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AU Mission To‎ Somaliland Says Recognition Overdue
ISSUE 215
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This Week's Somaliland News

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New Oil Concession Secretly‎ Signed With An Indian Businessman‎

Unknown Flying Object‎ Witnessed In Somaliland Night Sky   

The Baidoa Rendezvous‎‎‎‎

Wales Strikes Out On Its‎ Own In Its Recognition Of Somaliland

American UN Employee Kidnapped In Somalia‎‎

AU Mission To‎ Somaliland Says Recognition Overdue

Regional Affairs

Breakaway State Has Achieved ‎Peace, Stability, Democracy

Range Teams Start Hunting In Somalia‎

The Speaker Of The Parliament Of Somaliland ‎Has Been A Guest Of The Queen In Cardiff And ‎Now Addresses Somaliland Diaspora In The UK

Militia Attack On Puntland's Mps‎

Somali Warlords Reject Call To Lift ‎UN Arms Embargo‎‎

Denmark Asks EU To Stop Djibouti Boycott

Forecast Shows Africa To Face River Crisis

Somali Parliament's Peace Bid Bad For Gun Business‎

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Battle For Hearts In Bandit Country‎‎‎‎‎‎‎

Yemen: Government Calls For Help ‎Curtailing Human Smuggling‎‎

Agreement Is Reached for Students From Somalia

UK Government Invests US$1 Million In ‎Initiative To Fight Pirate Fishing‎

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

Somali Book Launch

Book Reviews: Desert Children‎‎

US Will Be Launching Predator Strikes In The Horn‎‎

Viva World Cup

Bossaso Port In Somalia Unlikely El ‎Dorado For The Displaced

Case Study Report

The Ticking Bomb:‎ The Educational Underachievement of Somali Children in the British Schools

Opinions

Well Done Mohamed‎‎ ‎‎

Finance Minister Should Not Be ‎Involved In Budget Preparation‎‎‎‎

Who Shelved The Role Of Attorney General’s Office In The Case Of Joint Needs Assessment Program?


By Somalilandtimes network

By FRED OLUOCH, Special Correspondent,

Nairobi, Kenya, March 1, 2006 – The African Union is coming under increased pressure from the breakaway Somaliland Republic to accord it recognition.

This follows revelations that an AU fact-finding mission to Somaliland between April 30 and May 4, 2005, had expressed the opinion that Somaliland had been made a "pariah region" by default. It strongly recommended the country's recognition, saying that since its declaration of independence in 1991, Somaliland has been steadily laying the foundations of a democratic "modern state."

However, the report of the mission – which was appointed by former president of Mali and chairperson of the AU Commission, Alpha Oumar Konare – has been kept under wraps and is yet to be discussed by the AU executive council for possible adoption by the heads of state summit.

The mission also noted that the lack of recognition ties the hands of the authorities and people of Somaliland as they cannot effectively transact business with the outside world in pursuit of their reconstruction and development goals.  

It was of the view that while it is the primary responsibility of the authorities and people of Somaliland to make efforts to acquire political recognition from the international community, the AU should be disposed to judge the case of Somaliland from an objective historical viewpoint and a moral angle vis-a-vis the aspirations of its people.  

The authorities of Somaliland have successively visited the AU Commission in 2003, 2004, and early 2005, seeking an observer status for Somaliland within the AU, not only to be able to follow developments on the continent, but also to gain a platform from which the country can state its case for being recognized as a sovereign state.

That proposed status is based on the recognition by the Somalilanders of the inherited colonial borders at the time of independence from Britain in June 1960.  

As a result, there is a visibly emotional attachment to the reclaimed independence and a firm determination among the people of Somaliland not to return to the failed union with Somalia, whether or not recognition is granted.  

Somaliland – situated on the northern tip of the former greater Somalia – boycotted the two-year peace process in Nairobi that culminated in the election of President Abdillahi Yusuf in October 2004.  

The Somaliland authorities have consistently rejected the idea of reuniting with Somalia, and recently warned that should Africa and the international community insist on Somaliland re-establishing the union, the leaders and people of Somaliland would fight to preserve their independence.  

The mission takes this line of argument by stating that the Union established in 1960 between Somaliland and Somalia brought enormous injustice and suffering to the people of the region.  

"The fact that the union was never ratified and also did not work to satisfaction while it lasted from 1960 to 1990, makes Somaliland's search for recognition historically unique and self-justified in African political history. As such, the AU should find a special method of dealing with this outstanding case," the report recommends.

Furthermore, given the acute humanitarian situation prevailing in Somaliland, the AU should mobilize financial resources to help alleviate the plight of the affected communities, especially those catering for internally displaced persons and returnees.  

The mission set out to assess the prevailing political, socio-economic, security, humanitarian and other related issues, as well as to listen to the concerns of the leadership and people of Somaliland, and duly report back the findings and the recommendations to the AU Commission for further action. It was led by the deputy chairperson of the Commission, Patrick Mazimhaka.  

While calling upon the international community to consider the issue of self-determination objectively, the mission noted evidence of democratic institutions sprouting among them; the constitution of Somaliland, which entrenches, among other aspects, the separation of power between the three arms of government; the balance of political forces built upon the functional co-habitation of traditional governance institutions, as embodied in the political role of clan elders and elected representatives; the existence of active opposition political parties with some capacity to influence public policy; and a budding independent press.  

The plethora of problems confronting Somaliland in the political, socio-economic, military, humanitarian and other sectors stem from the legacy of a political union with Somalia, that malfunctioned, bringing destruction and ruin upon the population.

Though credit has to be given to Somaliland for promoting a democratic order within a relatively short span of time, there are gaps that need attention from both policy makers and the individual citizens. One critical gap lies in gender relations in terms of the predominance of men in the various structures, institutions and processes.  

Source: The East African, 1st March 2006


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