Somalia threatens to sever ties with Kenya over election dispute

Somalia President Mohamed Farmaajo wants to slap Kenya with more stringent diplomatic restrictions if Nairobi continues with what he terms political interference in the February elections.

A source close to President Farmaajo said at least 100,000 Kenyans working in various sectors of Somaliaā€™s economy risk losing their jobs if Kenya is cited as an enemy.

ā€œPresident Farmaajo will soon declare Kenya an enemy and that means more than 100,000 people could lose their jobs directly. Kenyaā€™s Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the government should find a solution to avert this crisis,ā€ said the source.

Nairobi has accused Somalia of double standards by banning flights from Kenya citing Covid-19, yet Ethiopiaā€™s miraa exports are allowed in Somalia.

Somalia banned international flights in March, including cargo planes carrying miraa.

The ban on miraa exports is hurting the livelihoods of thousands of Kenyan farmers.

On Monday, Farmaajoā€™a administration issued a notice directing that any Kenyan wishing to travel to Somalia must first apply for a visa at the Somalia Embassy in Nairobi.

Although they cited Covid-19 restrictions, sources said Farmaajoā€™s administration is not happy with the ā€œpolitical interferenceā€ and that Kenya has been in bed with Jubalandā€™s leader Ahmed Madobe, who is considered ā€œa traitor.ā€

Expelled ambassador

Last week, Somalia expelled Kenyaā€™s ambassador and recalled its own envoy from Nairobi after accusing Kenya of interfering in the electoral process in Jubaland, one of Somaliaā€™s five semi-autonomous states.

Although Somalia did not reveal details of the interference, Kenya has denied any involvement and dismissed the allegations.

ā€œAs a result of the Kenyan governmentā€™s political interferences in the internal affairs of Somalia, the regional President of Jubaland has reneged on the election agreement that was reached on the September 17, 2020 in Mogadishu,ā€ Somaliaā€™s Foreign Ministry had said.

Jubaland is a southern state that borders Kenya and includes the major port of Kismayo.

In August, Farmaajoā€™s regime demanded that Kenya ā€œmust treat Somalia as an equal, desist from interfering in Somaliaā€™s internal affairs, apologise for violating Somalia airspace, allow in goods from Somalia, including fish, rice, sugar, honey, meat and milk and stop forcing flights from Somalia to make a stop-over in Wajir for inspectionā€.

Somalia also demanded a government-to-government talks after it snubbed a delegation of traders and officials from Kenya crops regulator ā€” Agriculture and Food Authority (AFA).

In February 2017, miraa traders suspended exports to Somalia after the country introduced punitive taxes. Somalia increased the tax on the produce from Sh309 to Sh360.5 per kilo, leading to a four-day boycott by Kenyan miraa exporters.

The decision was rescinded and the tax dropped to Sh247 after intervention by the Kenyan government.

Miraa farmers have urged the government to intervene and have cargo planes resume flights to Mogadishu, so as to revive their venture.

Source-Standard Digital

 

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