13- January-2024 – Theguardian.com
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We are ready for a warâ: Somalia threatens conflict with Ethiopia over breakaway region www.theguardian.com/
Somaliland hoped to be recognised as a country after port deal with landlocked Ethiopia – but move has sparked fury in Somalia
Somalia is prepared to go to war to stop Ethiopia recognising the breakaway territory of Somaliland and building a port there, a senior adviser to Somaliaâs president has said.
A memorandum of understanding signed on 1 January allowing landlocked Ethiopia to develop a naval base on Somalilandâs coast has rattled the Horn of Africa, one of the worldâs most volatile regions.
Somalia claims Somaliland as part of its territory and has declared the deal void. Last Sunday its president, Hassan Sheikh Mohamud, called on Somalis to âprepare for the defence of our homelandâ, while rallies have been held in Mogadishu, Somaliaâs capital, against the agreement.
Somalia is prepared to go to war to stop Ethiopia recognising the breakaway territory of Somaliland and building a port there, a senior adviser to Somaliaâs president has said.
A memorandum of understanding signed on 1 January allowing landlocked Ethiopia to develop a naval base on Somalilandâs coast has rattled the Horn of Africa, one of the worldâs most volatile regions.
Somalia claims Somaliland as part of its territory and has declared the deal void. Last Sunday its president, Hassan Sheikh Mohamud, called on Somalis to âprepare for the defence of our homelandâ, while rallies have been held in Mogadishu, Somaliaâs capital, against the agreement.
We are pursuing all diplomatic options and I think Ethiopia will come to its senses, but we are ready for a war if Abiy wants a war,â said the adviser, referring to the Ethiopian prime minister, Abiy Ahmed.
Ethiopia and Somalia fought a conflict in 1977-78 over a disputed region and tensions still run deep. Ethiopia invaded Somalia in 2006 to dislodge Islamists from Mogadishu, helping to spark the Al-Shabaab insurgency, and today it is one of the largest contributors of troops in the African Union peacekeeping force in Somalia.
The adviser said the port deal âcaught Somalia by surpriseâ. He claimed Abiy had denied intending to seek sea access through Somaliland when questioned by Mohamud at a summit in Saudi Arabia in November.
However, it is still not recognised by any country. Western governments will not recognise it until African countries do, but the continentâs leaders have held off, following the African Unionâs longstanding policy against redrawing national boundaries inherited from colonialists.
Without recognition, Somaliland struggles to attract investment and is cut off from international finance, which is mostly channelled through Mogadishu. In an interview with the Observer, Somalilandâs foreign minister, Essa Kayd, said the port deal with Ethiopia will âlegitimise our self-determinationâ and could spark a âdomino effectâ of other countries recognising the territory.
âRecognition is what we have been fighting for all this time and it is the most important thing we can offer to the people of Somaliland,â Kayd said.
However, there is confusion over the content of the deal between Somaliland and Ethiopia. Neither side has made the full text public.
When it was struck, Somalilandâs president, Muse Bihi Abdi, said Ethiopia had agreed to grant official recognition in return for a 50-year lease of a stretch of coastline, which it will develop for ânaval and commercialâ purposes. However, Ethiopia said it had only agreed to âmake an in-depth assessment towards taking a position regarding the efforts of Somaliland to gain recognitionâ.
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A western diplomat briefed on the deal described it as a âmemorandum of misunderstandingâ. âEthiopia insists they did not agree to recognise Somaliland,â the diplomat said.
Kayd said the deal is based on Ethiopia granting recognition to Somaliland: âWithout that, nothing is going to happen.â He added that discussions had been progressing âfor yearsâ. âEthiopia needï»żćŁŻéœè„ s sea access and we need recognition, so you can see how these needs can be dealt with.â
Ethiopia became the worldâs largest landlocked country in 1993 when Eritrea seceded along with its Red Sea coastline. In October, Abiy said this was a historic mistake that threatens Ethiopiaâs existence, sparking fears of a war with Eritrea. âIn 2030 we are projected to have a population of 150 million,â Abiy said. â150 million people canât live in a geographic prison.â
On Thursday, Abiyâs adviser drew parallels between Ethiopiaâs quest for sea access and its construction of the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam, a potentially transformational hydroÂelectric project on the Blue Nile, which was built despite objections and military threats from Egypt.
Somalia is unlikely to attack Ethiopia while it grapples with Al-Shabaab, said Alan Boswell, Horn of Africa director at the International Crisis Group. But the deal could open fresh fissures in a turbulent region.
Mohamud visited Eritrea last week and is preparing to travel to Egypt. The countries are Ethiopiaâs main regional rivals and have both expressed support for Somalia in the wake of the port deal. âAbiy sees this as a legacy issue,â said Boswell. âIf this deal with Somaliland falls through, Ethiopia will try to find a port somewhere else, so this is going to shape regional dynamics for years to come.â
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