Gadabuursi are split. But then again, they don't own most of the land. Most of Awdal is Ciise land. Even the Borama section, has areas like xaariirad, which is a Ciise deegan.
Awdalland means nothing, beacause wabar only speaks for some gadabuursi and none of the ciise. Just like Khatumo didn't speak for the Warsans.
No threat, our flag still flies high there. Who cares about a people who were happy under riyaale (one of theres) and the moment he is out of office is against the country. lol
Awdal is mostly gadabursi the Ciise clan is minority and the Ciise clan is a majority in djibouti!
What a nincompoop!
No one in Awdalland makhir or khatuumo regardless of clan supports SL!
You idiot. I said most is Ciise land. Not mostly Ciise. There are more Gadabuursi, but this is the horn. And each tribe runs its land. And Most of Awdal land is Ciise. Parts of Lughaya, All of Seylac, A lot of Baki, some degmad in Boroma. None of the degmads are purely Gadabuursi. While Seylac is purely Ciise. Isaaq are also in Baki, Lughaya.
Land talks.
And you say that, yet, Dhuulo Garaads are always in Hargeisa. SL Flag flies over Las canood. Taleex. Hudun.
And in the east, Borama, Lughaya, Seylac.
Keep talking your bullshit, with nothing to back it up. You don't even know, who owns which lands. But you wanna talk Waqooyi.

^ Richard Burton, First Footsteps in East Africa, 1856; edited with an introduction and additional chapters by Gordon Waterfield (New York: Praeger, 1966), p. 132. For en mer nylig beskrivelse, se A. T. Curle, "The Ruined cities of Somaliland", Antiquity, 11 (1937), pp. 315-327
^ «Awdal "Republic": Declaration of Independence, [Somalia]». University of Pennsylvania - African Studies Center. Visit 29. january 2007.
^ Awdalland Deserves Recognition – New Song (Daawo)
^ The Declaration of Adal State
^ «Somaliland: The Myth of Clan-Based Statehood». Somalia Watch. 7. december 2002. Visit 29. january 2007. «
In the Awdal, the most western region, is occupied by the Gadabursi and Issa both belonging to the Dir clan family.»
^ Battera, Federico (2005). «Chapter 9: The Collapse of the State and the Resurgence of Customary Law in Northern Somalia». Shattering Tradition: Custom, Law and the Individual in the Muslim Mediterranean. Walter Dostal, Wolfgang Kraus (ed.). London: I.B. Taurus. s. 296. ISBN 1850436347. Visit 18. march 2010.
«Awdal is mainly inhabited by the Gadabuursi confederation of clans. The Gadaabursi are concentrated in Awdal....»
