Home | Contact us | Links | Archives | Search

Kerry McCarthy MP
Issue 294
Front Page
Index
Headlines

UK MPs Visit Somaliland

S/land Forces Encroach On Badhan Town

Somaliland Foreign Minister Extends Appreciation To Foreign Investors

Time Interview With Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi

Somali opposition to discuss anti-Ethiopia military strategy

Jendayi Frazer to visit Ethiopia

Somali opposition leaders unite against Ethiopia

What the World should do in Somalia

Hope on the Horn of Africa: An Interview With Ambassador Stuart Symington

Africa Insight - Why Talk in Hotels Won't Yield Long Term Peace

Mogadishu mayor travels to Yemen, fighting kills 8

Regional Affairs

Ethiopian oppositions request national consensus for the millennium

East Africa: People Traffic Set to Escalate

Editorial
Special Report

International News

Russia arms old and new friends in Asia

France to host summit to discuss security issues in Africa

Kerry McCarthy MP

Two young men dead after community hall party

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

Ramadan, Counterculture, And Soul

Refutation of Addis Voice Dictatorial and Barbaric Ethos – Part I

From Sudan To Supermodel Stardom

Somalia Needs Own Army

Taking advantage of the refugee system

US the axis of evil in Iraq

Kenyan scientists save Grevy's zebras from possible extinction

Food for thought

Opinions

Somaliland and its path forward

Puntland In The Doldrums

Leadership Challenges And Big Missed Of Opposition's Parties

UN vs. NGOs

The Burao Conference: A closer look

Somaliland and its path forward..


Kerry speaking in Parliament

The next stage on my travels...

05 September 2007

So, I left Uganda on Saturday and flew up to Addis Ababa.  Ethiopia celebrates the Millennium on September 12th, so it's technically 1999 here and the celebrations are already starting. I was told that 30,000 Rastafarians from Jamaica have arrived in town to join the party. After a day spent holed up in my hotel - yes, it's the rainy season here and it rained and rained - I met up with 3 colleagues from the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Somaliland at the British Embassy on Monday morning. We flew out to Hargeysa, the capital on Somaliland on Tuesday and arrived back in Addis today. For security reasons we weren't allowed to tell anyone about our trip, including the many, many Somalilanders in my constituency who've been urging me for the past 2 years to visit their country. So apologies to Mustafa, Kayse and the rest of you!

We've had a series of meetings so far, including a day in Ethiopia discussing the Somaliland/ Somalia situation with both the British and US Ambassadors to Ethiopia. I also had dinner with the head of DfID's Ethiopia office - interesting to compare notes on Ethiopia and Uganda - and we're due to visit the UK Visas outpost in Addis tomorrow morning. 53% of the applications they handle are from Somalilanders wanting to come to the UK so I'm looking forward to asking them lots of questions. We're also meeting the Prime Minister of Ethiopia tomorrow too, to talk about his country's role in Somalia.

The visit to Somaliland, brief as it was, was absolutely fascinating. Hargeisa, although obviously poor, is a very picturesque place. We met the President, and I had very useful conversations with the Foreign Minister and the Minister for Planning (who handles Development issues too). We also visited a school and hospital, and met with NGOs, as well as various parliamentarians and their Electoral Commission. Lots of complex issues raised, to do with the lack of recognition for Somaliland and the extent to which their future is tied to the fortunes of Somalia, which we will be following up on when we're back in Westminster. For example, there's no postal service in Somaliland at all - because they're not recognized by the International Postal Union as an independent state. Anyone wanting to send mail has to DHL it.

I'm in an internet cafe at the moment and the clock is ticking, but will provide a full report when I return to the UK on Friday! 

Source: Kerry McCarthy


Home | Contact us | Links | Archives | Search