Somaliland
offers ports for anti-pirate operations
The breakaway enclave of
Somaliland offered on Thursday the use of ports along its long
coastline for foreign naval patrols against Somali pirates.
The Somali sea-gangs have attacked dozens of ships in the Gulf of
Aden this year, but generally prefer to strike in waters near Yemen
instead of going close to Somaliland's shore.
"Our coast is extremely long but we have kept our waters free of
pirates. We have not had one single incident," said Abdillahi Duale,
foreign minister for Somaliland which broke away from Somalia to
declare itself an independent republic in 1991.
"We will support the fight against pirates any way we can. Our ports
are open for the coalition and all those who are fighting piracy to
use as they wish," he told Reuters.
The European Union is to begin an air and naval operation off
Somalia next week, while a Danish-led multilateral task force has
eight ships, and the NATO alliance has a further four patrolling the
waters off Somalia.
Duale said the coastguard of Somaliland -- a semi-desert terrain
that is home to 3.5 million people and neighbours Djibouti and
Ethiopia in the north-west of Somalia -- was doing a good job
keeping pirates at bay.
He declined to say how many boats Somaliland had.
Neighbouring Puntland, which also runs its affairs relatively
autonomously but has not sought independence from Somalia, is by
contrast a major base for pirates.
Seventeen years of civil conflict in southern and central Somalia
has fuelled piracy, which has spilled into Indian Ocean waters as
well as the Gulf of Aden, shaking global shipping.
U.N. SECURITY ALERT
Since early 2007, Islamist insurgents have been fighting the
Mogadishu-based government of Somalia and its Ethiopian military
backers. The insurgents are within a few miles of the capital.
Duale said the militant Islamist group al Shabaab was behind an
October 29 wave of suicide blasts in Somaliland's capital Hargeisa
that killed at least 25 people at a U.N. building, the Ethiopian
embassy and a local government building.
"They want to cripple Somaliland's democratisation process," the
minister said during a visit to Kenya.
The ex-British protectorate, roughly the size of England and Wales,
has won plaudits for multi-party polls and institutions. No country,
however, has recognised its independence.
Duale, and other ministers on a Somaliland delegation in Nairobi,
said the United Nations' decision to put the region on a Phase Four
alert after the bombs -- meaning all non-essential staff are
evacuated -- was "outrageous" and unfair.
"That is just what the terrorists want," Duale said
Planning Minister Ali Ibrahim said Somaliland should be supported,
rather than abandoned, in its fight against militants, which
included foiling numerous bomb plots.
"It is very paradoxical. We all talk about the fight against terror,
but when terror hits a poor country like Somaliland, everyone pulls
back and retreats in the name of protecting their nationals," he
said. "They are giving up to terrorists."
The U.N. security decision would hinder much-needed development
projects in Somaliland, deter foreign aid groups and investors, and
may even undermine a local presidential election set for March 2009,
the ministers said.
"Voter registration is in full swing. If this Phase Four continues,
we might have problems, for example in getting in all the foreign
observers who were expected," Ibrahim said.
Somalianders abroad remain undeterred, however, the ministers said,
still pouring money into construction of homes, hotels and
factories.
"We are a de facto state," Foreign Minister Duale said. "We will
stay the course. We know that one brave country will ... recognise
our independence. History will put the Somaliland state where it
belongs."
By Andrew Cawthorne and David Clarke
Reuters
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