Between Statehood and Somalia: Reflections of Somaliland Statehood
Washington University Global Studies Law Review
Volume 10 | Issue 4
2011
Between Statehood and Somalia: Reflections of
Somaliland Statehood
Dimitrios Lalos
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Recommended Citation
Dimitrios Lalos, Between Statehood and Somalia: Reflections of Somaliland Statehood, 10 Wash. U. Global Stud. L. Rev. 789 (2011),
https://openscholarship.wustl.edu/law_globalstudies/vol10/iss4/5
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BETWEEN STATEHOOD AND SOMALIA:
REFLECTIONS OF SOMALILAND STATEHOOD
I. INTRODUCTION
Since the early 1990s, Somalia has lacked the basic characteristics of a
state as recognized by the international community.1 At independence,
Somalia—officially the Somali Republic after the union of former British
Somaliland in the North and former Italian Somaliland in the South2—was
regarded as one of the least likely African countries to fall into the
category of a ―failed state.‖3 The majority of Somalians are ethnically
Somali; they share a similar adherence to Sunni Islam and nomadic
pastoralism.4 Below these surface similarities, however, a deep division in
history exists between the northern Somaliland and the southern region.5
This division between the North and South has not only created tension in
government, it has also led to civil war.6
Out of the ashes of the North-South violence, Somaliland emerged as a
de facto state.7 Saddled with early political and economic challenges,
Somaliland ―has [since instituted] its own democratic government, police
force, army, financial system, and currency.‖8 During the same period,
Somalia has effectively ceased to exist.
1. See infra notes 73–90, 133–45 and accompanying text.
2. See infra notes 8–25 and accompanying text.
3. Ian S. Spears, Reflections on Somaliland & Africa’s Territorial Order, 30 REV. OF AFR. POL.
ECON. 89, 92 (2003). ―In superficial terms, given that its commonalities in language, ethnic identity
and religion make it unique among developing states, Somalia might once have been regarded as one
of the least likely African countries to experience state breakup.‖ Id.
A ―failed‖ state is characterized by a ―government [that] is unable to discharge its basic
governmental functions with respect to its populace and territory.‖ MICHAEL SCHOISWOHL, STATUS
AND (HUMAN RIGHTS) OBLIGATIONS OF NON-RECOGNIZED DE FACTO REGIMES IN INTERNATIONAL
LAW: THE CASE OF ‗SOMALILAND‘ 26–27 (2004). Five basic governmental functions exist: (1) to
exercise sovereign control over territory; (2) to have sovereign oversight and supervision of the
nation‘s resources; (3) to exercise the effective and rational collection of revenue; (4) to maintain
adequate national infrastructure, such as roads and telephone systems; and (5) to have the capacity to
govern and to maintain law and order. Ali A. Mazrui, The African State as a Political Refugee:
Institutional Collapse and Human Displacement, in AFRICAN CONFLICT RESOLUTION: THE U.S. ROLE
IN PEACEMAKING 9, 11 (David R. Smock & Chester A. Crocker eds., 1995).
4. MARK BRADBURY, AFRICAN ISSUES: BECOMING SOMALILAND 9 (2008). Many countries are
multi-ethnic. In fact, ninety percent of the world‘s countries have two or more ethnic groups. MILTON
J. ESMAN, ETHNIC POLITICS 2 (1994).
5. BRADBURY, supra note 4, at 9.
6. See infra notes 32–41 and accompanying text.
7. Brad Poore, Somaliland: Shackled to a Failed State, 30 STAN. J. INT‘L L. 117, 117 (2007).
8. Id.
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This Note recognizes that under international law, Somaliland is
subject to the rule of law of the parent state, a rule firmly established by
the Supreme Court of Canada in Reference re Secession of Quebec.9 The
Supreme Court of Canada, however, also developed remedial secession
theory as a mechanism to enable a minority region to negotiate secession
with the parent state.10
By using remedial secession theory as a baseline, this Note argues that
a minority region that lacks internal self-determination and the right to
negotiate for secession but otherwise meets the requirements for statehood
should be permitted to declare independence. Part II of this Note
summarizes the competing historical, economic, and political traditions of
the Republic of Somaliland and the Somali Republic. Part III offers an
overview of the competing theories of recognition under international law.
Part IV begins with an analysis of unilateral secession theory followed by
an analysis of remedial secession as a competing theory. Part V argues
that, absent internal self-determination and the right to negotiate for
secession, remedial secession theory offers an avenue to Somaliland
independence. Finally, Part VI discusses the potential ramifications of
non-recognition, specifically focusing on terrorism.
II. HISTORICAL SETTING
Beginning in the late nineteenth century, the British began colonizing
Somaliland.11 Because British interest was limited to coastal regions, its
civil administration was rather lenient.12 As a result, traditional societal
structures were kept autonomous from British rule.13 To fund its
administration, however, the British relied heavily on imperial treasuries,
resulting in the stagnation of the colony.14
9. Reference re Secession of Quebec, [1998] 2 S.C.R. 217, paras. 112–13 (Can.).
10. Id. at 86–88, 97–98.
11. SCHOISWOHL, supra note 3, at 111. The northern orientation and proximity of Somaliland to
the Gulf states has long distinguished it from Somalia. Spears, supra note 3, at 93. In 1839, the British
began to occupy the port of Aden in present-day Yemen. As a result, Somaliland became vital to the
protection of shipping routes and the maintenance of a steady meat supply. To secure these routes,
several treaties were executed between the British government and territorial leaders in Somaliland.
BRADBURY, supra note 4, at 25–26.
12. SCHOISWOHL, supra note 3, at 111. British indirect rule was intended to reinforce stable
governance while limiting resistance to colonialism. Id. at 28.
13. See id. at 111.
14. BRADBURY, supra note 4, at 30. ―[B]etween 1920 and 1940 the colony stagnated: a few roads
were cleared, some agricultural projects were started, a few schools were built and some students were
sent to Sudan for education . . . .‖ Id.
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BETWEEN STATEHOOD AND SOMALIA
791
During this period, the Italian government was busy establishing its
own ―sphere of influence‖ in southern Somalia.15 Unlike the British in
northern Somalia, however, the Italian government was fo (...truncated)