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Somalia: No real Peace, No stable Sports Kingsley Kobo


Sporting activities involve people who assemble to celebrate joy and festivity in a peaceful environment, with the desire to promote social cohesion and communal or national patriotism. But when violence is at centre stage, it is difficult to win people’s confidence and convene them to witness the fervour in sports. When there is no peace, there can’t be any development in sports.


The above is the lamentable situation in Somalia, a Northeast African nation blessed with uncountable potential sport talents, capable of launching the country’s image to greater heights if peace had been given a long-lasting chance.


Somalia and its population have been facing the savage consequences of an absurd civil war since 1991, with no central government commanding anywhere or anything in the 600, 000 square / km surface populated by some nine million people, most of whom are impoverished refugees in their own country.


With little development possible under such condition, sporting activities have also paid the price of this instability. World’s football governing body FIFA has imposed a ban on all of its controlled games not to hold inside Somalia. Competitions are not possible in regions with fierce violence, thus killing the spirit of sports, and giving young people no inspiration to consider a sporting career.


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