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Somalia progress and new government

Name: Anonymous 2011-04-29 21:00

I've been looking into somalia for the last 30 minutes, and I feel incredible anger towards the rest of the world.

The country has been improving quite drastically in many areas since the fall of the central government. I don't know how much you guys know, but I don't want to go to much into it. It's a long list of things. The only things that have measurably declined are literacy and a vague indication that roads aren't doing to well (even though the amount of schools has doubled,their attendance is rising an costs are falling, and universities have quadrupled. The roads aren't doing well because militias and the TFC government armed by other countries are tolling on them without maintaining them).

The reason I was pissed is because the country is doing considerably better and only increasing, it's even outperforming its neighbours in many ways, but the new government seems like it is finally forcing its way into power with the help of the U.S. and various European and african nations. It doesn't own the country yet, but it has already declared Shari'a law as the judicial basis of law. It doesn't have public support because the citizens don't want a new government, so it has used militancy to agressively shove its way into legitimacy.

Honestly I don't know what this topic is about, I was just pissed to hear that. I wanted to see somalia experience real anarchy (since it is only under a vague anarchy) for 20 more years and see how it went. Instead we get 15 years of improvement and the international community pushing hard for another tyrannical government that is going to kill people for being raped.

Name: Anonymous 2011-04-30 13:17

I don't see what Somalia has to do with anarchism, half the country is controlled by regional governments which don't differ much from the average African government I believe. In the rest of the country a civil war is being waged between Islamists and the internationally recognized government which depends almost entirely on the Ethiopians, leading to a situation similar to Afghanistan during their civil war.

And in Belgium the previous federal government is basically still in power, just with limited powers, and the 4-5 regional governments still function as usual.

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