Somalia law voids port deal of Somaliland with Ethiopia
President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud safeguard’s Somalia’s sovereignty and territorial integrity
President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud safeguard’s Somalia’s sovereignty and territorial integrity

Police have launched a manhunt and formed a special task force to investigate the fatal shooting of a prominent…

The so-called “Oplan Romanov,” or the alleged covert operation purportedly aimed at eliminating Vice President Sara…

TACLOBAN CITY — Just a week after classes resumed following a fatal mass shooting on campus, officials at San Jose…

The Philippine Charity Sweepstakes Office (PCSO) has signed up another corporation to expand public access to the…

Water reserves at Pantabangan Dam are rising steadily following heavy rains brought by the southwest monsoon and…

(Photo by Hassan Ali Elmi / AFP)
Read next

What's your take?
Google Preferred Sources
Get more Daily Tribune stories in your search results
Add Daily Tribune as a preferred source on Google Search.
Continue reading
Somalia's president has signed a law "nullifying" the agreement between Ethiopia and Somaliland allowing the former access to the latter's port.
President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud said the law voided the "illegal" pact giving landlocked Ethiopia long-sought access to the Red Sea through Somaliland, a separatist northwestern region over which Somalia exercises little real authority.
The passage of the bill on Saturday evening "is an illustration of our commitment to safeguard our unity, sovereignty & territorial integrity as per international law," the president wrote on X, formerly Twitter.
The central government in Mogadishu has vowed to strenuously oppose by any legal means the port agreement between regional power Ethiopia and Somaliland, whose 1991 claim of independence from Somalia is not recognized internationally.
Somalia called the surprise pact signed on Monday an act of "aggression" and a violation of its sovereignty, and appealed for international support.
It staunchly opposes Somaliland's claim to independence but in reality has little say over the affairs of the de facto state, which has its own government, security forces and currency and a long coastline on one of the world's busiest shipping routes.
Somaliland's leadership has said Ethiopia would "formally recognize the Republic of Somaliland" under the deal, but this has not been confirmed by the government in Addis Ababa.
The agreement has raised tensions in the Horn of Africa and the African Union, United States, European Union and the Arab League have called for calm and for Somalia's sovereignty to be respected.
The memorandum of understanding gives Ethiopia access to commercial maritime services and a military base, with Somaliland leasing its 20 kilometers of coastline for 50 years.
Ethiopia, the second most populous country in Africa and one of the biggest landlocked nations in the world, was cut off from the coast after Eritrea seceded and declared independence in 1993 following a three-decade war.
Addis Ababa had maintained access to a port in Eritrea until the two countries went to war in 1998 to 2000, and since then Ethiopia funnels most of its trade through Djibouti.