Somaliaâs apology âreflects the depth of the historical relationsâ between the nations and âappreciation for the UAEâs purposeful role in supporting the Somali people and their government,â the Emiratesâ state-run WAM news agency said.
In a dramatic incident in April 2018, Somali agents boarded an Emirati airplane at the Mogadishu airport, held Emirati soldiers at gunpoint and made off with bags of cash that the countryâs security services claimed were undeclared U.S. dollars. The UAE said the funds had been flown in to pay salaries of Somali soldiers and provide other aid.
Last month as the UAE dispatched planeloads of humanitarian aid to drought-stricken Somalia, Roble offered a formal apology to the Emirati government for the confiscation of the $9.6 million. He promised Somalia would return the seized funds âas soon as possible.â
âA new dawn of normalizing relations,â Roble tweeted at the time. âAfter a period of cold relations, Somalia & UAE are now on a progressive path to solve their differences & resume the brotherly ties.â
The row came as the UAE, along with three other Arab states, broke ties with Qatar, claiming the state supported terrorism. The ensuing political rivalry was deeply felt in Somalia and the wider Horn of Africa, where wealthy Gulf Arab sheikhdoms have poured millions of dollars and vied for power and profits in recent years.
Somaliaâs federal government had remained neutral in Gulfâs diplomatic crisis, with many suspecting Mogadishuâs President Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed was aligned with Qatar despite intense Saudi and Emirati pressure to denounce Doha. The embargo officially ended a year ago as Saudi Arabia led regional efforts at reconciliation.
Even as Prime Minister Roble pledged to hand over the money to the Emirates earlier this year, President Mohamed ordered the central bank against releasing the $9.6 million âdue to its illegal entry into our nation,â his spokesman said in a statement last month. A wider political dispute between the leaders has threatened to further destabilize the troubled African nation.
Somalia is led by a federal government that tries to wield power over regional states. Despite Mogadishuâs official neutrality, the federal states had declared support for the UAE and Saudi Arabia in their boycott of Qatar.
The Emirates has invested heavily in infrastructure in Somaliaâs breakaway territory of Somaliland, with Dubai-owned DP World port operator running a major port in the area.
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