Somaliland, an unrecognised state, is winning friends abroad
But storing up problems at home
ON JULY IST 1960, five days after it cut its colonial ties, the former British Somaliland merged with the one-time Italian Somaliland to form a united Somalia. It was a bad move. The dictatorship of Siad Barre, who took office in 1969, marginalised and massacred Somalilanders. On May 18th 1991, five months after his fall, what was by then simply Somaliland declared independence. It was a statement of intent—and regret. Exiles returned home to rebuild their nation. “Hargeisa had been destroyed to rubble,” recalls Suad Ibrahim Abdi, a campaigner for women’s rights. “There were no buildings, no water.”
This article appeared in the Middle East & Africa section of the print edition under the headline “Out of the rubble, 30 years on”
Middle East & Africa May 8th 2021
- Somaliland, an unrecognised state, is winning friends abroad
- Donors make it harder for Africans to avoid deadly wood smoke
- Covid-19 has exposed Africa’s dependence on vaccines from abroad
- Houthi rebels look to take Marib, prolonging Yemen’s war
- Foreign workers in Qatar get some basic rights
- How Arab autocrats pick their opponents
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