time hedging
We map the five LRUs most likely to ground your type this season and pre-position rotables or pooling options; where heavy work is unavoidable, we reserve windows with partner facilities while clearing documentation snags that extend turn time. (Engine shop TATs remain elevated—get in line early, with clean records.)

Why Danan?

  • Diaspora-led expertise. Founder Ahmed Ali brings decades of avionics and heavy maintenance leadership in Canada and Somalia, with hands-on 737, ATR, Dash-8 and Fokker experience—plus AME (Canada) and FCC licenses.
  • Regulatory fluency. We support license applications, SMS programs, maintenance-program authoring, and operational audits/insurance reviews for operators scaling up after the Class A airspace upgrade.
  • On-ramp speed. Our model is built around rapid remote troubleshooting and targeted dispatch to shorten the AOG tail, not just the shop visit.

A simple plan for the next 30 days

  1. Free 30-minute fleet-health consult. We align on your biggest downtime drivers and regulatory deadlines.
  2. Data and docs sweep. Pull logbooks, MEL/CDL trends, ETOPS (if applicable), and last audit findings.
  3. Execute the blitz. Close easy avionics snags, schedule training refreshers, and lock in external slots only where needed.
  4. Board-ready update. You leave with a one-page reliability plan and date-driven SMS progress tracker

 

source hiiraan online