Mustafa I. Adam
Monday, April 10, 2017

Recognition is one of the most testing and complicated issues in international law, and it is starting to become Somaliland’s eventual demise. Once considered one of Africa’s great Democratic establishment, it has now resorted to the arrest and detention of Journalist to dispute their claim to statehood is being endangered. Many quasi-states have justified their claim to statehood by being oppressive, and few have been considered legitimate. Somaliland has adopted this romantic notion that international recognition will bring about democratic rights, state building, and good governance which will in return advance access to international institutions and lending establishments. The truth to this view would leave a portion of the population traumatized.
As per the presiding government, until sovereignty comes, anything that damages the public image of the country is treasonous, and any person is exemplifying such moral decadence shall be arrested without due process. The institutional wisdom that has been winning the hearts and minds of international observers has become its Achilles heel.
Somaliland has turned its legacy into a non-existent state that is governed by constitutional laws that are resolute when it suits a particular political party. The nation is obsessed with achieving sovereignty without the political environment to formulate a constitution that allows the fair representation of all citizens. The lack of credible leadership and the bickering of the political elite who only shoulder the burdens of the state when their political surroundings affect their bottom line is unacceptable. It has become a nation without the constitutional framework or the rules of engagement to deal with any political predicament.