Home | Contact us | Links | Archives | Search

 
Issue 405

Front Page

News Headlines

Ethiopia Upgrades Its Trade Office In Somaliland To A Consulate

Somaliland Election Commission Sworn

Somaliland: A Beacon Of Hope

Somaliland Women Demand Their Rights

Sheikh Sharif’s Parliamentarians Ask For Asylum In Europe

Muna Asayr Jama Draws Attention To The Plight Of Homeless Children

RDF To Help 70 Potential Employees In Finding Jobs

Somaliland Citizen Says Saudi Authorities Confiscated His Property And Appeals For Help

Local and Regional Affairs

Somaliland Leader Calls For War On Shabaab

Somaliland Gets First Debit Card Service

Somali Man Aged '112', Weds Girl, 17.. And Plans To Have Children

Networking Horn Of Africa For Climate Change Action

Somalis Rally To Denounce Israel Raid

Yemeni Security Arrested Somalis Suspected Of Being Al-Qaeda Members

Djibouti: EASBRIG To Hold Joint Exercises In Djibouti

Radical Somali Youth Potential Threat To National Security: RCMP Commissioner

Senior U.S. Official For Refugees Concludes Africa Visit

Pirates Demand $7 Million For Yacht Couple, Britain Says

Militants Beat Women In Somalia

Uganda: Somalis Rush To Register

Woman Struck And Killed As Husband Watches

Uganda Tightens Security Following Al-Shabaab Threat

Navy Federal Celebrating A Truly Remote ATM

Arab League Makes Little Headway On Somalia Talks

Editorial

The Upgrading Of Ethiopian Representation In Somaliland Is A Step In The Right Direction

Features & Commentary

Implementation Of The Six-Point Agreement And Learning From Our Recent Experience

Somaliland: A Year From The Terror Attack

Somali Road Trip To Islamist Heartland

Women Football Vastly Growing In Djibouti

How To Stabilize Horn Of Africa

PolicyWatch #1593: Militias And Insurgency In Somalia

International News

Clinton Wants More Action On Al Qaeda

Facebook Wins $711 Million From Spammer

Honduras Reaches Deal On Political Crisis

Iran Sends Mixed Signals On Nuclear Deal

Obama Consults Military Leaders, Nears Afghan Troop Decision

Opinion

Somaliland: A Shinning Example To All Somalis

An Open Letter To Newly Elected National Elections Commission!

What Soap Opera Or Musalsal Does To Our Society!

We The People Of Idiots!

How To Stabilize Horn Of Africa

By CHARLES TANNOCK

After almost two decades as a failed state torn by civil war, perhaps the world should begin to admit that Somalia – as it is currently constructed – is beyond repair.

Some of the country, however, can meet at least a basic standard of governance.

The northernmost region, Somaliland, situated strategically at the opening to the Red Sea and home to roughly 3.5 million of Somalia’s 10 million people, is more or less autonomous and stable.

But this stability fuels fears that Somaliland’s people will activate the declaration of independence they adopted in 1991.

At the end of September, Somaliland will hold its third presidential election, the previous two having been open and competitive.

Unlike many developing countries, it will welcome foreign observers to oversee the elections, though, unfortunately, most Western countries and agencies will stay away, lest their presence be seen as legitimizing Somaliland’s de facto government.

But Somaliland’s strategic position near the world’s major oil-transport routes, now plagued by piracy, and chaos in the country’s south, mean that independence should no longer be dismissed out of hand.

Indeed, following a fact-finding mission in 2007, a consensus is emerging within the EU that an African Union country should be the first to recognize Somaliland’s independence.

Ethiopia is the obvious candidate to spearhead recognition, given its worries about jihadi unrest within Somalia.

Moreover, landlocked Ethiopia uses Somaliland’s port of Berbera extensively.

Yet Ethiopia may hesitate, owing to its fears that formally recognizing Somaliland’s independence could undermine Somalia’s fragile Western-backed Transitional Federal Government.

But, as Somalia’s new president, Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed, is a former head of the Islamic Courts, Ethiopia may choose the current status quo in Somaliland over the dream of stabilizing Somalia.

The key regional obstacle to recognition is Saudi Arabia, which not only objects to the secular, democratic model promoted by Somaliland, but is a strong ally of Somalia, which is a member of the Arab League (despite not being Arab) and the Organization of the Islamic Conference.

Saudi Arabia supports the TFG financially and politically.

Saudi pressure on Somaliland has ranged from banning livestock imports between 1996-2006, to threatening to reject the Somaliland passports of Hajj pilgrims.

When Somaliland’s people vote at the end of September, they will not be deciding explicitly on secession, but their steady effort at state building does amplify their claims to independence.

Does any self-selected group anywhere have the right to declare independence?

If so, the richest parts of any country could decide to go it alone, thus impoverishing their fellow citizens.

Even if greed is ruled out as an acceptable motive, in favor of traditional ethno-cultural nationalism, a profusion of tiny tribal states might make the world far more unstable.

Clear principles are needed, as neither self-determination nor the inviolability of national borders can be treated as sacrosanct in every case.

So let me attempt to outline some basic principles:

· No outside forces should either encourage or discourage secession, and the barriers for recognizing secession should be set high. Secession is in itself neither good nor bad: like divorce, it may make people more or less content.

· A declaration of independence should be recognized only if a clear majority (well over 50 per cent -plus-one of the voters) have freely chosen it, ideally in an unbiased referendum.

· The new state must guarantee that any minorities it drags along – say, Russians in the Baltic states, or Serbs in Kosovo – will be decently treated.

· Secessionists should have a reasonable claim to being a national group that, preferably, enjoyed stable self-government in the past on the territory they claim. Nations need not be ethnically based; few are entirely.

But most nations are unified by language, a shared history of oppression, or some other force of history.

Given the interests of all the world’s great powers in stabilizing the Horn of Africa, there does seem to be movement toward accepting Somaliland’s claims.

An independent Somaliland could be a force for stability and good governance in an otherwise hopeless region.

So the world may soon need to test whether the controversial principles it brought to bear in Kosovo have the same meaning in Africa.

Tannock is Spokesman on the European Parliament Foreign Affairs Committee for the European Conservatives and Reformists Group.

Source: Business Daily Africa - Charles Tannock - Oct 28, 2009

Posted Thursday, October 29 2009 at 00:00


 


 


 


 




















 

 


Home | Contact us | Links | Archives | Search