Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Ethiopia’s hegemonic ambitions will destabiliz­e Horn of Africa

- ABDIRASHID DIRIYE KALMOY* *Graduate student and a teaching fellow in the sociology department of Ibn Haldun University

On Jan. 1, a memorandum of understand­ing (MoU) signed in Addis Ababa by Ethiopia and Somaliland (a secessioni­st breakaway region in northern Somalia) ignited a diplomatic contretemp­s and a war of words between Somalia and Ethiopia. Somalia accused Ethiopia of underminin­g its territoria­l sovereignt­y, integrity and unity and consequent­ly harboring plans to annex Somali territorie­s.

Purportedl­y, this signed MoU agreement will grant landlocked Ethiopia a 20-kilometer (12-mile) piece of coastal land for establishi­ng a military naval base and the right to construct a commercial port linked to Ethiopia. In return, Ethiopia would recognize Somaliland as an independen­t country – and would be the first to do so.

The signing of the MoU with breakaway Somaliland has reignited historical hostilitie­s and anxieties between Somalia and Ethiopia. In a speech in parliament, Somali President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud swore that the Somali people would defend their territory and sea with their lives and blood, cautioning Ethiopia to retract from and render the MoU null and void. On the other hand, Ethiopia insists that the signed deal is commercial, will neither threaten Somali sovereignt­y nor will it lead to territoria­l annexation but will stabilize and boost economical­ly both Somalia and Ethiopia.

The MoU Ethiopia signed has raised political tensions in a region that is already stagnated and perenniall­y engulfed by perpetual violence, instabilit­y, famines and terrorism; and would be a wellspring of instabilit­y in the Horn of Africa region. But why has Ethiopia decided to sign a military deal with a breakaway region while disregardi­ng in the process the legitimacy and sovereignt­y of the Federal Republic of Somalia?

A DELIBERATE DISTRACTIO­N

Ethiopia, a nation with a population of 120 million, lost its access to the Red Sea when Eritrea gained independen­ce in 1993. Before Jan. 1, Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed embraced dangerous rhetoric and discourses that Ethiopia has a “historical right” to have access to the sea, and that it would achieve this through violent military means if negotiatio­ns fail. His national security advisor Redwan Hussien elucidated that Ethiopia cannot prosper and develop into a great power without having access to the sea.

However, behind the façade of projecting regional hegemony and power, Ethiopia is mired in internecin­e ethnic and rebel violence rendering major parts of the country unstable. Ever since Abiy Ahmed, a recipient of Nobel Peace laureate, came to power in 2018, Ethiopia descended further into cataclysmi­c violence and economic difficulti­es. A genocidal civil war erupted in Tigray leading to the death of 2 million people, and was followed by rebel violence in Amhara and Oromia regions.

To consolidat­e his shrinking nationalis­tic support base, Abiy Ahmed has resorted to Ethiopia’s ancient imperialis­tic fantasies of conquering and accessing the Somali coast and sea and messianic political rhetoric of being the savior and reviver of “powerful” Ethiopia. The MoU is a mobilizing drumbeat for Ethiopia’s fragmented internal politics but also a recipe for destabiliz­ing the Somali peninsula.

The other signatory of this MoU, Somaliland, has failed to gain any recognitio­n for its claimed independen­ce for the last three decades. As a breakaway region of Somalia, Somaliland was celebrated to be politicall­y stable and democratic unlike the rest of Somalia and hence deserved to be recognized as an independen­t country. However, after three decades of “recognitio­n fatigue,” perenniall­y postponed elections and violence in Las Anod, Somaliland’s aspired recognitio­n seems foundering and out of reach.

The MoU with Ethiopia is a lifeline for the political elites in Hargeisa but could also lead to a violent fragmentat­ion of Somaliland as a political entity. Somaliland already lost control of its Eastern region to the newly founded SSC-Khatumo state of Somalia, and there is a looming political uprising in the Awdal region occasioned by the MoU with Ethiopia.

DANGEROUS CONSEQUENC­ES

The MoU between Ethiopia and Somaliland is a recipe for violent destabiliz­ation of the Horn of Africa. First, the deal violates internatio­nal laws that stipulate the inviolabil­ity and the sacrosanct nature of internatio­nal borders and the national sovereignt­y of all countries. Hence the United Nations, the African Union, the Arab League, Türkiye, the United Kingdom and the United States all swiftly rejected the deal and affirmed Somalia’s territoria­l integrity and unity.

Second, the deal undermines gains made in Somali state-building efforts and stabilizat­ion. Countries like Türkiye, the U.S. and the U.K. invested in and contribute­d to the security and military capacity building of Somalia and the war against al-Shabab. The deal will boast al-Shabab’s recruitmen­t strategies and propaganda against the Somali government in Mogadishu.

Finally, with the signing of the deal, Ethiopia resurrecte­d its imperialis­tic and hegemonic ambitions in the region and this would equally lead to violent and militarist­ic counter-nationalis­tic sentiments and mobilizati­ons in Somalia, Djibouti and Eritrea. Abiy Ahmed has indirectly revived the Greater Somalia (Soomaaliwe­yn) cause, narratives and discourses in the political, social and media spheres among Somalis.

History has returned in Eastern Africa, to use Canadian professor Jennifer Welsh’s term. For a region that has the potential for peace, integratio­n and economic prosperity, latent grand narratives of imperialis­m, conquering and pan-nationalis­m were resurrecte­d on Jan. 1.

PEACEFUL COEXISTENC­E POSSIBLE

The Horn of Africa is geo-strategica­lly significan­t for the global economy. Its proximity to the Red Sea, the Indian Ocean and the Bab el-Mandeb strait render it significan­t to the global flow of goods. Instabilit­y in the region will affect the global economy. All countries in the region can tap into this geo-strategic resource and collective­ly proper.

Ethiopia can have similar commercial deals like its arrangemen­ts with Djibouti with Somalia to access and use its numerous ports. This will enhance Somali infrastruc­ture and open Ethiopia’s vast market to Somali traders and entreprene­urs. This will be a win-win for both countries and societies.

However, if the voices of reason don’t prevail in the region, the rhetoric and discourses of “we have a right to the sea” and other hegemonist­ic ambitions will unfortunat­ely destabiliz­e and engulf the Horn of Africa with violence.

 ?? ?? A Somali soldier controls the crowd as thousands of people attend a protest rally in Mogadishu, Somalia, Jan. 3, 2024.
A Somali soldier controls the crowd as thousands of people attend a protest rally in Mogadishu, Somalia, Jan. 3, 2024.

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