By Abdurrahman Warsameh
MOGADISHU, Aug. 24 (Xinhua) -- "They have been terrific Olympic Games and
it ended as spectacular as it started," said Qali Gure, a Mogadishu resident and
one of the few lucky ones who were able to watch the Games live in her home. "I
really enjoyed every bit of it."
Somalia sent two athletes to the Beijing Summer Olympic Games despite near
two decades of violence and lawlessness that destroyed much of the country's
infrastructures including most of the sports facilities which has turned into
ruins.
Although the Somali athletes did not receive any medals but the mere fact
of Somalia being represented at the Games was a source of pride for many here so
the Games were doggedly followed, albeit mostly by radio, from the Opening to
the Closing ceremonies and all in-between.
Local radio stations have been airing programs about the games since they
started and have been reporting all the sports events at the games.
"I and many others who do not have a TV set or electricity in my
neighborhood but I watched both the opening and the closing ceremonies with my
neighbor," Abdullahi Nor, a sports enthusiast in Mogadishu told Xinhua. "The
Games were really well organized, the ceremonies were fantastic and
entertaining."
Isse Wayel, one of the fortunate Mogadishu residents, was glued to his TV
set for the duration of the Games and was following them tenaciously as new
legends were made at the Games which he describes as "the best " he had ever
seen.
"These were amazing events where old records were broken and new ones set,
Games where everything was perfectly choreographed and precisely planned," Wayel
told Xinhua. "The Games were the best I have ever watched and left me with a
beautiful lasting impression about China and its people."
Most of the people in the capital, though, were busy in their everyday
worries of surviving perhaps in one of the most dangerous cities in the world
where insecurity and deadly violence has been the order of the day for most part
of the past two decades.
However, many say that the now concluded Olympic Games could teach lessons
for Somali people as thousands of people from almost every nation on the planet
gathered in Beijing to celebrate humanity in peace, harmony and respect.
"The motto of the Beijing Olympics, One world, One Dream, summarizes all
that the Games meant for peoples of the world. We can learn a lot that from the
Games because different nationalities can cooperate. We, as Somalis, can then
live together in peace and work for the pacification and development of our
country," said Yusuf Ahmed, a teacher in Mogadishu.
Despite their difficult circumstances, Somalis have not been left out in
the coming together of the international community of nations in friendship and
accord and there were a lot of lessons to be learnt, he said.