Home›Politics›“Otherwise we’ll have to go to war”: Somaliland demands
recognition 26 years on
“Otherwise we’ll have to go to war”: Somaliland demands recognition 26 years on
By James Wan
May 22, 2017
0
Share:

Somaliland’s Foreign Minister talks about the self-declared state’s
struggle for recognition, domestic successes, and strategies towards
Somalia.
Dr Saad Ali Shire, Minister for Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation

Dr Saad Ali Shire, Somaliland’s Minister for Foreign Affairs and
International Cooperation/

Shortly after the collapse of the brutal Siad Barre regime in 1991,
Somaliland unilaterally declared independence from Somalia. It
reinstated the borders that had existed when it was briefly a
sovereign state in 1960, and its government called on the world to
recognise it as a newly sovereign country.

No one did.

In the 26 years since, Somaliland has continued to call for
recognition. In the meantime, it has succeeded in many of the ways the
rest of Somalia has failed. It has maintained relative stability. It
has held elections. And it has developed on various economic and
social measures.

And yet, still no one has heeded its calls to be accepted as a sovereign nation.

African Arguments caught up with Dr Saad Ali Shire, Minister for
Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation, to ask him about the
campaign for recognition, the challenges facing Somaliland, and the
government’s relations with Somalia.

[International recognition for Somaliland will boost prosperity in the
Horn of Africa]

You’ve been making the same argument for recognition for 26 years. Yet
still no country recognises you. Are you going to keep making the same
case or do you have a change of plan?

Somalia and Somaliland were two independent states that united on 1
July 1960, even though legally the process was questionable. On 26
June 1960, the sovereignty of Britain over Somaliland had ceased and
we assumed our own sovereignty. It was only compromised when we joined
Somalia.

We were together for 30 years, under the democratic republic from 1960
to 1969 then under military dictatorship until 1991. In both cases,
the union did not work for Somaliland and was very destructive towards
the end. We asked why we should be part of a system that only harms
us.

It’s been 26 years since we decided to leave the union. We’ve not been
recognised as yet, but a lot has changed. Somaliland of 2017 is
different to Somaliland of 1991. We’ve rebuilt the country and
economy. We’ve had five one-man-one-vote elections. We have stability
and have made a lot of social progress. We have 30 universities when
we had none before and 1,000 primary schools.

Politically, Somaliland is much more credible. In the early 90s when
we came to the UK, we’d meet with junior officers. Now I meet with the
minister.

I think the world should be ashamed of itself for not recognising
Somaliland. We’re denied our rights by being denied sovereignty. It’s
a humanitarian case in a way. What is there to lose? There’s no
country in the world that can say we don’t like Somaliland because
we’re causing them damage. On the contrary. Full recognition can only
help the international community deal with pressing challenges such as
terrorism and piracy.

The drought in Somaliland is another challenge. Tens of thousands have
been displaced to camps where some say they are living in appalling
conditions with no facilities, no security, and that the government is
not doing anything to help them.

I think the government is trying its best, and not just the government
but the community. It’s a miracle we survive. It’s a miracle we lost
only a few lives in this drought. Our people are very generous and
supportive, and the government as well.

But of course we could have done with the support of the international
community. I must be fair; we do get assistance, though it really came
very very late. And even then it is not enough.

Our economy is pastoral, our main resource is livestock and we lost
it. It will probably take 20 years to recover, and that’s if we don’t
have another severe drought and we’re assisted adequately.

Somaliland suffers from very high unemployment, leading lots of young
people to take perilous journeys to Europe or find work in Mogadishu.
What are you doing to create jobs?

The government is trying to create the right environment for the
private sector to come in and invest. Of course we’re constrained by
lack of recognition. We believe we have loads of opportunities for
investment and there’s no lack of interest. In the capital Hargeisa,
there are always all sorts of people from all around the world:
Europeans, Asians, Americans, even Russians. But unfortunately lack of
recognition is putting the brakes on that.

We think we can improve prospects for employment and tackle human
trafficking activities, which lure a lot of young people to Europe, by
creating prosperity back home – if we’re recognised.

You recently signed a big deal with Emirati firm DP World to expand
and manage Berbera port. Lasting for 30 years and with a $442 million
investment, it could be transformative. How will you ensure ordinary
citizens benefit?

It consists of two components. One is expansion and management of the
port. The other is the free zone.

The port will be extended so there will be plenty of construction
jobs. Once the port is extended and traffic increases, there will be
opportunities for extending services and transport that will create
more jobs within the port and in activities related to the port.

We also believe the free zone will create a lot of employment. In the
Jebel Ali Free Zone in the United Arab Emirates, they have 7-8,000
companies attached to the port. I understand the state gets about 25%
of its income from the port and free zone. We’re not looking for
thousands but a few hundred, or one hundred, companies. That would be
a lot of jobs.

Free zones have lower tax and labour regulations. And in Berbera port,
there are already reports of wages being cut and nearly 300 people
being laid off since the deal. What mechanisms will be in place to
ensure jobs are reasonably paid, conditions are adequate, and that
locals actually benefit?

Free zones are considered as foreign countries so they are not taxed
at all. The main purpose is not tax but job creation.

In the deal with DP World, they are supposed to not lay off anybody on
the payroll. In fact they did hire all the people on the payroll so
that report is not true. As far as pay is concerned, most people are
being paid twice, maybe three times, what they were being paid.
They’re very happy.

Of course in every institution there are people with vested interests
and winners and losers in every change. There will be some losers who
will complain. But overall it’s been a really good deal for the
workers.

Does the recent election of Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed Farmaajo as
Somalia’s new president change anything in terms of your relationship?

We hope so. We started talks with Somalia in 2012. In five years, we
haven’t got very far on anything. The new president says he is
committed to the talks, the international community is very
supportive, and we are also committed.

We hope we will be able to settle our differences around the table
peacefully, because otherwise we’ll have to go to war, and that will
be disruptive and destructive for both of us and for the region.

What does Somaliland want to get from the negotiations, and what would
it take to go to war?

We have to have a mutual consent to recognise each other as
independent African states. That’s our aim and we would like to
collaborate on the many things we can do together better. Ensuring
security from disease, terrorism and extremism; we can collaborate on
the economic arena; droughts and epidemics don’t know boundaries.
There are many things we can do together positively while recognising
each other’s sovereignty.

Can you expand on your comment about going to war, which many may find alarming?

I think that’s the only other alternative. They are claiming
Somaliland as part of Somalia. And if they want to exert what they may
call their right to rule Somaliland from Mogadishu, then we will fight
them and you will have a war. We will interfere in their internal
affairs if they interfere in our internal affairs, so we will have a
sort of hostile relationship and a hostile relationship is not good
for us, for them, or the region.

Somaliland’s presidential elections are scheduled for later this year
in which you will get a new president. What’s at stake in them and
what’s your advice to voters?

I’m hoping we will have again a peaceful free and fair election. I
think that will give confidence to our people and the international
community. The important thing is that citizens exercise their right
and that they vote so that the new government will be legitimate and
will have the consent of the people.

-- 
To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected]
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/d/forum/southsudankob
View this message at 
https://groups.google.com/d/msg/southsudankob/topic-id/message-id
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout
--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"South Sudan Info - The Kob" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/SouthSudanKob.
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/SouthSudanKob/CAJb14oqBfwCtqcsi7TxThDGHyfm%3D%3D0zTn%3DrV1OZAB8zoyPNTpQ%40mail.gmail.com.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to