Khaleej Times

Somaliland to honour DP World deal

DP WORLD DEAL TO DEVELOP BERBERA PORT TO GO AHEAD AS PLANNED

- Issac John

dubai — The President of Somaliland on Friday dismissed Somalia’s move banning the UAE ports operator DP World from developing Berbera Port, saying Mogadishu has no jurisdicti­on over the matter.

“Somaliland is an independen­t sovereign country with a

We will not allow any outside forces to interfere in our internal issues Muse Behi Abdi, President, Republic of Somaliland

long democratic tradition. We will not allow any outside forces to interfere in our internal issues,” President Muse Behi Abdi said in Dubai.

Abdi, who was accompanie­d by five ministers, told the media that there is “no authority other than the elected representa­tives of the country to decide on its internal affairs.

He said the agreement signed between the UAE ports operator DP World and the Ethiopian Government to acquire a 19 per cent stake in Berbera Port is lawful and binding. “As a sovereign and independen­t state, Somaliland has right to enter agreements, and does not allow others to meddle with its rights.”

Asked what would happen in a worst-case scenario of Somalia sticking with its position of denouncing the port deal, terming the tri-party agreement unconstitu­tional, null, and void, Abdi said “nothing will happen.” The project will go as planned and will be completed within two years, he added.

The Parliament of Somaliland approved the partnershi­p with DP World in 2016, paving the way for the UAE’s port operator to invest $442 million to rebuild the Port of Berbera and manage it through a 30-year concession. Recently, both countries agreed to give 19 per cent stake in the project to Ethiopia.

The president said the present agreement is nothing new. “It is an extension of the agreement entered into between the Republic of Somaliland and DP World and approved by the parliament.”

Abdi said since Somaliland’s union with Somalia did not work, his country decided to stay out of the union in May 1991. “Since then, Somaliland has succeeded in building a democratic, stable state where people elect their president and parliament in free and fair elections. It has the constituti­onal right and the capacity to enter into treaties and agreements with other nations and internatio­nal companies which it does. Somalia has no jurisdicti­on over Somaliland, which is a sovereign state,” said Abdi.

Minister of Foreign Affairs and Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Dr Saad Ali Shire said it was very unfortunat­e that Somalia’s parliament is trying to create a controvers­y over the issue despite all problems the country faces. They are trying to block a developmen­t which is needed by every country in the continent, including Somalia.”

On Thursday, DP World, which is also in a separate dispute over its operations at the Port of Djibouti, said it is committed to the Somaliland port agreement and is going ahead with the developmen­t as planned. DP World group chairman and CEO Sultan Ahmed bin Sulayem said the Dubai-based ports operator is concerned by the decision by the Somalia parliament.

Last week, the Somali Ministry of Ports and Marine Transport said Mogadishu was not a party to the agreement which it termed as defective. “This so-called agreement is both defective and detrimenta­l to the sovereignt­y of the Federal Republic of Somalia and the unity of the country,” the ministry said.

Somalia’s upper house of parliament on Thursday approved legislatio­n banning DP World from operating anywhere in the Horn of Africa country.

According to the original deal announced on March 1, Ethiopia will become a 19 per cent shareholde­r in the Port of Berbera, with DP World controllin­g 51 per cent stake in the project. Somaliland will hold the remaining 30 per cent. The government of landlocked Ethiopia will also invest in infrastruc­ture to develop the Berbera Corridor as a trade gateway to the port, according to the agreement. Mogadishu however is contesting the manner in which the deal was reached between. The Somalian Ministry of Ports and Marine Transport dismissed the agreement as “defective” in a statement in the first week of March, saying the Somalian government was not party to the agreement.

Developmen­t of the Berbera corridor is expected to address some of the region’s most pressing employment and investment issues. DP World plans to build an additional berth in line with the Berbera masterplan as part of its concession agreement, and earlier this month said it had signed the final agreement with the Government of Dubai to develop a 12sqkm greenfield economic free zone in Somaliland to complement growth of the port.

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 ?? Photo by Mohammad Mustafa Khan ?? Somaliland President Muse Behi Abdi and Foreign Affairs and Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Minister Dr Saad Ali Shire at a Press conference in Dubai on Friday. —
Photo by Mohammad Mustafa Khan Somaliland President Muse Behi Abdi and Foreign Affairs and Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Minister Dr Saad Ali Shire at a Press conference in Dubai on Friday. —

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