US
eyes Somaliland as answer to Mogadishu's woes
By JASON STRAZIUSO, Associated Press Writer,
Friday, October 15, 2010
HARGEISA, Somalia — A new six-story office building will soon house
a $1 billion-a-year business. The recently elected president has
appointed smart people and won the admiration of the intern
ational community. Gunfire is nowhere to be heard.
All this seems too good to be true for the war-ravaged nation of
Somalia. Yet Somalia this is, or more precisely Somaliland, a slice
of the northern part of the country.
This former British colony joined Somalia a half-century ago but
changed its mind in 1991 when th e central government in
Mogadishu collapsed and most of the rest of the country became mired
in war. The United States, the United Nations and other
international players don't recognize Somal iland as a
separate country, but they are now lavishing new money and attention
on the region.
Somaliland officials say the international community has wasted too
much time and money on Mo gadishu and its string of failed
governments. They say the struggling but democratically elected
government in the north deserves support and can serve as a bulwark
against spreading terrorism.
In bullet-riddled Mogadishu and in much of the rest of Somalia to
the south, a hardline Islamist ins urgency is in control and
is threatening the central government's tiny hold on the country. To
the north, across the narrow Gulf of Aden, lies Yemen, a hotspot for
Islamist militancy.
"This is a country called Somaliland that is peaceful and democratic
... where the streets are full of uniformed children with book in
hand going to school, not hooded, with guns, going to war,"
President Ahmed Mohamud Silanyo told a visiting delegation from the
U.N., EU, World Bank and Af rican Development Bank earlier
this week.
A six-story cement building dominates this city's skyline. Once
completed, it will house the headq uarters of a money transfer
company that operates in 144 countries.
Yet Somaliland is bathed in poverty. Huts fashioned from scrap metal
and wrapped in plastic shee ting dot the capital, crammed full
of the internally displaced. Rusted cars are heaped in a jumble.
Discarded plastic bags snag on cacti growing in the sandy ground.
Goats and sheep wander the streets, seeking shade from the afternoon
sun.
Since his June election, Silanyo has tapped Somaliland's diaspora to
recruit U.S.- and British-educ ated technocrats to run the country.
He slashed the size of his Cabinet, instilling confidence in the
international community about the way he will run Somaliland, an
area the size of North Carolina with 3.5 million people.
The successful election and the new government's serious approach
merit increased attention, sa id Mark Bowden, the top U.N.
humanitarian representative for Somalia.
Somaliland became independent in 1960 before joining Somalia only
days later. Because no countr y has yet recognized its 1991
declaration of re-independence, the world community sees it as part
of Somalia. Business leaders at a trade fair in Hargeisa this week
said the lack of recognition creates impediments to economic growth:
No access to credit, high insurance rates on imported shipping,
severely restricted ability to travel.
Despite the poverty and restrictions, the government has capable,
educated leaders who are inf using the town with a can-do
spirit. Dahabshiil, the money transfer company building the
six-story headquarters, facilitates the transfer of $1 billion from
Somaliland's overseas diaspora. And many of those diaspora's leaders
are returning here.
Hussein Bulhan, a Harvard-educated former professor at Boston
University, is the president of H argeisa University. He
believes the U.S. should take notice and invest more.
"Following Sept. 11, the focus has become fighting terrorism," said
Bulhan. "Too much focus has been put into putting out fires instead
of building the peace."
Johnnie Carson, the top U.S. diplomat for Africa, announced last
month that the U.S. is trying a new, two-track approach to Somalia
that will see continued support of the Mogadishu governm ent
but also direct engagement with Somaliland and neighboring Puntland,
another autonomous region.
More American diplomats and aid workers will travel to Somaliland,
Carson said. USAID, the U.S. government aid arm, dedicated $7
million to Somaliland in fiscal year 2009. In 2010 that number is
rising to $26 million.
"Where you have pockets of stability and pockets of people willing
to actively contribute to devel op the country as a whole, it
just makes sense to develop their capacity," said a U.S. Embassy
sp okesman in Kenya who was not allowed to be identified because of
State Department rules.
Bowden, the U.N. official, said Somaliland gets about $80 million to
$100 million a year in aid money, but that the number could double.
Somaliland's trade fair highlighted the region's soap makers, tile
makers and university offerings. Saeed Odugheal, 40, grew up in
Britain but now owns a water bottling company here.
"Somaliland is Africa's best kept secret," he said. "What I want to
see is a hell of a lot more deve lopment money. People talk
about creating a democracy. This is a democracy. It's only right to
support a country like that."
Carson said the U.S. will not recognize Somaliland as independent
because the African Union will not do so. Somaliland Foreign
Minister Mohamed A. Omar acknowledged that the AU is afraid that if
Somaliland is recognized, other regions might clamor for the same.
But he said Somaliland's situation is unique.
"We are not starting a new nation. We have been a nation before,"
said Omar, who holds a docto rate in political science from
Britain's University of Birmingham. "We voluntarily joined with Soma
lia in 1960. We are withdrawing from that union."
Omar said the region would like to share intelligence with the West
and receive more direct secu rity aid, adding that the region
has a strong record of fighting piracy and terrorism. Hargeisa was
hit by a suicide bomb attack in 2008.
"Somaliland has been attacked by terrorists not only because they
hate us, what I think what th ey are attacking is the
principles and values we stand for, which is democracy," Omar said.
"These are universal values that have been attacked. We need
universal support and universal defense in order to defend those
values."
Somaliland's minister of mining, energy and water resources traded a
six-figure job in Los Angeles for his new role. He said without $40
million in repairs, Hergeisa's water system could collapse. The
minister, Hussein Abdi Dualeh, urged the international community to
switch its focus from Mo gadishu to Somaliland.
"The aid we get here won't be torn up by shrapnel," he said.
Source: AP
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