can't be wahabi then abti, you have to have an urge to behead. clearly you dont follow sheikh wahabii am nabadoon sxb, part time hippy, part time whbi, full time nabadoon
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can't be wahabi then abti, you have to have an urge to behead. clearly you dont follow sheikh wahabii am nabadoon sxb, part time hippy, part time whbi, full time nabadoon
Somaliland is being infested with Wahabi boarding schools and university, which is very dangerous for the social cohesion of the country and the freedoms enjoyed by the people. We must stop this scourge of extremism before it festers and it endangers the whole country's stability.
1. Saudi University (indoctrination camp capacity: 4,000 students per year in Burco). Over the space of 10 years, this 'university' will have contributed 40,000 hardcore Wahabis who will permeate the society.
http://www.somalinet.com/forums/viewtop ... 2&start=45
2. Kuwait boarding school (indoctrination camp capacity: 750 students per year in Burco). Over 10 years this will contribute 7,500 hardcore Wahabis.
Total of nearly 50,000 Wahabis who will take over from the moderate Somali scholars by the year 2026. Mark my words.
can't be wahabi then abti, you have to have an urge to behead. clearly you dont follow sheikh wahabi
allow dhowr ma nigga hoobariiska!waxan ahay whbiWhy?These sort of topics make my blood boil.
http://intpolicydigest.org/2016/08/18/s ... education/Somaliland: Keep Ideology Out of K–12 Education
Intense ideological competition is going on in Somaliland’s education system. The competition involves all tiers of education, without exception. Multiple Middle Eastern individuals and Islamic charitable organizations are trying hard to produce a generation bearing the Wahabi ideological flag. So far they are, by and large, succeeding in producing a wave of cohorts who are ideologically thwarted having fully absorbed the principles of Wahhabism. Furthermore, it is certain that such a generation is susceptible, and can easily fall prey to radical organizations and extremist groups.
In Somaliland, when the civil war broke out in the 1990’s, the educational infrastructure collapsed. Private educators and Middle Eastern charitable organizations filled the vacuum with various ideological and educational objectives. Parallel to state education, private education blossomed and even out-competed state education by getting funding from international charitable foundations, mainly from countries, such as Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Yemen.Private education mainly employed the curriculum of the funding country and the school reflected the name of the funding country. Hence, Somaliland now has Qatari schools, Bahrain schools, Turkish schools and Sudanese schools. Various curricula are being employed in the nation. Standing parallel to the national curriculum, this bizarre approach to education has produced students and graduates with different thinking and outlooks. As a result, students’ appreciation of mutual understanding and communality is all the more difficult.
Weak supervision by educational authorities in Somaliland has resulted in self-governing education empires. The worst of the cases is the remotely-guided Wahabi educational institutions that are prevalent in the country. The people in charge of the educational system are weak in character and are not sufficiently educated to review, monitor and evaluate the various curricula operating in the country. That is exactly why private education with foreign funding overwhelmed them and made them puppets.
Indeed, Somaliland needs to install and implement a comprehensive educational supervision regime. Educational authorities should have a close eye on what is going on in some private educational establishments. They should do their best to prevent radicalization. As such, there is a need for an urgent review of the curriculum the private educational system is employing. Furthermore, parents should be aware of the need to check what their children are taught in schools.
I do like Western agencies to investigate this facility that is surely creating the next black Osama bin Laden and ISiS in the Horn.
The Arabs have sealed off this facility and only allow those who subscribe to their Wahabi views in not even SL government can enter because of fears Kuwait will cut off the little aid.
I like to see this school replaced by American USAID or UAE al Khalifa Foundation.
Kuwait may have good intentions but the people it trusted with the program come from mostly Egypt who are none other than Muslim Brotherhood elites.
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