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Somaliland Seeks Recognition, Somali Pres Calls For Talks

ISSUE 263
Front Page
Index
Headlines

SNM Veterans Demand The Release Of Haatuf Journalists

Somaliland: A Pressing Need for Recognition

Amnesty International Declare Haatuf Journalists As “Prisoners Of Conscience”

'A strategy on Somalia' & Somaliland

West ‘backing the wrong horse’ in Mogadishu peace initiatives

Reporters Without Borders issues its 2007 annual press freedom survey

Somalia's parliament elects new speaker

Somali Islamists threaten AU peacekeepers

Somalia to Talk Peace

Regional Affairs

U.N. Pushes Africans To Send Peacekeepers To Somalia

Somaliland Seeks Recognition, Somali Pres Poses Unity Talks

Editorial
Special Report

International News

Somalia needs African solidarity
South Africa: Letter from the President

Somalia is important to America

Merkel, Mubarak address joint conference

Oil, Not Terrorists, The Reason For US Attack On Somalia

The Quiet War in the Horn of Africa

Discussion on changing political situation in Somalia held in London UK

Understanding 7/7: Al-Qaeda and the Real Trinity of Terror

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

Analysis: Ethiopian Intervention In Somalia In Context

A Strategy On Somalia

Rebuild Somalia To Undercut Warlords

Using Insult Laws is an Insult to the Somaliland Media and Public – the detention and trial of Haatuf Journalists

'A Condemned Woman'
Anna Politkovskaya

Meles Winds It Up in Somalia

Food for thought

Opinions

CIA Rendition Flights Are Currently Active In The Horn

The Neu-Siyadist's Attempt To Build Castle In The Air

The Mirage Victory and Euphoria of War Lord Abdillahi Yusuf and His Cohorts Will Be Short-Lived

The Staggering Failures And Arrogance Of The Current Administration & The Ruling Party

Don't Blame Somaliland, But Learn From It...

How Long The People Of Somaliland Be Hostage To Few People For Their Future

The Nonsense Demands Of The Somali Cabbies In Minneapolis

A road map to lasting peace and prosperity in Somalia


ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia Jan 28, 2007 – Somaliland has sent a formal request to the African Union asking to be recognized as an independent African government, according to diplomatic sources in Addis Ababa.

Somaliland officials in the Ethiopian capital reportedly delivered the message to the AU.

The 8th AU Summit is scheduled to open in Addis Ababa Monday, with Somalia and the conflict-ridden Sudanese region of Darfur high on the summit agenda.

Somaliland, unilaterally declared independence from the rest of Somalia in 1991, as Somalia disintegrated and erupted in civil war.

No nation in the international community has recognized Somaliland’s independence, even though the peaceful breakaway Somali region has an observer seat at the AU.

African support?

Dr. Charles Murigande, Rwanda’s foreign minister, reportedly surprised African diplomats and angered Somali delegates in Addis Ababa when he openly called for Somaliland’s recognition by AU member states.

Dr. Murigande said the Somaliland government has a right to be recognized internationally, since the government returned law and order to the region and can self-manage.

The comments warranted a response from Abdillahi Yusuf, president of Somalia’s   internationally recognized   transitional federal government.

While commending Somaliland for securing the peace, President Yusuf called on Somaliland’s leadership to open talks with his government and reach consensus.

Yusuf said his government would not interfere in Somaliland affairs until southern Somalia was pacified.

Earlier this month, thousands of protestors in the Somaliland capital Hargeisa and other cities expressed their support for independence by taking to streets and opposing Yusuf’s Mogadishu-based government.

President Yusuf does not enjoy a   particularly popular history in Somaliland. As leader of the Puntland autonomy, he deployed his   troops in late 2002 to Sool region, giving effective   control of the disputed region to Puntland.

Somaliland claims legal right over Sool and Sanaag regions under colonial-era boundaries, while Puntland maintains legitimacy on blood ties between inhabitants.

Source: www.garoweonline.com

 


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