For too long, social media chatter has twisted the truth into confusion, leading some to believe that Somaliland is a separate country. Let’s clear this. Somalia is one nation, one land, one people bound by history stretching back more than 4,000 years. Before colonial lines were drawn, Somalis lived freely within their clan territories—each group respecting the borders of others. Until now, that legacy was still alive, never seeking to split their homeland apart.  

Somaliland is not a country; it’s the northwestern region of Somalia, home primarily to the Isaaq clan, alongside other Somali communities who do not support secession. No international body recognizes it as an independent state, nor does the Somali constitution. The idea of separation was planted during colonial times and fueled by political elites seeking control, not unity. The world tried to divide Somalis before—Ethiopia took a part, Kenya another—but even then, the Somali spirit refused to be broken.  

And here’s the warning: don’t let reckless tweets or Facebook posts ignite old wounds. Don’t push clans who live in peace today to shed each other’s blood again. The internet made the world one village—so use it to build, not destroy. Speak truth, not division. Somalia’s unity is fragile but sacred; protect it with your words as much as your heart.

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