Tjioux
the pussy is never yours, its just your turn.
From the late 1980s onwards, two parallel tracks emerged to address the deepening national crisis as the country plunged into political and economic chaos, armed opposition forces pressed towards the capital, the government lost control of many regions outside Mogadishu, and administrative structures disintegrated. On the one hand, a group comprising the remnants of the former civilian government launched an initiative to try to salvage the country from total collapse by attempting to persuade Siyad Barre to resign and form a caretaker government. Although this strategy put them in opposition not only to the Barre regime but also the armed opposition groups (see below), the process gained momentum and gathered popular support as a mass movement. It built upon the preceding mobilisation of civic actors, which included a cultural group who composed songs and plays, such as the well-known “Land cruiser” depicting the travesties of the regime. Members of the group were mostly urban-based or in the diaspora and had connections with both Western countries (notably Italy) and the Arab world. Many of them had suffered long imprisonment under the Barre regime and several leading members originated from the northeast regions, including General Mohamed Abshir (who acted as the group’s spokesman on the BBC and the Voice of America), Abdirizak Haji Hussein (former prime minister and well-respected Somali nationalist), Abdulahi Boqor Musse “King Kong” (brother of the boqor, or king, of the Darod clan), and General Abdulahi Ali Farah “Hoolif”. Other key figures included the advocate Ismail Jumaale, the focal point for the group before he passed away in Italy, as well as Ali Mahdi and Hussein Bod, all from the Hawiye clan family. In mid-1990, the group, now numbering over one hundred prominent political, traditional and religious figures, engaged in a series of underground meetings in which the “Manifesto Declaration” was drafted. The Manifesto Declaration temporarily united former political rivals and was signed by 114 members of the ‘Manifesto Group’, as it became known. The government responded by arresting outspoken members of the group and, although they were quickly released in response to foreign pressure, the movement faltered.
Siad barre what a xoolo he was
AUN tho..
Siad barre what a xoolo he was
AUN tho..