Somaliland: The History of a Country that doesn’t Exist

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Somaliland: The History of a Country that doesn't Exist
Somalilandsun: The Somali people are fiercely nationalistic. Colonialism split them into five segments divided between four different powers. Thus decolonization and pan-Somalism became synonymous.In 1960 a partial reunification took place between British Somaliland and Somalia Italiana. Africa Confidential wrote at the time that the new Somali state would never be beset by tribal division but this discounted the existence of powerful clans within Somali society and the persistence of colonial administrative cultures. The collapse of parliamentary democracy in 1969 and the resulting army–and clanic–dictatorship that followed led to a civil war in the ‘perfect’ national state. It lasted fourteen years in the “British” North and is still raging today in the ‘Italian’ South.

Somaliland “re-birthed” itself through an enormous solo effort but the viable nation so recreated within its former colonial borders was never internationally recognized and still struggles to exist economically and diplomatically.

This is recounted  In his inimitable prose, by Gerard Prunier in a book titled “The Nation that doesn’t Exist: The History of Somaliland” which conveys how one of the world’s newest nations came into being and survived, against all odds.

This book recounts an African success story where the peace so widely acclaimed by the international community has had no reward but its own lonely achievement.

The writer Gerard Prunier is a renowned historian of contemporary Africa, author of, inter alia, the acclaimed The Rwanda Crisis: History of a Genocide and editor of Understanding Contemporary Ethiopia, both published by Hurst.
Released this month the book which costs £45 can be availed in one of this online Vendors