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Somaliland votes on independence
BBC 31/5/01
A woman wrapped in the Somaliland flag celebrates outside a polling station
Somaliland is not officially recognised
The people of the self-declared republic of Somaliland are voting in a referendum on independence.

The tiny African region broke away from the rest of Somalia 10 years ago, but its secession has never been internationally recognised.

The vote is controversial both inside and outside Somaliland.

But Somaliland's leader, President Mohamed Ibrahim Egal, is determined that what he terms a successful new state is allowed to disassociate itself from war-torn Somalia.

Hurdles

The referendum will determine whether independence is supported by the majority of people in Somaliland, but it remains to be seen whether the result will be endorsed by the international community.

Voters were queuing up when the 600 polling stations opened at 0600 local time (0300 GMT), the news agency AFP said.

The vice-chairman of the national constitutional commission said he was hoping for a turnout of 60%.

But the vote is not straight forward:

 
bulletThere is no census, so community elders are deciding who should vote
bulletIn two areas local people are divided over whether they should belong to Somaliland or the neighbouring administrative region of Puntland
bulletSome in Somaliland do not want to break from Somalia at all

Somalia's new transitional government is staunchly opposed to the referendum. Its acting prime minister, Osman Jama Ali, described it on Wednesday as "a ploy to divide Somalia by the help of unfriendly foreign countries and opportunist individuals".
A money changer with the Somaliland currency
Somaliland even has its own money

The Organisation of African Unity (OAU) and the United Nations also refuse to lend their support, declaring that they fully support Somalia's new administration, even though its control barely extends beyond a few areas of the capital Mogadishu.

Stability

But the BBC Africa Analyst says that Somaliland has achieved a level of stability not seen in the rest of Somalia.

While Mogadishu is terrorised by competing armed factions, Somaliland's capital Hargeisa is one of the safest cities on the continent.

The international community's reluctance to endorse Somaliland's independence is based on the principle - enshrined in the OAU charter - of the inviolability of colonial borders.

Unofficially, "everybody is afraid of a proliferation of mini-states" which would be unsustainable and could lead to endless border disputes, said one Somalia expert quoted by AFP.

Historically distinct

Somaliland has been officially independent before - for four days in 1960, between the end of British colonial rule and integration with the rest of Somalia which had been under Italian administration.

A Muslim woman in Hargeisa market
The majority of its population is Muslim
When the country descended into civil war after the collapse of Mohamed Siad Barre's dictatorship in 1991, Somaliland declared independence.

To the rest of the world, Somaliland remains an invisible state.

In London on Thursday a crowd of supporters demonstrated near the British prime minister's official residence, calling on Somaliland's former colonial power to be the first to recognise the state's independence.

 

SOMALILAND DEMOCRACY WATCH ORGANISTION - NEWS PAGE