V24 Exclusive: Stefan Tompson traveled to Somaliland, where democracy, an army, and a functioning economy exist, yet the region remains largely invisible on the global stage.
Stefan Tompson
Sep 7, 2025 - 10:57 PM
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Every May 18, Somalilanders celebrate a country the world refuses to acknowledge. In Hargeisa, the streets overflow with flags, music, and pride. Children wave banners, veterans parade, and families sing about freedom. The celebrations resemble any other nation’s holiday. The problem? Somaliland, at the center of it all, does not officially exist.
With its own army, government, elections, and currency, Somaliland remains internationally recognized as part of Somalia. Why is a functioning, democratic state denied recognition, and why has the world looked away for so long?
Somaliland’s story begins in the colonial era. Britain ruled the north, while Italy controlled the south. In June 1960, British Somaliland gained independence and was briefly recognized by over 30 nations, including the UK and the US. Days later, it merged with Italian Somaliland to form the Somali Republic.
The union was rushed and unstable. Northern Somalilanders felt sidelined politically and neglected economically. Under Siad Barre’s dictatorship, tensions escalated into brutality. By the late 1980s, government forces targeted the Isaaq clan. Hargeisa was bombed, tens of thousands were killed, and mass graves still surround the city.
When Somalia collapsed into civil war in 1991, Somaliland walked away from the failed union. It declared independence within its 1960 borders and began building a new state. Reconciliation meetings were held, a constitution was drafted, and democratic institutions were created. Yet recognition never came.
For three decades, Somaliland has achieved what few believed possible in the Horn of Africa. It has maintained peace, protected its borders, conducted competitive elections, and overseen multiple peaceful transfers of power. Voter registration uses biometric technology. Opposition parties win elections. Taxes are collected, services provided, and security forces maintain order.
This is not a breakaway movement demanding secession. Somaliland was once independent, chose unity, and rebuilt itself when that unity failed. By every standard of international law, it arguably qualifies as a state. Yet without recognition, it is excluded from the global system, denied access to loans, trade deals, and formal diplomatic partnerships.
Somaliland’s stability has not gone unnoticed. In Berbera, the UAE’s DP World has invested heavily in a modern port serving Ethiopia and other regional economies. A UAE-backed highway links the port to Addis Ababa, cementing Somaliland as a trade hub.
Taiwan, diplomatically isolated itself, has partnered with Somaliland and opened a de facto embassy in Hargeisa. Western governments such as the UK, Denmark, and the Netherlands maintain offices there. In Washington, congressional hearings have debated Somaliland’s role in counterterrorism and maritime security. Reports in 2025 suggest Donald Trump’s team may consider recognition — a historic break with decades of policy.
Yet resistance remains. The African Union insists colonial borders must not be redrawn, fearing that recognition could trigger separatist movements across Africa. Somalia continues to block Somaliland’s push for recognition, even as it struggles to control its own territory. The irony is stark: a failed state retains legitimacy, while a functioning one is denied it.
Recognition would not only correct an injustice, but also strengthen global security. It is a democratic ally in a region plagued by authoritarianism and extremism. Its location on a key maritime route makes it strategically vital. It has remained secure in the shadow of al-Shabaab and other terror groups, proving itself a counterterrorism partner. And its people rebuilt their country without foreign armies or massive aid packages — they reconciled, reformed, and built from the ground up.
For more than three decades, Somalilanders have raised their flag and marked their independence, even as the world looked away. Recognition is not a reward. It is reality. Somaliland exists. It has for decades. The question is whether the world will finally admit it.
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Stefan Tompson
Founder | Visegrad24