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Somalia President Mohamed Abdullahi Farmaajo. FILE PHOTO | NMG |
Osman Dubbe, the Somali Minister for
Information declared the news on national TV a few minutes to 2am in the
morning, breaking tradition of countries making such pronouncements during the
day.
Dubbe said Kenya had “constantly interfered”
with Somalia’s internal affairs and that Nairobi was violating Somalia’s
sovereignty.
He said Kenyan diplomats in Mogadishu will
have seven days to leave the country. But this came just a week after Mogadishu
actually expelled the Kenyan ambassador to Somalia, Lucas Tumbo, and recalled
theirs to Nairobi, Mohamud Ahmed Tarzan, following a similar complaint of
interference.
Somalia had also submitted a complaint to
regional bloc, the Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD), to
include the spat with Kenya during the upcoming virtual summit on Dec 20 on
Tigray.
Kenya though, became the second country in a
year after Guinea, with which Somalia has cut ties over the Somaliland issue.
Kenya hosts Bihi
But as Mogadishu moved in the night, Nairobi
was hosting Bihi for bilateral talks with President Uhuru Kenyatta. Both sides
on Monday said they had agreed on a number of issues and would continue
discussions on Tuesday on business and security cooperation.
With the cutting of diplomatic ties, it means
the Kenyan embassy in Mogadishu and Somalia’s mission in Nairobi will be shut
and their officials sent back home. But both countries, based on Vienna
Convention on Consular Relations, will remain obligated to offer visa and other
travel and immigration services to nationals of each other.
In fact, each country will remain obligated to
protect premises owned by either side on their host territories.
However, despite having legal obligations to
protect citizens of each other, the actual protection of each other’s nationals
may be granted to a third acceptable state.
It was unclear by Tuesday morning what will
happen to military cooperation between Somalia and Kenya which has sent troops
to the country under the African Union Mission in Somalia (Amisom). Legally, it
is Amisom to make a decision about troop movements, but in consultation with
the UN and troop contributing countries.
About 350,000 Somali refugees also live in
Kenya, most of them in camps in Dadaab and Kakuma. Kenya will have to continue
protecting them, under the international humanitarian law.
What may be exposed, however, are the
properties owned by Somalia businesses and politicians in Nairobi.
Officials in the Kenyan capital said on Tuesday morning they had not yet received any formal communication from Mogadishu on the severing of ties.
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