Somalia President Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed Farmajo during a visit to
Abu Dhabi, the capital of United Arab Emirates on April 10, 2017.
Somalia recently ditched a military deal with its ally UAE and seized
millions of dollars in cash from an Emirati plane. PHOTO | SOMALI
EMBASSY UAE
Tensions between Somalia and the United Arab Emirates ratcheted
up this week as Mogadishu ditched a military deal with its ally and
seized millions of dollars in cash from an Emirati plane.
The
escalation came after months of building friction in Somalia as the
Gulf crisis pitting Arab powers against each other spills over into the
fragile state, whose position of neutrality has not gone down well at
home or with its allies.
Rashid Abdi, an analyst with
the International Crisis Group, told AFP that while the UAE and Somalia
have traditionally been close, and Mogadishu has vowed to remain neutral
over the Gulf divisions, the central government is nevertheless
"perceived to be very much pro-Qatar".
Some of
Somalia's federal states were unhappy with President Mohamed Abdullahi
Mohamed's neutral stance, and have broken with the official position to
side with the UAE.
Diplomatic tensions first spilled
into the open in March after the Dubai-based DP World gave Ethiopia a 19
per cent stake in the Berbera port in breakaway Somaliland — whose
independence is not recognised by Mogadishu.
Lawmakers
in Somalia, which also has a history of animosity with Ethiopia, adopted
a resolution accusing the company of having "intentionally violated the
sovereignty of Somalia".
Tempers have also flared over a military base being built by the UAE in Somaliland.
'Unnecessary tensions'
On
Sunday, Somali security forces stormed onto a UAE civilian aircraft at
the international airport, and seized $9.6 million in cash held in three
unmarked bags.
"The security forces noticed the
suspicious bags and handed them over to the concerned departments,"
Somalia's security ministry said in a statement.
However
the UAE in a statement accused security forces of holding those on the
plane "at gunpoint", and said the cash had been allocated to support the
Somali army and trainees.
"The current Somali
government ... is creating unnecessary tensions with a friend and an
ally who supported the stability and security of Somalia during its
hardest phases," tweeted UAE state minister for foreign affairs Anwar
Gargash.
"We call for wisdom and reason".
Just
days later, on Wednesday, Somalia's defence ministry announced it was
taking over the management of hundreds of Somali troops who had been
trained by the UAE.
The UAE has been running a military camp in Mogadishu where it trains Somali soldiers, who are also paid by Emirati officials.
"As
a government, our responsibility is to take care of our armed forces
and pay their wages and not to delegate that responsibility to others.
We thank the UAE for the training and relentless support it provided,"
Defence Minister Mohamed Mursal told a local news agency.
Experts
describe the bloated and largely ineffective Somali army as more a
collection of clan militias, with various international militaries
providing poorly-coordinated training to different units.
The
security of the country, battling the Al-Qaeda-linked Shabaab
extremists, has largely been propped up by Amisom, the African Union
peacekeeping force, which is due to withdraw by 2020.
'Vulnerable and weak'
The
10-month Gulf crisis pits Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Egypt and Bahrain
against Qatar — which has been accused by its rivals of fostering close
links with Tehran and supporting Islamist extremists. Qatar denies the
charges.
With close geographic, political, economic
and cultural ties with the Gulf, observers warn the Horn of Africa is
facing heightened instability as countries come under pressure to pick
sides while Arab powers jockey for political influence.
Somalia
has not had an effective central government since the 1991 overthrow of
president Siad Barre's military regime which ushered in decades of
anarchy and conflict.
Abdi warned the Gulf crisis could have a "serious destabilising impact on Somalia."
"There's
no doubt that the Gulf crisis has spilled over into the Horn. Now
countries which are strong can manage this war, but Somalia is very
vulnerable and very weak," he said.
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