Issue 384
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Front
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News Headlines
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Local
and Regional Affairs |
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Editorial |
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Features
& Commentary |
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International News
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Opinion |
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By Aniis A Essa
The international community has made several brave efforts to rescue and
reconstruct the disintegrated State of Somalia. All these brave efforts
had however failed and Somali proper still lies in ruins and is still a
theatre for marauding warring militants. All the experts, the political
analysis’s and the experienced anthropologists called to help, have in
their turn also failed to diagnose accurately the causes of the dilemma.
These experts have for the first time came up against native problems,
which defied their pet theories, their quaint conclusions and their
misinterpretation of the abstract indices of native cultures.
The poor eminent men and women could not admit that all their learned
treaties were wrong, it was more convenient to accuse the leopard of
changing its spots. The search for a solution of the Somali problem was
always dogged by anomalies and ambivalences, which in one form or
another emasculated every reconciliation effort. To understand those
anomalies and ambivalences we must go back to the recent history of the
Horn of Africa. In 1943 after the defeat of the Italian Colonies in East
Africa a British Military administration took over all the Somali
inhabited territories in the Horn of Africa. For the first time in one
hundred years the Somali people were under one common administration,
with a common currency and a common tariff. With the help of the huge
military expending of the conquering British forces, there was an
unprecedented boom in the Somali territories. The idea of remaining
united and holding on to this bonanza of the union took hold over the
minds of Somali leaders.
The British Labor government of the time welcomed the Somali aspirations
and proposed an expanded British Protectorate over all the Somali
territories except the French Somali Coast; as the present Republic of
Djibouti was known then. The proposal never found support in the council
of the great victorious powers but the Somali clung to their hope and
Greater Somalia was over since then the centerpiece of their political
aspirations.
In 1960 British Somaliland Protectorate and the Italian Trust territory
of Somalia gained their independence and immediately united as the first
step towards Greater Somalia. In 1963 the third step was almost taken
when the British conservative Government of Harold Macmillan showed some
sympathy and undertook to ascertain the wishes of the people of the NFD,
Kenya and promised to act according to those wishes. Then an alarmed
emperor of Ethiopia appealed to President Kennedy and a phone call from
the Oval Office in the White House to No 10 Downing Street upset the
Somalis for good. Consequently a disappointed and a bitter Somalia took
up unrelenting confrontation with its neighbors and Horn of Africa had
never known peace or constructive development. Eventually the rebellion
against the Siyad Barre Dictatorship broke the spell of extreme
nationalism.
Now all the great powers, the AU, and the Government of the Horn of
Africa countries, who is the 1960s denied Greater Somalia and made it
into a pernicious concept, are now talking in a confused ambivalence
about the Territorial integrity of Somalia. The Territorial integrity of
the Democratic Republic, which was ruled by Mohamed Siad Barre “Af-Weyne”,
is that of Greater Somalia but the Territorial integrity of Somali is
that Territory which was once an Italian Colony. What is required for
the solution of the Somali Problem is clarity of objectives and
expressions. The politics of the Nile River must not be allowed to
bedevil the Somali reconciliation and the Ethiopian ambivalence over
Somalia and Greater Somalia must be resolved. A truncated Greater
Somalia composed of the former Italian colony and the British
Protectorate is impractical and unacceptable.
What then? I am proposes that if the Territorial integrity of the
Democratic Republic of Somalia is to be preserved, then I am asking that
the Government of United States of America, The Government of UK, and
the Government of the Republic of South Africa should form a panel to
organize the formation of a state of the Somali inhabited Territories in
the Horn of Africa. Then were a golden opportunity, which was missed in
1960, and a humanitarian mission of the first category. The problem of
the warning factions will immediately evaporated at the moment this
mission is announced and a new grateful nation will appear in the Horn
of Africa, bringing constructive contributions to the region and an
everlasting peace to the Horn of Africa. We abjectly beg this Government
to pity the agony of this tortured nation and to do the right thing at
long last Without embracing this noble scheme of building the only
homogeneous nation if Africa, the nation of any other territorial
integrity is a blasphemy, under such circumstance SOMALILAND DEMANDS
RECOGNITION of its sovereignty and resents vehemently and equation of
itself with the factions of Somalia.
Aniis A Essa
ADVOCATE OF SOMALILAND RECOGNITION
WASHINGTON DC
ANIIS@YAHOO.COM
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