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The
Economist, February 27th 1960
Somaliland and Somalia
will soon be faced with the task of running their own
affairs-and getting on with their neighbours
A GALE of constitutional change is blowing through the Horn
of Africa. On February 17th, British Somaliland had a
general election, the second ever held in the protectorate,
and a party of swift change won a decisive victory. Elected
Somaliland members now dominate a Legislative Council that
three years ago did not even exist.
The timetable for independence has been written in New York,
not in Whitehall. In 1950, the United Nations set a term of
ten years on Italy's trusteeship of Somalia, and in June the
Italians make their reluctant exit. The British in
Somaliland can only follow. The Somalilanders are determined
that they should go, and there is indeed no earthly reason
for hanging on-beyond responsibility for what is left
behind.
Somaliland and Somalia start off with roughly the same
disadvantages; both are harsh, hot lands of sand and rock
without water, known mineral wealth, industry or anything
else that makes life easy. But the Italian trust territory
has had a clear political lead over the Protectorate for
which, indirectly, it can thank Mussolini and his imperial
dreams.
The British military caretakers who took over region during
the war exerted themselves to decontaminate the territory
from fascist influence by an educational programme that was
considerably ahead of anything suggested for Somaliland.
Then the Italians came back, uncluttered by other colonial
commitments, and more immediately aware than the British
that they were working to a fierce timetable.
Somalia has virtually governed itself since 1957. Its
several political parties and the maze of their tribal
ramifications promised a situation of singular confusion.
But the Italians, keeping democratic scruples under strict
control, picked their man and stuck to him. At the general
elections last year, the Somali Youth League, led by Mr
Abdullahi Issa, won 85 of the 90 seats, two-thirds of them
unopposed because of the "regrettable technical errors" of
their opponents.
The Somaliland election last week was not distorted by any
such technicalities, but the result was hardly less
conclusive. The Somali National League (SNL) has won 20 of
the 33 seats available; the Somali United party, a new group
that shortly before the elections joined forces with the
SNL, has won 12 seats. This leaves the National United
Front, which won most of the seats in last year's rather
timid attempt at elections, and whose members the British
authorities were seriously coaching in the arts of
government, with only one seat, although it got nearly a
third of the total votes cast.
The victorious SNL, led by Mr Mohammed Egal, is the party
loudest in its demands for quick independence (it boycotted
the earlier elections) and its victory is being proclaimed
by Cairo radio as a smack in the eye for imperialism. But
the decisive factor in the election was probably not so much
the party platforms, which were all much the same, as the
complex inter-play of tribal, sub-tribal and family
loyalties.
All the parties agreed that the Somaliland and Somalia
should join up, sooner rather than later. Mr Lennox-Boyd,
the British Colonial secretary, foreshadowed this last year
when he promised British help should Somaliland seek some
form of "closer association" with Somalia. Possibly when the
time comes the two sides will be less keen than they are now
on a complete union.
The SNL is not on particularly warm terms with the Somali
Youth League in Somalia, while for its part, the government
at Mogadishu may cool towards the idea of straightforward
fusion.
At present Somalia's government is picked from members of
the Hawiye tribe-an ascendancy that is unjustified
numerically, and would be very hard to maintain if a deluge
of Somalilanders were to join forces with the opposition.
Then comes the question of Commonwealth membership. For the
commonwealth club to refuse this British territory admission
would seem unlikely; but there is no certainty that the new
member would be invited to bring a guest.
THE challenge is how either state, together or separately,
will be able to pay its way. The World Bank has calculated
that Somalia will need $6 million a year of outside help if
it is to manage at all. For a time, this much is assured.
The Italian government has promised $3.6 million a year for
the years immediately following independence, and the
Americans are expected to find most of the balance. Bananas
are Somalia's only export and even they are not grown
competitively; about half Italy's aid consists of the
government's handsome subsidy on Somali bananas, supported
by a generous quota; these arrangements are guaranteed for
the next four years.
This is not entirely quixotic; the Italian banana-growers in
Somalia, most of whom settled there in the
nineteen-thirties, have a significant voice in the ruling
party in Italy. But against them, the Italian left-wing
parties have always contended that Rome should spend what
money it has to spare on its strident problems nearer home.
After 1964, Somalia certainly cannot count on Italian aid
continuing on its present scale.
Somaliland needs less money than Somalia, because it is more
rural and has about half as many people; otherwise it has
roughly the same difficulties and no banana industry. Its
exports are livestock and skins; both have done fairly well
in the last few years, but one bad drought and Somaliland's
exports go by the board. There is a seepage of oil that
gives the Somalilanders hope and a dressing for their
camels' saddle sores, but little else. Plans for mineral
development are in the air, not on the ground. The British
Government hands out £1.3 million a year, half of which is
used to balance the budget and half for development and
welfare.
The impossibility, even by expensive hothouse methods, of
quickly raising a professional and administrative class in
Somaliland has meant that a substantial proportion of the
development and welfare grant is held over from year to
year. Students with the minimum qualifications are now being
bundled off to Britain for further education; in 1959 the
Colonial Office gave 60 scholarships, three times as many as
in 1956. The nomad existence and deeply suspicious attitude
of most Somalilanders provide excuses for Britain's late
start, but these do not mitigate the stark difficulty of
building on little or no foundation.
OVERSHADOWING all these problems is the question of
Ethiopia's attitude towards its young, noisy, and weaker
neighbours. Somalis are flagrantly calling down trouble upon
themselves by the clamour for a Greater Somalia; the union
of all Somali-speaking people in Somalia, Somaliland, French
Somaliland, Kenya-and Ethiopia. The Pan-Somali movement is
led from Mogadishu by an exile from French Somaliland, but
some Somali politicians automatically include it in their
creed. It gets a certain support from Cairo, although the
Egyptians themselves are shaky about what sort of trouble
they are trying to stir up for whom in the Horn.
Even if Somali politicians are now only playing lip service
to irredentism, the fact that they have committed themselves
to wooing and subverting the Somalis in the Ogaden invites
Ethiopian retaliation. Addis Ababa, already seriously
concerned about the succession to the throne and running an
empire that could be knocked apart by one good blow, is in
no mood to wait and see what its neighbours are really up
to. When in September, 1958, French Somaliland held its
referendum, the Ethiopians showed their teeth-and the
determination not to lose the right of access to Djibouti-in
moving their troops to the frontier.
In the event, French Somaliland, whose population is evenly
divided between Somalis and Danakil, voted heavily in favour
of continued attachment to France.
Ethiopian suspicions and Somali ambitions have killed all
hope of settling the immediate frontier issues. The border
between Ethiopia, Somaliland and Somalia runs roughly down
the middle of a hundred-mile-wide strip that each side
claims.
Mr Trygvie Lie was recently appointed by the United Nations
to try his hand at mediation, but like others before him had
to acknowledge defeat. On the Somaliland frontier, the
ceaseless quarrels over Somali grazing rights in the Haud
can only grow more passionate with the departure of the
British. When in 1897 the British Government signed away the
Haud, its mind was on other African troubles; Somaliland
inherits an overwhelming grievance.
Both Somaliland and Somalia face a horribly difficult
infancy as independent states. But what both must get in
their heads is the loneliness of their position if they try
Ethiopia too far. None of the western powers will have any
interest in supporting a Somali campaign against Ethiopia.
© The Economist Newspaper Limited, London, February 27th
1960
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