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Discover Job Vacancies & Opportunities in Somalia | Koor
Find diverse job vacancies & opportunities in Somalia, including NGO, govt, & UN roles. Connect with top employers on Koor for full-time to consulting positions.
#Career Resources Somalia#Job Platform Somalia#Employers Platform Somalia#Government Jobs Tenders Bids Somalia#Somalia Job Vacancies#Somalia Tenders
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Discover the latest job opportunities in Somalia. Our platform features current vacancies in various industries, including finance, healthcare, education, and more. Whether you're a fresh graduate or an experienced professional, apply now to embark on a rewarding career path. Don't miss out on the chance to secure a fulfilling job in Somalia. Browse and apply today.
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How to Control the Education System in Somaliland?
Mohamed Abdi Othman, The National UN Volunteers-Somaliland
First and foremost, I am very happy to see many young educators who have graduated from universities, both public and private zones , with different bachelor's degrees and master's programs. Over the last 15 years, education in Somaliland has been increasing in numerical form at each stage, from elementary to tertiary education, akin to an inverse ogive curve. However, the quality of education has declined by 60% when compared to the former education in the Republic of Somalia before the civil war.
If we take one faculty, such as the College of Education at Somali National University, formerly known as Lafoole, it was the best faculty in Somalia during that era. This college produced well-qualified educators who maintained the quality of education. It was merit-based, and the needs of society were ready to study with incredible interest. Students were eager to read unlimited books, and teachers were honest in their teaching, without any hesitations or discrimination. Teachers supplied incredible knowledge and skills.
Why was education good at that time?.
The quality of education was based on policy formulation, which considered factors such as financial issues, curriculum type, student type, teacher type, learning environment type, education type, and cultural aspects related to society type. The Republic of Somalia had prepared all these factors, and both teachers and students were not worried about tuition fees and salary scales. Consequently, the quality of education in that era was SMART, with a benchmark system, and all students were qualified upon graduation. The government of the Republic of Somalia had prepared everything, including job opportunities and other educational opportunities, based on the students' choices.
Now, in Somaliland, when I was a student in my first bachelor's degree, I was concerned about collecting the tuition fee. At that time, opportunities for jobs and the ability to pay tuition fees were critical. The economy was stagnating, and these problems were not limited to myself, but thousands of students were also struggling with tuition fees, transportation costs, and other necessary resources for university students. Many students face these challenges and do not appreciate the knowledge and skills provided by lecturers at the university. Additionally, the universities in this era are not providing a good education. The way courses are handled and the quality of education is not adequate, as they lack learning facilities such as textbooks, electricity, water, digital libraries, qualified teachers, and updated curricula.
Moreover, in 2023, all Universities in Somaliland have still not improved the quality of education in terms of learning courses and syllabi. The curriculum development and internal administration are also lacking. Furthermore, they have not established platforms for students to take internships and other opportunities with companies and public institutions, resulting in a lack of connections.
If we delve deeper into the education system in Somaliland, it is evident that it is profit-oriented. The teachers, deans, and rectors of the university base their decisions on clan alliances and a bigtoy system. So, why do we need quality education when the system is based on clan affiliations? Additionally, thousands of students graduate from different universities each year, but their performance levels do not correspond to their graduation levels. Some students perform at the primary or secondary school level in terms of their academic performance, skills, and attitudes.
Who is responsible for this?. The Ministry of Education and Science, as well as the Higher Commission Committee of Education in Somaliland, hold the duties and responsibilities. We need massive accountability and the implementation of international laws on education, including international, national, and regional reforms. We must ask ourselves the following questions:
1. What do we need to do?
2. How do we do it?
3. When do we do it?
4. Who will do it?
When analyzing these four complex questions, we will understand where we came from and where we are heading. I hope that educators and leaders in the field of education can read this article and identify the real problems in our education system in Somaliland.
Dear ladies and gentlemen, we need to have open and free debates to understand the multitude of problems that surround us, both as individuals and at the national level. Our children's future will be greatly affected by the quality of education and the division of job opportunities. Currently, our students are exhausted, and even I felt tired when I observed the institutions in Somaliland and the quality of education. There is hardly any noticeable difference between the teachers and the students themselves.
Dear friends and cherished educators, let us create social platforms to showcase education problems and strategies to improve the quality of education in Somaliland. All educators are encouraged to contact me freely without hesitation.
I hope you find this information fruitful.
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How to Control the Education System in Somaliland?
Mohamed Abdi Osman, The National UN Volunteer-Somaliland
First and foremost, I am very happy to see many young youths who have graduated from universities, both public and private zones , with different bachelor's degrees and master's programs. Over the last 15 years, education in Somaliland has been increasing in numerical form at each stage, from elementary to tertiary education, akin to an inverse ogive curve. However, the quality of education has declined by 60% when compared to the former education in the Republic of Somalia before the civil war.
If we take one faculty, such as the College of Education at Somali National University, formerly known as Lafoole, it was the best faculty in Somalia during that era. This college produced well-qualified educators who maintained the quality of education. It was merit-based, and the needs of society were ready to study with incredible interest. Students were eager to read unlimited books, and teachers were honest in their teaching, without any hesitations or discrimination. Teachers supplied incredible knowledge and skills.
Why was education good at that time?.
The quality of education was based on policy formulation, which considered factors such as financial issues, curriculum type, student type, teacher type, learning environment type, education type, and cultural aspects related to society type. The Republic of Somalia had prepared all these factors, and both teachers and students were not worried about tuition fees and salary scales. Consequently, the quality of education in that era was SMART, with a benchmark system, and all students were qualified upon graduation. The government of the Republic of Somalia had prepared everything, including job opportunities and other educational opportunities, based on the students' choices.
Now, in Somaliland, when I was a student in my first bachelor's degree, I was concerned about collecting the tuition fee. At that time, opportunities for jobs and the ability to pay tuition fees were critical. The economy was stagnating, and these problems were not limited to myself, but thousands of students were also struggling with tuition fees, transportation costs, and other necessary resources for university students. Many students face these challenges and do not appreciate the knowledge and skills provided by lecturers at the university. Additionally, the universities in this era are not providing a good education. The way courses are handled and the quality of education is not adequate, as they lack learning facilities such as textbooks, electricity, water, digital libraries, qualified teachers, and updated curricula.
Moreover, in 2023, all Universities in Somaliland have still not improved the quality of education in terms of learning courses and syllabi. The curriculum development and internal administration are also lacking. Furthermore, they have not established platforms for students to take internships and other opportunities with companies and public institutions, resulting in a lack of connections.
If we delve deeper into the education system in Somaliland, it is evident that it is profit-oriented. The teachers, deans, and rectors of the university base their decisions on clan alliances and a bigtoy system. So, why do we need quality education when the system is based on clan affiliations? Additionally, thousands of students graduate from different universities each year, but their performance levels do not correspond to their graduation levels. Some students perform at the primary or secondary school level in terms of their academic performance, skills, and attitudes.
Who is responsible for this?. The Ministry of Education and Science, as well as the Higher Commission Committee of Education in Somaliland, hold the duties and responsibilities. We need massive accountability and the implementation of international laws on education, including international, national, and regional reforms. We must ask ourselves the following questions:
1. What do we need to do?
2. How do we do it?
3. When do we do it?
4. Who will do it?
When analyzing these four complex questions, we will understand where we came from and where we are heading. I hope that educators and leaders in the field of education can read this article and identify the real problems in our education system in Somaliland.
Dear ladies and gentlemen, we need to have open and free debates to understand the multitude of problems that surround us, both as individuals and at the national level. Our children's future will be greatly affected by the quality of education and the division of job opportunities. Currently, our students are exhausted, and even I felt tired when I observed the institutions in Somaliland and the quality of education. There is hardly any noticeable difference between the teachers and the students themselves.
Dear friends and cherished educators, let us create social platforms to showcase education problems and strategies to improve the quality of education in Somaliland. All educators are encouraged to contact me freely without hesitation.
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IBPS PO MAINS PREPRATION|STATIC GK|COUNTRY,CAPITAL,CURRENCY
Country – Capital – Currency
· Algeria – Algiers – Dinar
· Angola – Luanda – Kwanza
· Afghanistan – Kabul – Afghani
· Austria – Vienna – Euro
· Armenia – Yerevan – Dram
· Argentina - Buenos Aires – Peso
· Australia – Canberra – Dollar
· Botswana – Gaborone – Pula
· Bahrain – Manama – Dinar
· Bangladesh – Dhaka – Taka
· Bhutan – Thimphu – Ngultrum
· Brunei - Bandar Seri Begawan – Dollar
· Belgium – Brussels – Euro
· Belarus – Minsk – Ruble
· Bulgaria – Sofia – Lev
· Bahamas – Nassau – Dollar
· Brazil – Brasilia – Real
· Chad - N’Djamena - CFA Franc
· Congo – Brazzaville - CFA Franc
· Cambodia - Phnom Penh – Riel
· China – Beijing - Renminbi (Yuan)
· Croatia – Zagreb – Kuna
· Czech Republic – Prague – Koruna
· Cyprus – Nicosia – Euro
· Canada – Ottawa – Dollar
· Cuba – Havana – Peso
· Chile – Santiago – Peso
· Denmark – Copenhagen – Krone
· Egypt – Cairo – Pound
· Ethiopia - Addis Ababa – Birr
· Estonia – Tallinn – Euro
· Ecuador – Quito - US Dollar
· Finland – Helsinki – Euro
· France – Paris – Euro
· Fiji – Suva – Dollar
· Gambia – Banjul – Dalasi
· Ghana – Accra – Cedi
· Germany – Berlin – Euro
· Greece – Athens – Euro
· Hungary – Budapest – Forint
· Indonesia – Jakarta – Rupiah
· Iran – Tehran – Riel
· Iraq – Baghdad – Dinar
· Israel – Jerusalem – Shekel
· Ireland – Dublin – Euro
· Italy – Rome – Euro
· Japan – Tokyo – Yen
· Jordan – Amman – Dinar
· Jamaica – Kingston – Dollar
· Kenya – Nairobi – Shilling
· Kazakhstan – Nur Sultan – Tenge
· Kuwait - Kuwait City – Dinar
· Kyrgyzstan – Bishkek – Som
· Libya – Tripoli – Dinar
· Laos – Vientiane – Kip
· Lebanon – Beirut – Pound
· Latvia – Riga – Euro
· Madagascar – Antananarivo – Ariary
· Mali – Bamako - CFA Franc
· Mauritius - Port Louis – Rupee
· Morocco – Rabat – Dirham
· Mozambique – Maputo – Metical
· Malaysia - Kuala Lumpur – Ringgit
· Maldives – Male – Rufiyaa
· Myanmar (Burma) – Naypyidaw – Kyat
· Mexico - Mexico City – Peso
· Namibia – Windhoek – Dollar
· Nigeria – Abuja – Naira
· Nepal – Kathmandu – Rupee
· North Korea – Pyongyang – Won
· Netherlands – Amsterdam – Euro
· Norway – Oslo – Krone
· New Zealand – Wellington – Dollar
· Oman – Muscat – Riel
· Pakistan – Islamabad – Rupee
· Philippines – Manila – Peso
· Poland – Warsaw – Zloty
· Portugal – Lisbon – Euro
· Paraguay – Asuncion – Guarani
· Peru – Lima - Nuevo Sol
· Qatar – Doha – Riyal
· Rwanda – Kigali – Franc
· Russia – Moscow – Rubble
· Seychelles – Victoria – Rupee
· Somalia – Mogadishu – Shilling
· South Africa - Pretoria, Cape Town , Bloemfontein – Rand
· Saudi Arabia – Riyadh – Riyal
· Singapore – Singapore – Dollar
· South Korea – Seoul – Won
· Sri Lanka - Colombo, Sri Jayewardenepura Kotte – Rupee
· Syria – Damascus – Pound
· Serbia – Belgrade – Dinar
· Slovakia – Bratislava – Euro
· Spain – Madrid – Euro
· Sweden – Stockholm – Krone
· Switzerland – Bern – Franc
· Tanzania – Dodoma – Shilling
· Taiwan – Taipei – Dollar
· · Tajikistan – Dushanbe – Somoni
· Thailand – Bangkok – Baht
· Turkey – Ankara – Lira
· Turkmenistan – Ashgabat – Manat
· Uganda – Kampala – Shilling
· Unites Arab Emirates - Abu Dhabi – Dirham
· Uzbekistan – Tashkent – Som
· Ukraine – Kiev – Hryvnia
· United Kingdom – London – Pound
· United States - Washington, D.C – Dollar
· Uruguay – Montevideo – Peso
· Vietnam – Hanoi – Dong
· Venezuela – Caracas – Bolivar
· Yemen – Sana – Riel
· Zambia – Lusaka – Kwacha
· Zimbabwe – Harare–Dollar
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Heather Cox Richardson:
September 7, 2020 (Monday)
I have been holding off for a calm news day to examine exactly what the fifth volume of the Senate Intelligence Committee’s bipartisan report on Russia’s attempts to influence the 2016 election said, and why it is important. The report came out on August 18 and, in the storm of other news, has gotten less attention than it should have.
While Special Counsel Robert Mueller marshaled a team to look into potential crimes committed by members of the Trump campaign and by Russian actors in the 2016 election, the Senate Intelligence Committee also conducted an investigation. The Senate committee was not limited, as Mueller was, by a directive from the acting Attorney General Rod Rosenstein. It looked more widely at the contacts between members of the 2016 Trump campaign and Russian operatives. Because Republicans control the Senate, the Senate Intelligence Committee is chaired by a Republican, first by Richard Burr (R-NC) and then, after Burr stepped down under allegations of insider trading, by Marco Rubio (R-FL).
The first volume of the committee’s report established that Russians successfully breached U.S. election systems in 2016. According to the Intelligence Community, “Russian intelligence obtained and maintained access to elements of multiple U.S. state or local electoral boards,” but the Department of Homeland Security “assesses that the types of systems Russian actors targeted or compromised were not involved in vote tallying.” Interestingly, the section on Russian attacks on voting machines is almost entirely redacted.
The second volume explained that Russian operatives “sought to influence the 2016 U.S. presidential election by harming Hillary Clinton's chances of success and supporting Donald Trump at the direction of the Kremlin.” It concluded that “in 2016, Russian operatives… used social media to conduct an information warfare campaign designed to spread disinformation and societal division in the United States. Masquerading as Americans, these operatives used targeted advertisements, intentionally falsified news articles, self-generated content, and social media platform tools to interact with and attempt to deceive tens of millions of social media users in the United States. This campaign sought to polarize Americans on the basis of societal, ideological, and racial differences, provoked real world events, and was part of a foreign government's covert support of Russia's favored candidate in the U.S. presidential election.”
The third volume examined how the U.S. government responded to the Russian attacks. The fourth reviewed and defended the methods and findings of the Intelligence Community.
And, on August 18, the committee released the fifth volume. The committee reviewed about a million documents and interviewed more than 200 witnesses. Its 966 pages establish extensive connections between Russian operatives and Trump campaign officials in 2016.
They established that Trump’s campaign chairman Paul Manafort worked closely during the campaign with his longtime business associate in Ukraine, Konstantin Kilimnik, whom the report identifies as a “Russian intelligence officer.”
This means that, according to Republicans—as well as the Democrats on the committee—in 2016, Trump’s campaign manager was actively working with a Russian intelligence officer.
Paul Manafort’s backstory matters.
Manafort cut his political teeth in Richard Nixon’s 1972 campaign, along with his friend Roger Stone, whom he had met in the Young Republicans organization, a social and political network of young professionals. Manafort worked for Ronald Reagan in 1980 and George H. W. Bush in 1988. In 1980, he and Roger Stone were two of the three principals who formed a lobbying firm in Washington, D.C., that brought under one roof lobbying and political consulting as well as public relations. Bundling these functions was groundbreaking: they would get their clients elected, and then help clients lobby them. One of their first clients was a friend of Stone’s: Donald J. Trump.
Quickly, Manafort began to look to foreign countries for his clients. He took advantage of the anti-communist focus of foreign policy after Reagan, cleaning up shady clients to look good enough to U.S. lawmakers that they could get U.S. dollars to shore up their political interests. Touting his connections to the Reagan and Bush administrations, Manafort racked up clients. He backed so many dictatorial governments—Nigeria, Kenya, Zaire, Equatorial Guinea, Saudi Arabia, and Somalia, among others—that a 1992 report from the Center for Public Integrity called his firm “The Torturers’ Lobby.”
In 1995, Manafort started his own firm and, a decade later, he began working for a young Russian billionaire Oleg Deripaska, who was eager to prove useful to Vladimir Putin. At the time, Putin was trying to consolidate power in Russia, where oligarchs were rising to replace the region’s communist leaders and were monopolizing formerly publicly held industries. In 2004, American journalist Paul Klebnikov, the chief editor of Forbes in Russia, was murdered as he tried to call attention to what the oligarchs were doing.
In 1991, Ukraine had declared its independence from the USSR, and threats of Ukrainian freedom soon worried Deripaska, who had business interests there. In 2004, it appeared at first that a Russian-backed politician, Viktor Yanukovych, was elected president of Ukraine. But Yanukovych was rumored to have ties to organized crime, and the election was so full of fraud—including the poisoning of a key rival who wanted to break ties with Russia and align Ukraine with Europe—the government voided the election and called for a do-over. Yanukovych needed a makeover fast, and for that he called on a political consultant with a reputation for making unsavory characters palatable to the media: Deripaska’s friend Paul Manafort.
For ten years, from 2004 to 2014, Manafort worked for Yanukovych and his party, trying to make what the U.S. State Department called a party of “mobsters and oligarchs” look legitimate. He made a fortune thanks to his new friends, especially Deripaska. In 2010, Yanukovych finally won the presidency on a platform of rejecting NATO, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization through which Europe joined together to oppose first the USSR, and then the rising threat of Russia. Immediately, Yanukovych turned Ukraine toward Russia. In 2014, after months of popular protests, Ukrainians ousted Yanukovych from power in what is known as the Revolution of Dignity. Yanukovych fled to Russia.
Shortly after Yanukovych’s ouster, Russia invaded Ukraine’s Crimea and annexed it, prompting the United States and the European Union to impose economic sanctions on Russia itself and also on specific Russian businesses and oligarchs, prohibiting them from doing business in United States territories. These sanctions crippled Russia and froze the assets of key Russian oligarchs.
Now without his main source of income, Manafort owed about $17 million to Deripaska. By 2016, his longtime friend and business partner Roger Stone was advising Trump’s floundering presidential campaign, and Manafort was happy to step in to help remake it. He did not take a salary, but reached out to Deripaska through one of his Ukrainian business partners, Konstantin Kilimnik, immediately after landing the job, asking him “How do we use to get whole? Has OVD [Oleg Vladimirovich Deripaska] operation seen?”
Manafort began as a campaign advisor in March 2016, and became the chairman in late June, after the June 9 meeting between Don Jr., Jared Kushner, and Manafort with a number of people, including a Russian lawyer associated with Putin’s intelligence services, in Trump Tower. (Remember that Trump tried to explain away that meeting as being about “adoptions,” because the Russian response to sanctions was to shut down American adoptions of Russian children.)
The fifth volume of the Senate Intelligence Report establishes that Kilimnik is a “Russian intelligence officer,” and that he acted as a liaison between Manafort and Deripaska while Manafort ran Trump’s campaign. On several occasions, Manafort passed the campaign’s sensitive internal polling data to Kilimnik, although because their communications were encrypted, the committee could not determine what became of the information. (Such polling might well dovetail with the information in volume 2.)
The report says Kilimnik may have been directly involved in hacking Democratic National Committee emails and handing the stolen files to WikiLeaks. The committee found “significant evidence” that WikiLeaks was “knowingly collaborating with Russian government officials.” The report also establishes that Trump repeatedly discussed the WikiLeaks document dumps with operative Roger Stone, then lied about those discussions with investigators.
The report says Manafort lied consistently about his interactions with Kilimnik, and has chosen to go to jail rather than change his story. It also notes that it is Kilimnik who launched the story that it was Ukraine, not Russia, that interfered in the U.S. election.
According to the report: "Taken as a whole, Manafort's high level access and willingness to share information with individuals closely affiliated with the Russian intelligence services, particularly Kilimnik and associates of Oleg Deripaska, represented a grave counterintelligence threat."
The report also established that the White House “significantly hampered” the investigation.
The Manafort story is only one of the issues covered in Volume 5.
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IBPS CLERK 2021 |STATIC GK|COUNTRY-CURRENCY-CAPITAL
Country – Capital – Currency
Algeria – Algiers – Dinar
Angola – Luanda – Kwanza
Afghanistan – Kabul – Afghani
Austria – Vienna – Euro
Armenia – Yerevan – Dram
Argentina - Buenos Aires – Peso
Australia – Canberra – Dollar
Botswana – Gaborone – Pula
Bahrain – Manama – Dinar
Bangladesh – Dhaka – Taka
Bhutan – Thimphu – Ngultrum
Brunei - Bandar Seri Begawan – Dollar
Belgium – Brussels – Euro
Belarus – Minsk – Ruble
Bulgaria – Sofia – Lev
Bahamas – Nassau – Dollar
Brazil – Brasilia – Real
Chad - N’Djamena - CFA Franc
Congo – Brazzaville - CFA Franc
Cambodia - Phnom Penh – Riel
China – Beijing - Renminbi (Yuan)
Croatia – Zagreb – Kuna
Czech Republic – Prague – Koruna
Cyprus – Nicosia – Euro
Canada – Ottawa – Dollar
Cuba – Havana – Peso
Chile – Santiago – Peso
Denmark – Copenhagen – Krone
Egypt – Cairo – Pound
Ethiopia - Addis Ababa – Birr
Estonia – Tallinn – Euro
Ecuador – Quito - US Dollar
Finland – Helsinki – Euro
France – Paris – Euro
Fiji – Suva – Dollar
Gambia – Banjul – Dalasi
Ghana – Accra – Cedi
Germany – Berlin – Euro
Greece – Athens – Euro
Hungary – Budapest – Forint
Indonesia – Jakarta – Rupiah
Iran – Tehran – Riel
Iraq – Baghdad – Dinar
Israel – Jerusalem – Shekel
Ireland – Dublin – Euro
Italy – Rome – Euro
Japan – Tokyo – Yen
Jordan – Amman – Dinar
Jamaica – Kingston – Dollar
Kenya – Nairobi – Shilling
Kazakhstan – Nur Sultan – Tenge
Kuwait - Kuwait City – Dinar
Kyrgyzstan – Bishkek – Som
Libya – Tripoli – Dinar
Laos – Vientiane – Kip
Lebanon – Beirut – Pound
Latvia – Riga – Euro
Madagascar – Antananarivo – Ariary
Mali – Bamako - CFA Franc
Mauritius - Port Louis – Rupee
Morocco – Rabat – Dirham
Mozambique – Maputo – Metical
Malaysia - Kuala Lumpur – Ringgit
Maldives – Male – Rufiyaa
Myanmar (Burma) – Naypyidaw – Kyat
Mexico - Mexico City – Peso
Namibia – Windhoek – Dollar
Nigeria – Abuja – Naira
Nepal – Kathmandu – Rupee
North Korea – Pyongyang – Won
Netherlands – Amsterdam – Euro
Norway – Oslo – Krone
New Zealand – Wellington – Dollar
Oman – Muscat – Riel
Pakistan – Islamabad – Rupee
Philippines – Manila – Peso
Poland – Warsaw – Zloty
Portugal – Lisbon – Euro
Paraguay – Asuncion – Guarani
Peru – Lima - Nuevo Sol
Qatar – Doha – Riyal
Rwanda – Kigali – Franc
Russia – Moscow – Rubble
Seychelles – Victoria – Rupee
Somalia – Mogadishu – Shilling
South Africa - Pretoria, Cape Town, Bloemfontein – Rand
Saudi Arabia – Riyadh – Riyal
Singapore – Singapore – Dollar
South Korea – Seoul – Won
Sri Lanka - Colombo, Sri Jayewardenepura Kotte – Rupee
Syria – Damascus – Pound
Serbia – Belgrade – Dinar
Slovakia – Bratislava – Euro
Spain – Madrid – Euro
Sweden – Stockholm – Krone
Switzerland – Bern – Franc
Tanzania – Dodoma – Shilling
Taiwan – Taipei – Dollar
· Tajikistan – Dushanbe – Somoni
Thailand – Bangkok – Baht
Turkey – Ankara – Lira
Turkmenistan – Ashgabat – Manat
Uganda – Kampala – Shilling
Unites Arab Emirates - Abu Dhabi – Dirham
Uzbekistan – Tashkent – Som
Ukraine – Kyiv – Hryvnia
The United Kingdom – London – Pound
United States - Washington, D.C – Dollar
Uruguay – Montevideo – Peso
Vietnam – Hanoi – Dong
Venezuela – Caracas – Bolivar
Yemen – Sana – Riel
Zambia – Lusaka – Kwacha
Zimbabwe – Harare–Dollar
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Virginia: Muslim immigrant who drove for Uber and Lyft is Somali war criminal, jury finds
How did Yusuf Abdi Ali get into the United States and why hasn’t he been deported yet?
An accused Somali war criminal who CNN reported last week was working in the US as a driver for Uber and Lyft was responsible for the torture of a man in 1988 and should pay him $500,000, a civil court jury found Tuesday.
Farhan Mohamoud Tani Warfaa alleged in court papers that he was beaten and tortured by soldiers under the command of Yusuf Abdi Ali--the man featured in CNN's report.
According to Warfaa, Ali's soldiers beat him, took his clothing and used a form of torture called the "Mig," in which they tied his hands and feet behind his back in a painful position that resembled the shape of the Somali Air Force's MIG aircraft. Ali was present during some of the torture, according to the lawsuit filed in federal court in Virginia.
Warfaa said Ali, also known as "Colonel Tukeh," shot him multiple times at point-blank range. The jury rejected a claim that Ali attempted to "extrajudicially" kill Warfaa.
Ali's attorney, Joseph Peter Drennan, told CNN he and his client were disappointed in the outcome of the case, which they viewed as politically motivated to benefit Somaliland, a breakaway region of Somalia.
"Yusuf Abdi Ali was held liable because he was a commander in an army that served under a regime that had a poor human rights record. But aside from the plaintiff's testimony, there was virtually no evidence that Ali tortured anyone," Drennan said.
Drennan said Ali cannot afford to pay the damages, noting that he recently lost his job as a rideshare driver.
Ali has not been convicted of a crime in connection with his alleged conduct in Somalia.
But an Internet search of his name turns up news accounts published over the last three decades that contain allegations that he committed various atrocities while serving as a military commander during Somalia's civil war in the 1980s.CNN recently identified Ali as a rideshare driver with Uber and Lyft earlier this month. After CNN's inquiries, Lyft permanently banned him from its platform and Uber suspended him pending a review of the matter.
Asked for an update after the jury's verdict Tuesday, Uber said Ali's access to the app was permanently removed.
Uber's app previously listed Ali as an "Uber Pro Diamond" driver with a 4.89 rating. When CNN reporters rode with Ali undercover and asked about Uber's background check process, he responded that it was quick and easy.
"They just want your background check, that's it," Ali said. "If you apply tonight maybe after two days it will come, you know, everything."
CNN previously reported that Uber and Lyft have approved thousands of drivers who should have been disqualified because of criminal records.
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Headlines
Fresh Documents Keep Up Pressure on Canada’s Trudeau Over Scandal (Reuters) A former cabinet member at the heart of a crisis that could cost Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau his job on Friday released documents to back up her case that she had been pressured to help a large corporation avoid a corruption trial.
Trump blasts Russia probe, calls 2020 Democrats ‘radical’ (AP) Presenting himself as both vindicated and vindictive, a fired-up President Donald Trump turned the findings of the Russia investigation into a political weapon at a Michigan rally that was part victory lap, part 2020 campaign push.
Trump Says It Is Very Likely He’ll Close Border With Mexico (Reuters) U.S. President Donald Trump said on Friday there was a very good chance he would close the border with Mexico next week as he seeks to stem a tide of illegal immigration into the United States.
Puerto Ricans Struggle to Buy Food Amid Funding Shortfall (AP) Iraida Vargas can no longer afford the two kinds of insulin her aging mother needs and has stopped buying fresh fruit and vegetables as billions of dollars in federal funds that help Puerto Ricans buy food, get medical treatment and recover from Hurricane Maria dwindle despite pleas from the U.S. territory that Congress take action.
Special Olympics receives continued funding (Reuters) President Donald Trump overrode his budget team and backed funding for the Special Olympics on Thursday after his proposed cuts to the athletic program drew heavy fire from both Republicans and Democrats. Trump’s proposed budget for fiscal year 2020, which he released earlier this month, would have zeroed out funding for the Special Olympics, which has an allocation of $17.6 million this fiscal year.
Mexican Police Nab Man Who Tried to Rob Bank With Loader (AP) Police in Mexico say they caught a man who stole a front-end loader, drove it to a local bank, knocked down a wall, chained a safe to the machine and tried to drag it off.
Nicaragua Reiterates Pledge to Release People Detained in Protests (Reuters) The Nicaraguan government reiterated its pledge on Friday to release all people arrested during protests against President Daniel Ortega, though the government remains in disagreement with opposition groups about the number of prisoners.
Protests at Chinese Copper Mine in Peru Continue After Local Leader Freed (Reuters) Peruvian police on Friday freed the leader of an indigenous community that has blocked roads to a major copper mine, but hours later arrested his second-in-command, accusing him of running over police officers while driving drunk.
Brazil’s Bolsonaro Visits Israel Amid Speculation on Embassy (AP) Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro was leaving Saturday on an official visit to Israel, where he was expected to decide whether he will move the Brazilian Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.
UK faces new Brexit crisis after lawmakers reject May’s deal (AP) British lawmakers on Friday rejected the government’s Brexit deal for a third time, leaving the U.K. facing the stark prospect of a chaotic departure from the European Union in just two weeks, with political leaders in turmoil and the country ill-prepared for the shock. It’s either that, or a long delay to the country’s exit from the EU. The alternatives are dwindling.
Slovakia Set to Elect Anti-Graft Lawyer as First Female President (Reuters) Riding a wave of public fury over corruption, liberal lawyer Zuzana Caputova looks set to win Slovakia’s presidential election on Saturday, bucking a trend that has seen the rise of populist, anti-European Union politicians across the continent.
Erdogan Says Turkey Will Solve Syria Issue ‘on the Field’ After Sunday’s Elections (Reuters) Turkey will solve the Syria issue “on the field” after Sunday’s local elections, President Tayyip Erdogan said on Saturday, as he sought to drum up support for his AK Party in the vote.
Ukraine set to elect new president (Reuters) A comedian with no political experience is tipped to win the first round of Ukraine’s presidential election on Sunday amid discontent over corruption and five years of war against pro-Russian separatists in the east of the country.
New Silk Road Critics Are ‘Prejudiced’, China’s Top Diplomat Says (Reuters) China has never forced debt upon participants of its new Silk Road project as “prejudiced” critics have suggested, the country’s top diplomat said on Saturday in a strongly worded defence of a key policy platform of President Xi Jinping
Australia to Boost National Security Funding by $400 Million: Newspaper (Reuters) Australia’s budget for the 2019/20 fiscal year will include an additional A$570 million ($404.36 million) for national security to boost counter-terrorism and anti-espionage operations, The Weekend Australian newspaper reported on Saturday.
Afghanistan Floods Kill 17, Worsen Already Desperate Situation (Reuters) Heavy rains caused flash floods in western Afghanistan that killed at least 17 people, destroying homes and sweeping through makeshift shelters that housed displaced families, a government official said on Saturday.
Israeli Fire Kills Palestinian on Gaza Border: Palestinian Health Ministry (Reuters) Israeli fire killed a Palestinian man near the Gaza border on Saturday, Palestinian Health officials said, as Israel’s forces massed at the frontier ahead of a rally to mark the first anniversary of a surge of Gaza border protests.
Protests in Algiers continue (Reuters) Thousands of protesters gathered in central Algiers, piling pressure on President Abdel Aziz Bouteflika to resign days after the country’s powerful military called for his removal. The ailing 82-year-old president, facing the biggest crisis of his 20-year-old rule, has failed to placate Algerians by reversing a decision to seek a fifth term.
Mali Warns Any Cut in UN Force Will Strengthen Militants (AP) Mali’s prime minister urged the Security Council on Friday to maintain its more than 16,000-strong peacekeeping mission in the country, warning that any reduction will end up strengthening Islamic militants and endangering the “fragile progress” toward peace.
UN Document Shows Kenya Seeking to Close Somali Refugee Camp (AP) An internal United Nations document says Kenya again seeks to close the Dadaab camp that hosts more than 200,000 refugees from neighboring Somalia and is one of the largest such camps in the world.
UN Starts Looking Toward the End of Peacekeeping in Congo (AP) The Security Council on Friday called for a strategic review of the U.N. peacekeeping mission in Congo with a view to progressively handing over its responsibilities to the country’s newly elected government led by President Felix Tshisekedi.
Mozambique cholera cases jump to 139 a day after outbreak (AP) Cholera cases in Mozambique among survivors of a devastating cyclone have shot up to 139, officials said, as nearly 1 million vaccine doses were rushed to the region and health workers desperately tried to improvise treatment space for victims.
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I just listened to this podcast, The Good Fight, which this week is about Sweden’s upcoming elections. I realize this topic isn’t super exciting for most people who read my dumb blog — although I suspect it’ll make global headlines, so you may become interested anyway — but if you’ve got a little time and you’re interested in the rise of right-wing populism, it’s worth a listen.
Here are some of my thoughts.
My book is significantly about social democratic politics. I did the bulk of my fieldwork in Sweden in 2005-2006, and I went back regularly in the years that followed, when the center-right Conservative party (Moderaterna) was in power. The Sweden Democrats, the right-wing populist party with roots in neo-Nazi organizations, were somewhat of an uncomfortable joke back then. They’re a party full of racists, led by a young, telegenic asshole named Jimmie Åkesson, and while they were making some waves at the local level, there was very little discussion that they’d ever make it big in national politics. Some worry, sure, but not much active fear. They’re literally only mentioned once in my book, in a footnote.
Now, on Sunday, the Sweden Democrats are poised to win big in the Swedish election, though of course we don’t know yet what will happen. And the question everyone outside Sweden seems to be asking is, why? What has happened that has shifted this historically tolerant, left-leaning country to embrace the barely-disguised virulence of nationalist white supremacists? And the answers folks come up with are all relatively predictable: immigration, the 2015 refugee crisis, rising crime rates, worry that the welfare state can’t afford these new “freeloaders,” etc. There’s more there, of course, and I’ll get to it, but I think that, while these familiar surface reasons matter, they’re also mostly wrong. Here’s why.
Sweden has taken in asylum seekers and other immigrants since the 1960s. That initial wave came mostly from Eastern Europe, and significantly from Poland, which was engaged in anti-Semitic pogroms at the time. This wave was followed by other waves, all the way up through the 2015 refugee crisis. Yet never before in those 50+ years has national politics turned to right-wing, anti-immigrant demagoguery to redress the issue. Of course one might say, well, those initial waves were made up of other white Europeans (Poland, Finland, the former Yugoslavia), and the refugees now are mostly non-white, so this is about racism — and that’s partly right. But other waves since the 1990s have included large populations from Somalia, Iraq, Turkey, and elsewhere — many non-white people, many Muslims, just like in 2015. This isn’t to say that these waves of immigration haven’t caused all sort of political strife in Sweden, but that the response has never involved turning to explicitly anti-immigrant electoral politics as a solution to the perceived problem. In other words, while racism is a part of the current situation, it’s not THE cause, nor is racism particularly new in Sweden. The new thing here is this turn to racism specifically in electoral politics, and that’s what needs to be explained.
I should say that along with all of those other immigration waves, the same rhetoric was used: the welfare state can’t afford them; they need to assimilate; they’re both very lazy and steal our jobs (not entirely dissimilar from what we hear in the US). This rhetoric is just as wrong now as it’s always been. Sweden, like the rest of Europe, has a population problem, and if Swedes want to keep their generous and robust welfare state going, they need the population to increase at a much higher rate than natural births can accommodate, and the only way to do that is through immigration. Without immigrants, the welfare state will eventually shrink and collapse in on itself, which means rather than being a drain on the system, immigrants are, in the long term, the system’s saviors.
So Sweden has undergone decades of immigration, including immigration from the Middle East and Africa, and white Swedes have used all sort of racist language and actions during each of those waves, but the anti-immigrant populists have never gained any power in parliament until very recently. If immigration isn’t new, and racism isn’t new, what makes now different?
I think there are two main answers to this question, both of which are mostly boring, but very real (and the podcast I started off with lands in a similar spot). The first is the steady degradation of the Social Democratic party. In the final decades of the 20th century, we saw the same basic pattern all over Europe and the Anglophone world: formerly left-leaning parties, including the Social Democrats, dazzled by the promises of financialization and globalization, turned to increasingly neoliberal governing strategies otherwise favored by center-right parties. The reasons they did this are complicated, but one result, electorally speaking, is that party brands ended up very muddied in a mishmash of left and right policy ideas with no coherent through-line (we saw this with the Democrats in the US, too). This move did lead to some initial electoral success in some cases, but in the long run it left these parties without any real, clear message or platform. This in turn ended up shunting voters more leftward and rightward, seeking parties that were much more earnest about the clarity of their politics (in the US, since we only have two parties, this process has worked out a bit differently). In Sweden, the Social Democrats themselves, the party that built the world’s strongest welfare state, spent the turn-of-the-century years remodeling it, generally with tasteless decor and poor craftsmanship, to the point where it was virtually unrecognizable from its former glorious form. Why vote for them, when there are plenty of parties on the right willing to do the same shitty renovations, and a few on the left who will argue for making the welfare state even stronger?
So I think the degradation of the Social Democratic party in Sweden — which has been in power for most of the last 90 years or so — and the effects that’s had on how other parties align and adapt, has set very specific conditions that impact how Swedes think about party politics today. But I think the much, much bigger issue in the current election, as it was in ours in 2016, is social media. Like, for real — this is a common and banal observation, to be sure, but I think we are all severely underestimating how much this matters. Had Facebook and YouTube been around (or as powerful) when waves of asylum seekers arrived in Sweden from Iraq and East Africa, I think we would have seen then what we’re seeing now. Like I said, racism isn’t new: people and their bigotry haven’t changed much; but the ability to spread that bigotry, to manipulate it, and to introduce and amplify lies and deceptions and exaggerations that then directly affect how people vote, that is something new, and mostly facilitated by social media.
I don’t think it’s a coincidence that the recent rise in right-wing populism tracks neatly with the growth of Facebook and other social media, both in Sweden and globally. Remember, I said earlier that the Sweden Democrats (the anti-immigrant party) were around, but were not taken very seriously, when I lived in Sweden in 2005-2006. Back then, most of us were still on MySpace. Facebook didn’t open to the general public until September 2006. YouTube’s first video was uploaded in 2005, and the company wasn’t bought by Google until late 2006. Twitter didn’t launch until July 2006. At that point the Sweden Democrats had no representation in parliament. But four years later, in 2010, they got over 5% of the vote, and in 2014 they got almost 10%. They’re expected to get around 20% on Sunday, which, if you’re paying attention, is basically a doubling of support in each election. I highly doubt this rate of growth would be possible absent the specific capacities of contemporary social media.
This is terrifying to me. I’ve been a Facebook skeptic from the start and I never joined, but that was mostly for other, mostly abstract reasons, like “I don’t want a corporation directly mediating my friendships!” I still feel that way, but looking back on it, I don’t think I had any idea how devastating the actual practical effects of this technology could be. And at this point I don’t really care about discerning whether social media spreads racism that already exists, and is thus merely a vector, or if it creates racism that didn’t exist before (my money is on “it’s both!”). That’s mostly (though not entirely) an academic distinction. What matters is that racism and hatred are clearly on the rise, and on the rise in formal institutions that have the power and authority to do some very bad things in the world at a scale I’ve never seen in my lifetime. And social media is playing a starring role in this drama. And none of us have any idea what to do about it.
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Platform to Find Jobs and Tenders in Somalia - Koor Employment
Find jobs and tenders with Koor. Connect employers, jobseekers, and vendors on our employment platform in Somalia. Stay updated with the latest opportunities.
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Senior Journalist Online- Somali Service job at BBC
Senior Journalist Online- Somali Service job at BBC
The BBC Somali Service operates a digital first strategy, publishing content online and on social media platforms, alongside producing radio news and current affairs programmes in Somali. The service’s focus is to produce world-class digital content that makes sense of news and events in Somalia and its neighbouring region for our local and global audiences. A career at the BBC offers you an…
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Euro Truck Simulator 2 - Pirate Paint Jobs Pack
Ativações / Sistemas
Euro Truck Simulator 2 - Pirate Paint Jobs Pack
Game: Euro Truck Simulator 2 Platform: PC Gamer: hkkane Gameplay Date: 29 July 2015 Gameplay Part./ Note: Prehistoric Paint Jobs Pack. Below are the minimum and recommended system specifications for Euro Truck Simulator 2 - Australian Paint Jobs Pack - Steam - Key GLOBAL. Due to potential programming changes, the minimum system requirements for Euro Truck Simulator 2 - Australian Paint Jobs Pack - Steam - Key GLOBAL may change over time. Euro Truck Simulator 2 - Halloween Paint Jobs Pack Customize your truck with a choice of six dark and scary paint jobs! Halloween is a great time to be different and make your truck stand out against the usual serious business look of vehicles found on the roads today.
Euro Truck Simulator 2 - Pirate Paint Jobs Pack
This game/item requires:
Available Regions for Activation
Across the globe, except South America and Europe.
Afghanistan
Algeria
American Samoa
Angola
Anguilla
Antarctica
Antigua & Barbuda
Aruba
Australia
Bahamas
Bahrain
Bangladesh
Barbados
Belize
Benin
Bermuda
Bhutan
Botswana
Bouvet Island
British Indian Ocean Territory
British Virgin Islands
Brunei
Burkina Faso
Burundi
Cambodia
Cameroon
Canada
Cape Verde
Caribbean Netherlands
Cayman Islands
Central African Republic
Chad
China
Christmas Island
Cocos (Keeling) Islands
Comoros
Congo - Brazzaville
Congo - Kinshasa
Cook Islands
Costa Rica
Côte d’Ivoire
Cuba
Curaçao
Djibouti
Dominica
Dominican Republic
Egypt
El Salvador
Equatorial Guinea
Eritrea
Ethiopia
Faroe Islands
Fiji
French Polynesia
French Southern Territories
Gabon
Gambia
Ghana
Gibraltar
Grenada
Guadeloupe
Guam
Guatemala
Guernsey
Guinea
Guinea-Bissau
Haiti
Heard & McDonald Islands
Honduras
Hong Kong SAR China
India
Indonesia
Iran
Iraq
Isle of Man
Israel
Jamaica
Japan
Jersey
Jordan
Kazakhstan
Kenya
Kiribati
Kuwait
Kyrgyzstan
Laos
Lebanon
Lesotho
Liberia
Libya
Macau SAR China
Madagascar
Malawi
Malaysia
Maldives
Mali
Marshall Islands
Martinique
Mauritania
Mauritius
Mayotte
Mexico
Micronesia
Mongolia
Montserrat
Morocco
Mozambique
Myanmar (Burma)
Namibia
Nauru
Nepal
New Caledonia
New Zealand
Nicaragua
Niger
Nigeria
Niue
Norfolk Island
North Korea
Northern Mariana Islands
Oman
Pakistan
Palau
Palestinian Territories
Panama
Papua New Guinea
Philippines
Pitcairn Islands
Puerto Rico
Qatar
Réunion
Russia
Rwanda
Saint Martin
Samoa
São Tomé & Príncipe
Saudi Arabia
Senegal
Seychelles
Sierra Leone
Singapore
Solomon Islands
Somalia
South Africa
South Korea
South Sudan
Sri Lanka
St. Barthélemy
St. Helena
St. Kitts & Nevis
St. Lucia
St. Martin
St. Pierre & Miquelon
St. Vincent & Grenadines
Sudan
Svalbard & Jan Mayen
Swaziland
Syria
Taiwan
Tajikistan
Tanzania
Thailand
Timor-Leste
Togo
Tokelau
Tonga
Trinidad & Tobago
Tunisia
Turkmenistan
Turks & Caicos Islands
Tuvalu
U.S. Outlying Islands
U.S. Virgin Islands
Uganda
United Arab Emirates
United States
Uzbekistan
Vanuatu
Vietnam
Wallis & Futuna
Western Sahara
Yemen
Zambia
Zimbabwe
About the game
Customize your truck by choosing among the 8 unique options of this DLC! Progressbar95 download.
Travel across Europe as king of the road, a trucker who delivers important cargo across impressive distances! With dozens of cities to explore from the UK, Belgium, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland, and many more, your endurance, skill and speed will all be pushed to their limits.
Highlights
Pirate Flag Decal;
Ghost Ship;
Pirate Flag Metallic;
Skull and Swords;
Pirate Gods;
Pirate Ahoy!
Pirate Ship;
Pirate Shipreck.
Borderlands 2 psycho build. Bonus toys t' decorate yer truck cabin wi':
Pirate bobblehead;
Parrot bobblehead;
Ship in a bottle;
Pirate Flag;
Skull with cutlasses.
System Requirements
Minimum
OS:Windows XP
Storage:2 GB
Processor:Dual Core 2.0GHz
Memory:2 GB
Graphics:GeForce 7600 GT
Recommended
OS:Windows 7
Storage:4 GB
Processor:Quad Core 3.0GHz
Memory:4 GB
Graphics:GeForce GTS 450
DirectX:10
Minimum
OS:Ubuntu 12.04
Storage:2 GB
Processor:Dual Core 2.0GHz
Memory:2 GB
Graphics:GeForce 7600 GT
Recommended
OS:Ubuntu 12.04
Storage:4 GB
Processor:Quad Core 3.0GHz
Memory:4 GB
Graphics:GeForce GTS 450
(C) 2012 SCS Software. All brand names, trademarks, registered marks, logos, and symbols on vehicles in the game are property of their rightful owners. Used with kind permission.
Release date:2016-09-19
Developer: SCS Software
Publisher: SCS Software
Game Mode
Single-player
Language
BulgarianCzechDanishGermanGreekEnglishSpanishFinnishFrenchHúngaroItalianNorwegianDutchPolishPortuguese (BR)Portuguese (PT)RomanianRussianSwedishTurkish
Ativações / Sistemas
Euro Truck Simulator 2 - Mighty Griffin Tuning Pack
Euro Truck Simulator 2 - Mighty Griffin Tuning Pack
This game/item requires:
Available Regions for Activation
Across the globe, except South America and Europe.
Afghanistan
Algeria
American Samoa
Angola
Anguilla
Antarctica
Antigua & Barbuda
Aruba
Australia
Bahamas
Bahrain
Bangladesh
Barbados
Belize
Benin
Bermuda
Bhutan
Botswana
Bouvet Island
British Indian Ocean Territory
British Virgin Islands
Brunei
Burkina Faso
Burundi
Cambodia
Cameroon
Canada
Cape Verde
Caribbean Netherlands
Cayman Islands
Central African Republic
Chad
China
Christmas Island
Cocos (Keeling) Islands
Comoros
Congo - Brazzaville
Congo - Kinshasa
Cook Islands
Costa Rica
Côte d’Ivoire
Cuba
Curaçao
Djibouti
Dominica
Dominican Republic
Egypt
El Salvador
Equatorial Guinea
Eritrea
Ethiopia
Faroe Islands
Fiji
French Polynesia
French Southern Territories
Gabon
Gambia
Ghana
Gibraltar
Grenada
Guadeloupe
Guam
Guatemala
Guernsey
Guinea
Guinea-Bissau
Haiti
Heard & McDonald Islands
Honduras
Hong Kong SAR China
India
Indonesia
Iran
Iraq
Isle of Man
Israel
Jamaica
Japan
Jersey
Jordan
Kazakhstan
Kenya
Kiribati
Kuwait
Kyrgyzstan
Laos
Lebanon
Lesotho
Liberia
Libya
Macau SAR China
Madagascar
Malawi
Malaysia
Maldives
Mali
Marshall Islands
Martinique
Mauritania
Mauritius
Mayotte
Mexico
Micronesia
Mongolia
Montserrat
Morocco
Mozambique
Myanmar (Burma)
Namibia
Nauru
Nepal
New Caledonia
New Zealand
Nicaragua
Niger
Nigeria
Niue
Norfolk Island
North Korea
Northern Mariana Islands
Oman
Pakistan
Palau
Palestinian Territories
Panama
Papua New Guinea
Philippines
Pitcairn Islands
Puerto Rico
Qatar
Réunion
Russia
Rwanda
Saint Martin
Samoa
São Tomé & Príncipe
Saudi Arabia
Senegal
Seychelles
Sierra Leone
Singapore
Solomon Islands
Somalia
South Africa
South Korea
South Sudan
Sri Lanka
St. Barthélemy
St. Helena
St. Kitts & Nevis
St. Lucia
St. Martin
St. Pierre & Miquelon
St. Vincent & Grenadines
Sudan
Svalbard & Jan Mayen
Swaziland
Syria
Taiwan
Tajikistan
Tanzania
Thailand
Timor-Leste
Togo
Tokelau
Tonga
Trinidad & Tobago
Tunisia
Turkmenistan
Turks & Caicos Islands
Tuvalu
U.S. Outlying Islands
U.S. Virgin Islands
Uganda
United Arab Emirates
United States
Uzbekistan
Vanuatu
Vietnam
Wallis & Futuna
Western Sahara
Yemen
Zambia
Zimbabwe
Euro Truck Simulator Download
About the game
Truck tuning is something that is close to the heart of all truckers. If you have ever been to a truck show, you would see that the amount of love and effort that some drivers are willing to devote to their vehicles is unbelievable. Tons of chrome, expensive hand-made parts, lights and paints - they can turn a regular truck into the work of art!
Toby: the secret mine download. Explore this phenomenon yourself, and trick up your Scania R and Scania Streamline trucks in Euro Truck Simulator 2 with a million of possible combinations of aftermarket parts including: chassis covers, rear bumpers, exhausts, front masks and grilles, stone guards, bull bars, front and rear mudflaps, wheel hubs, door and window trims, paint jobs, front badges, and various cabin accessories like curtains, mugs, LED logos or a dashboard table.
System Requirements
Minimum
OS:Windows XP
Storage:2 GB
Processor:Dual Core 2.0GHz
Memory:2 GB
Graphics:GeForce 7600 GT
Recommended
OS:Windows 7
Storage:4 GB
Processor:Quad Core 3.0GHz
Memory:4 GB
Graphics:GeForce GTS 450
DirectX:10
Minimum
OS:Ubuntu 12.04
Storage:2 GB
Processor:Dual Core 2.0GHz
Memory:2 GB
Graphics:GeForce 7600 GT
Recommended
OS:Ubuntu 12.04
Storage:4 GB
Processor:Quad Core 3.0GHz
Memory:4 GB
Graphics:GeForce GTS 450
Euro Truck Simulator 2 - Pirate Paint Jobs Pack 1.8
(C) 2016 SCS Software. Cloud gardens download apk. All brand names, trademarks, registered marks, logos, and symbols on vehicles in the game are property of their rightful owners. Used with kind permission.
Release date:2016-06-28
Developer: SCS Software
Publisher: SCS Software
Game Mode
Single-player
Language
Euro Truck Simulator 2 - Pirate Paint Jobs Pack 4
BulgarianCzechDanishGermanGreekEnglishSpanishFinnishFrenchHúngaroItalianNorwegianDutchPolishPortuguese (BR)Portuguese (PT)RomanianRussianSwedishTurkish
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