السبت، أغسطس 22، 2009

Watan azumi


dansudan

Akasarin al'ummar Musulmi a fadin duniya su na shirye-shiryen fara azumin watan Ramadan, wata mai tsarki a Musulunci, daga asabar. Addinin Musulunci yana amfani da bayyanar wata wajen tsaida ranar farko ko ta karshen wata

Shugabannin addinin Musulunci a fadin duniya sun ce ba a samu ganin wata ba a ranar alhamis, a saboda haka aka tsaida jumma'a ta zamo ranar karshe ta watan Sha'aban

Musulmi a kasashe kamar Nijeriya, Aljeriya, masar, Indonesiya, Iraqi, Sudan, Syria, Somaliya, kasashen yankin Gulf da yankunan Falasdinawa da ma nan Amurka duk zasu tashi da azumi asabar idan Allah Ya kai mu

A tsawon watan Ramadan, Musulmi su na gujewa cin abinci ko shan ruwa ko jima'i da wasu abubuwan da dama daga ketowar alfijir har zuwa faduwar rana

الأحد، أغسطس 02، 2009

Sudanese Hausa they are Genuine sudanese Mr. President!


dansudan

November 1, 2008 — Omer al-Bashir, the embattled president of Sudan, has been reported to have made a statement in a Sudanese newspaper al-Ayaam two months ago that the Hausa Fulani people are not Sudanese and that they should not vote in the 2009 general elections stipulated by the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA)! This sparked off a vigorous protest in the Hausa Fulani communities all over the Sudan especially in the city of al-Gadhariff in Eastern Sudan. During the protest, in which people from the Hausa neighborhood organized a peaceful march led by a group of tribal leaders and officials in a popular demonstration to hand a memorandum of protest to the Head Quarter of the Gadhariff state to express their disapproval of President al-Bashir’s reported offensive statement that the Sudanese tribes of Hausa, Fulani, Bornu and Tama groups as non-Sudanese and they not have the right to participate in the upcoming elections in Sudan. Government of Sudan forces backed by heavy weapons attacked the unarmed civilians and chased them into their neighborhoods using tear gas and live ammunition, which resulted in the martyrdom of four people who were killed in cold blood and hundreds were wounded and among the seriously injured were children and women and local hospital had difficulty coping with the casualties. Accordingly, the NCP regime added insult to injury. The irresponsible, imprudent and a racist statement by the president al-Bashir and the killing of peacefully demonstrating civilians are deplorable.
We all know that the Hausa Fulani people are hard working, devout Muslims of high moral code and patriotic Sudanese citizens who are widely distributed all over the country for centuries. They have contributed immensely to the development projects. It is unfair and an unjust accusation on the part of a president of a nation to label his fellow compatriots as aliens. Though it is appalling, but not surprising as al-Bashir is not a stranger to controversy with respect to random and misjudged statements of his personal views. He is renowned for the vulgarity of the language he tends to use without giving any attention to the consequences it may lead to. Al-Bashir’s blunders have tarnished the Sudanese reputation and the once good name of Sudan. Similar reckless distasteful obnoxious assertions were made by Abdel-Rahim Mohamed Hussein, Sudan’s Minister of Defence, who was reported to have stated in a press conference at the Sudanese Embassy in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on Thursday March the 13th 2008 at 11:45pm in an answer to the question whether it was true that the Government of Sudan (GOS) was planning to settle Five Million Egyptians mainly from Upper Egypt, the Nile valley south of Cairo, in the Northern Region ”Shamaliya” by saying: " If we assume the argument that the government seeks to resettle 5 million Egyptians in northern region why not? What is good of 8 million people in Darfur, all of whom are Africans came from abroad. Isn’t it better for you those who come from Egypt or those Africans who have come from West Africa?! ".
At this juncture, it is high time we define what makes a Sudanese and to identify the criteria for being a Sudanese. Sudan means in Arabic, the lingua franca for the different Sudanese ethnic groups, ‘Land of the black people’ that extends from the Red Sea in the east to the Atlantic Ocean in the Western coast of the African Continent before the colonial powers partitioned it into present day countries, separating and displacing its people using the Divide and Rule Doctrine.
The Hausa people have a glorious history and a promising future. They are a Sahelian people mainly located in the West African regions of northern Nigeria, southeastern Niger, Sudan, Cameroon, Ghana, Cote d’Ivoire, and Chad and smaller communities scattered throughout West Africa and on the traditional Hajj route across the Sahara Desert and Sahel like many other African tribal groups across the imaginary borders created by the ex-colonials.
Historians report that with the decline of the Nok and Sokoto, who had previously controlled Central and Northern Nigeria between 800 BCE and 200 CE, the Hausa were able to emerge as the new power in the region. Closely linked with the Kanuri people of Kanem-Bornu (Lake Chad), the Hausa aristocracy adopted Islam in the 11th century CE. In 1810 the Fulani, another Islamic African ethnic group that spanned across West Africa, invaded the Hausa states. Their cultural similarities however allowed for significant integration between the two groups, who in modern times are often demarcated as "Hausa-Fulani", rather than as individuated groups. The Hausa remain in preeminent in Niger and Northern Nigeria. Their impact in Nigeria, as in Sudan, is paramount, as the Hausa-Fulani amalgamation has controlled Nigerian politics for much of its independent history. They remain one of the largest and most historically grounded civilizations in West Africa.
The Hausa and Fulani cultural similarities however allowed for significant integration between the two groups, who in modern times are often demarcated as "Hausa-Fulani", rather than as individuated groups and many Fulani in the region do not distinguish themselves from the Hausa. The Hausa have been Muslim since the 14th century, and have converted many other Nigerian tribes to the Muslim faith by contact, trade etc. The architecture of the Hausa is perhaps one of the least known but most beautiful of the medieval age. Many of their early mosques and palaces are bright and colourful and often include intricate engraving or elaborate symbols designed into the facade. By 1500 CE the Hausa utilized a modified Arabic script known as ajami to record their own language; the Hausa compiled several written histories, the most popular being the Kano Chronicle. Hausa-speakers (35 million), situated largely within but also beyond the borders of the state of Nigeria.
The Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni was reported to have said: “How do they live together respecting each other’s culture? This has been the problem of the Sudan.", when the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) was signed in Nairobi on 9 January 2005 and was hailed by leaders from around the world as the dawn of a new era for Sudan.
In short, Sudan is for the Sudanese and we believe that there is ample room and enough resources in the country for those who accept to live in it as citizens, including those who continue to identify themselves as anything else but Sudanese, like president al-Bashir himself and his uncle al-Tayeb Mustafa as well as some elements in the National Congress Party (NCP/NIF) such as Mohamed Mandour al-Mahdi, Nafie Ali Nafie, Abdelrahim Hamdi, Abdelrahim Mohammed Hussein, Hassan Makki, a self-proclaimed "intellectual" and a committed racist who has described the IDP camps around Khartoum as a dangerous black-belt zone and Hassan Sati and others of the ilk. We the Sudanese will need to repeat the eternal question quoted by Luke Kuth Dak, reportedly asked by the famous Sudanese novelist al-Tayeb Saleh, when the National Islamic Front (NIF) seized power by military coup in June 1989, deposing the elected Sudanese government of the Umma Party’s Sadiq el-Mahdi. The novelist has been quoted as said:” where did these people come from?!
The Hausa Fulani people and others were appalled by the deeply offensive unacceptable remarks Omer al-bashir has made about their nationality. He has a duty to convey public apologies for the distress and disquietude caused to them. Is president Omer Hassan Ahmed al-Bashir prepared to use the virtue of humility and offer unreserved public apology to the Sudanese Hausa-Fulani people? A sixty-four dollar question ($64 question).

بوكو حرام


dansudan


تمرد المتطرفين الاسلاميين في شمال نيجيريا الذي انتهى مؤخرا مع اعدام زعيمه محمد يوسف، ليس حدثا غريبا في نيجيريا رغم أن أغلبية سكانها من المعتدلين، حيث يعود تاريخ حركات التمرد التي تقودها عناصر إسلامية إلى مطلع القرن التاسع عشر الميلادي، نقلا عن تقرير إخباري السبت 1-8-2009.وقد تجمع هؤلاء المتطرفون في حركة اطلق عليها اسم "طالبان" الذي قد يوحي بوجود علاقة مباشرة لها مع حركتي طالبان في افغانستان وباكستان. لكن العديد من المحللين النيجيريين والغربيين يرون ان هذه العلاقة غير محتملة، وفي ذات الوقت يقرون بوجود شبكات ونشاطات دعوية اسلامية في نيجيريا البلد المنتج للنفط والاكثر كثافة سكانية في افريقيا (140 مليون ساكن نصفهم يدين بالاسلام).

وتتكون حركة "طالبان" التي يعني اسمها بلغة الحوسة "بوكو حرام" اي "التربية الغربية حرام"، بالخصوص من طلاب تخلوا عن دراساتهم.ظهرت تلك الحركة بهذا الاسم سنة 2002 في مايدوغوري عاصمة ولاية بورنو لكن السلطات قالت انها تاسست منذ 1995.وفي 2004 اقام "طالبان" نيجيريا الذين كان عددهم مئتين بمن فيهم النساء، قاعدتهم في قرية كاناما (يوبي). ويبدو ان محمد يوسف كان له آلاف الانصار.ووقعت اعنف المواجهات الدامية خلال الايام الاخيرة في مايدوغوري عاصمة بورنو معقل "طالبان".واحتضنت بورنو لفترة طويلة مركز التعليم الاسلامي في نيجيريا. وكانت بورنو مهد امبراطورية كانم بورنو التي تاسست على ضفاف بحيرة تشاد سنة 850 ميلادية، في الموقع الذي شهد دخول الاسلام الى نيجيريا.وفي 1086 اعتنق حاكم كانم بورنو في تلك الحقبة ماي ابن عبد الجليل الاسلام واقام مركزا للدراسات اسلامية.وكانت اكبر ولايات شمال البلاد مثل كانو وزاريا تدين بالاحيائية حتى القرن الرابع عشر عندما انتشر الاسلام مع دعاة فولاني.وفي 1804 قاد طالب اسلامي من فولاني يدعى عثمان دان فوديو حركة تمرد ادت سنة 1808 الى اقامة خلافة اسلامية عاصمتها سوكوتو في شمال شرق البلاد. وقد سيطرت هذه الخلافة على اكبر جزء من شمال البلاد حتى تمت الاطاحة بآخر خليفة قتله البريطانيون سنة 1903.وخلال حكمهم في شمال نيجيريا ابقى البريطانيون على العديد من قوانين الشريعة في قانون العقوبات المحلي.وخلال انتخابات 1999 فاز رجل سياسي في الشمال يدعى احمد ساني بحملة ركز فيها على ضرورة تطبيق الشريعة الاسلامية في النظام القضائي.ومنذ 1960 شهدت نيجيريا عدة انتفاضات اسلامية سحقها الجيش النيجيري.

leader of the Boko Haram







dansudan






The leader of the Boko Haram sect, Ustaz Mohammed Yusuf, was born on January 29, 1970 in Girgir village, Jakusko Local Government Area of Yobe State.Not much is known about his educational pursuit. In 2002, the 39-year-old self-proclaimed Islamic scholar founded the group that would eventually become known as Boko Haram, meaning "Western education is sinful" in the Hausa language; the group operated from its Maiduguri base under various sobriquets. It consistently showed aversion to 'boko' or western education.Yusuf made a name for himself preaching against western education and consistently argued that the current system in Nigeria, symbolised by government, needed to be overthrown and replaced with an extreme version of Islamic law. Yusuf was also averse to other Muslims who disagreed with his methods and beliefs. He was soon regarded as an oddity by the rest of Muslims. Nonetheless, he was able to attract huge numbers of followers from among the youths in many states of northern Nigeria, including Yobe, Bauchi, Kano, Katsina and Kaduna.Contrary to the widely-held belief that Yusuf did not believe in Prophet Muhammad (SAW), he demonstrated that belief in his preaching, where he quoted from the sayings of the prophet to support his points.And contrary to the thinking that he was a university graduate or drop-out, Mohammed Yusuf admitted, during a 2006 canonical debate with a Bauchi-based cleric and university lecturer, Malam Isah Aliyu Fantami, that he had never attended a western-type school.In the debate, a DVD of which I obtained yesterday, the late Yusuf defended his group's position hotly, citing sources from Islamic history and jurisprudence, as well as from western science, making reference to the theory of evolution and giving off-hand examples from the Encyclopaedia Britannica.But it was obvious from the debate that his theories were faulty and easily debunked by his opponent.En-route Brazil on a state visit early this week, President Umaru Yar'Adua revealed, to the surprise of many, that the Nigerian security agencies had been tracking the Boko Haram sect for several years, describing its members as a "potentially dangerous group" who have been gathering weapons and intelligence to try to force their views on Nigerians.On November 13, 2008, Yusuf and some of his followers were arrested by the police for public incitement through preaching and were brought to Abuja for trial. A High Court judge in the federal capital granted them bail on January 20, this year, after they were handed over to the police for prosecution.The stage, it seemed, was set for a showdown between Yusuf's group and security forces, especially on June 11, when police officers in Maiduguri fired on a funeral procession by Boko Haram, shooting 17. Yusuf, denouncing the shootings, vowed to take revenge.During a joint press conference in Abuja yesterday, defence spokesman Colonel Mohammed Yarima described the Boko Haram leader as a motivational character who had four wives and 12 children. He said the operation to catch Yusuf was already well under way. "We have his picture, we have his details and the long arm of the law will catch up with him," he vowed.That promise was fulfilled last night when security forces captured and killed Mohammed Yusuf in Maiduguri, thus ending an era in the short but bloody history of the sect he commanded.