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2).
“What people need is not new and better curriculum
but access to more and more of the real world; plenty of time
and space to think over their experiences, and to use ideas
and make meaning out of them”
I had the pleasure of meeting one such person whom this statement
speaks much of and about. Universities produce a number of graduates
each year with all the promises of life. University of Hargeisa
in Somaliland is such university which produced a student currently
in South Africa studying for his master’s degree in legal
field at the Univisersity of Pretoria, which isn’t very
easy given my observation. He encountered lot of problems to
finally be there. But the human quest for self discovery and
triumph is what kept him alive. It is my deep seated feeling
and wishes that most young generation in Somaliland can take
his life and view it as a bench mark for things that could be
achieved for this country. He is a sign that as an emerging
nation we can make it through various obstacles. I wish that
through education, Somaliland can stand on its own two feet
and rise against the mounting pressure from the world particularly
that it can’t be recognised for some strange reasons.
We are a nation known for violence and creed but with young
man like Mohamed we can give Somaliland voice to speak against
brutality and speak for humanity and give content to the kind
of nation we want to build as Somaliland. I’m writing
these because I first and foremost love Somaliland and I have
many great things I pray for about it and I pray for my friend
that his dreams could be achieved. History has opened my eye
to many issues that affects our people and I realised that these
issues could better be resolved if we have an integrated frame
work with other world universities esp. the South African universities
for students exchange programmes and in that manner we would
be giving exposure not only to Somaliland but also our idea
of justice and constructive society. We have nothing to loose
in demanding a place in the community of nations. History will
not remember us if we do not write our history in the history
books and speak about it proudly without fear or prejudice.
Mohamed Faarah Hersi, the son of late former mayor of Berber
is a goal-oriented, enthusiastic, self-motivated, hardworking
with attitude and discipline, he has a passion for scholarship,
originality and the ability to make creative decisions and is
currently specialising in human rights which is a sensitive
aspects given our deep wounded human history. We need justice
and answers about lot of things that happened to our people
in the past. We need to forgive but who and how? These are questions
that I think requires human rights as an instrument to give
us justice and sense of restoration and candidates like him
could be useful in transforming and restructuring of our lives
and history. Sad historical fact is that our mothers, sisters
and fathers have been killed for and raped inexplicably and
law could seek the truth and find solutions to those past unanswered
questions. We have moved from that in bit to finding a stable
land for our people and now perhaps its time to solve by questioning
and resolving and we can use academic people like Mohamed Hersi
for uplifting our new society in this information age era.
It goes without saying that special thanks and gratitude goes
to those that have helped him. By so doing they were renewing
their commitment to mother Somaliland and affirming that they’re
deeply human.
As published on the University of Pretoria’s website,
“the LLM in Human Rights and Democratisation in Africa
is a unique programme to which 30 individuals from African countries
with a good law degree and preferably experience in the field
of human rights are admitted. During an intensive one-year course,
they are taught by eminent lecturers in the field of human rights
and gain invaluable practical exposure. It is the only course
of its kind in Africa.”(TUKS website)
“This year, students from Somaliland, Niger, and the United
States of America for the first time joined the LLM (Human Rights
and Democratisation) programme at the University of Pretoria.
The programme, which is presented by the Centre for Human Rights
at the Faculty of Law, has been in existence for nine years.
Over this period, 227 students from 32 countries around Africa
have completed this degree course” Justice Kate O’Regan
The Centre for Human Rights of the Faculty of Law of the University
of Pretoria focuses primarily on human rights law in Africa.
Highlights in its history since the Centre was established in
1986 include the involvement of members of the Centre in the
writing of the South African Constitution and Bill of Rights,
and the contribution the Centre has made to legal education
in respect of human rights on the continent through its academic
programmes and research outputs. Members of the Centre have
served as consultants on human rights issues to a range of institutions,
including the Organisation of African Unity/African Union, NEPAD,
the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights and the
South African Human Rights Commission.The Centre has been awarded
the 2006 UNESCO Prize for Human Rights Education.
(Source: http://www.chr.up.ac.za/about/introduction.html)
“A note from a zealot fellow countryman”
Saeed furaa,
Freelance Journalist,
Pretoria,
South Africa “Where the sun never sets”.
E-mail: somalilandjournalist@yahoo.com
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