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Issue 507/ 15th - 21st Oct 2011

Front Page

Somaliland News

News Headlines

Safiya Hashi Madar Talks About Her Struggle Against Barre’s Dictatorship - Part Four

Eng. Bashe A. Gabobe Makes Suggestions To President Ahmed Silanyo - Part Two

IOM Assists Ethiopian Migrants Stranded in Hargeysa/Somaliland with Voluntary Return and Reintegration

Local and Regional Affairs

UN Official Thanks Turkey For Helping Somalia

Killed Teen’s Pals ‘Made Up Story’

UN Lifts Security Warning On Kenya

Prosecutors: Recordings From Wiretap Of Minnesota Women Shows They Talked Of Supporting Jihad

Children Swept Away As Rains Threaten Drought-Displaced Families

Minnesota: Report Shows Somali Kids Test Kindergarten-Ready: Why?

Gunmen Take 2 Spanish Aid Workers At Kenyan Camp

Editorial

Somaliland’s Steady Progress

Features & Commentary

Somalia’s Woes: Hope Is Four-Legged And Woolly

Eating In The Horn Of Africa: Camel, Goat And. . .Spaghetti?

The Tears Of Somalia

Somaliland: The Country Without Mail

We Are Getting It Wrong On Piracy

International News

Opinion

Accusing Somaliland Minister Of Al-Shabaab Links

Somali Militia Destroyed Their Land; Now They’re Doing The Same To Ours

Current Status Of Forests And Woodlands In Somaliland: (Threats And Opportunities) Part V

 

Somaliland: The Country Without Mail

By Sean McLachlan

Today is World Post Day, celebrated every October 9 to mark the anniversary of the foundation of the Universal Postal Union in 1874. More than 150 countries celebrate this day honoring something that's so vital to our lives but is generally taken for granted.

In Somaliland they aren't celebrating, because they don't have a postal system. No other country recognizes Somaliland as a nation and therefore it can't get membership in the Universal Postal Union. Somaliland is the northern third of former Somalia and declared independence in 1991. After a bloody war of independence it developed a government, law enforcement, a viable economy, and infrastructure while neighboring Puntland became a haven for pirates and southern Somalia was torn apart by warlords and terrorists.

When I was traveling in Somaliland last year I was based in Hargeisa, the capital. Unlike much of the region, the lights stayed on around the clock, the streets were safe, and businesses were thriving. When I visited the central post office, however, I found an empty ruin.

So what does a country without mail do to get, um, mail? Courier services are widely used, and there's broadband Internet in the capital. In fact, they had the fastest Internet connection I've ever seen in Africa! Some Somalis told me the lack of a postal system actually encouraged the development of Internet Service Providers.

Still, it would have been nice to have been able to send postcards to my friends from this nation that doesn't officially exist. Of course I didn't actually see any postcards for sale, because there was no way to send them. With the rest of the world recognizing the Transitional Federal Government in Mogadishu, which doesn't even control all of Mogadishu, it doesn't look like we're going to be seeing any postcards from Somaliland anytime soon.

Source: Gadling.com


 




 


 



 



 

 


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