Issues Archive

Issues filters
Search
  • The Somali Wire 393
  • The Ethiopian Cable 31
  • The Horn Edition 31
Archive
Filter by tags
Somalia (43) Al Shabaab (36) Villa Somalia (30) Hassan Sheikh Mohamud (25) Somalia politics (17) Farmaajo (17) Puntland (17) Mogadishu (16) Ethiopia (16) Somalia elections (14) Somaliland (13) Somalia political crisis (12) Jubaland (10) AUSSOM (7) Mohamed Hussein Roble (7) Abiy Ahmed (7) Somalia security (7) Tigray (7) Eritrea (7) Kenya (7) NISA (7) Fahad Yasin (7) Sudan (6) SSC-Khaatumo (6) African Union (6) Somalia drought crisis (6) TPLF (6) Amhara (6) Horn of Africa (6) Somali politics (6) Addis (6) USAID (5) Nairobi (5) OLA (5) HSM (5) Somalia crisis (5) Somali elections (5) Horn of Africa geopolitics (5) Somali culture (5) Somalia elections 2022 (5) South Sudan (5) Politics (5) Humanitarian (4) Conflict (4) US (4) Healthcare (4) China (4) Somali National Army (4) Somalia humanitarian crisis (4) Tigray Peoples Liberation Front (4) Federalism (4) Oromo Liberation Army (4) History (4) Poetry (4) Disarmament (3) Fano (3) Somalia elections 2021 (3) Federal Government (3) Women (3) Security (3) OPOV (3) Kenya Somalia relations (3) GERD (3) Elections (3) Fighting (3) RSF (3) Qatar (3) Gulf (3) Mogadishu bombing 2022 (3) Troop Contributing Countries (3) Somali opposition (3) Villa Somalia crisis (3) Mogadishu unrest (3) Somalia electoral crisis (3) PM Roble (3) Laas Aanood (3) Turkey Somalia relations (3) Diaspora (3) Madoobe (3) Oromo Liberation Front (3) OLF (3) Oromo (3) Awdheegle (3) UPDF (3) SNA (3) Operation Silent Storm (3) Horn of Africa drought (3) Economy (3) NCC (3) Ethiopia Somalia relations (3) UN (3) ISS (3) Hawiye (3) UAE (3) Oromia (3)
Search
  • The Somali Wire 393
  • The Ethiopian Cable 31
  • The Horn Edition 31
Archive
Filter by tags
Somalia (43) Al Shabaab (36) Villa Somalia (30) Hassan Sheikh Mohamud (25) Somalia politics (17) Farmaajo (17) Puntland (17) Mogadishu (16) Ethiopia (16) Somalia elections (14) Somaliland (13) Somalia political crisis (12) Jubaland (10) AUSSOM (7) Mohamed Hussein Roble (7) Abiy Ahmed (7) Somalia security (7) Tigray (7) Eritrea (7) Kenya (7) NISA (7) Fahad Yasin (7) Sudan (6) SSC-Khaatumo (6) African Union (6) Somalia drought crisis (6) TPLF (6) Amhara (6) Horn of Africa (6) Somali politics (6) Addis (6) USAID (5) Nairobi (5) OLA (5) HSM (5) Somalia crisis (5) Somali elections (5) Horn of Africa geopolitics (5) Somali culture (5) Somalia elections 2022 (5) South Sudan (5) Politics (5) Humanitarian (4) Conflict (4) US (4) Healthcare (4) China (4) Somali National Army (4) Somalia humanitarian crisis (4) Tigray Peoples Liberation Front (4) Federalism (4) Oromo Liberation Army (4) History (4) Poetry (4) Disarmament (3) Fano (3) Somalia elections 2021 (3) Federal Government (3) Women (3) Security (3) OPOV (3) Kenya Somalia relations (3) GERD (3) Elections (3) Fighting (3) RSF (3) Qatar (3) Gulf (3) Mogadishu bombing 2022 (3) Troop Contributing Countries (3) Somali opposition (3) Villa Somalia crisis (3) Mogadishu unrest (3) Somalia electoral crisis (3) PM Roble (3) Laas Aanood (3) Turkey Somalia relations (3) Diaspora (3) Madoobe (3) Oromo Liberation Front (3) OLF (3) Oromo (3) Awdheegle (3) UPDF (3) SNA (3) Operation Silent Storm (3) Horn of Africa drought (3) Economy (3) NCC (3) Ethiopia Somalia relations (3) UN (3) ISS (3) Hawiye (3) UAE (3) Oromia (3)
  • Published April 7, 2022

    In the aftermath of the devastating Waaheen Market fire, Somaliland's vulnerability within the international aid system has come under renewed scrutiny. Despite global sympathy and a pledge of $12 million from the Federal Government of Somalia (FGS), the reality is more complex. The funds were not Mogadishu's aid, but international development grants long allocated for Somaliland frozen since 2018 when the FGS unilaterally ended the Somaliland Special Arrangement. This decision, driven by fears of undermining federalism, severed Somaliland’s access to direct international assistance. As a result, the region despite its relative peace and stability remains disconnected from international banking, aid systems, and forums for development planning. Hargeisa’s private sector has sustained the economy for decades, but the fire has exposed deep cracks in this self-reliance, particularly the absence of insurance safety nets or accessible global funding.

Scroll