For more than 30 years, the topic of “Somaliland independence” has repeatedly resurfaced in Somali politics. Supporters argue it’s a done deal. Opponents say it’s impossible. But most ordinary people are stuck in the middle, wondering what the truth really is.
When you strip away the emotions, slogans, and political noise, one thing becomes very clear:
Somaliland cannot become an internationally recognized independent state—not legally, not historically, and not on the ground today.
Here’s why, in plain language.
1. Somalia Is an Old Nation—Not a European Invention
Many African countries were created by Europeans. Somalia wasn’t.
Somalis lived on this land for thousands of years, sharing the same language, culture, religion, and clan structure. Long before colonial borders, Somalis built powerful states, including:
- The Warsangeli Sultanate
- The Ajuuraan Empire
- The Imamate of Somalia
Gaaladi Empire and many more.
Majeertania empire
Some lasted hundreds of years. All were built by Somali families and clans — not by European governments.
So when the British and Italians left, Somalis didn’t “form” a new identity.
We simply reunited a nation that already existed.
Because of this deep shared identity, no single clan can break off and claim a new country on its own—especially not on land belonging to many communities.
2. Africa Will Not Allow Redrawing Borders — It Would Cause Endless Wars
Here’s the part most people don’t know:
No African country is allowed to change colonial borders.
This is the rule that keeps Africa from falling apart.
If one region is allowed to break away because of clan or tribal identity:
- dozens of other African communities will demand the same.
- Countries will split again,
- and tribal wars will explode across the continent.
The African Union knows this.
That’s why not a single African country has supported Somaliland’s bid for recognition—not Ethiopia, not Kenya, not Djibouti, not South Africa.
If Somaliland were recognized, Africa would face a disaster.
So the AU will never open that door.
3. The Regions Somaliland Claims Are Not Unified — Many Communities Reject Secession
This is the biggest issue.
You cannot form a country if major parts of the territory don’t want to join you.
Inside the lands Somaliland claims, whole communities reject independence, including:
- Dhulbahante
- Warsangali
- Gadabuursi/And Isse
Their message has always been the same:
“We are Somali citizens, not part of a breakaway state.”
The 2023–2024 Laascaanood war proved this beyond debate:
- Somaliland’s army was expelled.
- The local clans formed SSC-Khaatumo, joining the Federal Government.
- The area is now recognized as Waqooyi Bari, Somalia.
If independence is forced again, these clans will resist again.
And this time, all of Somalia would support them.
The result would be a large, dangerous war that could drag the whole region into chaos.
No serious country or organization will recognize a state sitting on top of an active clan conflict
The Bigger Threat: Fragmentation Makes Somalia Weak and Extremists Strong
If Somalia breaks apart into clan-based mini-states:
- federal government collapses,
- extremist groups gain more space,
- foreign powers take advantage,
- And Somali civilians pay the price.
Seeing Somalia divided is every terrorist group’s dream.
Seeing Somalia united is their worst nightmare.
The safest and strongest path is
a united federal Somalia where every clan has a seat, a voice, and a future.
Conclusion: Unity Is Difficult—But Division Is Deadly
Recognizing Somaliland would not bring peace.
It would trigger wider clan wars, weaken Somalia, destabilize the Horn of Africa, and give extremist groups more room to breathe.
A strong, inclusive federal Somalia is the only path that protects:
- our people,
- our territory,
- our history,
- and our future.
Somalia has already suffered enough.
We cannot afford another fracture.
Unity is not the easiest road — but it is the only road that avoids disaster.
