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Economic Success In Somaliland
Issue 279
Front Page
Index
Headlines

President Rayale Blocks Release Of 70-Year Old Woman From Prison

Somaliland National Security Committee Violate The Freedom And Human Rights Of Individual Citizens

Economic Success In Somaliland

Somali Dissidents Oppose Talks

1,325 Delegates To Attend Somalia Conference Of Clans

Egyptian Envoy Freed From Somalia

European Union Role On Kosovo Vs African Union Role On Somaliland

Amnesty International Annual Report 2007‎

Democracy challenged in Somaliland

Regional Affairs

Indian Dhow Hijacked In Somalia

Ethiopia FM Meets Somali Government In Mogadishu

Editorial
Special Report

International News

U.S. Ambassador Sees Real Hope For Somalia’s Future

Somali Pop Stars Take On Tradition

Dozens Of Muslim Meatpackers Return To Production Lines After Prayer Walk-Out

Smokin' On Somalia

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

Dynamics Of Post-Intervention Political Failure''

Reflections on Africa

Ethiopia Reaps U.S. Aid By Enlisting In War On Terror And Hiring Influential Lobbyists

East Africa Attracts Hunters For Oil And Gas

Food for thought

Opinions

Is May 18 The Somaliland Day Or The Cleaning Day?

The 16th Anniversary Of Somaliland Independence In Toronto

Our National Day: Much Ado About Nothing

An Open Letter to Ruth Kelly

The evolution, theory and practice of hegemony

Somaliland’s pursuit of recognition, maybe it is time to look East!

Somaliland Constitution: A Tool Being Used To Achieve Personal Interests

 

Somaliland 's port in Berbera is the centre of the country's economy

Berbera, Somaliland, May 21, 2007 – Al Jazeera's Mohammed Adow reports from the breakaway territory of Somaliland, finding that stability has built a strong economy.

Somaliland booms

On the dusty streets of the market place in the Hargeysa, the capital, goods are displayed.

Money-changers also do a brisk trade, converting between shillings, dollars and euros.

They are cashing in on relative stability in the enclave to build solid businesses.

Goods in the market are brought in through the port of Berbera. The port itself is the backbone of the territory's economy and the main source of revenue for the government.

This is the port of Berbera, the single most important facility in Somaliland, it accounts for about 80 per cent of national revenue.

Strategically located off the Gulf of Aden, which connects this part of Africa to the Middle East, it is the port of choice for many.

Ali Omar is in charge of the port's management.

"This port is important not only to Somaliland but the whole region," he says.  

"Goods brought in through here find there way to Ethiopia, Somalia, Kenya and sometimes even Uganda."

Two-way aid

If the docks of Berbera oil the wheels of the government, then it is remittances from abroad that keep the private sector moving.

You Tube

Many families survive on money sent back by relatives in Europe, the US and the Gulf who fled during the 1991 civil war.

The government estimates that the diaspora sends back about $500m   to Somaliland every year.

Yet Somaliland's population also sends money to their relatives abroad, when the going gets tough for them.

As one woman, Amina, says:

"I am sending money to my mother who lives in Canada. I want her to come and stay with us during the summer. I have up to seven relatives living in Canada. We support each other."

Optimism

Somaliland 's economy has flourished   in a secure and stable   environment  

The large flows of capital have contributed to the rapid economic recovery in post-war Somaliland.

In the capital, multi-storey buildings are springing up.

The livestock sector has traditionally been the backbone of the Somaliland economy.

A seven-year ban on export of Somali livestock to the Gulf had a crippling effect on both the rural and urban economies.

However, a recent lifting of this ban has provided much optimism.

Somaliland 's people for now depend on their more predictable sources of income to survive.

And for now they seem to succeed.

Source: Al Jazeera


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