Home | Contact us | Links | Archives | Search

Speech By Jenny Sonesson Secretary-General Liberal Women Of Sweden At The Opening Of The KULMIYE Party’s Conference
Issue 324
Front Page
Index
Headlines

Enough Support In Both Houses Of Parliament For Bill Banning Ahmedou Abdallah From Entering Somaliland

Norwegian Firm TGS Spent $10 Million On Geophysical Surveys In Somaliland Says Minerals Ministry Official

KULMIYE’s II Conference Succeeds

Fuad A. Adde Sacked For Accusing Riyale Of Mismanaging Donations For Sool

Somaliland Local Government Re-organisation through Presidential Decrees in an Election Year

Norway To Withdraw From International Contact Group On Somalia

Ethiopian factor surfaces in Puntland oil dispute

Two Somaliland-Born Prisoners In Guantanamo Search For New Home

Politics of one belly

Divide Widens Between Insurgent Groups In Somalia

There can be another Zimbabwe without Bob

No Ethiopian soldiers in Puntland, says leader

Regional Affairs

Somaliland’s Opposition Leader Warns Against Any Delay Of Presidential Elections

Vice-President Ahmed Yusuf and delegation visit Las Anod

France Working to Save Yacht Crew

Editorial
Special Report

International News

US Marks 40th Anniversary of King Assassination

Pedestrian forced at gunpoint to join bogus-cheque scam, court hears

Blaze death: Dead man became father just two weeks ago

Validating foreign policy folly

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

My 47-day ordeal at the hands of Somali pirates, by British captain held for ransom

Somaliland: Past, Present And Future

GINI, THE LOST QUEEN

Search for Khouri smoking gun is on

Socotra is precious, humanity-central Island, says study

A Generation Of Career Women

Founder member Henry Allingham on the RAF at 90

Somalia Called 'World's Most Neglected Crisis'

Food for thought

Opinions

A Message to KULMIYE 2nd Convention: Hargeysa Somaliland

She Is A Surviving Veteran

Somaliland American Council Criticizes Report By UN Official

Welcome in Lascanood, Mr Vice President

Speech By Jenny Sonesson Secretary-General Liberal Women Of Sweden At The Opening Of The KULMIYE Party’s Conference

Somalia: The Need for a Popular Culture

 

Jenny Sonesson

Jenny Sonesson

As a member of the Liberal in Sweden, I’m glad to be here today at this fantastic conference of KULMIYE. It’s always pleasant to be among friends who share the same values as you. No matter if you are in Stockholm or Hargeysa.

I would like to read a greeting to you all from one of our Swedish Liberal ministers, the Swedish Minister for European Affairs.

Greeting from Cecilia Malmstrom

Swedish Minister for European Affairs Vice President of the Liberal of Sweden Chair of the International Board of the Liberal of Sweden

I wish the KULMIYE Party of Somaliland the best of luck with your important job to build a stable and transparent democracy in one of the most dangerous and insecure areas on the African continent – the Horn of Africa.

Your task is of great importance. Not only to the people of Somaliland but also for my country Sweden and the Swedish people.

Geographical distance is of no importance in the modern world of the 21st century, when it comes to war, international terrorism, famine, climate threats or epidemics. Nor to prosperous trade and fruitful cultural exchange between stable and peaceful democracies.

The development of Africa is of global interest. The future of Africa is part of our common future - and therefore concerns us all.

Best regards,
Cecilia Malmstrom

The very same day Rhoda and I left Sweden, in one of our biggest newspapers there was an article about the dreadful war in Somalia. According to the UN the situation there is now more alarming than in Darfur.

I have to admit I was a bit nervous on the plane. But Rhoda calmed me down. To my great relieve I have seen with my own eyes that Somaliland is different. You want peace, you want stability and you want to give your children a future. One of Rhoda’s cousins told me yesterday she feels safer here than on the streets of London.

The war in Somalia is not a new thing, it’s been going on for 17 years now. That’s sad. But it’s even sadder, the right word is probably tragic, that we can’t even guess how long the war will last and how many lives it will cost.

Somaliland ’s situation resembles that of a wife who can’t get a divorce from an aggressive husband unable to pursue the possibility of rebuilding her own future.

The upcoming elections are extremely important tests for the young democracy of Somaliland. It’s easy to talk the talk of democracy. It’s much harder to walk the walk of democracy.

More than 60% of the population of this country consists of women. And people I meet tell me that women are the backbone of the economy of Somaliland. Yet you have only two elected women in the parliament and only one out of more than 300 on the local level. Numerous studies indicate that when women are involved in the decision making bodies of a society – democracy deepens, gets more stable and you have increased economic growth.

If the upcoming elections in Somaliland turn out to be free and fair and the politicians elected reflects the population in a more accurate way, it will send a strong signal to the international community that the men and women of Somaliland have chosen to walk the path of democracy.

The borders of the countries on the African continent were drawn up by colonial powers a long time ago in a very undemocratic way.

Personally, I’m convinced that the international community will not ignore a strong voice from a truly democratic Somaliland when we discuss the borders of the Horn of Africa.

I wish the people of Somaliland a bright future. The future of Somaliland is part of our common future.

Good luck KULMIYE with your important task!

Thank you
Jenny Sonesson

 

 


Home | Contact us | Links | Archives | Search