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Organizations Somaliland (Ex-British Somaliland
Protectorate) is situated on the eastern horn of Africa and
lies between the 08°00' - 11°30' parallel north of the
equator and between 42°30' - 49°00' meridian east of the
Greenwich. It shares borders with Republic of Djibouti to
the west, Federal Republic of Ethiopia to the south and
Somalia to the east. Somaliland has a coastal line to the
north of the country which extends 460 miles along the Red
Sea. Somaliland lies on an area of 137,600kmē (68,000 sq.
miles).
The bulk of Somaliland's exports are of livestock. In
1996, 3 million heads of livestock were exported to the
Middle East alone but Saudi Arabia which was the main market
has banned imports of livestock from Somaliland and this has
badly affected the economy as a whole. Other exports include
hides, skins, myrrh and frankincense.
Somaliland has confirmed deposits of petroleum, natural
gas, world's largest gypsum, lime, mica, quartz, lignite
coal, lead, gold and sulphur and many different of precious
and semi precious stones The Population of Somaliland is 3.5
million. There is a low inflation, growing economy and a
balanced budget.
Somaliland achieved independence from Great Britain on
26th June 1960 and became first independent Somali UN
recognized state as a full member of the United Nations but
very hastily entered union with Somalia (Ex-Italian colony)
which Somaliland suffered 30 years of anarchy, long
humiliation, dereliction, injustice, repression, atrocities
and destruction through indiscriminate heavy bombardment on
civilians, cities (Hargeisa and Burao) towns, and rural
areas by warplanes, tanks and artillery. It was motivated by
both tribal hatred and desire for land expansion and devised
to ethnic cleanse an entire people, either by massacring or
expelling in order to resettle refugees from Ethiopian-ruled
Western Somali Province and others in their motherland.
The valiant armed struggle of SNM (1981-1991),
supported by its courageous people, rescued Somaliland and
its people from the well plotted statelessness in January
1991. This liberation facilitated the victorious national
reconciliation, the immediate withdrawal from the disastrous
union with Somalia, and the reclamation of Somaliland
sovereignty in the Pan-Somaliland Conference held in Burao,
capital of Togdheer region, in May 1991. Subsequently, law
and order were restored, clan militias were disarmed, and
democratic institutions were established.
Somaliland has fulfilled the fundamental condition for
diplomatic recognition: An existing independent nation with
its own colonial-drawn borders- a legal basis for diplomatic
recognition. Somaliland fulfils the criteria of statehood
according to Article 1 of the 1933 Montevideo Convention on
the Rights and Duties of State: Somaliland has a permanent
population; a defined territory (the former British
Somaliland) with clear international boundaries of which it
has an effective control; a democratic government, and a
capacity to enter into relations with other states.
Somaliland fulfils the criteria for recognizing new states,
according to the guidelines set out by the European Union (EU)
in 1992, even though they only apply to European nations.
Article 4 of African Union charter asserts that the
organization respects and recognizes independence of African
countries based on colonial borders. The diplomatic
recognition of all the 53 current African states is based on
these colonial borders.
Somaliland is not a breakaway or a separatist
country. The UN, the African Union, and the Arab League know
undisputedly that Somaliland achieved independence before
Somalia on June 26, 1960 within its colonial borders, and
was one of the 17 African countries that obtained
independence in 1960 from Europe. However, it had
un-ratified merger with Somalia for 30 years (July 1960-
January 1991) but withdrew from that union due to the above
mentioned atrocities and destruction. The day after
independence and before the merger, 35 countries recognized
Somaliland diplomatically including Egypt, Israel and the
five Permanent Members of the Security Council. Why not now?
What is the difference between then and now? Somaliland is
not the first country that withdrew from a union. Estonia,
Lithuania, and Latvia withdrew from the Soviet Union
collapse in 1989, Bosnia and Macedonia withdrew from the
Federation of disintegrated Yugoslavia in 1990s and East
Timor from Indonesia 20 Feb 2002. All these new countries
were automatically recognized by the United Nations.
Somaliland is not exception as it fulfilled the same
criteria. We are by no means the first African State to have
entered into a voluntary union with another state and
subsequently withdrawn from that union intact. Egypt and
Syria, Senegal and Gambia, and Senegal and Mali, Rwanda and
Burundi have all done likewise. Nor is Somaliland the first
African colonial entity to have asserted its separation and
independence from another; Eritrea and the Sahrawi Republic
are today both full members of the African Union.
The Somalilanders, almost unanimously, ask what more they
can do when the AU and the international community continues
to recognize some anarchic, violent places in the west and
central Africa as sovereign units. It is time to give them
an answer.
Besides the withdrawal decision of May 1991, the landmark
referendum held in Somaliland on May 31, 2001,
overwhelmingly approved Somaliland constitution and
reaffirmed, in the presence of international election
monitors, the will of the Somaliland people to have
independent, sovereign state of their own. Neither the UN
nor the regional organizations (African Union and Arab
League) have the right to nullify the decision of Somaliland
people in that referendum.
Since more than 97% of the total voters of Somaliland
have voted 'yes' in that referendum and since Somaliland was
historically an independent and separate country from
Somalia Proper with the overwhelming majority of the
Somalilanders rejecting the 1961 constitution which was
supposed to be the bedrock for the so-called reunion of
Somalia and Somaliland and since Somalilanders have
witnessed what amounts to genocide in the hands of their
fellow southerners, it is time that the international
community stopped its hypocrisy and began respecting the
basic human rights of the people of Somaliland and therefore
recognized Somaliland as an independent country which it
deserves. Anything less than that, will plunge the whole
region into further civil strife and more bloodshed, as any
attempt towards re-unification with Somalia proper will sow
the seeds of hatred and will ignite a long protracted civil
war.
Is it fair to hold back a nation who made their
choice yes for Somaliland? If we don't respect basic human
rights for freedom of choice as in the case of the
Somaliland referendum outcome, then the alternative will be
long civil war without end. It's very hard to ignore that
Somaliland saved itself from the anarchy of Somalia, and
without help from the international community made peace,
government, and a better system of conflict resolution based
on their own culture.
In December 2002, we held our First Local Government
elections. Five months later in April 2003 we followed it by
our very first Presidential elections where three political
parties, peacefully contested the seat of the President of
Somaliland and the simple majority won by our President H.E
Dahir Rayale kahin.
Somaliland's system of government is multiparty electoral
democracy featuring a bicameral parliament. The president,
MP's of the house of representatives and local councils have
all been chosen through peaceful, fair and transparent
elections witnessed and confirmed by international
observers.
Somaliland is a nation that believes in democracy, peace
and human rights. Because of these they want to separate
from their own brothers who do not recognize these moral
values. People who love peace and democracy should have
given Somaliland a chance to show the world that they are a
nation in their own right. The world has neglected and has
turned a blind eye on the people of Somaliland. It's about
time the world gives these people who want to be recognized
for many reasons a recognition so that they can shut off
their past and move on with life.
The lack of recognition has been depriving the people of
Somaliland during the last 16 years of the opportunity to
exercise their universally recognized human rights in terms
of trade, traveling, learning and socio-economic
development. The United Nations however are mistaken to
believe that Somaliland will eventually be a part of
"Somalia". The freedom being currently enjoyed in
Somaliland cost its people the loss of tens of thousands of
their sons and daughters and the total destruction of their
towns and villages.
Why on earth would anyone in the international community
deny Somaliland this, and plunge it into the bloody chaos of
Somalia proper?
Somaliland people have paid a huge price to reinstate
their independence and sovereignty. Rivers of blood have
flowed and heaps of dead bodies have been witnessed in the
streets of Somaliland. Therefore, it is about time that the
international community recognized Somaliland and made
operational the expression of the people to control their
destiny and not to be arrested for the warlords who lost
their sense of humanity and direction. Moreover, Africans,
in general, have being criticized that they do not manage
their affairs; however, Somaliland has refuted that biased
notion by creating an oasis of peace, prosperity, and good
governance. Somaliland's deed is shining in Horn of Africa
and the peace-loving people of world should open their eyes
and support.
Those who oppose the recognition of an independent
Somaliland state should be very careful of the alternative
that they are advocating which is the denial of the right to
exist as a nation. Suppression is not the solution in here,
the peaceful separation of the two states (Somaliland and
Somalia) is, and its time the world should face the reality
and recognize Somaliland as an independent state.
The neglect of Somaliland by the international community
exposes its shocking double standard that on one hand
advocates for peace, stability, and democratic institutions,
and, on the other hand, ignores peaceful, stable, democratic
Somaliland by denying it of diplomatic recognition. This
denial has no legal basis in the court of international law.
The delay is just a mere hope by the UN and regional
organizations that Somaliland may return to the union with
Somalia one day. This political gambling at the expense of
Somaliland people for 16 years is irresponsible. It is also
perpetuation of lawlessness, despair, famine, violent,
terrorism spread and factional fighting in Somalia. There is
no doubt that Somalia would be peaceful and stable country
today led by its own government if Somaliland were
recognized long time ago. Now, neither Somaliland is
recognized nor Somalia has peace, both peoples are punished
equally in the hands of UN and AU. The policy of keeping
both countries at bay is not working any more. The sooner
Somaliland is recognized the better chance to restore peace,
law, and order in Somalia.
In conclusion, After more than 30yrs of abuse, torture,
mass killing and humiliation, it is unfair to the Somaliland
people that the international community goes against the
will of the Somaliland people after they have done
everything a state could do, and therefore recognition is
the answer.
IM. Abdi Halim M. Musa June 30, 2006
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