- Minister in Cape Town to woo mining firms
- Region relies on selling livestock, remittances
- Relatively stable compared with rest of Somalia
By Ed Stoddard
CAPE TOWN, (Reuters) - The breakaway territory of
Somaliland cannot access foreign aid because it has not yet been recognised
internationally as a state, and that suits it just fine.
"That is a blessing in disguise. Aid never developed
anything,"Hussein Abdi Dualeh, Somaliland's minister of energy and
minerals, told Reuters on the sidelines of an African mining conference.
"Aid is not a panacea, we'd rather not have it ... How
many African countries do you know that developed because of a lot of aid? It's
a curse. The ones that get the most aid are the ones with the problems,"
he said.
Dualeh is in Cape Town trying to woo junior mining companies
to come and explore for minerals in Somaliland, which Dualeh described as
Africa's "land mining frontier. Almost completely unexplored".
That might be a hard sell as even raising capital can be
difficult for projects in a state that is not recognised internationally but
Dualeh said Somaliland, which broke away from Somalia in 1991, showed that an
African country could fend for itself with no outside help.
Somaliland has enjoyed relative stability compared with the
rest of Somalia, which has been racked by decades of civil war, and has held a
series of peaceful elections.
"We've been left to our own devices. We are our own
people and our own guys. We pull ourselves up by our own boot straps,"
said the U.S.-educated minister who speaks English with an American accent.
He also said that while the country could not access
international capital markets it also had no debt as a result, adding to its
narrative of self-reliance.
"We owe absolutely nothing to anybody. We would not
change hands with Greece today. We have zero debt," he said.
He said the country's national budget was around $250
million, funded completely by its own resources.
Its economy is largely based on selling livestock - goats
and cattle - to Arab countries, while it also relies heavily on the remittances
of its diaspora community.
"Remittances from overseas prop up the economy to the
tune of about a billion dollars a year," Dualeh said.
(Editing by Alison
Williams)
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