Traitors and prostitutes selling out Somalia

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The summary of the case

Kenya has presented to the UN evidence of what it believes should determine its sea boundary dispute with Somalia.

On Thursday, Attorney-General Githu Muigai and his team tabled geographical and seismic data collected for the past seven years.

The submission, to the UN Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf, is in a bid to prove that the current sea boundary with Somalia should stand.

"In preparing the submission, Kenya had to acquire bathymetric data in 2007 and seismic, magnetics and gravity data in 2008, in offshore areas appurtenant to Kenya," the Attorney-General's Office said on Thursday in a statement.

The presentation to the UN Commission in New York comes just a fortnight after Kenya challenged a case filed by Somalia to the International Court of Justice (ICJ) as invalid.

The commission was created by the 1982 Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS).

It usually considers data and other material submitted by coastal states concerning the establishment of the outer limits of the continental shelf beyond 200 nautical miles (370km) and to make recommendations.

Though Somalia has already sued Kenya on the issue, Kenya argues it wants to know the area which it will have rights to exploit resources in the sea.

"Kenya stands to benefit from minerals and other non-living resources of the seabed and the subsoil together with living organisms belonging to the sedentary species, the AGs Office stated.

Usually, based on what a country presents, the commission's recommendations are final and binding and Kenya may have to adjust to those recommendations.

Kenya already missed a deadline to reach an agreement with Somalia over territorial boundaries.

Usually, the commission asks countries sharing maritime boundaries to submit to it orientations and limits of those borders.

Those agreements must set out exclusive economic zones, territorial seas and continental shelves.

Kenya argues that the current sea boundary with Somalia, which takes a perpendicular line to the land boundary into the sea should stand because Tanzania-Kenya sea border takes the same shape.

But Somalia wants the boundary to extent diagonally to the south at Kiunga into the sea, and not eastwards as it is today.

Somalia went to the ICJ to demand that its boundary with Kenya be adjusted to give Mogadishu a huge chunk of it with significant oil deposits.

The area in contest is about 100,000km2 forming a triangle east of the Kenya coast.

The dispute dating back to 2009 was influenced by disagreements over resources on the sea bed.

CONTRAVENED SOVEREIGNTY

Kenya went ahead to lease oil blocks in the contested area to Total and Eni oil companies in 2012, a decision Mogadishu argued contravened its sovereignty.

There are about 44 oil and gas exploration blocks in or near this area. In 2012, an Australian from PanContinental discovered vas gas in the Lamu Basin.

The area also hosts a Kenyan navy base at Manda Bay, which is used by US forces in combating sea piracy.

Kenya responded, at the time, by initiating dialogue that led to a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the then Somali Transitional Federal Government to negotiate the dispute out of courts but with the help of the UN Commission.

However, the Somali Parliament rejected the deal and Somalia went ahead to sue.

In response to the case filed in earlier this year, Prof Muigai told the ICJ the case should not stand because it violates trust between Mogadishu and Nairobi.

The AG said the case could jeopardise Kenya's support for Somalia to stabilise against Al-Shabaab.

Litigating the complex issue before the court is clearly contrary to the 2009 MoU.

Somalia's case is invalid and Kenya is confident that the court will agree with its submissions, Prof Muigai argued in his response to the case filed in July.

"The two governments must find a solution through amicable agreement, under international law. It is their obligation to do so."

In 2014, President Uhuru Kenyatta met with his Somali counterpart Sheikh Mohamud over the matter.

But Somalia argued that that only the ICJ, a UN Court that handles inter-state disputes, would resolve it because the two sides had exhausted all diplomatic channels.

The issue of the Kenyan government violations against our territorial waters has continued for a long time, so it's the right time to end its fake claim in court, Somalia's Information Minister Mohammed Maareeye argued in July this year.

ICJ verdicts normally do not provide for appeals, meaning Kenya would have to live with the binding decision, which may be losing a significant chuck of its sea territory.
 
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There should not be any dispute at all. The case is clear like sun only blind & traitor that wouldnot see the truth
 
The prime minister didn't sign that MOU agreement, but this warsame creature signed the agreement that he didn't understand it (or I doubt that he even read the agreement.) then HSM agreed to set up a joining commitee for the management of this issue which did not need at all. buy feel free to add any pictures you want.


Don't be a hypocrite and try to defend cumar fuusto. It seems like you are protecting him and you don't hold Him accountable for his share of the blame.

It see.s like you protecting him on bases of qabil.
 
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