The National - News

UAE role is crucial, says Somali regional leader

- CHARLIE MITCHELL

The UAE’s engagement with Puntland is crucial to developmen­t and security in the impoverish­ed Somali state, its president said.

Abdiweli Mohamed Ali said the Bosaso port being developed by P&O Ports, owned by Dubai, would be the cornerston­e of the state’s economic future, despite the diplomatic crisis between Abu Dhabi and Somalia’s central government in Mogadishu.

The country as a whole needs the expertise and investment of the UAE and others to heave itself out of poverty, Mr Ali told The National in an exclusive interview.

“We have the longest coast in Africa, we have minerals, we have oil,” said Mr Ali, who was Somalia’s prime minister between 2011 and 2012. “We are a poor people sitting on a gold mine.”

The Puntland president, who is on a four-day official visit to the Emirates to soothe fears that the diplomatic dispute could affect vital investment­s in the autonomous region, confirmed that the UAE would continue to fund anti-piracy and anti-terrorism operations there.

He said the US$336 million (Dh1.23 billion) port at Bosaso, on the Gulf of Aden, was the answer to his state’s economic and security malaise.

The project will not only pull Puntland’s disaffecte­d youth out of poverty and unemployme­nt, but also help to tackle extremism and human traffickin­g, he said.

“Why are our youth joining Al Shabab, why are they joining ISIS, why do they go into piracy? Because they have no hope,” Mr Ali said. “That is why the support of the UAE is so important.”

When asked about reported displeasur­e stirred in Mogadishu by the project, he said: “We need developmen­t and no sane individual or leader will object to that.”

Since last year, Somalia’s proximity to the Gulf and internal fragility have sucked it into the ongoing Qatar dispute, which began 10 months

ago when the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and Egypt severed ties with Doha.

Starved of investment and plagued by violence and extremism since the country’s collapse in 1991, Somalia’s states have relied heavily on internatio­nal players, among them Gulf countries, throwing into question the central government’s promise to remain neutral in the Qatar crisis.

The UAE and Turkey – an ally of Doha – are among the largest investors in the Horn of Africa country. And while Turkey is most active in the capital, where it operates a port and a military base, the UAE has pursued investment primarily in Puntland and the breakaway region of Somaliland, where it is building a military base across the water from Yemen.

The involvemen­t of powers has driven a wedge between Somalia’s states and the enfeebled central government.

“That is the only way we can develop because we don’t have a strong government that can offer any public investment,” Mr Ali said. “Mogadishu is not Somalia, and Somalia is not Mogadishu.”

After months of deteriorat­ing relations, Somali armed forces stormed a UAE plane this month, seizing $9.6m (Dh35m) destined for the Puntland Marine Police Force, financed by the Emirates since 2014.

The incident prompted the UAE to end its military training programme in Somalia and suspend operations at Sheikh Zayed hospital in the capital.

On Monday, six Somali soldiers died and 10 were injured when clashes broke out at a former UAE training base in Mogadishu, after units from the Somali National Army reportedly tried to salvage hardware.

Mr Ali hinted that any attempt by Mogadishu to derail the Bosaso deal, and others like it, would fall on deaf ears.

“Bringing investment is my duty, it is my responsibi­lity,” he said.

 ?? Satish Kumar for The National ?? Abdiweli Mohamed Ali says the economic wellbeing of Puntland is his responsibi­lity
Satish Kumar for The National Abdiweli Mohamed Ali says the economic wellbeing of Puntland is his responsibi­lity

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