Sovereignty
By Prof. Nassir Hussein Kahin, Political Analyst, International Affairs Writer, Executive Managing Editor, Bridgingsomaliland and Founder of Somaliland Unity & Recognition Initiative (SURI) Facebook Group.
In a bold and symbolically brilliant move, President Abdirahman Mohamed Abdillahi Irro has announced in a press release, the launching of a national peace and reconciliation initiative in the war-torn and ravaged Sanaag region, evoking the foundational ethos that once bound Somaliland together during its formative post-1991 years. This effort, grounded in dialogue and collective healing, seeks to address long-simmering grievances among local communities and reassert Somaliland’s legacy as a self-forged republic born not through conquest, but through consensus.
At a time when regional fractures and clan-based tensions have been exploited by external actors and domestic rivals alike, Irro’s initiative marks a return to the grassroots politics of peacemaking that shaped Somaliland’s earliest stability. “Peaceful coexistence stands as the cornerstone of Somaliland’s stability, democratic resilience, and sustainable development,” President Irro declared in the press release. His call is not merely administrative—it is deeply moral, almost constitutional in tone.
The four pillars of the initiative: peaceful coexistence, unity through dialogue, state-supported justice, and traditional dispute resolution—are not unfamiliar to Somalilanders. They are echoes of the same conflict resolution strategies chronicled in Mark Bradbury’s “Becoming Somaliland”, which documented how clan elders, religious leaders, and community mediators stitched together a war-torn land through conferences, customary law, and hard-won trust.
Back then, there were no international peacekeepers or high-profile mediators. Somaliland’s people forged peace from within—sometimes around campfires, often in tents, always with the urgency of survival and the hope of self-governance. Today, President Irro’s call to “embrace this initiative with sincerity and resolve” revives this indigenous tradition, signaling that the country’s strength still lies in its people-led processes.
But the stakes now are higher. The geopolitical landscape has shifted dramatically. The Red Sea rivalry, Ethiopia’s strategic interests, and Somalia’s persistent claims all create external pressures. Internally, political fragmentation, delayed elections and clan grievances in Sanaag and Sool threaten the cohesion that Somaliland once prided itself on.
In this context, Irro’s peace mission is more than a regional effort—it is a test of Somaliland’s national character. Can it once again overcome local tensions through national dialogue? Can it reaffirm the legitimacy of its institutions by resolving disputes not with bullets, but with words?
Bradbury described Somaliland as a political anomaly—a functioning state without recognition, held together not by external validation but internal legitimacy. The current initiative in Sanaag, if successful, would reinforce that narrative. It would show that Somaliland’s statehood is still being “become”—through every act of reconciliation, every avoided clash, every community that chooses dialogue over division.
What remains to be seen is whether the people of Sanaag—elders, youth, civil society, and politicians—will rise to meet this call. But if Somaliland’s past offers any lessons, it is that real peace is possible when the people themselves own the process.
As President Irro concluded in his appeal, “Let this initiative herald a new chapter defined by unity, peace, and shared prosperity.” If Sanaag can become a stage for such a renewal, then Somaliland may yet again offer the region a model of homegrown stability amid stormy seas.


