Thrag

36 posts

Thrag

Thrag

@Thrag0on

Katılım Nisan 2026
69 Takip Edilen1 Takipçiler
Thrag
Thrag@Thrag0on·
@AAbdishakur do you think we forgot what you did selling the sea to Kenya 🇰🇪
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GF
GF@Genfei·
@Thrag0on @Mr_Andrew_Fox And you say that from the UK, eh? Traitor much? And you joined twitter a month ago? Bot much?
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Andrew Fox
Andrew Fox@Mr_Andrew_Fox·
Beautiful Commonwealth War Graves cemetery in Hargeisa, Somaliland. As always, wherever you go in the world, beautifully maintained by local employees. Very moving experience. All faiths and none buried side by side.
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Thrag
Thrag@Thrag0on·
@JameelKhalid18 @Mr_Andrew_Fox They fought against the Somali Dervish movement, an Islamic resistance force that battled the Italians in the south and the British in the northwest of the country. But you wouldn’t know that !
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SMS Somali TV
SMS Somali TV@SMSSomaliTV1·
“I will sell my #motorcycle and migrate if Hassan Sheikh Mohamud extends his term by one #year. Every clan is armed, and war could break out. Hassan Sheikh should stop acting through #Hawiye clan interests.” #Residents of Mogadishu reacted strongly to the president’s term #extension.
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Thrag
Thrag@Thrag0on·
@umutcagrisariii I can’t trust people who don’t pray or fast ? Who treat honesty like a business loss watering down milk to fake value, reheating yesterday’s meat and selling it as fresh, always chasing the quickest buck instead of real integrity.
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Umut Çağrı Sarı
Umut Çağrı Sarı@umutcagrisariii·
Abdirashid, as an ordinary Somali citizen, you have every right to comment on Turkish–Somali relations and express your own vision for the future. So why is it acceptable for others to do so, but not for me as an ordinary Turkish citizen? If you are uncomfortable with my opinions, you are free to block me or ignore me. The fact that you feel the need to report me everywhere only proves that what I say hits a nerve. If this is how the game is going to be played, with complaints, censorship, and childish reactions whenever someone speaks openly, then maybe we should not play at all. By the way, the day Farmaajo’s supporters insulted Turkish President Erdoğan and spread offensive edited images of him across social media, I made my judgment about Farmaajo and his entire troll network. Farmaajo could rule Somalia for another 500 years and I would still stand against him. And I will never stay silent about Sheikh Sharif either, a man who studied in Sudan, benefited from Sudan and lived off its hospitality for years, yet still chose to embrace Deni, someone who helped bring war and destruction to Sudan. Just as Somalia is one of my red lines, the blood of my Sudanese brothers and sisters is also a red line for me.
Abdirashid Hashi@AnalystSomalia

On Somalia–Türkiye Relations Türkiye and Somalia have a good relationship, and most Somalis appreciate Türkiye’s role and the gurmad, or rescue mission, President @RTErdogan mounted to help avert famine in Somalia in 2011. Somalis also immensely appreciate Türkiye helping Somalia protect its territorial waters after Ethiopia attempted to swindle some of them, as well as Türkiye’s support in helping the Somali government fight Al-Shabaab and rebuild the national army. Somalis also appreciate other economic arrangements, such as oil exploration and similar cooperation, even if some believe the negotiations and/or arrangements were not always optimal for Somalia. Somalis would also appreciate it if Türkiye chose to mediate and help Somali politicians sort out their differences — just as diplomats from 🇺🇸 and 🇬🇧 recently mediated among Somali leaders on election- and transition-related issues. Somalis, however, would not appreciate direct or indirect involvement by Turkish citizens, academics, commentators, or diplomats siding with politicking Somali politicians, and it is also not in Türkiye’s interest. The Turkish ambassador rushing to meet with @HassanSMohamud after his mandate ended, and writing in three languages to emphasize that they recognize him as the legitimate president, was not in the interest of the Turkish state or the long-term relationship between the two countries. In politics and diplomacy, moves and signals are visible, and they are often read or perceived exactly as intended. Somalis have indeed noticed the visit and the amplification by some Turkish commentators on Somalia. Previous Turkish ambassadors used to take vacations during election seasons because they understood that whoever Somalis elected would remain a friend of Türkiye. The partnership and the reservoir of goodwill built over the years were simply too deep and valuable to warrant even the perception of meddling. It is for Somalis, and only Somalis, to decide whether Hassan Sheikh Mohamud is our president. His four-year legal mandate ended under the constitution pursuant to which he was sworn in. If Somalis decide that he should remain temporarily because the alternative is collapse, that too is for Somalis alone to determine. Turkish media outlets like TRT Africa and TRT Somali acting like Somali government media are also not in Türkiye’s interest. I am told that analysis of comments on TRT platforms has shown unprecedented negative feedback — hence the misinformation conference reportedly held in Türkiye not long ago. Some Turkish social media commentators who think they understand Somalia or Somalis are insulting former Somali presidents like @M_Farmaajo and @HESharifShAhmed, arguing with Somalis online, and on an almost hourly basis inserting themselves into Somalia’s internal affairs. They are also doing huge damage to the relationship between the two countries, because Somalis are deeply allergic to noisy foreigners. These individuals will not help the side they think they are helping, nor are they harming the opposition — if anything, they are only increasing the opposition’s determination. The Turkish academics trying to spin these issues are merely exposing how weak their arguments are and how limited their understanding of Somali society is. At any rate, just as Somalis do not involve themselves in the internal politics of Türkiye, the Turkish state would benefit from either mediating honorably or asking its supporters, spin doctors, and diplomats to stay away from Somalia’s election-related competition. @RTErdoga @HakanFidan

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Thrag
Thrag@Thrag0on·
@LordAshcroft @CWGC They were traitors who sided with occupiers against their own people. Wherever the British went, they left behind graves, division, and bloodshed then tell more positive history to justify dividing a nation.
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Lord Ashcroft
Lord Ashcroft@LordAshcroft·
My first port of call in Somaliland was to visit the Commonwealth War Graves Cemetery. As usual well kept. I am a fan of the @CWGC
Lord Ashcroft tweet media
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Thrag
Thrag@Thrag0on·
@sultanwho For someone whontalk about Somaliland 24/7 he dosent know even the celebrations 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
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ME24 - Middle East 24
ME24 - Middle East 24@MiddleEast_24·
Somaliland-Rooted Star Taha Abdi Ali Earns Spot in Sweden’s 2026 World Cup Squad Swedish international Taha Abdi Ali has officially been selected for Sweden’s squad at the 2026 FIFA World Cup, continuing his rapid rise in European football. Ali, whose family roots trace back to Somaliland, is widely celebrated among Somalilanders who view his international success as a moment of pride and representation on the global stage.
ME24 - Middle East 24 tweet media
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MP Dr Abdillahi Hashi Abib
“Traitor?” Coming from anonymous tribal propagandists who have never stood for anything except emotional hysteria and clan manipulation, that accusation means absolutely nothing. People like you throw around words like “traitor” because you are incapable of debating facts, principles, or public records. Your entire political vocabulary is insults, conspiracy theories, and blind tribal rage. Before accusing me of working for any “secessionist clan,” go study my history first. While many of you were silent, terrified, or busy protecting clan interests, I publicly confronted the actions of Muse Bihi Abdi and raised concerns about atrocities committed against civilians in SSC. I supported accountability and legal action while keyboard warriors like you were hiding behind fake accounts and social media slogans. Unlike you, I do not build my politics around clan worship. I do not suddenly discover “Somali unity” only when it benefits my emotions or political side. I speak against injustice whether it comes from Mogadishu, Hargeisa, or anywhere else. And spare everyone the fake drama about Minnesota. Somali Americans are some of the hardest working immigrant communities in the United States. They built businesses, created jobs, educated families, and contributed positively to American society. But opportunists and attention-seekers like you exploit every controversy to spread division, fear, and hatred against your own people. You call others “implants” while parroting propaganda without evidence, facts, or intellectual honesty. That is the behavior of political cowards who cannot survive serious debate. I have taken public positions, filed legal complaints, challenged powerful officials, and spoken openly despite attacks from every direction. Meanwhile, people like you specialize in one thing only: barking online while others do the real work. So keep screaming “traitor” if it helps you sleep better. History will remember who stood publicly on principle and who hid behind tribal insults and social media mob behavior.
Ʌ฿ҮӐŊ (son of Ðaraawiish)🐎🇸🇴@RealAbyan

A traitor. Everyone knows your true intentions. Working for secessionist clan in Hargeisa and harming innocent Somalis in Minnesota. Separatist implant in Somalia 🇸🇴

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Thrag
Thrag@Thrag0on·
Someone exile this man from Somalia whether it’s a shit show or not i dont want this man to be even buried there
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Thrag
Thrag@Thrag0on·
@MPDrAbib You have no community you fucking retard you will be exiled
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MP Dr Abdillahi Hashi Abib
The Fear Is Not Mario Nawfal Interview - The Fear Is Exposure of Cancer in Our Communities I will not apologize to anyone for giving an interview to Mario Nawfal, and I reject the fake outrage from people who suddenly discovered “principles” after remaining silent for years while Somalia was being destroyed by corruption, abuse of power, political criminality, and the collapse of rule of law. Mr. Nawfal has his own beliefs, opinions, and political positions, just as I have mine. His views do not define my convictions, especially regarding Palestine. My support for the Palestinian people did not begin with social media trends or political fashion. It began long before many of today’s online activists even understood the meaning of the Palestinian struggle. In 1976, as a middle school student in Mogadishu, I had the honor of accompanying my beloved father to ceremony with some of the most important liberation leaders of that era. That day changed my worldview forever. I personally met and shook Yasser Arafat and learned directly from him about the suffering, displacement, humiliation, and resistance of the Palestinian people. I also met Joshua Nkomo (ZAPU), one of the great freedom fighters of Zimbabwe’s liberation struggle against white minority apartheid rule, and President of North Yemen Honorable Ibrahim al-Hamdi. These were names I had previously only heard through BBC Somali Service broadcasts, and suddenly as a young student I was standing before them, listening to men who dedicated their lives to liberation, dignity, sovereignty, and justice for their people. Those encounters shaped my conscience and political understanding at a very young age. Later during university, Palestinian classmates shared firsthand stories with me about checkpoints, occupation, humiliation, exile, and daily suffering. I defended Palestinian rights when doing so was unpopular, inconvenient, and even academically and politically costly in which I lost my scholarship. So, spare me the dishonest accusations that I somehow abandoned Palestine because I gave interview Mr. Nawfal. That claim is intellectually weak, politically childish, and morally hollow. Let me also explain the upbringing and experiences that shaped my beliefs so people may better understand why I refuse to surrender my principles to online pressure, emotional politics, propaganda campaigns, or organized intimidation. When I was in middle school, I once visited my father at his office. While waiting to meet him, several people were sitting outside criticizing him harshly. When I informed my father about the criticism, he calmly smiled and told me this was normal in public service. Then he taught me a lesson that stayed with me my entire life - “Nin xil qaaday, eed qaaday.” “A man who accepts responsibility must also accept criticism”. That lesson shaped my understanding of leadership and public life. If you choose to stand in the public arena, you must also be prepared to face criticism, accusations, misunderstandings, and even unfair attacks without abandoning your principles. So, the criticism I am receiving today - whether from people who once claimed to support me or from supporters of Hassan Sheikh Mohamud - is well understood. Criticism is part of democratic life. Another defining lesson came when I was about 14 years old. My father called me into his office and asked me to help draft a formal legal complaint against the Director of the Ministry of Transportation and Aviation involving allegations of corruption, misappropriation, and abuse of public funds. He handed me sections of the Somali Penal Code and detailed legal violations. At that time, corruption cases against senior officials were extremely sensitive. Powerful ministers and even a vice president allegedly benefited from the deal in question. Pressure came from every direction to stop the case. But my father refused to back down. After I finished typing the complaint, I asked him whether he feared losing his position by pursuing such a dangerous case against powerful people. Without hesitation, he told me - “If you truly believe in the rule of law, then you should fear nothing.” That statement became one of the foundations of my life. From that moment forward, I understood that accountability means nothing if it only applies to the weak. Transparency means nothing if powerful officials are protected from scrutiny. And the rule of law means nothing if those in authority are treated as untouchable. Those experiences shaped my belief that public office is not protection from accountability, but a greater obligation to uphold justice, integrity, and public trust regardless of political pressure, intimidation, threats, or personal consequences. Later, while I was in high school, I regularly visited the U.S. Library in the Shangani district to participate in debates about the 1980 American presidential election between Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan. Most people strongly supported President Carter because Reagan had publicly discussed reducing foreign aid and closing libraries abroad, which many interpreted as hostility toward Africa. But I was the only person openly supporting Reagan. Even at a young age, before ever living in America, I understood that U.S. politics is ultimately driven by strategic interests. I believed Reagan’s anti-communist position would push the United States to strengthen relations with Somalia in order to counter Soviet influence in Ethiopia during the Cold War. That prediction later proved correct when President Reagan welcomed Mohamed Siad Barre to the White House as Somalia became strategically important to the United States in the Horn of Africa. A U.S. Embassy official later asked me how I had predicted that outcome despite Reagan’s earlier rhetoric. The point is simple: I understand American politics deeply. I studied it long before I ever lived in the United States. I understand how narratives are manufactured, how fear is weaponized, how political fundraising works, and how strategic interests shape policy. What is truly at stake today is not personalities, clans, propaganda, or political camps. What is at stake is the survival of Somalia and the moral future of Somali communities around the world. The painful truth too many people refuse to admit is that corruption has become a cancer eating away the soul of our nation and poisoning parts of our communities abroad, including segments of the Somali American community where public suffering has become a business model for a small group of opportunists. For decades, billions intended for poor Somali citizens, displaced families, struggling mothers, hungry children, healthcare, education, reconstruction, and development disappeared into the pockets of corrupt officials, politically connected businessmen, fake NGOs, middlemen, and professional fraudsters enriching themselves in the name of the Somali people. Instead of confronting this ugly reality honestly, too many people chose silence, tribal protection, fear, propaganda, and public relations games. We glorify people who should be investigated. We celebrate individuals who mastered the art of manipulating donor systems, exploiting clan emotions, abusing welfare systems, and weaponizing poverty for personal enrichment. Anyone who dares expose this rotten system is attacked, isolated, smeared, threatened, or accused of “dividing the community.” Why? Because corruption is no longer treated as a crime by many people - it has become normalized by those benefiting directly or indirectly from the collapse of accountability and rule of law. That is exactly why I accepted the interview. I am grateful to Mr. Nawfal for giving me a global platform to expose corruption, constitutional violations, abuse of power, illegal evictions, looting of public resources, and the suffering of ordinary Somali citizens. Unlike many compromised media outlets controlled by political interests, intimidation, or clan calculations, his platform allowed these issues to reach millions globally. The real fear for some people is not Mario Nawfal - the real fear is exposure. Some of the loudest critics today were nowhere to be found when President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud and Speaker Adan Mohamed Nur attempted illegally removed me from Parliament, when President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud terminated illegally my salary, or when I challenged illegal constitutional amendments before the East African Court of Justice and needed support to cover enormous legal costs. None of these online patriots stood beside me then. Suddenly after interview with Mr. Nawfal, they appear pretending to defend Somali nationalism. What hypocrisy. But we must also confront another painful reality with honesty and courage - we have a responsibility to address the moral decay spreading inside parts of our own communities before it infects an entire new generation. Children absorb what they see from parents, relatives, elders, religious leaders, and community figures. If fraud, corruption, dishonesty, glorification of shortcuts, abuse of public systems, and disrespect for rule of law become normalized inside homes and communities, our youth will eventually see those behaviors as acceptable. That is how moral collapse spreads from one generation to another. We must build communities that glorify hard work, honesty, education, family values, accountability, dignity, ethics, and respect for the rule of law. Those are the values that create respected and successful communities anywhere in the world. If we continue denying these internal problems, we will keep giving political ammunition to figures such as Donald Trump and segments of the far-right movement that already seek to weaponize immigrant communities, including Somali Americans, for political gain. Denial will not protect us. Silence will not save us. Tribal emotions and propaganda campaigns will not solve the crisis. Real leadership is not pretending everything is fine. Real leadership is having the courage to diagnose cancer before it destroys an entire generation. Somalia and Somali communities abroad do not lack intelligence, talent, hardworking families, or potential. What we lack is the collective courage to hold ourselves accountable and rebuild a culture rooted in integrity, responsibility, education, dignity, and rule of law. I was raised by an honest father who never took one shilling beyond his lawful salary. He taught me that dignity begins with hard work, honesty, and refusing to steal from others. Those same values are how I raised my children in the United States. I will never normalize corruption simply because the criminals belong to my own community or clan. As my father used to say: “Nin xil qaaday eed qaaday.” And as my mother would say about endless critics sitting comfortably on the sidelines - “Habar guriga fadhidaa lagdin wax uga fudud.” I have never changed my beliefs to satisfy crowds, political factions, donors, or online mobs, and I will not start now. I will continue speaking against corruption, dictatorship, fraud, abuse of power, and theft of Somali public resources on any platform available - whether some people like it or not. Because real love for Somalia is not silence. Real love for Somalia is having the courage to tell uncomfortable truths before the damage becomes irreversible. @shokonoda @amnesty @HRW @UKinSomalia @HouseForeignGOP @realDonaldTrump @StateDept @SpeakerJohnson @susiewiles2024 @HassanSMohamud @TheVillaSomalia @HamzaAbdiBarre @AadanMadobe @SomaliainQatar @MOFAKuwait @UAEinSomalia @ChineseSomalia @KSAmofaEN @US2SOMALIA @EU_in_Somalia @ItalyinSomalia @UNSomalia @TC_MogadisuBE @UNDPSomalia @WorldBankAfrica @IMFAfrica @CanHCKenya @SwissEmbassyKE @MarioNawfal
MP Dr Abdillahi Hashi Abib tweet media
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Jvnior
Jvnior@Jvnior·
I’m Muslim Palestinian. Born in Michigan, living in Florida. Should I run for politics in America?
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DrFaqashSlayer
DrFaqashSlayer@DrFaqashSlayer·
Breaking News 🚨🚨🚨 The First Somalilander to play for the World Cup- Taha Ali representing Sweden. Well Done to Taha Ali for making it onto the squad 🎉🎉🎉
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Thrag
Thrag@Thrag0on·
@LandofPuntites @RealAbyan You see after that I mentioned mentioned the deen and the other evil your spreading your speaking about 66 years
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🔻Legacy
🔻Legacy@LandofPuntites·
@Thrag0on @RealAbyan I’m sorry but, why is that of your concern again? You should worry more about the 66 years of lies that’s starting to unravel.
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Ʌ฿ҮӐŊ (son of Ðaraawiish)🐎🇸🇴
Dhulbahante x Habar Gidir ♥️ Habar Gidir Clan invited Dhulbahante to lovely banquet in Mogadishu today. These two powerful Somali clans have throughout history stood for Somalinimo and unity of greater Somalia 🇸🇴
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Thrag
Thrag@Thrag0on·
@LandofPuntites @RealAbyan This what pubtkand reprsents im guessing devilish zina smh 🤦🏽‍♂️ cover up women
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Thrag
Thrag@Thrag0on·
@PaliNewsNetwork @MyronGainesX The Palestinians are one of the most racist people i couldn’t give a flying toss about their struggle.
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Thrag
Thrag@Thrag0on·
@HajiSamakab The have no culture they were southern clothing as well eat our food these people are scummy
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