The National - News

Somaliland and Ethiopia sign agreement amid regional dispute

- THE NATIONAL

Somaliland and Ethiopia have signed an agreement that could give Ethiopia access to the sea, sparking fury in Somalia, which summoned its ambassador to Ethiopia yesterday.

The deal could lead Somaliland to lease a 20km stretch of its coastline to the landlocked country of 120 million. Somalia does not recognise the breakaway region, which seceded amid a civil war in 1991.

The agreement would allow Ethiopia to set up commercial operations at a leased military base in Berbera.

It also commits Ethiopia to recognise Somaliland’s independen­ce in due course.

Somalia’s government yesterday called an emergency meeting to discuss the decision, reassertin­g its territoria­l claim over Somaliland.

The cabinet later called the Ethiopia-Somaliland deal “null and void” and said it “endangered stability and peace in the region”.

President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud’s government said Somaliland, which has a population of about four million, has no authority to strike deals with foreign government­s.

Somaliland President Muse Bihi Abdi said the agreement included a statement that Ethiopia would recognise Somaliland as an independen­t country shortly, although the deal itself represents de facto recognitio­n.

“Somalia is indivisibl­e. Its sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity is uncompromi­sable,” said Somalia’s Minister of Petroleum and Mineral Resources, Abdirizak Omar Mohamed.

The cabinet called the deal “a violation and an open interferen­ce with Somalia’s sovereignt­y, freedom and unity”.

“The so-called memorandum of understand­ing and agreement of co-operation is null and void,” it said.

A Somalian statement on social media said Ethiopia “knows well that it can’t sign a military pact/MOU to lease a port with the regional head of state – that mandate is the prerogativ­e of Somalia”.

Ethiopia lost its access to the sea when Eritrea seceded in 1993. Ethiopia has been using the port in neighbouri­ng Djibouti for most of its imports and exports.

In October, Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed said his country’s existence was “tied to the Red Sea”.

“If we [countries in the Horn of Africa] plan to live together in peace, we have to find a way to share with each other in a balanced manner,” he added,

Somaliland, a former Italian colony, developed a distinct government during the colonial period until it was taken over by Britain during the Second World War.

After the war, it became a UN trust territory, governed by an interim UN council, until Somalia’s independen­ce in 1960.

 ?? AFP ?? Hassan Sheikh Mohamud, right, has said Somaliland has no right to strike deals with foreign government­s
AFP Hassan Sheikh Mohamud, right, has said Somaliland has no right to strike deals with foreign government­s

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