Ethiopia Offers Airline Stake to Somaliland for Red Sea Access
- Agreement will give Somaliland stake in Ethiopian Airlines
- Ethiopia’s Hussein says details will be ironed out in a month

The Berbera port of Somaliland. Photographer: Mustafa Saeed/AFP/Getty Images
January 1, 2024 at 10:20 AM EST
Ethiopia signed a memorandum of understanding with Somaliland, a breakaway region of Somalia, to gain access to the Red Sea in exchange for a stake in its flagship carrier Ethiopian Airlines.
Detailed negotiations to reach a formal agreement will be concluded in a month, said Redwan Hussein, national security adviser to Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed. He didn’t disclose the stake Ethiopia will offer for Africa’s biggest airline.
The MoU will enable Ethiopia to access the Red Sea from Somaliland to use as a military base and for commercial purposes for 50 years, Hussein said at a briefing on Monday in the capital Addis Ababa. It will be able to lease a “20 kilometer (12 miles) long access for the Ethiopian Navy base and to be used as one of its entry ports,” Somaliland President Muse Bihi Abdi said at the same event.
Ethiopia can also build infrastructure and a corridor, Hussein said.
As part of the agreement Africa’s second most populated nation will recognize Somaliland as a sovereign state, Bihi said.
In October, Abiy in a televised lecture identified access to the ocean as a strategic objective and warned that failure to secure it could lead to conflict before toning down his comments.
Abiy’s remarks drew rebukes from Eritrea, Somalia and Djibouti, all of whom described their sovereignty and territorial integrity as sacrosanct and not open for discussion.
His position on the Red Sea raised concerns among diplomats of fresh regional instability.
The Horn of Africa nation lost direct access to the sea in 1993, when Eritrea gained independence after a three-decade war. Its main trade route now runs along roads and a railway that link the capital, Addis Ababa, to a port in Djibouti, one of five neighbors with coastlines that include Somalia, Eritrea, Sudan and Kenya.More than a 10th of the world’s global commerce transited the Red Sea that connects the Indian Ocean to the Suez Canal before attacks on commercial vessels by Houthi rebels led some ships to re-route around Africa to avoid the violence.
Landlocked Ethiopia signs pact to use Somaliland’s Red Sea port Times LIVE 02:03
Ethiopia and a breakaway Somali region sign a deal giving Ethiopia access to the sea AfricaNews 01:43
Somaliland New Deal with Ethiopian Airlines for Red Sea Access Aviation A2Z 01:41
Ethiopia signs deal with breakaway Somaliland to secure access to Red Sea TRT World 00:44
Ethiopia signs deal with Somaliland to secure access to sea Anadolu Agency 00:36
Ethiopia eyes Berbera as primary port Splash 24/7 00:25
Ethiopia Recognizes Somaliland in Exchange for Seaport Access The Maritime Executive 21:49
Ethiopia and Somali region sign a deal giving Ethiopia access to the sea, leaders say PBS Online 19:13
Ethiopia Takes First Steps Towards Sea Access with Somaliland Deal Oneindia 18:02
Ethiopia and a breakaway Somali region sign a deal giving Ethiopia access to the sea, leaders say ABC News 17:21
Ethiopia signs agreement to use Somaliland’s Red Sea port Al Jazeera 16:11
Ethiopia, Somaliland agree deal on Berbera port access Daily Nation 16:11
Ethiopia ‘Secures’ Access to Sea After Deal With Somaliland Voice of America 15:44
Ethiopia Signs Pact To Use Somaliland’s Red Sea Port gCaptain 15:26
Ethiopia signs agreement paving way to sea access BBC 13:33
Ethiopia, Somaliland agree deal on port access Legit NG 12:05