Somaliland – www.israelhayom.com https://www.israelhayom.com israelhayom english website Mon, 29 Dec 2025 15:18:57 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.2 https://www.israelhayom.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/cropped-G_rTskDu_400x400-32x32.jpg Somaliland – www.israelhayom.com https://www.israelhayom.com 32 32 Israel recognizes Somaliland yet travel remains out of reach https://www.israelhayom.com/2025/12/29/israel-recognizes-somaliland-yet-travel-remains-out-of-reach/ https://www.israelhayom.com/2025/12/29/israel-recognizes-somaliland-yet-travel-remains-out-of-reach/#respond Mon, 29 Dec 2025 15:00:42 +0000 https://www.israelhayom.com/?p=1112605 Although Israel has recognized Somaliland, we found that reaching it as Israelis is anything but straightforward. We tried to board a Fly Dubai flight to Dubai in order to catch a connecting flight to Somaliland, but hopes aside, reality intervened. It turns out that political and diplomatic realities do not align with Israel's recognition. Not […]

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Although Israel has recognized Somaliland, we found that reaching it as Israelis is anything but straightforward. We tried to board a Fly Dubai flight to Dubai in order to catch a connecting flight to Somaliland, but hopes aside, reality intervened.

It turns out that political and diplomatic realities do not align with Israel's recognition. Not only are there no direct flights to Somaliland, but the visa process for Somalia, Somaliland's neighbor, has turned any attempt to reach the region into an almost insurmountable challenge.

Somaliland, despite having been formally recognized by Israel, is not recognized by any other country in the world. A direct result of this situation is the absence of direct flights to the territory. In addition, international airlines also do not recognize Somaliland, which means there is no easy way for Israelis to get there. In practice, traveling to Somaliland requires first flying to Somalia, the larger neighboring country. The problem is that Israelis cannot obtain a visa to Somalia unless they hold a foreign passport.

Soldiers of the Somaliland Army in the capital, Hargeisa. Photo: Wikipedia

If you do manage to secure a Somali visa, entry into Somaliland itself is relatively simple. Hargeisa International Airport, located in Somaliland's capital, offers visitors a visa on arrival for about $60. The process is handled on the spot and takes only a few minutes.

Israel's recognition of Somaliland has not provided practical solutions for Israelis who want to visit. The political system, rooted in conflict and a lack of international recognition, has created a situation in which every attempt to reach the territory runs into seemingly impenetrable bureaucratic barriers.

While recognition of a state does not always translate into practical solutions or conditions that allow tourists to arrive, in the case of Somaliland the story highlights the wide gap between government policy and a political reality that complicates any effort at direct engagement. In the end, even though Israel has recognized Somaliland, the path to reaching it remains blocked for Israelis, and we were left grounded.

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Why is Ilhan Omar silent on the recognition of Somaliland? https://www.israelhayom.com/2025/12/28/why-is-ilhan-omar-silent-on-the-recognition-of-somaliland/ https://www.israelhayom.com/2025/12/28/why-is-ilhan-omar-silent-on-the-recognition-of-somaliland/#respond Sun, 28 Dec 2025 09:00:59 +0000 https://www.israelhayom.com/?p=1112267 The Israeli announcement recognizing Somaliland's sovereignty has triggered an uproar within the Somali community in the US, most of it concentrated in Minnesota. Social media has been flooded with voices both supporting and opposing the move. Yet amid the heated debate, one prominent voice has been conspicuously absent. Congresswoman Ilhan Omar, long regarded as a […]

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The Israeli announcement recognizing Somaliland's sovereignty has triggered an uproar within the Somali community in the US, most of it concentrated in Minnesota. Social media has been flooded with voices both supporting and opposing the move.

Yet amid the heated debate, one prominent voice has been conspicuously absent. Congresswoman Ilhan Omar, long regarded as a leading figure and de facto spokesperson for the Somali American community, has remained silent. Her silence is striking, particularly given that she rarely misses an opportunity to criticize Israel and is usually outspoken on Somali-related issues.

One possible explanation lies in the delicate internal dynamics of the Somali community in the US, which forms the backbone of Omar's electoral base, as well as in her own controversial family history, tied to one of the darkest chapters in Somalia's past.

אילהן עומאר ואביה נוא עומאר מוחמד ,
Ilhan Omar and her father, Nur Omar Mohamed

Omar's father, Col. Nur Omar Mohamed, was allegedly directly involved in the genocide against members of the Isaaq clan in northern Somalia. That same clan later went on, in the aftermath of the civil war, to establish the Republic of Somaliland. The genocide was carried out under the rule of Somali dictator Mohamed Siad Barre, who led an authoritarian military regime and routinely executed his opponents.

The campaign of mass killings began after Somalia's defeat in the Ogaden War against Ethiopia, a loss that triggered a massive influx of refugees into northern Somalia. The sudden arrival of large numbers of refugees led to mounting friction with the local population, most of them Arab members of the Isaaq clan, who lived semi-nomadic lives in the region. The tensions eventually erupted into an Isaaq uprising against the Mogadishu regime, prompting Barre to order a brutal military crackdown.

The president's son-in-law, Gen. Mohamed Said Hersi Morgan, drafted a document approved by Barre that proposed a "final solution" to what he described as the Isaaq problem. The plan was swiftly implemented, launching a systematic campaign of executions by gunfire, starvation and aerial bombardment. More than 200,000 civilians were killed, and human rights organizations continue to uncover new mass graves in the sands of Somaliland.

חורבות בהרגייסה לאחר רצח העם , ויקיפדיה
Ruins in Hargeisa after the genocide. Photo: Wikipedia

Col. Nur Omar Mohamed was one of the commanders in the field during the genocide. His close ties to the president and to the ruling clan enabled him to evade accountability. At the time, the Somaliland Chronicle published an article stating: "At the heart of this brutal military regime stood Col. Nur Omar Mohamed, Ilhan Omar's father. His rank, authority, membership in the ruling Darod clan, and more than 10 years of advancement through the Somali military hierarchy to the rank of colonel placed him directly within the chain of command during, and at the height of, the Isaaq genocide. Based on his position, loyalty to the regime and role in the army, it is almost certain that he had extensive knowledge of, and involvement in, the planning, conception, management and execution of the genocide."

Many survivors of the genocide, along with members of other ethnic groups who suffered under Barre's bloody rule, now live in the US and form part of Omar's electorate. The prospect of reopening the deep wounds of the massacres of the late 1980s and early 1990s may be reason enough for the congresswoman to forgo another confrontation with Israel and opt, at least this time, for silence.

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