SOREST

4.8K posts

SOREST banner
SOREST

SOREST

@oursorest

Our mission is to actualize the vision of the people of Somaliland through supporting and delivering the services they need. including international recognitio

global Katılım Temmuz 2020
1.3K Takip Edilen1.5K Takipçiler
Sabitlenmiş Tweet
SOREST
SOREST@oursorest·
SOREST tweet media
ZXX
0
2
6
662
SOREST retweetledi
Ismail lugweyne
Ismail lugweyne@IsmacilYuusuf·
Somaliland tricolour flag was gained through ten years liberation of struggle. It is symbol of somaliland sovereignty and political independence. It is symbol of unity. It is symbol of pride. It is symbol of progress. It is symbol of victory youtu.be/f-62w0bEqjc?si…
YouTube video
YouTube
English
0
1
1
126
SOREST retweetledi
Erigavo Times
Erigavo Times@Cityoferigavo·
The Turkish Masjid in Berbera, Somaliland, was built 1874–1884 under Egypt’s Khedivate, an Ottoman tributary that briefly ruled the coast. It originally featured a prayer hall, ablution, toilets, hammam, funeral wash area, minaret & garden. #Berbera,#Somaliland
Erigavo Times tweet mediaErigavo Times tweet mediaErigavo Times tweet media
English
1
2
9
378
SOREST retweetledi
REPUBLIC OF SOMALILAND
REPUBLIC OF SOMALILAND@RepOfSomaliland·
Trump was right: ‘Somalia is not even a country. They just run around killing each other.’ Today in Mogadishu, protesters were shot dead by police as the president and dictator of Somalia clings to power. His term ends on May 15, 2026, but he is backed by Turkey and Qatar . The situation is pure chaos. The United Nations, the African Union, and the Arab League want to chain the peaceful, democratic Republic of Somaliland to this failed mess? It’s time to face reality: recognize Somaliland NOW. Peace over lawlessness.
English
50
624
686
35.3K
SOREST retweetledi
Adal Empire 🀄️
Adal Empire 🀄️@MadowNews·
Hey @grok Remove all flags except the two highest Freedom House-rated counties.
Adal Empire 🀄️ tweet media
English
15
24
444
86.4K
SOREST retweetledi
Washington Eye
Washington Eye@washington_EY·
US Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) has renewed his calls for the Trump administration to recognize Somaliland as an independent and sovereign state. “Somaliland stands with our allies, including Taiwan and Israel, and aligns with US interests in a region where China is aggressively expanding,” Cruz said. “Most recently, Israel’s decision to formally recognize #Somaliland in December 2025 underscores its growing strategic relevance.” #WashingtonEye
Washington Eye tweet media
English
28
165
477
34.3K
SOREST retweetledi
عدنان_Al Isxaaqi
عدنان_Al Isxaaqi@darknomad770·
#صوماليلاند هذه الإنجازات ليست إلا جزءاً بسيطاً مما حققه رئيس صوماليلاند خلال عامه الأول. إلى أولئك الذين يعادون وجودنا: لن تصلوا أبداً إلى مستوى قادتنا، وهذا الإحباط هو سرّ عدائكم لنا
عدنان_Al Isxaaqi tweet mediaعدنان_Al Isxaaqi tweet media
العربية
2
14
100
3.7K
SOREST retweetledi
khalif Hagoog; SL FIRST
khalif Hagoog; SL FIRST@nuur1_nuur·
All these companies should either change their names or their licenses must revoked 1.SOMTEL❌️ 2.TELESOM❌️ 3. SO'GASHO❌️ NEW NAME PROPOSAL OPTIONS 👇 SL TEL SOMALILAND COM SL NETWORK SL_LINK SOMALILAND CONNECT SL MOBILE SOMALILAND NET SL TELECOM SOMALILAND DIGITAL SOMALILAND MOBILE SL CONNECT SOMALILAND WIRELESS SL TECH SOMALILAND COMMUNICATIONS. #SOMALILAND
khalif Hagoog; SL FIRST tweet media
English
13
11
49
2.6K
SOREST
SOREST@oursorest·
@nuur1_nuur @KSAMOFA This message seems to be misguided, because, the question is what's the purpose that it intended to achieve, is it just to say something or feeling bad of the opportunity that they missed.
English
0
0
0
38
SOREST retweetledi
Israel in the UAE
Israel in the UAE@israelintheUAE·
We are proud to welcome Etihad Airways back to Israel. 🇮🇱🇦🇪 Once again, Etihad is the first to resume its flights, proving that true partnership is measured by consistency and an uncompromising commitment. In just a few years, Etihad has become a favorite for many Israelis, ranking as the 8th most popular airline in the country for 2025. Thank you for being a reliable bridge between our nations and for always leading the way. Welcome back! ✈️ #Israel #UAE #EtihadAirways #Partnership #Aviation #WelcomeBack
Israel in the UAE tweet mediaIsrael in the UAE tweet mediaIsrael in the UAE tweet mediaIsrael in the UAE tweet media
English
875
1.1K
9.2K
1.9M
SOREST retweetledi
Samuel J. Rosenfeld 🇺🇸 They Lied — I Document
Somaliland Writes to Silicon Valley: A Letter in Search of Recognition There are, from time to time, letters that travel farther than the distance between sender and recipient. This one begins in Hargeisa, the capital of Somaliland, and is addressed not to a foreign ministry, nor to the United Nations, but to a man whose influence lies in the curious republic of the digital age—Elon Musk. It is written by Abdilahi Mohamed Ahmed, a parliamentarian with responsibilities in internal affairs, security, and defense. Yet his concern in this instance is not a matter of borders guarded by soldiers, but of borders drawn—or not drawn—on a social media platform. His appeal is directed to X, and it concerns something both modest and profound: the right of Somalilanders to name themselves as they are. The difficulty, as he describes it, is simple enough to state. A citizen of Somaliland who seeks verification on X must, for want of an alternative, identify as being from Somalia. In a purely technical sense, this is a dropdown menu problem. In a human sense, it is rather more than that. It is the small but persistent friction of being told, in the quiet language of systems and settings, that one’s identity does not quite exist. Now Somaliland is one of those places that sit awkwardly in the atlas of international affairs. It declared independence in 1991 and has, by most practical measures, governed itself ever since. It has its own institutions, its own elections, and—by the testimony of many observers—a degree of stability in a region often marked by disorder, which sets it apart from its neighbours. Yet it remains, in the eyes of most of the world’s governments, unrecognized. Somaliland exists, if one may put it this way, in the space between fact and acknowledgment. And so the letter arrives on Mr. Musk’s desk not as a petition for diplomatic recognition—something even the boldest entrepreneur cannot bestow—but as a request for something both smaller and, in its own way, more immediate. The MP asks that Somaliland be included in the identity verification system of X, so that its citizens may represent themselves accurately, and thereby participate more fully in what has become, for better or worse, the world’s largest conversation. X, if anything, resembles a modern Speakers’ Corner—only this one stretches across continents and never quite closes. It is a practical concern. Without proper recognition in the system, users may find themselves hindered in obtaining verification, which in turn affects their ability to conduct business, practice journalism, or engage in civic discourse with the authority that verification confers. But it is also a symbolic one. For in the modern world, where so much of public life has migrated online, the absence of a name in a database can feel like a quiet form of exclusion. The letter makes its case with a certain measured confidence. Somaliland, it says, has been democratic and stable for over three decades. Its citizens are active participants on X, using it to connect with the wider world, to promote trade, and to speak—freely, one hopes—on matters of public concern. To recognize Somaliland within the platform, the MP suggests, would not only correct an inconsistency but affirm a principle: that access to digital spaces should reflect the realities of the communities that inhabit them. There is, too, an offer of cooperation. Somaliland’s authorities, the letter says, stand ready to assist X in making the necessary adjustments, as though this were not merely a request but the beginning of a conversation. It is a tone that acknowledges the peculiar balance of power in our time, where a technology company may, in certain respects, shape the lived experience of identity as surely as any government. What makes the letter noteworthy is not only its content but its destination. In an earlier age, such an appeal might have been addressed to a foreign secretary or an ambassador. Today, it is sent to the head of a global platform, whose decisions about categories and classifications ripple outward to millions of users. It is a reminder that recognition, once the exclusive province of states, now has a parallel life in the architecture of the digital world. Whether Elon Musk will act on the request is, for the moment, an open question. The change being asked for is, in technical terms, a modest one. Yet its implications are not. For the people of Somaliland, to appear under their own name on a platform like X would be a small but meaningful acknowledgment of who they believe themselves to be. And so this letter, quietly composed in Hargeisa, joins that long tradition of appeals sent outward in hope—hope that someone, somewhere, will listen, and perhaps understand. And if it does nothing more than that, it will at least have marked, in its own modest way, the point at which a question of identity, once confined to maps and ministries, found its way into the circuitry of the modern world—and now, like a vessel setting out across uncertain waters, we may only wish it Godspeed, and fair winds and following seas. @elonmusk @Support @nikitabier @AbdilahiGacma @Presidencysl_ @MoI_Somalilandd @SldiasporaGN @somalilandmfa @SomalilandUS @SomalilandinUK @tvsaab @Somaalilanders @IsraeliPM @SomalilandFT @SenTedCruz @HornDiplomat @GavinWilliamson @X @Abdirahmanirro @SarahChampionMP @GOP @oxygen_breeze @stephenctimms @FabianLeedsNE @Hassangallaydh @MarkusWiechel @Labour @Mudanemaxamed @MMSomalitv @DavidGreenhh @Keir_Starmer @10DowningStreet @Conservatives
Samuel J. Rosenfeld 🇺🇸 They Lied — I Document tweet media
English
5
34
119
2.5K
SOREST
SOREST@oursorest·
@simdachi @AbiyAhmedAli @Abdirahmanirro @mrubin1971 @DrJPPham Whose war is this ? These people are fighting to kill each like headless chicken instead of working together to improve their livelihoods, don't you think they are helping those who are waiting to replace them. If they can't figure out the net result, then good luck 🤞
English
0
0
0
19
SOREST retweetledi
REPUBLIC OF SOMALILAND
REPUBLIC OF SOMALILAND@RepOfSomaliland·
31 BILLION barrels.🛢️ That’s what lies beneath the Republic of Somaliland. It would rank roughly around 11th–12th in the world. Just above: Kazakhstan (~30 billion barrels) Just below: Nigeria (~37 billion barrels) Have you ever wondered why countries like Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Egypt, and Turkey resist recognition? It’s not just only about a free democracy in the Horn of Africa; it’s also about energy, positioning, and control. “Workers drilling for water accidentally struck oil a few years go…” and now the story is unfolding. Genel Energy (listed on the London Stock Exchange) and state-owned CPC Corporation Taiwan will drill the first well, targeting an estimated 650 million barrels, with drilling scheduled for 2026. With oil prices high and the Red Sea serving as a global shortcut, Somaliland is geographically closer to key markets in Europe, America, and Asia than many Gulf producers. This proximity allows Somaliland to unlock faster and more strategic exports through its Berbera port. ➡️ Prime Red Sea access = shorter export routes ➡️ Small population, massive wealth ➡️ Strategic edge over traditional Gulf routes ➡️ Emerging energy powerhouse in the Horn Opportunity for first-mover advantage  ➡️ Taiwan ➡️ Israel ➡️ Greece ➡️ India ➡️ USA This isn’t just a discovery…it’s a shift in global energy dynamics. 🛢️
English
37
318
1.3K
88.3K
SOREST retweetledi
Abdisalam Yassin
Abdisalam Yassin@AbdisalamYassi1·
This is a clear example of the diplomatic sophistication of the people of Somaliland.They negotiated with the British Empire of the time as equals.Their anxiety about the transfer of HARA to Ethiopia in 1954 propelled them to Somali irredentism that resulted in the Isaq genocide
Yusuf Gabobe@yGabobe

@AbdisalamYassi1 Mujahid see this interesting treaty between the two sides after the Mary Anne incident

English
0
9
21
1.2K
SOREST retweetledi
Abdisalam Yassin
Abdisalam Yassin@AbdisalamYassi1·
This is an important advice. Repeat this mantra until the decisionmakers heed it.
Maryan@mari_ah

I believe there is a critical need for reform across all government positions in Somaliland, with an emphasis on hiring qualified professionals who are equipped to handle the challenges of today’s world. In particular, the foreign affairs sector requires individuals with strong communication skills and leadership abilities, people who can represent #Somaliland effectively on the global stage. It’s essential that we select those who not only understand diplomacy but also have the expertise to navigate complex international relations. I hope my message reaches the right people and that it sparks a conversation on how we can build a stronger, more capable government that can truly serve the interests of our nation.

English
0
3
14
783
SOREST retweetledi
Somalilanders
Somalilanders@Somaalilanders·
When three former U.S. Assistant Secretaries of State for Africa, along with a former U.S. Ambassador and Envoy to the Sahel and Great Lakes regions of Africa, call on the U.S. government to recognise Somaliland, it says it all. @CohenOnAfrica @JendayiFrazer @TiborPNagyJr @DrJPPham
Somalilanders tweet mediaSomalilanders tweet mediaSomalilanders tweet mediaSomalilanders tweet media
English
9
33
132
8.4K
SOREST
SOREST@oursorest·
@NewYorkSun The Republic of Somaliland is an independent state from June 26, 1960. The intended union with Somalia on July 1st 1960. has failed from the get go, please do your research b4 you publish papers
English
0
0
0
165
The New York Sun
The New York Sun@NewYorkSun·
An X account linked to the Republic of Somaliland is wading into American politics with cheeky posts including some encouraging Congress to formally recognize its independence after a longtime split from Somalia nysun.com/article/somali…
English
10
29
139
5.2K