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ISSUE 90
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Somaliland Tries To Get Some Respect
Since breaking away from Somalia 12 years ago, the tiny country has become
one of the region's only true democracies, though few outside know or care
DPA, HARGEISA
Hargeisa, Oct 06, 2003 (Taipei Times) – From the air the landscape looks as
though it is dotted with outsized footballs, but once on the ground it
becomes clear that these are human dwellings.
They are built using a technique that has also been adopted by Western
outdoor equipment manufacturers in making their igloo tents.
Flexible rods form a semi-spherical skeletal structure that is then
covered with old bits of clothing, plastic sheeting and old sacks.
In Somaliland, the breakaway republic in the north of Somalia, these
patchwork huts stand right next door to the concrete houses of the better
off and the white-washed buildings put up by the international aid
organizations.
Somaliland is poor but proud. Twelve years ago the former British colony
declared itself independent from Somalia, although no one has yet recognized
it as an independent country.
Undeterred by their lack of success on the international stage, the
inhabitants of Somaliland hoist their own national flag, use their own
registration numbers on their vehicles and print their own money.
The currency's value is so degraded that exchanging a US$10 note leaves the
visitor with more cash than can comfortably fit into a normal wallet.
Moneychangers in the nominal capital of Hargeisa sit surrounded by knee-high
piles of bank notes, which provide a handy footrest when they take their
midday siesta.
"This is a peaceful and stable country. You can travel around without being
stopped by armed militias," says Jesper Morch, the representative of the UN
children's organization UNICEF in Somalia. He believes it is time that the
international community acknowledges the political achievements of the small
republic.
And the International Crisis Group, a group of independent political
experts, is even more explicit in the way it sees the situation.
"International recognition would establish Somaliland as one of the few
truly democratic states in the region," they say in a report.
In April Somaliland conducted a tense presidential election, in which
President Dahir Rayala Kahin was confirmed in office against all
expectations with a majority of just 80 votes.
Foreign Minister Edna Adan, a former midwife and the founder of a women's
clinic in Hargeisa, has acquired the status of a resolute mother figure in
this small country with an estimated population of some 3.5 million.
She represents Somaliland on the international stage with a mixture of charm
and determination to see it granted recognition as a full member of the
family of nations.
Somaliland cannot survive without international aid. Income from the trade
in livestock has declined dramatically after the outbreak of disease in the
national herd.
And a large part of the national income is consumed in the form of khat, a
leaf imported from Kenya and Ethiopia that the residents chew. The habit,
which provides the consumer with a mild high after hours of chewing, can
cost up to five dollars a day.
Only 17 percent of the children of school-going age actually attend school,
and more than 90 percent of the women are believed to undergo a form of
circumcision in childhood that is often so radical that they suffer severe
health problems in later life, especially when they give birth.
"There is simply no family planning here," says Dahir Mohammed Yusuf, the
deputy director of the Edna Adan Clinic in Hargeisa.
Despite all the country's problems, however, life is better here for
ordinary people than in the rest of Somalia. Somalia is rated the fifth
poorest country in the world, and for the past 12 years it has had no
effective central government.
During the civil war, many of the country's educated elite simply left, and
in the capital Mogadishu the warring clans continue to battle for turf and
abduct anyone they believe can provide ransom money.
A UN security official, returning after a two-year tour of duty in
Mogadishu, said recently: "In this place, all hope is in vain."
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