WASHINGTON
- The top US diplomat for Africa has met
with the president of Somaliland, but
the talks do not mean Washington is
ready to recognize the breakaway region
of Somalia, US officials said Thursday.
US Assistant Secretary of
State for African Affairs Jendayi Frazer
had lunch with Somaliland president
Dahir Riyale Kahin at the State
Department on Monday, a US diplomat said
on condition of anonymity.
But State Department
spokesman Sean McCormack stressed that
the meeting did not imply US recognition
of the northwestern coast region, which
split from Somalia in 1991.
"There's no change in our
policy position vis-a-vis recognition of
Somaliland. We are not on the verge of
recognizing Somaliland," McCormack told
reporters.
"There is a process under
way that the AU (African Union) is
engaged in and we are going to be
watching very closely that situation,
but there's no change in our policy," he
said.
McCormack said the
meeting is part of Washington's policy
of speaking with key players in Somalia
in order to build democracy in the east
African country, which has been plagued
by civil unrest since the 1991 ouster of
dictator Mohamed Siad Barre.
"We think it's important
to have as many political contacts as we
can with responsible individuals in
Somalia who have an interest in building
up the democratic structures and
institutions of Somalia and trying to
take it from where it is to a much more
hopeful future," he said.
"Certainly, Jendayi's
meetings ... fall solidly in that
category and it's a policy that we are
going to continue to pursue," he said.
"We have interest in
fighting terrorism in Somalia, as well
as in the Horn of Africa. ... Anybody
who has an interest in a more peaceful
and democratic Somalia has a role to
play in this process."
A former British
protectorate, Somaliland united with the
Italian Somalia in 1960. But the region
unilaterally broke away five months
after Barre was ousted in 1991.
The Washington Post
reported last month that US officials
were debating whether to shift US
support from the fragile Somali
government to the less volatile region
of Somaliland.
But State Department
officials oppose such a move, putting
them at odds with Defense Department
officials who say that forging ties with
Somaliland could help bring stability to
the region, the Post said.
The region of 3.5 million
people, which adopted a provisional
constitution in 1997 and ratified it
four years later, boasts its own
president, government, parliament,
police force, penal code and currency.
Source:AFP