By JOINT REPORT The EastAfrican
President Uhuru Kenyatta (left) with Prime Minister Li Keqiang in Nairobi, when the Chinese leader visited recently. Photo/FIL
In Summary
Kenya’s President Uhuru Kenyatta is facing a dilemma in dealing with two key neighbours — South Sudan and Somalia.
After barely a year in office, Kenya’s political
leaders are now realising that their country’s economic power cannot
always translate into a foreign policy clout.
Kenya and Somalia are at loggerheads over how to
govern southern Somalia, currently controlled by Kenyan troops belatedly
brought under the aegis of the African Union Mission in Somalia
(Amisom).
The Kenyan government has supported an initiative
to set up an interim Jubbaland administration whose links with Mogadishu
will be tenuous at best.
Diplomatic sources said that Kenya is planning to
open consular offices in Jubbaland and Hargeisa in the self-declared
independent Somaliland, but Mogadishu is concerned that Nairobi is
planting a seed of self-determination for other regions that could cut
links with Mogadishu.
The EastAfrican has learnt that the
government of President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud, has been particularly
upset by the “Usalama Watch” operation in Kenya aimed at kicking out
illegal aliens in the country, which has been seen as targeting Somali
nationals.
There are also elements within President Mohamud’s
government that have never been comfortable with the Kenya Defence
Forces’ entry into Somalia in October 2011 and are wary of Kenya’s
increased influence in the affairs of Somalia.
However, former Somalia minister Abdirahman Omar
Osman, who has just left his job as the spokesperson of the presidency,
argued that the Federal Government of Somalia fully supports the KDF
military operations in Somalia.
Two weeks ago, a political consul at the Somali
embassy in Kenya, Siyad Mohamud Shire, was arrested in a Nairobi suburb
during a police swoops under “Usalama Watch,” forcing Mogadishu to
recall its ambassador to Kenya, Mohamed Ali Nur, for consultation.
But despite his “personal challenges” as a leader
who faces charges at the International Criminal Court, President
Kenyatta seems determined to nudge his country towards a more robust
role in regional and African affairs, his engagement with the East (read
China) rather than the country’s traditional Western allies being his
boldest move so far.
President Kenyatta didn’t also shy away from
kicking up his own diplomatic dust when he spearheaded what is popularly
known as the Coalition of the Willing, with Uganda and Rwanda, leaving
out Tanzania, which is a member of the East African Community (EAC).
Under President Kenyatta’s watch, the country has
not only become more vulnerable to terrorist attacks from Somalia, but
the breakdown of law and order in neighbouring South Sudan is also
posing serious threats to the country’s interests.
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