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Zmeselo
Senior Member+
Posts: 37345
Joined: 30 Jul 2010, 20:43

Matt Bryden & Rashid Abdi, sued by the Govt. of Somalia.

Post by Zmeselo » 21 Dec 2020, 06:23



The Federal Government of Somalia will bring forth a lawsuit against the head of Sahan Research, Matt Bryden, in his home nation of Canada on grounds of defamation. Rashid Abdi, also an employee of Sahan will be sued in Kenya, if Somalia & Kenya agree to restore ties.
(Daily Jubaland: @DailyJubaland)



People should ask themselves, why fake political analyst Rashid Abdi isn’t quoted on Kenyan politics. Is it because as a not yet Kenyan, he is scared to comment on Kenyan politics? Or is it, because his opinion on his own country isnt sought after by westerners ?
(Karbaash ❁: @DrNabadNolol)
Last edited by Zmeselo on 21 Dec 2020, 06:53, edited 1 time in total.

Zmeselo
Senior Member+
Posts: 37345
Joined: 30 Jul 2010, 20:43

Re: Matt Bryden & Rashid Abdi, sued by the Govt. of Somalia.

Post by Zmeselo » 21 Dec 2020, 06:37



Africa
UN Investigator: Too Early to Lift Eritrean Sanctions

By VOA News

https://www.voanews.com/africa/un-inves ... -sanctions

July 17, 2012

The head of the United Nations monitoring group on Somalia and Eritrea says it is too early to lift U.N. sanctions against Eritrea, despite a report suggesting the Asmara government no longer actively supports Somali al-Shabab insurgents.

U.N. coordinator Matt Bryden told VOA Tuesday,
While we've seen some improvement, I don't think we see enough and we suggest that it will be too early to lift sanctions.
The Security Council imposed an arms embargo on Eritrea and Somalia in 2009, on concerns that officials were providing financial assistance and weapons to al-Qaida-linked al-Shabab insurgents. Eritrea has repeatedly denied the charges.

Bryden's call for caution comes just hours after Eritrea's U.N. envoy said existing sanctions should be lifted. The envoy cited a pending U.N. report that says investigators found no evidence of Eritrean support for armed groups in Somalia in the past year.

The U.N. report, seen by VOA, attributes the reduction in Eritrean support to enhanced international monitoring and al-Shabab's battlefield failures.

Bryden also said Somali officials linked in the report to the alleged theft of public funds could be hit with U.N. sanctions prohibiting travel and freezing foreign assets.
It's quite possible that some of those named in the report will eventually be designated. But this decision is for the Council and its member states. When the final version of the report is released [in a few days], there will be evidence in the public domain,
he said.

Somalia has not had a fully-functioning government since 1991. Armed militias held power in Mogadishu until August 2011, when African Union and Somali government troops pushed al-Shabab militants out of the capital.

The U.N.-backed government that took over barely operates outside the city. Its U.N. mandate expires August 20.


______________________


UN Chief, Fires Matt Bryden

22 AUG 2012


Removing this incompetent and biased individual from the helm of the Monitoring Group, was long overdue

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has sacked the incompetent Coordinator of the Monitoring Group for Somalia and Eritrea (SEMG), Matt Bryden from Canada.

The Secretary also fired the other incompetent ‘expert’ in Eritrea finances, Ghassan Schbley of United States, both effective from August 14, 2012.

The UN has received a considerable and detailed complaint about the group, for its lack of professionalism and political bias. Characteristics, that severely undermines its credibility.

As a result, it fails to present an objective, neutral and credible report on Eritrea, or Somalia for that matter.

The new Coordinator, as well as Eritrea finance ‘expert’ are Canadian Jarat Chopra and Dinesh Mahtani of UK respectively. [Read the Secretary General’s letter below, in its entirety]



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