Somali official says Dubai's DP World should rethink port deals
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Somali official says Dubai’s DP World should rethink port deals

Somali official says Dubai’s DP World should rethink port deals

The comments come amid a diplomatic row between the volatile Horn of Africa nation and the UAE

Reuters

Somalia’s foreign minister said on Friday that Dubai state-owned port operator DP World should reconsider its contract with the breakaway region of Somaliland and work with federal authorities so Somalia’s sovereignty is not violated.

“We are asking DP World to reconsider these agreements, particularly the one in Berbera port since Somaliland is claiming to be a state independent from Somalia,” Ahmed Isse Awad, Somalia’s foreign minister, told Reuters in an interview.

He said DP World’s agreement to develop an economic zone and port in Somaliland’s Berbera “bypassed the legitimate authority” of Somalia, triggering “misunderstanding and disagreement” that remained unresolved.

Read: Dubai’s DP World to begin work on Berbera project in Somaliland

A DP World spokesman told Reuters that construction in Somaliland and Puntland, another semi-autonomous region of Somalia where a Dubai state-owned company has a separate deal to manage a port, was on schedule and that work would start soon.

Read: Dubai’s P&O Ports wins 30-year concession in Somalia’s Puntland

“Both Puntland and Somaliland have urged DP World to expedite construction,” the spokesman said. Somaliland and Puntland officials could not be immediately reached for comment.

The comments come amid a diplomatic row between the volatile Horn of Africa nation and the United Arab Emirates (UAE), where the Dubai government owns DP World.

Somalia and the UAE have separately said a UAE military training programme in Somalia has ended following the seizure of millions of dollars from a UAE plane at Mogadishu airport earlier this month.

Read: UAE ends programme to train Somalia’s soldiers

The spat is related to the port issue but has escalated amid an increasingly troubled relationship between Gulf states – divided by their own disputes – and fractured Somalia, whose coastline sits close to key shipping routes and across the water from Yemen.

The UAE and Saudi Arabia have strong trading links with and influence in Somalia, but that is offset by the sway of Qatar and its ally Turkey, one of Somalia’s biggest foreign investors.

Analysts have said the dispute in the Gulf that erupted last year between Qatar and Turkey on the one hand and Saudi Arabia and the UAE on the other risks exacerbating an already explosive security situation on both sides of the Gulf of Aden.

Against this backdrop, Somalia’s parliament unanimously passed a resolution last month saying DP World’s contract with Somaliland was null and void because it was agreed with authorities in the breakaway region, not with the federal government.

Somaliland President Muse Bihi Abdi has said the vote will have no impact on the DP World deal which includes the government of Ethiopia.

Somaliland broke away from Somalia in 1991 and has acted as a de-facto state since then.

Read: DP World says Djibouti incident could hurt Africa investment

Its small port of Berbera exports camels to the Middle East and imports food and other items. But DP World’s deal to expand the port is one of many investments the UAE government has made in Somaliland, from agreeing to train police and military to establishing a military base.

Awad said the federal government wanted DP World to engage with Mogadishu, instead of Somaliland authorities.

Read: DP World says Djibouti incident could hurt Africa investment

“After that, Somalia welcomes any investment in any part of Somalia including Berbera,” he said.

He added this policy applied to any deals by foreign countries or government’s with Somalia’s federal member states, which include Puntland.

The minister denied claims by UAE authorities that they had signed the Berbera port deal with a previous Somali government, saying no evidence had been produced.

He said he thought relations with the Gulf state would normalize, without giving details, and said Mogadishu wanted to enter “serious, open and friendly” discussion to resolve misunderstandings.


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