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Somalia’s livestock and fisheries sectors feel effects of Yemen conflict

byCustoms Today Report
09/05/2015
in Uncategorized
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Yemen might be the poorest country in the Middle East, but it has great strategic importance for its neighbours. The country sits on the Bab al-Mandab Strait, a waterway linking the Red Sea with the Gulf of Aden, through which much of the world’s oil shipments pass.

Every year, Millions of animals are exported through the ports of Berbera in Somaliland and Bossaso in Puntland. Both have established relative stability compared to the two decades of civil war that has ravaged southern and central Somalia. But since the conflict erupted in March, exportation of livestock has been halted.Livestock is the mainstay of the Somali economy, contributing 40 percent to the country’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

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Traders in the northern port town of Berbera administered by the self-declared independent nation of Somaliland have said that several ships packed with animals sent to Yemen recently were forced to come back.‘’There was no place to sell them and all the markets have been closed due to the war…. They were forced to come back here and it is a loss to our market,’’ says Awad Suleiman, a businessman in Berbera.

Approximately $250 million is generated from the export of goats, sheep and camels to the Gulf countries annually. In a report released weeks ago by the Food and Agricultural organization (FAO), Somalia recorded one of its highest exports of livestock in a single year since the collapse of the central government in 1991 by transporting 5 million livestock to markets in the Gulf of Arabia.

‘’ Yemen was a vital market for our business…. It used to also link our business to the other Gulf countries. Our business is now facing jeopardy and we don’t know where it will end up,’’ says another businessman in Bossaso port.

Tags: feel the effectsfisheries sectorsSomalia’s livestockYemen Conflict

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