A uniquely successful African state

One of my main points is that the state of Somalia doesn’t exist thus has been completely to unable to give it’s blessing to Somaliland. This contrasts to your Hoboken, NJ example where there is still a central government who has the final say in succession.

So I repeat: Why should Somalilanders wait another 20 years for the vague chance that Somalia can cobble up an semi-effective government to grant it succession? This doesn’t seem likely nor realistic.

Drop the ego pal, you are neither the sole nor the first serious responder to this thread…which makes me wonder why am I responding to your silly trolling? :smack:

Didn’t Bashir give the South his blessing to choose independence in the upcoming referendum? I asked a few Sudanese colleges of mine (from both north and south) and I have yet to find **anybody **who doesn’t believe that the country will spilt. It just seems enviable. What I personally fear is that the South will either fall into a SPLA military dictatorship after gaining independence (like Eritrea did with the EPLF/PFDJ) or split among the many divided southern ethnic nationalities (Dinka/Nuer/etc).

It’s not the fear that the South will split, it’s whether the North will let it happen peacefully. That’s the reason the South Sudanese are currently tooling up just as fast as they can - and why the Kenyans are helping them. And I wouldn’t trust Bashir if he told me the sky was blue. I mean, this is a man with a warrant on his head for war crimes…

Last year I spoke with a political leader from Somaliland and I have several friends from Somalia so I actually happen to know about it, but I wasn’t aware until I read this thread that there had been a new election (the third? fourth?).

Inspired by this thread I wrote an article about the situation in my blog. Then I was further inspired by talking to a somalian who had read my article. So now I’ve e-mailed a party colleague in the EU parliament, as well as my party’s expert on foreign relations in the national parliament, and asked them for feedback and to pursue the issue. Tomorrow I will look into the possibility of the municipal government establishing connection via a “friendship city”. Thank you SDMB :slight_smile:

Hey Hallucinex, I just finished that paper you recommended and it was great. Full of facts and straight to the point; that sure beats my normal source of information about Somalia (listening to K’naan)

I’ll share another interesting paper I found, it’s by former U.S. ambassador to Ethiopia (1996-99) and to Burkina Faso (1987-90) David H. Shinn. It’s called: Somaliland: The Little Country that Could and was penned in November 2002

Oh and here is a link to the website of the Somaliland government. The front page has an interesting news title: “SOMALILAND PRESIDENT CONGRATULATES THE INCOMING PRESIDENT ELECT”

Somaliland also has a historic status as an entity distinct from the whole of Somalia, which has been alluded to throughout this thread – it is a descendant of British Somaliland, which, like Tanganyika and Zanzibar, joined with a neighbouring colony, briefly becoming part of Somalia. They later separated; I’m not sure how this is different from the separation of Ethiopia and Eritrea.

Ladies and gentlemen, JayJay & the Sunshine Band!

You know, I’d feel bad about adding to the frivolity without actually particip[ating in the thread. OP, you clearly can offer more than me just looking this up on wiki. So, what’s the deal with Somaliland? How is it different from Somalia? Edify us.

Yo; wikipedia seems like a very good source of info for Somaliland a the region as a whole. However if you are to understand the modern state of Somaliland I’d recommend you start with the “protectorate” of British Somaliland then read a bit about how Said Barre ordered the boming of Hargeisa in the late 80’s, to Somaliland’s declaration of independence in 1991.

If you want to understand the central cause of their independence streak I would say that it has a lot to do with the fact that

  1. Somaliland was ruled by a different European power (the UK).
  2. They are geographically removed from the most unstable part of Somalia (Northwest).
  3. The majority of Somalilanders belong to different clans (Dir and Ishaak) then then Puntlanders (Darod) or the Somalians from the unstable South (Hawiye, Rahanweyn, etc).

In fact the border dispute between Somaliland and Puntland can attributed to the fact that the traditional borders of Somaliland includes land which have Darod-Somalis (the Puntland majority clan) who are not happy to belong to Somaliland (which is Dir and Ishaak dominated).

Confusing, eh? It’s like Afghanistan. As the secular state of Somalia broke down people reverted back to the ancient clan hierarchies. Here’s a goodmap of the various Somali clans in the horn. And another good general link.

On the other hand we are getting some amusement at Djibouti’s expense. I agree that attempt at cuteness in the OP just brought out the “I don’t give a fuck” in all of us.

Why do we have sanctions against Somaliland and is there anything we can do to make Djibouti a more tourist friendly destination? I’m kinda aching to say, I spent the summer in Djibouti.

We don’t have sanctions against any nation named “Somaliland”. We simply don’t recognize the country.