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On the dawn of May 15, 2018, the armed forces of Federal Somalia waged an unexpected attack on Somaliland Republic armed forces based at Tukaraq.

Somalia’s forces attacked through the front of the Puntland Administration of Federal Somalia whilst the Somaliland Republic was busy celebrating its 27th anniversary of regaining its independence from Somalia achieved on June 26, 1960. Somaliland forces repelled the attacks and inflicted heavy losses on the invading enemy forces.

The land of the Harti People in Sool and Eastern Sanaag is located within Somaliland British colonial borders. It is an integral and inseparable part of independent Somaliland. Thus, there is no “disputed land or territories” in Somaliland as some may claim preposterously. Somaliland does not accept the idea of “disputed land in Somaliland” as any other African country would not accept to call part of its territory “disputed land”.

Puntland Administration of Federal Somalia dreams to reunite Harti people, the sub-clan of Darod, of Somaliland, Somalia, and Ethiopia to create Harti country in the Horn of Africa. Would the United Nations or Africa accept to create Fulani country by reuniting the Fulanis of Mali, Nigeria, Niger, Chad, and Cameroon or Tuareg country by reuniting the Tuaregs of Senegal, Nigeria, Mali, and Niger?

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The answer is: No. likewise, Africa would never accept that the Puntland Administration of Federal Somalia reunite Hartis of Somaliland, Somalia, and Ethiopia to create a tribal crisis in the Horn of Africa. There is no country in Africa or in any other continent whose population is based on a single clan or lineage as the Puntland Administration of Somalia claims blindly.

History of Somaliland
1930s Horn of Africa Map

If the United Nations or the Organization of African Union do not respect and recognize Somaliland’s borders, emerging from colonial borders as any other African country, then the territorial integrity of each African country would be questionable and would be at risk of dispute and continental disintegration through endless clan wars.

The political map of Africa that shows its independent countries had not been made by the United Nations, by the African Union, or by African nations. It is the result of the European Colonial Occupation that invaded the African Continent at the end of the 19th century and divided it up into territories with colonial borders for their own political sphere of influence.

When leaving Africa, mainly in the 1960s, the Europeans based the independence and diplomatic recognition of all African emerging countries including Somaliland on their colonial borders inherited from the colonial powers. The borders of African independent states had been drawn by the colonial powers of Europe at the end of the 19th century, mainly during The Partition of Africa held in Berlin in 1884. Likewise, all the current borders of Asia and South America also emerged from colonial borders drawn mainly by Britain, France, and Spain and were all recognized too on their colonial borders.

Somaliland is located in the Horn of Africa. It lies between the 08°00′ – 11°30′ parallel North of the Equator and between 42°30′ – 49°00′ Meridian East of Greenwich. It is bordered by the Red Sea to the North, Djibouti to the West, Ethiopia to the South, and Somalia to the East. Somaliland has a coastline with the majority lying along the Gulf of Aden (Red Sea). The country is slightly larger than England, with an area of 137, 600 km² (53,100 sq. miles) and with a population of around 4 millions.

According to the unique history of the continent of Africa, an African country is recognized as an independent nation when it meets or fulfills the following four (4) requirements:

1.    That it is colonized separately

2.    That it has its own colonial borders

3.    That it has an official proclamation of independence granted by the colonizing power on a specific date

4.    That it Fulfills the Montevideo Convention Requirements on the Rights and Duties of States held on December 26, 1933, which stated that the state as a person of international law should possess the following qualifications:

                              I.            a permanent population

                           II.            a defined country

                         III.            a government

                        IV.            a capacity to enter into relations with the other states.

Somaliland has perfectly fulfilled the four required conditions to be recognized as an independent country and that is why it was recognized on June 26, 1960, by the United Nations and many countries of the international community.

The borders of Somalia, Somaliland, Djibouti, or any other Africa country have the same international status and legitimacy because they all had been drawn by European Colonial powers. Anyone who opposes the legitimacy of Somaliland’s borders, its statehood, its independence, and its diplomatic recognition is challenging the borders and sovereignty of all African independent states (54 states) whose borders also rose from their colonial borders.

African borders are based on land only and not on lineage or clans. There are no clan borders or clan states in Africa or anywhere else in this world. There are only national land-based borders in Africa whose nations consist of many tribes or clans that share common borders and sovereignty.

The following African clans clearly show of how same African clans are distributed over different countries. The inhabitance or residence of some African clans is as follows:

1.    Fulani Clan: This clan inhabits in Mali, Nigeria, Niger, Chad, Cameroon, etc.

2.    Tuareg Clan: This clan has inhabitance in Senegal, Nigeria, Mali, Niger, etc.

3.    Lunda Clan: This clan inhabits in Congo, Zambia, and Angola.

4.    Yoruba Clan: This clan has inhabitance in Nigeria, Benin, and Togo.

5.    Maasai Clan: This clan resides in Kenya, and Tanzania.

6.    Afar Clan: This clan inhabits in Ethiopia, Eritrea, and Djibouti

7.    Gabooye Clan: This clan inhabits in Somaliland, Somalia, Ethiopia

8.    Berber Clan: This clan has inhabitance in Morroco, Tunisia, Libya, and Algeria.

9.    Isaaq Clan: This clan inhabits in Somaliland, Ethiopia, Kenya, Djibouti

10.  Samaroon Clan: This tribe inhabits in Somaliland, Ethiopia, and Djibouti.

11.  Hawiye Clan: This clan inhabits in Somalia, Kenya, and Ethiopia.

12.  Darood Clan: This clan inhabits in Somalia, Somaliland, Kenya, Ethiopia

13.   Rahanwein Clan: This clan has inhabitance in Somalia, Ethiopia, and Kenya.

14.   Essa Clan: This clan inhabits in Djibouti, Ethiopia, and Somaliland.

The internal security, stability, and peace of Africa rest on respecting, recognizing, and implementing its current borders that rose from colonial borders. If an African country would claim the clan and its land located in another African country, the continent would fall to endless devastating, bloody clan wars, violence, and anarchy. The African continent would not exist as we know it today.

The peace and stability of African states depend on respecting and recognizing colonial borders. United Nations and African Union should not allow any country like Somalia or any other country to redraw African colonial borders to avoid the danger of plunging the continent into endless clan wars and anarchy.

African Union and African leaders claim that if Somaliland is recognized, it will shift or change the borders of current African independent states inherited from colonial powers leading to instability and political unrest in Africa. If that claim were true, why did not the recognition of South Sudan and Eritrea change the borders of Africa and cause instability and political unrest in the African continent? Senegal and Gambia founded a federation or union in February 1982 calling it

Senegambia. That union was dissolved in September 1989 after a disagreement and each country regained its original independence and diplomatic recognition without changing the borders of Africa. So, why denying Somaliland of regaining the independence and recognition it had before the union with Somalia? Somaliland diplomatic recognition does not need any approval from Somalia as any other African country did not need the approval of its independence and diplomatic recognition from any other African country.

Somaliland is not a secessionist or breakaway region from Somalia but Somaliland just withdrew from the union with Somalia after Somalia grossly violated the union and committed injustices and atrocities in Somaliland between 1960-1991. If the Nyanza Province of Kenya, or Arusha Region of Tanzania, or the Puntland province of Somalia break away from their own respective countries, that

would be secessionists, separatists, or breakaways and that would change or shift the colonial borders of Africa inherited from colonial powers and that would create instability and political unrest in the continent of Africa because these provinces share the history and colonial borders with their own countries.

The declaration of the Organization of African Unity (O.A.U) in 1964 on African Borders was the formal acceptance of the existing colonial borders inherited from colonial powers on which independence and recognition of each African country were based including Somaliland. That declaration had nothing to do with unifications, federations, and unions between two or more African countries like the failed union between Somaliland and Somalia formed unthoughtfully and hastily in 1960.

A union or federation could be dissolved anytime if the sides disagree each restoring and retaining its original independence and borders. That declaration reinforces the rightful claim of Somaliland to be recognized as an independent nation based on its colonial borders. That declaration does not prevent Somaliland from withdrawing from the union with Somalia and restoring its independence and diplomatic recognition achieved on June 26, 1960. If Uganda and Kenya share a union today and after some time they disagree and dissolve that union, each would still be an independent, recognized nation on its own colonial borders.

Somaliland and Somalia are not the first two countries in this world whose union dissolved or ceased to exist. The Soviet Union that had 15 Socialist Republics created by the Bolshevik Revolution led by Lenin in 1917 broke up after social upheavals and political discontent ended its existence peacefully in 1989 with new countries emerging from it such as Georgia, Ukraine, Armenia, Uzbekistan, Lithuania, Estonia, Latvia, etc. They are all recognized by the UN and international community on the basis of their original borders existing before the union.

The federation of the former Republic of Yugoslavia that had 8 countries broke up too after bloody civil wars between 1991-1995 and new countries such as Serbia, Croatia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Kosovo, etc. emerged from its ashes. All these countries are also recognized diplomatically too for their original borders existing before the federation. This shows that the unity among countries that share a union is not sacred anymore if they have disagreements. So, Somaliland Republic deserves international diplomatic recognition based on its British colonial borders.

The United Nations and Africa Union must condemn the aggression of Federal Somalia against the Somaliland Republic on May 15, 2018, to assure stability and peace of Africa.

Federal Somalia is sternly warned that peace and good neighborly relations between the Somaliland Republic and Federal Somalia will only depend on respecting and recognizing the border between Somaliland and Somalia.

Ibrahim Hassan Gagale


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