Investigative Reports

The Diplomacy of Gullibility: How Somaliland’s Foreign Ministry Keeps Falling for International Fraudsters

In what has become a familiar scene in Somaliland's...

Ex-US Ambassador to Somalia Lobbies for Hormuud’s Access to American Banking System

Questions mount as André partners with Somali MP who...

Major Corruption Allegations Rock Somaliland Finance Ministry’s Recruitment for World Bank’s Public Resource Management Project

According to documents examined by Somaliland Chronicle, serious allegations...
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“He Came, Conquered and Humiliated Farmajo” Inside PM Abiy’s Visit to Mogadishu

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The Ethiopian Prime Minister Dr Abiy Ahmed paid an unexpected visit to Mogadishu on Saturday June 16th to meet the Somalia’s President Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed. The newly elected Prime Minister has been on a whirlwind of visits to meet with Ethiopia’s regional traditional rivals and other African leaders but his visit to Mogadishu has been the most discussed and auspicious yet.

Dr Abiy Ahmed greeted Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed bin Sultan Al-Nahyan, the crown prince of Abu Dhabi, at Bole International Airport

Dr Ahmed’s visit to Mogadishu follows another meeting a day earlier in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia where the Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed bin Sultan Al-Nahyan signed 3 billion US dollars loan and investment agreements, including a one billion foreign currency support. According to the signed agreement with Ethiopia, UAE will make an immediate transfer of 1 billion US dollars to the National Bank of Ethiopia to alleviate the foreign currency shortage in Ethiopia.

Dr Abiy’s visit to Mogadishu differed from all meetings he has had so far with any leader, in that he swapped his sharp tailored suit for a casual khaki and according to eye witnesses and photos of his visit to Mogadishu and also brought with him a massive force of Ethiopian Special Forces for security escort. Somali security personnel where no where to be seen.

A video of the streets of Mogadishu shows Ethiopian forces with AMISOM guarding many parts of Mogadishu while the Prime Minister was visiting.

Don’t let his charming smile fool you or the Doctorate for that matter, Abiy has fought against Mengistu Haile Mariam as a teenager and rose to the rank of lieutenant colonel as an intelligence officer, he knows what he is doing and saw action in many conflict theaters in Africa, this is not his first rodeo the Prime Minister was a peace keeper in Rwanda during the genocide!

In a joint Communiqué issued by the Prime Minister and the President of Federal Government of Somalia Mr. Farmajo, Mr. Abiy has won massive concessions that did not show any reciprocity on the part of Ethiopia.

Article #7 is the most significant of the Communiqué points to a joint Ethiopian – Somali investment in four unspecified ports in Somalia and land transportation network. Ethiopia is land locked and has no ports of its own to contribute to this bilateral agreement with Somalia.

The timing and the optics of the meeting raised many questions, a day after meeting with the the Crown Prince of Abu Dhab and a massive infusion of 3 billion dollars with 33% or 1 billion to be immediately transferred to Ethiopia, the Ethiopian Prime Minister visits Mogadishu.

To many observers, this was a rather unexpected turn of events that Somalia would concede four ports to Ethiopia while the trilateral deal of Somaliland, DP World and Ethiopia added to the political instability of Somalia that led to the ouster of the former Speaker of the Parliament as well as the numerous grievances that Somalia filed in the UN Security Council against this deal.

Prime Ministry Abiy stated that he wants to build an Ethiopian Navy though at the time it was not clear where it would be based on despite that his country is landlocked.

There is no evidence that Mr Farmajo has brought up the Prime Minister’s ambition to build and base a navy in one or all of the four Somali ports he won in this concession.

Others point to the very nature of the meeting between Dr Ahmed and Mr Farmajo where it seemed the Ethiopian Prime Minister has gone to great lengths to show that the Somali leader was not his equal. Social media has been a blaze from the Prime Minister’s safari attire to the photo of him hugging Mr Farmajo to assert dominance and his justified distrust of all Somali security personnel and instead bringing a large contingent of Ethiopian Special Forces to guarantee his safety.

Somali president, Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed, left, introduces his ministers to the new Prime Minister of Ethiopia, Abiy Ahmed, middle, during Abiy Ahmed visit to Somali, Mogadishu, Saturday, June16, 2018.(AP Photo/Farah Abdi Warsameh)

A western diplomat who did not wish to be named said “Don’t let his charming smile fool you or the Doctorate for that matter, Abiy has fought against Mengistu Haile Mariam as a teenager and rose to the rank of lieutenant colonel as an intelligence officer, he knows what he is doing and saw action in many conflict theaters in Africa, this is not his first rodeo the Prime Minister was a peace keeper in Rwanda during the genocide!” of the Ethiopian Prime Minister.

Despite the minutia and the level of detail the media and the public has analysed the meeting and the resulting Communiqué, another important but overlooked article is #12

Though article #12 of the Communiqué is lacking in detail, many who were privy to the discussion stated that the Prime Minister was has strongly suggested that Somalia officially renounce any territorial claim of the Ogaden region of Ethiopia and declare the Ogaden National Liberation Front a terrorist group. While some media outlets interpreted this article as a sign that Ethiopia no longer supports an independent Somaliland.

A Villa Somalia protocol official who feared for his safety described the meeting in lopsided and Mr Farmajo in a demure and submissive state he has never seen, saying “Abiy came, he conquered and humiliated Farmajo and if I see my name in the paper, I will be shot dead and they will say it was Al-Shabaab. This was the saddest thing I have witnessed in my 40 years of service to my country”. Adding “They even disarmed Farmajo’s own security and inspected the Somali honor guard’s weapons to ensure there was no ammo”.

President of Somaliland with Former Ethiopian Prime Minister H.E Hailemariam Dessalegn

When reached for comment, on condition of anonymity, a high ranking official in HE President Muse Bihi government said “We have enjoyed watching Somalia flail and file complaints about the Berbera DP World to anyone who would listen, now they conceded four ports to Ethiopia in one meeting, obviously, we congratulate Prime Minister Abiy for his impressive negotiating skills but this is not our business, this is a bilateral agreement between Somalia and Ethiopia. Unlike Somalia, we respect other countries decisions and self determination and we don’t try to control things beyond our sphere of influence.

 

Hargeysa Mayor Pledges Land for Somaliland Military and their Families.

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Statement by Mayor soltelco on his official Facebook page.

On the Occassion of Eid Al-Fitr, Mayor of Somaliland’s capital of Hargeisa Abdirahman Aideed “soltelco” issued a statement on his official Facebook page that the Hargeysa Municipality has allocated land for current members of Somaliland’s Armed Forces as well as the survivors of those that have made the ultimate sacrifice in defense for their country.

The Mayor’s statement wished happy Eid Mubarak to all Muslims and Somaliland public and especially members of the Military.

The statement also appealed to mayor of Somaliland’s other major cities to make similar pledge and allocate land for our Armed Forces.

Mayor SOLTELCO’s statement is short on specifics and it is unclear if member’s of the military and survivors of those killed in action will be given the land free of charge by the Municipality or if they will purchase it at a discounted rate. Either scenario is a welcome news as land prices in Somaliland are very expensive. The Somaliland Chronicle is trying to reach the Mayor for further clarification.

Somaliland Responds to Second Call for Jihad From Puntland

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The Governor of Somalia’s Puntland state Mr. Abdiweli Mohamed Ali Gaas repeated the call for Jihad against Somaliland during his speech to worshipers after the prayer of Eid Al-Fitr.

This is the second time Puntland has called for Jihad against Somaliland to recapture Tukeraq town which Somaliland has reclaimed from Puntland militias in early January as well as other parts of Sool and Sanaag regions of Somaliland.

Puntland is claiming that large swaths of Sool and Sanaag regions are part of it is territory based on their tribal composition. While Somaliland is asserting that its borders are those defined by the colonial powers which is what every border in the entire African continent is

based upon.

Somaliland accused Somalia’s Federal Government of being behind two failed assaults by Puntland Militias to retake Tukeraq town.

Mr. Gaas who has sacked his intelligence and security services chiefs last Wednesday in a move that many observers attributed to string of high profile and brazen attacks by Al-Shabaab terrorist network. Al-Shabaab has overrun a major military base close to the regional capital of Bossasso. Additionally, reports from Bossasso also pointed to intelligence lapse in the planning of two failed assaults on Somaliland’s Army in Tukeraq town.

Despite the region being in the grip of terrorism, the regional Governor once again called for armed Jihad and appealed to the people of Sool that Puntland is coming to liberate them.

Somaliland Responds

Somaliland Presidential Spokesman Mr. Mohamoud Warsame Jama

When asked to comment on Mr. Abdiwali’s threats and call for Jihad against Somaliland, Somaliland’s Presidential spokesman, Mr. Mohamoud Warsame Jama stated Somalia and Somaliland had a union that was dissolved in 1991, there is nothing between Puntland and Somaliland. He added that Somaliland will not respond to the weak regional administration that cannot secure its people from Al-Shabaab and any threats from Puntland are of simply no consequence.

The spokesman continued to say that Somaliland holds the Somali Federal Government  responsible for the attacks on Somaliland in Tukeraq on two separate occasions and that we have been a nation, a powerful nation that existed for 27 years and will not be harmed by skirmishes by Somalia.

The President’s Spokesman added that Somaliland is working to provide relief to its people affected by the recent cyclone but will defend it self and its borders are not negotiable and that it is ready to defend itself against attacks.

Russia Pummels Saudi Arabia in World cup Opener Match 5 – 0

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Russia comprehensively thrashed Saudi Arabia, 5-0, in the opening game of its home World Cup. Yuri Gazinsky scored on a header 12 minutes in, and afterward Saudi Arabia could offer little resistance.

Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, FIFA president Gianni Infantino and Russian President Vladimir Putin watch the ceremony prior to the Russia 2018 World Cup Group A football match between Russia and Saudi Arabia at the Luzhniki Stadium in Moscow on June 14, 2018. / AFP PHOTO / SPUTNIK / Alexey DRUZHININ

Substitute Denis Cheryshev scored twice, with Yuri Gazinsky, Artem Dzyuba and Aleksandr Golovin also on target at a delirious Luzhniki Stadium.

[Need some help? Here’s a breakdown of all 32 teams. Here’s the World Cup schedule.]

Although the Saudis pressed in the opening moments, Russia created the first clear threat when Mario Fernandes crossed for Fyodor Smolov, whose shot was blocked.

Priceless reaction by Putin and Crown Price Salman

And the hosts struck after 12 minutes when they forced another corner which was half-cleared and, when Roman Zobnin crossed, Gazinsky headed home the tournament’s opening goal.

Saudi Arabia were under increasing pressure and Smolov’s deflected strike was clawed away by keeper Abdullah Al-Mayouf when play continued after an offside had been missed.

But they threatened with 20 minutes gone when Yasser Al-Shahrani broke down the left and, from his cross, Mohammad Al-Sahlaawi’s header was deflected wide.

Soon afterwards, Russia were forced into a change when midfielder Alan Dzagoev pulled up with what seemed to be a hamstring injury and was replaced by Cheryshev.

Cheryshev was quickly into the action, racing from inside his own half before being dispossessed as he tried to shield the ball while support arrived.

Ten minutes before the break, Salem Al-Dawsari embarked on a dangerous run for Saudi Arabia but was crowded out, and moments later Russia appealed in vain for a penalty when Smolov went down under Osama Hawsawi’s challenge.

Cheryshev was in a dangerous position on the left of the area but ran out of space when it seemed the hosts could be about to double their lead. But with 43 minutes gone they did just that, substitute Cheryshev superbly getting away from a challenge and thumping his finish high into the net.

Neither coach made any changes at the break, with Russia’s Smolov the first to threaten in the second half with a deflected effort.

Saudi Arabia were continuing to give possession away easily and, from another concession dangerously close to their own area, Golovin fired over.

But the Saudis were close to pulling a goal back soon afterwards as a dangerous cross zipped through the area with Taisar Al-Jassim unable to get a telling touch. Salman Al-Faraj headed over from a free kick as the hour approached, but Russia goalkeeper Igor Akinfeev remained largely untroubled.

Saudi coach Juan Antonio Pizzi made a change after 63 minutes, bringing winger Fahad Al Muwallad on for midfielder Abdullah Otayf, and Russia’s Stanislav Cherchesov replaced Aleksandr Samedov with Daler Kuzyaev soon afterwards.

Smolov came off for fellow striker Dzyuba as Russia made their final change — and Dzyuba wrapped up the points with his first touch after 71 minutes when he took advantage of more poor marking to head powerfully home.

Roman Zobnin sent a header over soon afterwards — but Russia saved the best until last as Cheryshev swerved a glorious effort into the top corner with his right foot in added time, and there was still time for to Golovin to bend in a magnificent free kick in the closing seconds.

Encrypted Apps Are Not As Safe as you Think

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ENCRYPTED COMMUNICATION USED to be too complicated for mainstream use, but approachable apps like WhatsApp and Signal have become a no-brainer for digital privacy. With all of their security-minded features, like disappearing messages and identity-confirming safety numbers, secure chat apps can rightfully give you peace of mind. You should absolutely use them. As the adage goes, though, there’s no such thing as perfect security. And feeling invincible could get you in trouble.

End-to-end encryption transforms messages into unintelligible chunks of data as soon as a user presses send. From there, the message isn’t reconstituted into something understandable until it reaches the receiver’s device. Along the way, the message is unreadable, protected from prying eyes. It essentially amounts to a bodyguard who picks you up at your house, rides around with you in your car, and walks you to the door of wherever you’re going. You’re safe during the transport, but your vigilance shouldn’t end there.

“These tools are hugely better than traditional email and things like Slack” for security, says Matthew Green, a cryptographer at Johns Hopkins University. “But encryption isn’t magic. You can easily get it wrong. In particular, if you don’t trust the people you’re talking to, you’re screwed.”

On one level it’s obvious that both you and the person you’re chatting with have access to the encrypted conversation—that’s the whole point. But it’s easy to forget in practice that people you message with could show the chat to someone else, take screenshots, or retain the conversation on their device indefinitely.

Former Trump campaign chair Paul Manafort found this out the hard way recently, when the FBI obtained messages he’d sent over WhatsApp from the people who received them.

 

‘Encryption isn’t magic. You can easily get it wrong. In particular, if you don’t trust the people you’re talking to, you’re screwed.’

MATTHEW GREEN, JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY

In another current investigation, the FBI was able to access Signal messages sent by former Senate Intelligence Committee aide James Wolfe, and had at least some information about the encrypted messaging habits of New York Timesreporter Ali Watkins, after the Justice Department seized her communications records as part of a leak investigation. Though it’s unknown how the FBI gained access to these encrypted chats, it wouldn’t necessarily have taken a crypto-breaking backdoor if investigators had device access or records from other chat participants.

You also need to keep track of how many devices you’ve stored your encrypted messages on. If you sync chats between, say, your smartphone and your laptop, or back them up in the cloud, there are potentially more opportunities for the data to be exposed. Some services, like iMessage and WhatsApp, either have cloud backups enabled by default or nudge users toward it to streamline the user experience. Manafort provides a useful illustration once again; investigators accessed his iCloud to access some of the same information informants gave them, as well as to glean new information about his activity. The chats were encrypted in WhatsApp; the backups were not.

“Digital systems strew data all over the place,” Green notes. “And providers may keep metadata like who you talked to and when. Encrypted messaging apps are valuable in that they tend to reduce the number of places where your data can live. However, the data is decrypted when it reaches your phone.”

That’s where operations security comes in, the process of protecting information by looking holistically at all the ways it could be obtained, and defending against each of them. An “opsec fail,” as it’s known, happens when someone’s data leaks because they didn’t think of a method an attacker could use to access it, or they didn’t carry out the procedure that was meant to protect against that particular theft strategy. Relying solely on these encrypted messaging tools without considering how they work, and without adding other, additional protections, leaves some paths exposed.

“Good opsec will save you from bad crypto, but good crypto won’t save you from bad opsec,” says Kenn White, director of the Open Crypto Audit Project, referencing a classic warning from security researcher The Grugq. “It’s easy for people to be confused.”

The stakes are especially high in government, where encrypted chat apps and disappearing message features are increasingly popular among officials. Just last week, sources told CNBC that investigators for special counsel Robert Mueller have been asking witnesses to voluntarily grant access to their encrypted messaging apps, including Dust, Confide, WhatsApp, and Signal. CNBC reported that witnesses have cooperated to avoid being subpoenaed.

Several encrypted messaging apps offer a disappearing message feature to help ensure that neither you nor the person you’re chatting with keeps data around longer than necessary. But even this precaution needs to come with the understanding that the service you’re using could fail to actually delete the messages you mark for erasure from their servers. Signal had a recent problem, first reported by Motherboard, where a fix for one bug inadvertently created another that failed to delete a set of messages users had set to disappear. The app quickly resolved the issue, but the situation serves as a reminder that all systems have flaws.

“Encrypted communication apps are tools, and just like any other tool, they have limited uses,” says Eva Galperin, director of cybersecurity at the Electronic Frontier Foundation.

In fact, simply choosing an encrypted messaging service may cary unknown risks. Some services like Confide and Telegram haven’t allowed an independent auditor to evaluate their cryptography, meaning it’s difficult to know how trustworthy they are, which of their promises they keep, and what user data they actually retain. And iMessage may collect more metadata than you think.

Signal, WIRED’s secure messaging recommendation, is open source, but it also proved its trustworthiness in a 2016 case where the service was subpoenaed. Developer Open Whisper Systems responded to a grand jury subpoena saying it could only produce the time an account was created and the most recent date that a user’s Signal app connected to its servers. The court had asked for significantly more detail like user names, addresses, telephone numbers, and email addresses. Signal had retained none of it.

While end-to-end encryption is a vital privacy protection that can thwart many types of surveillance, you still need to understand the other avenues a government or attacker could take to obtain chat logs. Even when a service works perfectly factors like where messages are stored, who else has received them, and who else has access to devices that contain them play an important role in your security. If you’re using encrypted chat apps as one tool in your privacy and security toolbox, more power to you. If you’re relying on it as a panacea, you’re more at risk than you realize.

source: Wired Magazine.

Somaliland President Pardons 511 Inmates

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The President of Somaliland HE Muse Bihi Abdi has issued a presidential decree to pardon 511 inmates in Somaliland prisons for the Eid Al-Fitr occasion.

The Presidential pardon stated that it does not apply to violent offenders and people convicted of series crimes and is only for what it termed as “light crimes”. The Presidential decree stated that the decree is being implemented effective immediately by the Attorney General’s Office.

In Somaliland, it is customary for the President to issue pardons on Eid occasion as an act of kindness to allow inmates to spend the holly celebration with their loved ones.

Time to Reshuffle Already?

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It started as a whisper few weeks ago and as the case with any new administration, there has been mishaps, some ministers in HE President Muse Bihi’s cabinet have found themselves stumbling from one controversy to another almost immediately following their appointments. While others worked quietly to implement the new President’s agenda.

The whisper of cabinet reshuffle has grown to a crescendo in social media the last few days and there is speculation that a major reshuffle might be imminent.

Others point to recent calls by high profile individuals in Somaliland who have been telegraphing to the President from social media or traditional media outlets on how he should redesign his cabinet.

It is not entirely clear if the President is planning to make any changes to his cabinet this early in his tenure,

but his choice of Ministers has been widely discussed where some have pointed to the relative youth and  possible inexperience to head vast government bureaucracies , while others have hailed it a major success as a move that brought educated and qualified youth to leadership positions. Still others, as is the case in Somaliland have immediately complained about the tribal composition of the President’s cabinet.

While the new cabinet consisted of mostly of new entrants into the political arena, The President went the traditional route of not appointing opposition party members to his cabinet.

Speculations aside, the President’s approval rating is split among party lines even though the response of his team to recent events such as cyclone Sagar and the conflict in Tukeraq have been very positive. One area that has been a thorn on the side of the new administration is the unrest in Elafweyn region.

President Bihi has been described as hard to read but there is definitely a growing speculation that there might be some high profile early departures from Mr. Bihi’s administration.