The African Union operates within a framework where sovereignty is treated as a static legal artefact, a ‘frozen right’ granted irrevocably at the moment of decolonisation, ignoring the functional, governance-filled reality of Somaliland.
The contemporary political landscape of Africa is haunted – not by the spectres of its colonial past, but by a robust, living anomaly: a polity that functions with all the attributes of statehood yet remains a spectral presence in the ledgers of international law.
Somaliland is the most enduring and instructive “ghost in the machine” of the Westphalian system, a de facto state that for more than three decades has performed a quiet, relentless critique of the continent’s most sacrosanct norm: the inviolability of colonial borders. Its existence poses a fundamental challenge to the African Union, not as a threat of fragmentation, but as a mirror reflecting a profound institutional and philosophical crisis. This crisis, a disjunction between juridical orthodoxy and empirical political reality, threatens to reduce the AU from a visionary project of collective agency into a curator of a colonial museum, a “sleeping giant” normatively loud yet politically subdued.
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The recent communiqué from the chairperson of the African Union Commission, which categorically rejected recognition of Somaliland and reaffirmed an “unwavering commitment” to Somalia’s sovereignty, was more than a routine diplomatic missive. It was a performative reassertion of a frozen paradigm. In its declaratory certainty, it bypassed the…
