Britain urges restraint over Ethiopia-Somaliland deal

Grain from US Aid is unloaded from a ship and bagged at Berbera Port in Somaliland on August 31, 2021. (AFP)
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Updated 06 January 2024
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Britain urges restraint over Ethiopia-Somaliland deal

  • Somaliland — whose 1991 claim of independence from Somalia is not recognized — signed the deal with Ethiopia in Addis Ababa on Monday
  • Somalia livid as surprise deal gives landlocked Ethiopia long-desired access to Red Sea

NAIROBI: Britain has called for restraint over the escalating tensions in the Horn of Africa over an agreement between Ethiopia and the separatist region of Somaliland, a former British protectorate.

Somalia has vowed to defend its territory by “all legal means” after the surprise deal, which gives landlocked Ethiopia long-desired access to the Red Sea, one of the world’s busiest shipping routes.
Somaliland — whose 1991 claim of independence from Somalia is not recognized internationally — signed the memorandum of understanding with Ethiopia in Addis Ababa on Monday.
“The UK is concerned by escalating tensions in the Horn of Africa,” the British Embassy in Somalia said on X. “We reaffirm our full respect for the sovereignty and territorial integrity of the Federal Republic of Somalia,” it added.
“We urge restraint and dialogue to peacefully resolve issues.”
Somalia has branded the deal an “aggression” by neighboring Ethiopia and a violation of its sovereignty and appealed to the UN and the African Union for urgent meetings.
Somaliland’s leadership has said Ethiopia would “formally recognize the Republic of Somaliland” under the deal, but this has not been confirmed by the government in Addis Ababa.
Among international players, the United States, African Union, European Union and the Arab League have called for Somalia’s sovereignty to be respected.
But since the accord was signed, several British politicians have used the accord to press for the UK to recognize Somaliland.
“For far too long the UK has not done enough. Now we need to show leadership and ensure Somaliland is recognized by the UK,” former defense minister Gavin Williamson said on X on Tuesday.
He called on British leaders “to lead in creating a global framework for recognition which is an extremely important, strategic step.”
Somaliland, a territory of about 4.5 million people with a long coastline on the Gulf of Aden, has been on a quest for formal statehood for more than three decades but it remains unrecognized globally, leaving it poor and isolated.
Mogadishu staunchly opposes its independence claim but in reality it exercises little authority over the affairs of the region, which has its own government, security forces and currency.
The memorandum of understanding gives Ethiopia access to commercial maritime services and a military base, with Somaliland leasing it 20 km  of coastline for 50 years. Ethiopia, the second most populous country in Africa and one of the biggest landlocked nations in the world, was cut off from the coast after Eritrea seceded and declared independence in 1993 following a three-decade war.
Addis Ababa had maintained access to a port in Eritrea until the two countries went to war in 1998-2000, and since then Ethiopia funnels most of its trade through Djibouti.

 


Cambodia demands Thailand withdraw troops, week into border truce

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Cambodia demands Thailand withdraw troops, week into border truce

PHNOM PENH: Cambodia called on neighboring Thailand on Saturday to pull out its forces from areas Phnom Penh claims as its own, one week since a truce halted deadly clashes along their disputed border.
The decades-old dispute between the Southeast Asian neighbors erupted into military clashes several times last year, with fighting in December killing dozens of people and displacing around one million on both sides.
The two countries agreed a truce on December 27, ending three weeks of clashes.
Cambodia says that during that period, Thailand seized several areas across four border provinces.
In a statement on Saturday, Phnom Penh’s foreign ministry demanded the withdrawal of “all Thai military personnel and equipment from the territory of the Kingdom of Cambodia to positions fully consistent with the legally established boundary.”
The Thai army has rejected claims it had used force to seize Cambodia territory, insisting its forces were present in areas that had always belonged to Thailand.
The Cambodian foreign ministry also called on Thailand to immediately end “all hostile military activities” along the frontier and “within Cambodian territory.”
The two nations’ border conflict stems from a dispute over the colonial-era demarcation of their 800-kilometer (500-mile) border, where both sides claim territory and centuries-old temple ruins.
On Friday, Cambodia’s Information Minister Neth Pheaktra accused Thailand of launching the “illegal annexation” of the border village of Chouk Chey.
The Thai army disputed Phnom Penh’s narrative, and Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul said his country “has never breached another country’s sovereignty and has acted in line with international regulations.”
Anutin was speaking on Friday while visiting troops deployed to the border province of Surin.