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   ISSUE 122 
  
    
  
   
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  156 Youngsters Sentenced By Controversial Panel But the Move is  
  widely Condemned 
   
  Hargeisa, May 22, 2004 (SL Times) – Thousands of people who converged  
  on Hargeisa’s Khayria Square last Tuesday morning to listen to a  
  speech that President Dahir Rayale Kahin was scheduled to give on the  
  occasion of the 13th anniversary of the 18th May Independence Day,  
  were in for disappointment when they became unable to hear what the  
  Somaliland leader was saying due to a public address system failure. 
  Mr. Rayale and his entourage arrived in Khayria Square at 7:45 in the  
  morning and stayed there until around 8:30 before returning back to  
  the presidency.  
   
  As the president began to speak from a podium built adjacent to the  
  front of the Khayria building, the loudspeakers failed to function.  
  The crowd became restive from the loss of sound and some people  
  started to make loud noises as if trying to draw attention to the  
  inaudibility of the president’s voice. Mr. Rayale reacted by  
  interrupting his speech several times to ask the crowd if they could  
  hear him. An attempt to repair the fault in the public address system  
  ended unsuccessfully after a man shown around by the minister of  
  information as a standby technician actually turned out to be a  
  gardener at the ministry’s offices. 
   
  When a segment of the crowd got noisy, policemen using large wooden  
  sticks moved in, ostensibly to restore calm. Many people, including a  
  pregnant woman, were seen being beaten by policemen. 
  On taking notice of the police's behavior, President Rayale was  
  prompted to shout loudly into the microphone an instruction for  
  policemen “to leave the people alone”. He also pleaded with the  
  crowd to stay calm. However the president’s voice was lost in the  
  loud cracking noise made by a sea of people being jolted backward and  
  forward by hundreds of policemen. The situation was about to get out  
  of control when President Rayale ended his speech. The president was  
  escorted by at least a dozen of technicals on the way to Khayria and  
  back. Both on arriving and leaving, his fast moving entourage of  
  vehicles barely missed crashing into the crowd only because people  
  were quick to get out of the way. This behavior angered many people.  
  “Our leaders need security protection but that doesn’t mean that they  
  have the right to endanger the lives of their own people,” said a  
  woman who waited for 2 hours to hear Rayale’s speech, marking the day  
  when Somaliland restored its sovereignty 13 years ago. 
   
  A former security officer commenting on the same matter observed:  
  “They are doing things in an unprofessional way because by reckless  
  driving you do not only put the lives of innocent civilians in danger  
  but also the lives of leaders you are supposed to protect”. 
   
  Many youngsters stayed at Khayria Square long after the 18th May  
  celebration ceremonies ended. Several hundreds of them gathered  
  together to stage a demonstration in protest against government 
  corruption, unemployment and water shortages. The demonstrators 
  then took the main road leading to President Rayale’s office.  
  The march was soon joined by gangs of teenagers and street- 
  boys who went on rampage, causing damage and looting some  
  properties. The police tried to disperse the march by firing live  
  bullets over the demonstrators. As the crowd neared the Presidency,  
  additional police reinforcement arrived. The presidential security  
  guards were also called in to help in putting down the rioting. 
  By mid-day on Tuesday over 180 youngsters including many school  
  children were arrested for taking part in an illegal demonstration  
  and disturbing public order. A controversial panel called the  
  Hargeisa Regional Security Committee sat in the afternoon to sentence  
  153 of the detainees to 6 months in prison each while another 3  
  received one year prison term each. The rest of the detainees were  
  released. 
   
  Parents who awaited in front of Hargeisa Central Police Station in  
  the hope that their children would be released, were shocked when 
  told that their loved-ones were going to be taken to Mandhera prison, 
  about 100km east of Hargeisa. By 7:30 p.m. buses carrying the  
  youngsters emerged from the police station. Mothers wept after the  
  police refused to let them talk to their children. “These are Faqash,”  
  shouted many of them. 
   
  Meanwhile, the Somaliland human rights group Samo-talis described the  
  sentencing of the detainees by the regional security committee as  
  illegal. The group called upon the Somaliland authorities to  
  immediately release the detainees. In a 1999 decision, the Somaliland  
  House of Representatives banned the role of security committees. Both  
  under late president Egal and current President Rayale, the  
  government never abolished this security apparatus. Security  
  committees were formed under the “Emergency law” introduced during  
  the time of dictator Siyad Barre. The law gave security committees  
  the power to make arbitrary arrests and trials. The Somaliland  
  government invokes this law routinely. But most legal experts  
  consider the functions of this body as unconstitutional. Only two  
  weeks ago, the KULMIYE opposition party demanded the security  
  committees be abolished. Many parents were devastated by the fact  
  that their children were going to miss their public exams which began  
  last Thursday throughout Somaliland. 
    
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