Please Note:
This profile was automatically generated using 9 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
This profile was automatically generated using 9 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
View all 9 references Web References
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1. Death toll rises to 82 in Ethiopia floods, government says urgent help needed - Yahoo! News
news.yahoo.com/s/cpress/200504 - [Cached]Published on: 4/27/2005 Last Visited: 4/27/2005
Some plastic sheeting and high-energy biscuits have arrived in the region but as yet rescuers have been unable to get them to survivors, said Ahmed Abdi of the UN's World Food Program.
He said many areas still remain cut off.
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2. Welcome banadir.com - where news is always free
www.banadir.com/somalis_ex6.sh - [Cached]Last Visited: 7/5/2006
Ahmed Jilaow Abdi is a balding gray-haired man in his late sixties. He was chief of Siyad Barre's National Security Service (NSS), Banadir Region and one time mayor of Mogadishu. He currently co-chairs the UN Police Committee and helps re-organize the Somali Police Force, which disintegrated during the anarchy.
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"This is an example of misleading intelligence reports the Americans are fed with by people who pose as bona fide informers," said Ahmed after the ordeal.
Aideed himself surfaced to give a television interview to ABC in which he denied for the June 5 ambush of the Pakistani soldiers. "I am here in Mogadishu and I am protected by God and my people;" he told the American television reporter, the second he gave to American television reporters since he went underground. -
3. Welcome banadir.com - where news is always free
www.banadir.com/somalis_ex6.sh - [Cached]Last Visited: 12/7/2003
Ahmed Jilaow Abdi is a balding gray-haired man in his late sixties. He was chief of Siyad Barre's National Security Service (NSS), Banadir Region and one time mayor of Mogadishu. He currently co-chairs the UN Police Committee and helps re-organize the Somali Police Force, which disintegrated during the anarchy.
...
"This is an example of misleading intelligence reports the Americans are fed with by people who pose as bona fide informers," said Ahmed after the ordeal.
Aideed himself surfaced to give a television interview to ABC in which he denied for the June 5 ambush of the Pakistani soldiers. "I am here in Mogadishu and I am protected by God and my people;" he told the American television reporter, the second he gave to American television reporters since he went underground.

