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Deeq A.

Qatar, Saudi Arabia reject Israel recognition of Somaliland region

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Deeq A.   
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Riyadh (Somalia Today) — Qatar and Saudi Arabia have issued stinging rejections of Israel’s move to formally recognise the Somaliland region, warning the decision sets a “dangerous precedent” that threatens the unity of the Somali state.

The swift condemnations from Doha and Riyadh on Saturday joined a growing chorus of regional anger, isolating Israel’s diplomatic breakthrough in the Horn of Africa just 24 hours after it was announced.

Yet, while the Gulf’s two heavyweight powers rallied behind Mogadishu, diplomatic sources suggest the deal was quietly orchestrated by their mutual neighbor, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), which has remained notably silent.

Coordinated Gulf rejection

In a sharply worded statement, Qatar’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs called the Israeli move a “flagrant violation of international law” and a direct assault on the “territorial integrity of the sisterly Federal Republic of Somalia.”

Doha explicitly rejected any attempt to “impose parallel entities,” a reference to Somaliland’s decades-long quest for legitimacy, which Mogadishu views as secessionist.

The Ministry added that Israel would be better off recognizing the “State of Palestine” rather than “undermining international legitimacy” in Africa.

Saudi Arabia followed suit, with its Foreign Ministry condemning the announcement as an entrenchment of “unilateral secessionist measures.”

Riyadh affirmed its “full support for the legitimate institutions of the Somali state” and warned that bypassing the federal government in Mogadishu would only deepen instability in the Horn of Africa.

Somalia’s federal government immediately welcomed the Gulf statements, presenting them as confirmation that Israel’s recognition remains isolated and lacks regional legitimacy.

Mogadishu described the move as “null and void,” insisting Somaliland remains an integral and inseparable part of the Somali state.

Senior officials warned that the recognition risks importing volatile Middle Eastern rivalries into the Horn of Africa and the Red Sea corridor, a strategic zone that has become increasingly militarised amid wars in Gaza and Yemen.

Somalia’s position aligns closely with African Union doctrine, which has consistently upheld the principle that borders inherited at independence should not be altered unilaterally.

The AU reiterated that Somaliland remains part of Somalia, warning that recognition of breakaway regions risks encouraging secessionist movements elsewhere on the continent.

Israel and Somaliland

Israel announced its decision after contacts with Somaliland’s leadership, presenting the recognition as the establishment of formal diplomatic relations and a foundation for cooperation in areas such as development, agriculture, and technology.

For Somaliland, which declared independence from Somalia in 1991 and has maintained its own government, security forces, and elections, Israel’s move represents the first recognition by a UN member state after more than three decades of diplomatic isolation.

Officials in Hargeisa framed the recognition as a breakthrough that could open the door to wider international acceptance, foreign investment, and formal state-to-state agreements that have long been out of reach.

“We have waited 34 years for this door to open,” a senior Somaliland official told Somalia Today. “We will not close it because others are uncomfortable with our sovereignty.”

Yet the forceful response from Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and other regional actors highlights the limits of that breakthrough and the diplomatic headwinds Somaliland still faces.

The UAE’s quiet role

Notably absent from the wave of official reactions has been the United Arab Emirates, a key Gulf actor with deep political, economic, and security ties across the Horn of Africa.

Abu Dhabi has issued no public statement either endorsing or rejecting Israel’s recognition, despite its close relations with both Israel and Somaliland.

Regional diplomats and officials, however, say the UAE played a quiet but central role in facilitating the recognition, acting behind the scenes to connect the parties and smooth the path toward the announcement.

Those sources describe months of discreet coordination, even as the UAE avoided public ownership of the decision amid mounting regional opposition.

Abu Dhabi has invested heavily in Somaliland in recent years, including port and infrastructure projects at Berbera port, while also maintaining close strategic ties with Israel following their normalisation agreement in 2020.

The UAE’s silence reflects a delicate balancing act: leveraging influence without triggering a public rift with Arab partners who remain firmly aligned with Somalia’s territorial claims.

Connecting Israel to this architecture serves a dual purpose for Abu Dhabi, strengthening the anti-Houthi security alliance in the Bab el-Mandeb strait while pulling Somaliland further into the orbit of the Abraham Accords.

Broader regional stakes

The growing backlash underscores wider fears that recognising Somaliland could weaken an already fragile international order built on state sovereignty, particularly in Africa, where borders remain sensitive and contested.

For Somalia, the immediate challenge is to keep the dispute anchored in diplomatic and multilateral forums and to prevent it from escalating into a broader security contest along its northern coastline.

For Arab states, the coordinated rejection by Qatar and Saudi Arabia signals an effort to project unity on Somalia’s territorial integrity while drawing a strategic red line around the Bab al-Mandab corridor.
Riyadh and Doha view an Israeli foothold on this critical maritime choke point as a direct threat to Arab strategic depth, elevating the issue far beyond a local border dispute.
With the Red Sea already militarised by wars in Gaza and Yemen, Gulf capitals are closing ranks to prevent a shift in influence that could permanently destabilize the Horn of Africa.
Whether Israel’s recognition remains a symbolic outlier or evolves into a broader diplomatic shift will depend on how many states are willing to defy regional consensus — and how Somalia and its allies respond in the months ahead.

The post Qatar, Saudi Arabia reject Israel recognition of Somaliland region appeared first on Caasimada Online.

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