Lee
21.1K posts


Somalilanders are good swimmers
Typical African@Joe__Bassey
They lied to you that Africans and black people can't swim. 🏊
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@Idddiiiiill Our border is the Indian Ocean, lady. We are coming for more
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@Idddiiiiill The notion of great Somalia never existed. Pre-colonialism, different Somali Sultanates each ruled their regions. We were never ruled by a centralised government.
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@MustafeFaysal1 @cityofhargeisa @ConnectiveStrat @Somaalilanders Stop hiding behind Somaliland. You low IQ Isaaq triblist.
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I am sure that this country is one of the countries that recognize Somaliland, but I am not sure about the time.
@cityofhargeisa
@ConnectiveStrat
@Somaalilanders

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Lee retweetledi

@EricLDaugh @NevadaLiberty64 Your Irish ancestors were unwanted in America as-well at one point.
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@NevadaLiberty64 We became America without Somalia. I don't want them here
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🚨 JUST IN: Stephen Miller lays it out PERFECTLY
Imagine a "native Minnesotan who works as a lineman...worried about his ability to support for and provide his family."
"And then imagine that he has a neighbor who's a SOMALI REFUGEE who arrived two years ago and has a Mercedes and NO financial stress and no worries at all in the entire world and never seems to ever go to work at all because he just went to an office in the state, lied on a piece of paper, and got unlimited free money forever for life!"
"THAT is the system that is being run and that is the corruption that this task force under the leadership of the Vice President is going to demolish." @StephenM
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𝟏𝟖 𝐌𝐚𝐲: 𝐒𝐨𝐦𝐚𝐥𝐢𝐥𝐚𝐧𝐝’𝐬 𝐌𝐨𝐬𝐭 𝐏𝐨𝐰𝐞𝐫𝐟𝐮𝐥 𝐃𝐢𝐩𝐥𝐨𝐦𝐚𝐭𝐢𝐜 𝐀𝐬𝐬𝐞𝐭
18 May is not just a national celebration it is Somaliland’s most effective diplomatic instrument.
It marks re-independence, but more importantly, it creates a recurring global moment to project legitimacy, performance, and political clarity.
Recognition is rarely granted in isolation; it is built on narratives that combine rights, achievements, and strategic value.
Somaliland already holds all three:
- a justified claim to recognition,
- a record of stability and governance,
- and growing geopolitical relevance.
18 May consolidates these elements into a single, visible platform.
This makes it the “fifth factor” in Somaliland’s recognition strategy. Not just a legal argument, but a diplomatic amplifier a moment to present its case directly to the international community, reinforce its credibility, and shape external perception.
The symbolism is sharp and unavoidable.
18 May forces a simple question onto the global stage:
should success be recognized, or should failure continue to be accommodated?
Somaliland represents functional governance and stability in a fragile region. Ignoring that reality increasingly carries its own political cost.
Recent developments show how this platform can translate into outcomes.
President Abdirahman Irro’s approach demonstrates that when the moment is used strategically with coordinated messaging and follow-up diplomacy it can extend beyond symbolism into tangible progress, including breakthrough recognitions.
This strategy has recently taken a more structured and assertive form. On 17 May 2025,President Abdirahman Irro escalated the moment into direct diplomacy by sending formal communication to 193 countries.
This was not symbolic outreach it was a coordinated attempt to engage the entire international system at once.
The follow-through matters. In a parliamentary address, the president confirmed that responses had been received.
That detail is critical:
engagement moved from one-way messaging to active diplomatic exchange.
The results are already visible. Israel’s re- recognition on 26 December 2025 did not emerge in isolation it reflects sustained outreach, timing, and strategic use of diplomatic platforms like 18 May.
More importantly, it signals momentum. Recognition, once initiated, tends to build.
The lesson is clear. 18 May must evolve from commemoration into strategy.
Each year should not only celebrate the past but actively convert visibility into diplomatic gains.
Recognition is not charity. It is alignment with reality.
#Somaliland #18May #55thAfricancountry #Israel #USA
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@cabdirashed Stop appropriating the name Somaliland you petty, Isaaq triblist.
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#Israel breaks the recognition barrier, setting a precedent. It is time for African nations to follow and formalize #Somaliland’s full re-recognition, consolidating years of engagement and aligning diplomacy with regional stability and strategic reality.

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