[quote="Cilmiile"]Perhaps you should ask the question in Somali.
Your English is incomprehensible.[/quote]
maybe you didn't understand "where's Wally" part.....

Cilmiile,
I used the saying "Where's Wally" as you brought up Mr. C/risaaq x. Xuseen, hence the original say of "Where is Wally":
Where's Wally?
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia;
Wally, as he appeared in the first edition of Where's Wally? (1987).Where's Wally? (titled Where's Waldo? in North America) is a series of children's books created by the British illustrator Martin Handford. The goal is to find a certain man, Wally, in a busy picture full of people. Wally dresses in a red and white striped shirt and bobble hat, carries a wooden walking stick, and wears glasses. He is always losing things, including books, camping equipment and even his shoes, and readers are invited to spot these items in the illustrations as well.
The name `Wally' was most likely borrowed from an early seventies pop festival in-joke, when the call `Wally!' and `Where's Wally?' would go round at nightfall. It may have been the name of a lost sound engineer at the first Glastonbury festival, or a missing person at the 1969 Isle of Wight festival. This was a regular shout at almost any British festival event during the 1970s."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Where's_Wally%3F