国产热热热精品,亚洲视频久久】日韩,三级婷婷在线久久,99人妻精品视频,精品九热人人肉肉在线,AV东京热一区二区,91po在线视频观看,久久激情宗合,青青草黄色手机视频

Global General

Stark reality in a Somali community

By Hu Yinan (China Daily)
Updated: 2010-12-06 07:26
Large Medium Small

Stark reality in a Somali community

People wait in line at a Kenyan processing center for new arrivals in Dadaab, the world's biggest refugee camp on Aug 20, 2009. Hundreds of thousands of Somalis have fled across the border to escape the war that has ravaged their nation. [Spencer Platt / Getty Images]

Rapid infiltration

The majority of Somali elites are based in the Kenyan capital, Nairobi, where people such as Mohamed Qanyare Afrah, once a powerful warlord in Mogadishu and now a Somali Member of Parliament aiming for presidency, can be spotted sipping coffee in a downtown cafe on a casual Sunday afternoon.

Somali refugees and immigrants who have lived in Kenya for generations, however, find themselves in a profoundly more hostile environment.

Kenya's Somali population was around 800,000 at the turn of the century but has since soared to 2.4 million. Many reside in North Eastern Province or Eastleigh, a predominantly Somali-inhabited district known as "Little Mogadishu".

Somali rights groups accuse Kenyan policymakers of marginalizing Somalis out of fears about Al-Shabaab's rapid infiltration into the country. Others, mostly young, optimistic men like Feisal, are making constant bus rides around Somali communities looking for jobs, only to return empty handed every time.

Among the thousands luck has failed is Mohamed Amin, 19. After spending an entire year unsuccessfully trying to find work in Eastleigh, he turned to the Internet for solace and amassed 500 friends from across the globe on Facebook.

Today, Mohamed proudly sees himself as "sort of a celebrity" in the cyber world, although financial troubles are never a part of the Somali-Kenyan's online conversations. He said: "If you tell friends your problems, you will lower yourself."

Unemployment is a key threat to Somali communities in Kenya, said Muhyadin Ahmed Roble, a Nairobi-based Somali journalist.

"Outside the communities, it's hard to find a job if you're a Somali ... but Al-Shabaab has lots of money," he said. "They give money and cell phones to children and recruit people."

The Islamist group also funds and has de facto control over a rising number of Muslim schools in southern Somalia and parts of Kenya, where youngsters and women are systematically trained to be jihadists, according to Muhyadin.

"Education changes everything. We teach people to behave. If not, they ... you know," said Hassan Faliir, manager at the COMPIT Training Center, Eastleigh's leading educational institution with a student population of 2,800, many of them Somalis.

Classrooms in the center's headquarters on the second floor of the Sunrise shopping mall are each equipped only with a few rows of crumbling wooden desks and chairs. On one classroom door is part of a verse from the Quran in English that has been printed with a blue-ink ballpoint pen. It reads: "Surely Allah does not change the condition of a people until they change their own."

COMPIT, which offers primary and secondary school education and aims to open a college in two years, relies on students' tuition fees to operate and is in dire need of donations and outside funding, said Hassan.

Similar institutions have even fewer financial means to compete with Al-Shabaab, which exploits Somali-Kenyan residents' collective frustration and experiences of alienation with promises of offering them a clear purpose of being.

日土县| 平乐县| 滦南县| 巩留县| 从化市| 绍兴市| 称多县| 阳谷县| 黄大仙区| 巴马| 五莲县| 门源| 清丰县| 岫岩| 洞头县| 丹寨县| 壶关县| 封丘县| 清涧县| 赞皇县| 旌德县| 阳江市| 关岭| 涡阳县| 阆中市| 邯郸市| 清流县| 吴川市| 瑞丽市| 新晃| 抚松县| 全椒县| 利川市| 广安市| 礼泉县| 顺义区| 唐山市| 娄烦县| 开鲁县| 锡林郭勒盟| 澳门|