Somalia's implementation of radio in Somalia is a cheap and effective solution to disseminate news on education, health information, and domestic and international circumstances. Radio can be reached with the smallest amount, effort and effort to most people (area of ​​approximately 20 kilometers). Compared to Information and Communication Technology (ICT) and Internet connection, wireless management is easily educated and requires less training time; while the internet technology may be more complicated, longer training time is required It is more expensive. Facility
My work in Somalia in 1993 was after the US Marine Corps landed on the beach on the outskirts of Mogadishu in December 1992. My job is to implement a rapid impact project in South Somalia to provide water and sanitation for those who want to return home to Kenya's Somali refugees. These immediate projects are going slowly. Somalia is the most difficult work environment I have ever encountered. Rugged roads, fuel shortages, armed gangs, and long distances between workplaces make it difficult to feel a sense of accomplishment. Somalia is experiencing the world's highest temperature and social trauma of massive starvation in the past. After the collapse of the Siad Barre administration, an estimated 250,000 to 300,000 people starved to death
Luuq of Somalia is hanging on the big nu of the Jubba River. The city is currently a shelter of hundreds of "internally displaced people" in Somalia. The evacuation centers for these refugees seem to have been built after August 2014 - the UN Humanitarian Affairs Adjustment Office created a map of the area. In Toshka, Egypt, crops of corn, cereals, and feed were burned with fire. These fields are part of the large-scale irrigation and agriculture project promoted by Hosni Mubarak, and water from Lake Nasser is used to irrigate new agricultural land in the Egyptian desert. Since its founding in 1997, only 10% of the planned land has been put into production.
At a distance of 6,000 kilometers across the continent of Africa, the radio stations in Somalia played quite different information using radio. It is managed by the Q & A program for young people aged 10 to 17 who correctly answered the question about the organization, Shabaab ("Youth" in Arabic) and awarded a rare prize. According to the New York Times, the winners of the top two are "AK-47, some money and Islamic books, gained the second grenade." I am sorry for children who do not have much points. Despite the famine of Somalia, the article reported that Al - Shabaab was banned from aid groups and prohibited hungry refugees, banned forbidden, banned gold teeth, dance and football. In government buildings, killing students is waiting for test scores to be announced.