The Case for the Independent Statehood of Somaliland
American University International Law Review
Volume 8
Issue 2 Vol 8. #2/3 Winter/Spring 92/93
Article 26
1993
The Case for the Independent Statehood of
Somaliland
Anthony J. Carroll
B. Rajagopal
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Recommended Citation
Carroll, Anthony J., and B. Rajagopal,. "The Case for the Independent Statehood of Somaliland." American University International
Law Review 8 no. 2/3 (1993): 653-681.
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ARTICLE
THE CASE FOR THE INDEPENDENT
STATEHOOD OF SOMALILAND
Anthony J. Carroll'
B. Rajagopal'
INTRODUCTION
Violent political convulsions have gripped the Horn of Africa since
the end of 1990.' While the human drama unfolds, revealing its tragic
dimensions, the international community continues to linger in a haze of
apathy.2 Few countries have experienced as much carnage, destruction
and instability as Somalia.' The economic costs of the destruction are
* Partner, Dalley, Neill, Asservero, Carroll and Nealer; Chairman, Africa Law
Committee, American Bar Association.
** B.L., 1990, University of Madras, LL.M., 1991, Washington College of Law,
The American University, Visiting Researcher, 1992, Harvard Law School.
1. See CHANGING REALrIEs IN THE HORN OF AFRICA: IMPLICATIONS FOR AFRICA AND U.S. POLICY, REPORT FOR THE THIRTY-SECOND STRATEGY FOR PEACE U.S.
FOREIGN POLICY CONFERENCE 4 (The Stanley Foundation, Oct. 24, 1991) (recounting
the momentous events that have taken place in the Horn of Africa since 1990). In
January, 1991, Siad Barre's twenty-one year old regime was overthrown in Somalia,
which led to the declaration of independence by the northern half, the Republic of
Somaliland in May, 1991. Id In June, 1991, Mengistu Haile Mariam was overthrown
in Ethiopia after fourteen years, leading the way for the independence of Eritrea. L
In Sudan, there are signs of a secessionist upheaval by the Sudan People's Liberation
Army. /,
2. See Jane Perlez, Somalia Self-Destructs, and the World Looks On, N.Y.
TIMES, Dec. 29, 1991, at §4 p.4 [hereinafter Perlez] (asserting that no country has
done much to end the self-genocide in Somalia). The Under Secretary General of the
United Nations, James Jonah, admitted that the events in Yugoslavia, Eastern Europe
and the former Soviet Union diverted U.N. attention from Somalia. See Robert M.
Press, United Nations Takes Lead in Somalia Crisis, CMsTMN SCIENCE Morror,
Feb. 12, 1992, at 6 (explaining that U.N. involvement was limited in the escalating
Somali crisis). The U.N. Security Council passed a resolution on January 23, 1992,
calling for an arms embargo against Somalia, pursuant to Chapter VII of the UN
Charter. See idL (noting that Security Council Resolution 733 took decisive action to
alleviate the crisis in Somalia).
3. See IRVING KAPLAN ET AL., AREA HANDBOOK FOR SOMALIA viii (1969)
AM. U.J. INT'L L. & POL'Y
[VOL. 8:653
staggering," and the extent of human rights violations, appallings Ironically, this chaos was not supposed to happen.
The Somalis are a cluster of indigenous peoples6 who have inhabited
the Horn of Africa for well over a thousand years. During this milennia,
they have existed in a land devoid of peace and prosperity.7 European
colonial powers appeared in the nineteenth century, creating yet another
episode of the African scramble and placing new pressures upon the
Horn of Africa.! The experience of colonialism at the hands of Britain
and Italy, and the political flux that marked their departure, form the
core causes of Somalia's current turmoil.
The state of Somalia came into existence in 1960, resulting from a
merger between two independent states, the Northern Somaliland, a
British Protectorate, and the Southern Somalia, an Italian Trust territory.9 In 1969, after a few years of civilian rule, the military, led by General Mohammed Siad Barre, overthrew the government in a bloodless
coup." General Barre ruled for the next two decades, with the alleged
support of the Soviet Union." This regime, marked by internal repres(reporting that virtually all Somalia nationals are ethnic Somali). Somalia was once
hailed as the prototypical African nation-state due to its purported ethnic homogeneity.
kd; DAVID D. LAITIN AND SAID S. SAMATAR, SOMALIA: NATION IN SEARCH OF A
STATE (1987)[hereinafter LArfIN].
4. See ECONOMIC INTELLIGENCE UNIT, COUNTRY PROFILE 1991-92: SOMALIA 36
(reporting that the United Nations Development Program's Human Development Report, 1991, ranks Somalia 149th of 160 countries in terms of its human development
index). Somalia's foreign debt stood at US$ 2850 million in 1989. JOHN DRYSDALE,
SOMALILAND: THE ANATOMY OF SECESSION 16 (1991) [hereinafter DRYSDALE, ANATOMY OF SECESSION].
5. See UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF STATE DISPATCH, 1990 Human Rights
Report: Somalia (Feb. 1, 1991) (describing the human rights atrocities in Somalia);
AFRICA WATCH, SOMALIA: A GOVERNMENT AT WAR WITH ITS OWN PEOPLE 126-131
(1990) (detailing the extent of human rights violations in Somalia).
6. See KAPLAN, supra note 3, at 29-53 (recalling the nomadic and pastoral society existing in Somalia before European colonization).
7. See KAPLAN, supra note 3, at 1-53 (1969) (reviewing the history of Somalia).
8. See FOREIGN AREA STUDIES, The American University, SOMALIA: A COUNTRY STUDY 1-61 (Harold D. Nelson ed., 1982) [hereinafter FOREIGN AREA STUDIES]
(describing Somalia's early history and its experiences under colonialism).
9. See KAPLAN, supra note 3, at 212-13 (recounting the formation of the state
of Somalia). Confusion may exist regarding nomenclature of Horn of Africa nations.
The Somaliland which declared its independence in 1991 has boundaries coterminous
with the colony of British Somaliland. Southern Somalia is the area once occupied by
Italy. Somalia is the name of the unified British Somaliland and Southern Somalia.
10. FOREIGN AREA STUDIES, supra note 8, at 46.
11. Somalia - A Poor Land of Pastoralists, Reuters, Jan. 28, 1991, available in
1993]
INDEPENDENT SOMALILAND
655
sion and external aggression, ended when the combined might of several
liberation movements, including Somali National Movement (SNM), the
Somali Salvation, Democratic Front, Somali Patriotic Movement, and the
United Somali Congress, deposed General Barre in 1991.2 Instead of
salvation however, the overthrow of General Barre's regime only worsened the situation and resulted in a Hobbesian nightmare of internal
fighting.13 While the war raged in and around Mogadishu, the capital of
modem day Somalia, the northern part of Somalia remained stable."
Taking advant (...truncated)