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NYTimes.com: Somalia Severs Diplomatic Ties With Kenya

Posted by: Berhane Habtemariam

Date: Tuesday, 15 December 2020

Somalia accused its East African neighbor of meddling in its internal affairs, weeks before a crucial general election.

 
Kenyan soldiers at their base in Tabda, inside Somalia, near the border with Kenya. As part of the African Union peacekeeping forces in Somalia, Kenya has more than 3,600 troops stationed in the country.
Kenyan soldiers at their base in Tabda, inside Somalia, near the border with Kenya. As part of the African Union peacekeeping forces in Somalia, Kenya has more than 3,600 troops stationed in the country.Credit...Ben Curtis/Associated Press

NAIROBI, Kenya — Somalia severed diplomatic ties with Kenya on Tuesday, accusing the neighboring East African nation of meddling in its internal political affairs weeks before a crucial general election.

The minister of information said Somalia was breaking off relations because Kenya had violated his country’s sovereignty. In an announcement broadcast on state television, the minister, Osman Dubbe, said Somalia would recall all its diplomats from Kenya and gave Kenyan diplomats seven days to leave the country.

“The federal government of Somalia reached this decision as an answer to the political violations and the Kenyan government’s continuous blatant interference recently in our country’s sovereignty,” Mr. Dubbe said. “The current leadership of the Kenyan government is working on dividing the two nations, who share common interests.”

The move to cut diplomatic ties injects an additional note of instability into the region, after the United States recently announced plans to withdraw its troops from Somalia — a move that Somali and other Western officials fear will motivate the Shabab militant group to escalate its offensive across Somalia and the Horn of Africa.

The rift with Kenya is the culmination of years of steadily deteriorating relations. It came a day after Kenya’s president hosted the president of Somaliland, the northwestern region that declared independence from Somalia in 1991.

While not internationally recognized, Somaliland has largely avoided the same violence that is tearing at the rest of Somalia and has set up its own military, political administration, and monetary system. On Tuesday, the two leaders agreed that Kenya would open a consulate in Somaliland’s capital, Hargeisa, by the end of March, with Kenya Airways and other Kenyan carriers commencing direct flights between Hargeisa and Nairobi.

Somalia also accused Kenya of meddling in the election campaign before a parliamentary vote scheduled for later this month as it struggles to transition to a more stable political system with smooth transfers of power.

Kenya’s government on Tuesday said that it would set up a committee to appraise and help address the standoff with Somalia.

Somalis were already facing myriad threats — floods, desert locusts and the coronavirus pandemic — and on Tuesday, opposition groups and their supporters clashed with the police in the Somali capital, Mogadishu, as they began protests aimed at pushing the government for a fair vote.

Adding to the uncertainty in the country, the United States announced just over a week ago that it would withdraw its troops from Somalia, raising concerns that the security gains achieved over the past decade against the Shabab, a terrorist group linked to Al Qaeda, could be undermined and the militants could try to claim it as a victory.

 
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Kenya and Somalia share a 430-mile border and have both been dogged by violence meted out by the Shabab. They have been engaged for years in a maritime dispute that is currently being adjudicated at the International Court of Justice at The Hague.

The latest escalation of tensions began in late November, when the Somali Ministry of Foreign Affairs accused Nairobi of meddling in the upcoming elections, recalled its ambassador to Kenya and mandated that Kenyan passport holders apply for visas in advance instead of getting them on arrival.

Somalia at the time said that Kenya was exerting pressure on the leader of the Jubaland state in southern Somalia after he threatened to boycott the parliamentary elections.

Rivals to President Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed of Somalia have accused him of trying to cling to power.

Rivals to President Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed of Somalia have accused him of trying to cling to power.Credit...Brittainy Newman/The New York Times

As part of the African Union peacekeeping forces in Somalia, Kenya has more than 3,600 troops stationed in the country. A majority of those are based in the Jubaland region, which borders Kenya, and in 2012, Kenya helped wrest the capital of Jubaland, Kismayo, from the Shabab.

The election campaign in Somalia has heated up in recent weeks as presidential candidates accused President Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed, who took office in 2017, of trying to cling to power by using the intelligence services to control the electoral process.

Rather that employing a one-person, one-ballot electoral system, clan leaders select delegates who choose lawmakers who, in turn, elect a president.

With electoral preparations lagging, a standoff has ensued between regional states and the national government. Experts say these tensions could give the Shabab and other militant groups an opening to capitalize on those divisions and disrupt the entire process.

Hussein Sheikh-Ali, a former national security adviser to Mr. Abdullahi and chairman of the Mogadishu-based Hiraal Institute research group, said the rift with Kenya allowed the president to provide a distraction from the troubled electoral process.

While the president was “deliberately picking this diplomatic row with Kenya for electioneering purposes, it will definitely have far-reaching consequences on both regional stability and counterterrorism efforts,” he said.

Adding to Somalia’s woes, more than 5 million people in the country are in need of humanitarian assistance, according to the United Nations, with flash floods displacing tens of thousands and desert locusts threatening crops.

Murithi Mutiga, the Horn of Africa project director for the research organization International Crisis Group, said Tuesday that the neighboring nations should be cooperating to tackle shared challenges, particularly on the security front. The Shabab is still attacking civilians and military targets and is making millions of dollars annually by extorting local businesses.

“Both sides appear unable to give diplomacy a chance and are instead locked in an escalatory cycle that serves neither party well,” he said.


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