On 6/10/06, Shane Mage <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
In all the media brouhaha about Somalia, I haven't seen a single word
 anywhere alluding to--let alone actually mentioning--the existence
 of the country called Somaliland.  That implies they must be doing
really well up there, doesn't it?

June 5, 2006 / New York TIMES
Hargeysa Journal
The Signs Say Somaliland, but the World Says Somalia
By MARC LACEY

HARGEYSA, Somalia — Edna Adan Ismail may get angry when she reads
this. In fact, she may pick up the phone and vent, berating anyone
with the gall to suggest that this city sits inside Somalia.

She will go on at length about the unique history of this region in
the northwestern part of a place that she says used to be called
Somalia but no longer is. She will describe the declaration 15 years
ago making this an independent land and the referendum a decade later
affirming it. She will emphatically say that this is not Somalia. It
is Somaliland. Got it?

But she may be a bit premature in making that claim. Sure, Ms. Ismail,
the foreign minister of the breakaway republic of Somaliland,
considers this an independent land. But even a decade and a half after
the area's so-called independence, no country in the world recognizes
it as such. The African Union, which is made up of all the countries
on the continent, does not acknowledge a Somaliland nation, nor does
the United Nations.

In fact, just the other day, Ms. Ismail was chastising Eric Laroche,
the United Nations' humanitarian coordinator for Somalia, because he
dared send a letter to her government calling himself just that. She
was outraged and offended, she said, and at a diplomatic reception
that was anything but diplomatic she let Mr. Laroche know what she
thought of his missive, which did not acknowledge Somaliland. Next
time, she said in her rather blunt way, she will send such a letter
back.

"We feel slighted, discriminated against, ignored and isolated," she
explained later. "We've been doing our own thing for the last 15
years. We have put our act together. Instead of encouraging us, we are
being pushed toward Somalia, which continues to fall apart."

Somaliland does have a rather unique history. After being a British
protectorate since 1884, Somaliland became an independent country on
June 26, 1960. The rest of present-day Somalia, then administered by
Italy, became independent several days later. Within days, the two
lands decided to merge.

But Somalilanders felt slighted almost from the start, since most of
the power went to the south of the country. Somalilanders rejected a
referendum on a unitary constitution in June 1961 and, later that
year, military officers in Hargeysa began an unsuccessful rebellion to
reassert Somaliland's independence.

Over the years, the leaders in Mogadishu fought to keep control of
Somaliland. In 1988, a full-scale civil war broke out between the
Mogadishu-based government and Somaliland rebels.

In May 1991, as Somalia descended into anarchy with the fall of the
government of Gen. Mohamed Siad Barre, Somaliland declared itself
independent. A decade later, a referendum in Somaliland on the issue
showed 97 percent of the population in favor of independence, and
Somaliland has essentially ruled itself, given the lack of a central
government in Somalia.

But getting recognition from the rest of the world has proved
nettlesome. African leaders are hesitant to acknowledge the claim for
fear of stirring up more chaos in Somalia. They also do not want to
encourage rebels elsewhere on the continent who desire independent
states of their own.

Still, an African Union fact-finding mission declared last year that
Somaliland's status was "unique and self-justified in African
political history," and that "the case should not be linked to the
notion of 'opening a Pandora's box.' "

The International Crisis Group, a nonprofit advocacy group based in
Brussels that tries to prevent and resolve conflicts, recommended in a
recent report that the African Union address the issue soon "to
prevent a deeply rooted dispute from evolving into an open conflict."

Somalilanders celebrated those words, and then they continued doing
what they have been doing for so long — waiting.

It is not easy being a Somalilander. The Somaliland passport — which
bears the region's logo and looks as official as any other nation's —
is not recognized by any country in the world, although the
neighboring countries of Ethiopia and Djibouti do allow people to
travel with it while still not officially recognizing Somaliland as a
country.

The Somaliland president, Dahir Rayale Kahin, is regarded more as a
governor by other nations, even though he considers himself to be as
much a president as, say, Thabo Mbeki of South Africa, Mwai Kibaki of
Kenya or Olusegun Obasanjo of Nigeria, three prominent presidents on
this continent.

"I don't want to live in an isolated portion of this planet," said
Mohamed M. Jamma, a law lecturer at the University of Hargeysa. "We
fulfill all the criteria of a modern state. We've had elections. We
have rule of law. Yet we are on the periphery."

Fifteen years is a long time to live in limbo, although Somalilanders
have not just been biding their time. They have been hard at work,
trying to rebuild a place that was in a shambles when it declared
itself independent. The capital was virtually leveled by the
government in Mogadishu as it sought to quell the rebellion. The
countryside was littered with land mines. The same kind of bitter clan
rivalry that has led to the collapse of the rest of Somalia was alive
and well here, too.

Somaliland is now an oasis of sorts, a relatively peaceful, reasonably
well functioning corner of a country that lies in ruins. Gunmen do not
rule the streets here. The local police do. A series of elections have
been held, including a presidential contest that was closer than the
one in which George W. Bush beat Al Gore. The courts declared Mr.
Kahin the victor and the populace accepted it. In essence, Somaliland
has been able to manage interclan rivalry and build basic democratic
institutions, whereas the rest of Somalia has found itself in an
anarchic struggle for control.

Hargeysa is still a rundown place, although those who know what it was
like 15 years ago rave about how it has risen from the rubble. There
are still plenty of people living in squalor here, although
Somalilanders point out that their fledgling nation has become a
refuge for people from across the area in search of something
Somaliland offers but the rest of Somalia does not — stability.

"Why not recognize us?" asked Khara Ahmed Biih, 44, who was walking
down Hargeysa's main street the other day carrying a cane. "It makes
us frustrated because if you see our country we have everything any
other country does."

It is an argument Ms. Ismail, a midwife turned diplomat, has made many
times, and is likely to make again, on the phone, any time now.

--
Jim Devine / "The decadent international but  individualistic
capitalism in the hands of which we found ourselves after the war is
not a success. It is not intelligent. It is not beautiful. It is not
just. It is not virtuous. And it doesn't deliver the goods." -- John
Maynard Keynes.

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