Xamse-Bushaar (@bushaarxamse) 's Twitter Profile
Xamse-Bushaar

@bushaarxamse

Passionate about democracy and good governance |

ID: 791599072868233216

calendar_today27-10-2016 11:15:01

521 Tweet

300 Takipçi

226 Takip Edilen

سلـطان (@sultanwho) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Somaliland has strong functioning institutions, elections, and peaceful transfers of power. Its internal security is stronger than many internationally recognized states.

GuledWiliq (@guledwiliq) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Recent Treasury Department sanctions against the Houthis are a welcome step, but they are ultimately toothless if they stop at non-state actors. The real enablers in the Red Sea and Horn of Africa remain largely untouched. The devil in Bab el-Mandeb is Djibouti. While Iran facilitates

Recent <a href="/USTreasury/">Treasury Department</a> sanctions against the Houthis are a welcome step, but they are ultimately toothless if they stop at non-state actors. The real enablers in the Red Sea and Horn of Africa remain largely untouched.

The devil in Bab el-Mandeb is Djibouti. While Iran facilitates
Nic Johnson (@tiltingatm3) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Ibn Khaldûn says prestige in lineages obeys the “rule of four” and ends after the causes of the origins of the attainment of glory by the founder have been forgotten both by scholarship and by tradition.

Ibn Khaldûn says prestige in lineages obeys the “rule of four” and ends after the causes of the origins of the attainment of glory by the founder have been forgotten both by scholarship and by tradition.
Saganism 📚 (@saganismm) 's Twitter Profile Photo

"All governments suffer a recurring problem: Power attracts pathological personalities. It is not that power corrupts but that it is magnetic to the corruptible." — Frank Herbert, Chapterhouse: Dune

"All governments suffer a recurring problem: Power attracts pathological personalities. It is not that power corrupts but that it is magnetic to the corruptible."

— Frank Herbert, Chapterhouse: Dune
Abdirahman Dhimbil (@abduuraxmaan) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Consul General of Israel in Toronto CG Idit Shamir 🇨🇦🇮🇱 on Somaliland–Israel ties: "Recognition was not a gift, but an honor for Israel to be first to step forward, the first to say what could have been said long ago.”

Xamse-Bushaar (@bushaarxamse) 's Twitter Profile Photo

“Abuja will be abuzz on Friday, 6 February, when Nigeria’s minister of state for defence, Bello Matawalle, holds a mass wedding for nine of his 30 children, from four wives.”😱😱 theafricareport.com/406797/matawal…

Xamse-Bushaar (@bushaarxamse) 's Twitter Profile Photo

This is how Hargeisa looked in 1991. #Somaliland was reborn from these ashes and ruined buildings. youtu.be/oNG49O-Myqk?si…

Xamse-Bushaar (@bushaarxamse) 's Twitter Profile Photo

“When you think of “#Somalia” – think grim North Korea, when you think of #Somaliland, think an African South Korea: a firm ally of civilization”themoderatevoice.com/somaliland-a-n…

Aziz Mahdi 🌍 (@amaguudcadde) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Another fact: In the 16th century, Ottomans annexed Zeila, creating nominal suzerainty over parts of the Somali coast. By the 1870s, Ottoman vassal Egypt under Khedive Ismail occupied towns like Zeila & Berbera. Egypt withdrew in 1882, paving the way for British colonisation.

Alliance of Biafran Americans (@realabamake) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Institutional Racism: The Invisible Chains on Africa's Self-Determination In the shadowed corridors of global diplomacy, where power is wielded through recognition and alliances, Africa's quest for self-determination remains stifled by a pervasive institutional racism that

Institutional Racism: The Invisible Chains on Africa's Self-Determination

In the shadowed corridors of global diplomacy, where power is wielded through recognition and alliances, Africa's quest for self-determination remains stifled by a pervasive institutional racism that
Xamse-Bushaar (@bushaarxamse) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Just a small correction: Mohamed Hagi is not a state minister, but rather the President’s Advisor on Foreign Affairs. The New York Times Matthew Mpoke Bigg nytimes.com/2026/02/12/wor…