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AbyssiniaLady
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Joined: 04 Feb 2007, 05:44

Somalia simply sealed toothless Kenya fate

Post by AbyssiniaLady » 15 Oct 2021, 17:36

Kenya is a small over populated country and does not have any major natural resources, It was hoping to sell oil and natural gas but that dream is gone for good.

According to Kenyan government, the first oil and gas exploration in Kenya started in the 1950’s with British Petroleum (BP) and Shell exploring the offshore of Lamu basin, the Rift Valley around lake Turkana and many other areas in the rift Valley 1954, Although many wells were drilled but found no commercially viable amount of oil and gas to continue operations at the site and they abandoned oil and gas exploration in Kenya altogether.

However, Total and Italian oil company Eni announced significant discoveries offshore oil and gas reserves in 2005 in the then disputed area, in block L-21, But now block L-21 L-23 L-24 L-5 and half L-26 all belongs to Somalia, By the way, The International Court of Justice awarded Kenya 10,000 square meters of the ocean which rightfully belongs to Somalia.

Today, corrupt Kenyan government is standing with empty hands.


This is the official Somalia and Kenya maritime delimitation line that is now registered in The United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, also called the Law of the Sea Convention.


And this is the unofficial Kenya maritime delimitation fantasy line that is rejected by The United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, also called the Law of the Sea Convention.

AbyssiniaLady
Member+
Posts: 5543
Joined: 04 Feb 2007, 05:44

Re: Somalia simply sealed toothless Kenya fate

Post by AbyssiniaLady » 16 Oct 2021, 12:45

Kenya must up her game after Somalia maritime dispute loss

KAMOTHO WAIGANJO By Kamotho Waiganjo | October 16th 2021


Somalia has the longest coastline in Africa and has no basis squeezing into Kenya’s meagre waters. [Courtesy]


This week, the government lost two major cases, one local relating to the Registration of Persons, programme popularly known as “Huduma Namba” and the second at the International Court of Justice (ICJ) on our maritime border with Somalia.

Coming soon after the devastating loss on the BBI constitutional amendment Bill at the High Court and the Court of Appeal, these losses demand serious reflection in the corridors of the AG Kihara Kariuki’s State Law Office.

It is shocking that despite overwhelming state resources, and some of our best legal brains, the government routinely loses cases, a hitherto unknown possibility in the days when Muthoni Kimani and others strode those bare offices with the meagerest of resources.


But my focus today is not an interrogation of these hallowed offices but on the devastating decision of the ICJ where we were judicially massacred by lawless Somalia. The decision did not come as a surprise. Anyone who has followed the goings-on at the Hague, including the refusal by Kenya to take part in the proceedings after its pleas to defer the case and to have Abdulqawi Ahmed Yusuf, a Somali national who was sitting as a judge in the case recuse himself were summarily rejected, would have known we were going to lose.

Indeed, Kenya had already given notice that it would not be bound by the decision by the time it was granted. The surprise is that we bungled the matter at a political and a judicial level leaving ourselves with no recourse but to join the league of rogue nations that defy international forums’ decisions. When around 2018, Somalia indicated that it was going to retract its informal acquiescence to Kenya using the latitudinal boundary and that it would insist on a southerly boundary, that should have sent danger signals.

By that time we were aware of the commercial aspects of the Somalia decision since we had discovered vast oil deposits in the contested area. We should have been aware of the history of foreign capital preferring to deal with war torn countries in Africa in the extraction of natural resources hence the preference for the disputed territory to be held by Somalia. Right from the beginning we should have applied the same approach that we used in the ICC case, investing in serious diplomatic initiatives incorporating the African Union, Igadd, Somalia’s Western allies and our own allies.

We had the best case, both in terms of historical acquiescence of the boundary by Somalia, the practice of other Africa’s coastal nations on similar matters and the justice of the case.


President of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) Ronny Abraham. [Courtesy]

Somalia has the longest coastline in Africa and has no basis squeezing into Kenya’s meagre waters. For some reason, we took a laissez-faire “big stronger brother” approach assuming we could run roughshod over this “failed state”. Clearly, they were more street smart and have outsmarted us all the way.

That said, we cannot abide by the ICJ decision; the way the matter was handled including the rush to conclude it is inconsistent with the handling of delicate international disputes. Diplomatic solutions are always the preferred option.

We must engage the diplomatic gear we failed to employ aggressively and take our case to other more objective forums including the United Nations.

There is talk that Somalia has sought the assistance of its benefactors to “protect its territorial waters”. We must similarly engage like allies so that we escalate the matter and ensure that the international community aligns with our desire for a diplomatic solution.

Ultimately, the essence of nationhood is the protection of territory and on this we must not waver.

But honestly, we must learn to do better politics especially at the international level and not have to shout thief when the horses have long bolted.

https://www.standardmedia.co.ke/kamotho ... spute-loss

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