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Somalia
Federal Republic of Somalia, Jumhuuriyadda Fedraalka Soomaaliya, Jumhuriyyat as-Sumal al-Fideraliyya
Last modified: 2013-03-26 by bruce berry
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image by
Cai Zhenyuan,
11 Sept 2012
Proportions: unspecified
Flag adopted 12 Oct 1954, Coat of Arms
adopted 10 Oct 1956
Other Somali pages:
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Awdal
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Azania
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Darwishland
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Federated Hinterland State
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Gedoland
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Hiiraan
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Khaatumo
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Maayland
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Somali Central State
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Sool, Sanaag and Cayan regions
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Tanadland
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Ximan and Xeeb (Himan and Heeb) Administration
See also:
Background
Somalia was created on 01 July 1960
following the independence of Italian Somaliland from
Italy, which then immediately united with British
Somaliland to form the Somali Republic. British Somaliland had gained
its independence just five days earlier on 26 June 1960. Although Somalia
is currently regarded as a "failed state" with a weak, but recognised
central government authority, the new Federal Government of Somalia established
in August 2012 is the first
permanent central government in the country since the start of the civil war.
De facto control of the north
of the country resides in local authorities, of which
Puntland, Maakhir and
Galmudug acknowledge the authority of the federal government, and maintain their
declaration of autonomy within a federated Somalia.
Southwestern Somalia and Jubaland, in the south,
have largely abandoned the idea of autonomy.
Somaliland in the north has declared itself independent from Somalia and
does not recognise the authority of the federal government. Somaliland's self-declared
independence is not recognised.
The British established a
protectorate in 1886 over what became known as British
Somaliland and the Italians colonised the south in 1889, which became known
as Italian Somaliland.
Italy, under Mussolini, invaded
Abyssinia (now Ethiopia) in 1935, in
an attempt to colonise it. This action was condemned by the League of
Nations, but little was done to prevent it or to liberate Italian occupied
Ethiopia.
On 03 August 1940 Italian troops invaded British Somaliland from Ethiopia and
succeeded in occupying the territory until January 1942 when Britain launched a
campaign from Kenya with the objectives to liberate
British Somaliland, Italian-occupied Ethiopia and conquer Italian Somaliland.
By February 1942, most of Italian Somaliland had been captured by the British
and in March, British Somaliland was retaken liberated from the coast with the
help of Somali patriotic forces and placed under British military
administration. Northern Somalia would remain a protectorate, while southern
Somalia by agreement became a United Nations Trusteeship in 1949. In 1960,
the two regions united as planned to form the independent Somali Republic under
a civilian government. Mohamed Siad Barre seized power in 1969 and established
the Somali Democratic Republic. In 1991, Barre's government collapsed as the
Somali civil war broke out.
Neighbouring
Djibouti was
maintained as a French colony until it obtained independence in 1977.
In the
absence of a functioning central government, various autonomous and
semi-autonomous regions (such as
Somaliland,
Puntland and
Galmudug etc ) have
emerged and in the early 2000s, several fledgling interim federal
administrations were created. The Transitional National Government
(TNG) was established in 2000 and this was followed by the
formation of the
Transitional
Federal Government (TFG) in 2004, which reestablished national
institutions such as the military. In 2006 the TFG, assisted by
Ethiopian troops, assumed control of most of the nation's southern
conflict zones from the newly formed
Islamic Courts Union (ICU). The ICU subsequently splintered into
more radical groups such as
Al-Shabaab, which battled the TFG and its allies for control of
the region, with the insurgents losing most of the territory that
they had seized by mid-2012. During 2011 and 2012, a Roadmap
political process providing clear benchmarks leading toward the
establishment of permanent democratic institutions was launched and
it is within this administrative framework that a new Provisional
Constitution was passed in August 2012, which formally designates
Somalia as a federation. Following the end of the TFG's
interim mandate the same month, the Federal Government of Somalia,
the first permanent central government in the country since the
start of the civil war, was also formed.
Bruce Berry, 03 Jan 2013
Flag of Somalia (Federal Republic of Somalia 2012 - )
The Federal Republic of Somalia was established on
August 20, 2012.
Specifically the constitution states:
Article 6. The Flag and National Symbols:
-
The flag of the Federal Republic of Somalia, as
shown in section A of Schedule One, is a light blue rectangle in the centre
of which is a white star with five equal points.
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The emblem of the Federal Republic of
Somalia, as shown in section B of Schedule One, is a blue shield with a gold
frame, in the centre of which is a silver-coated, five-pointed star. The shield
is surmounted by a decorated emblem with five golden heads, with two lateral
ones halved. The shield is borne from the sides by two leopards facing each
other under the lower point of the shield, along with two palm leaves, which are
interlaced with a white ribbon.
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Somalia has a national anthem which is
“Qolobaa Calankeed”.
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The Federal Member States of the
Federal Republic of Somalia shall have their own flags and national symbols in
accordance with the federal system.
The flag, as illustrated in the
Constitution, bears a star considerably smaller than that used previously.
However, no official specifications as to the size of the star are provided.
Cai Zhenyuan,
11 Sept 2012
The protocol manual for the London 2012 Olympics
(Flags and Anthems Manual, London, 2012 [bib-lna.html])
provides recommendations for national flag designs. Each National Olympic
Committee was sent an image of their flag, including the PMS shades, by the
London Organising Committee of the Olympic Games (LOCOG) for their approval.
Once this was obtained, the LOCOG produced a 60 x 90 cm version of the flag for
further approval. So, while these specifications may not be the official,
government, version of each flag, they are certainly what the National Olympic
Committee believed their flag to be.
For Somalia : PMS 277 blue. The vertical flag is simply the horizontal version
turned 90 degrees clockwise.
Ian Sumner,
10 Oct 2012
Flag of Somalia (Transitional Federal Government 2004-2012)
image
by Željko Heimer, 20 Jan 2003
The Transitional Federal Government of the Somali Republic adopted the flag for
all of Somalia which is exactly the same as the original Somali flag.
"Somali Transitional Charter. Transitional Federal Charter for the Somali
Republic" (Adopted February 2004)
"ARTICLE 6
THE FLAG AND EMBLEM
1. The National flag for the Transitional Federal Government shall be of
rectangular shape, azure in colour with a white star and five equal points
emblazoned in the centre.
2. The emblem of Transitional Federal Government shall be composed of an azure
escutcheon with a gold border, which shall bear a Silver five-pointed star.
3. The escutcheon shall be surmounted by embattlement with five equal points in
Moorish style, two lateral points halved, borne by two leopards rampant in
natural form facing each other, resting on two lances crossing under the point
of the escutcheon with two palm leaves in natural form interlaced with a white
ribbon."
Chapter Four describes the Somalia as being a Federation:
"CHAPTER FOUR
THE TRANSITIONAL FEDERAL GOVERNMENT ARTICLE 11
1. The Transitional Federal Government of the Somali Republic shall have a
decentralised system of administration based on federalism.
2. The Somali Republic shall comprise of :-
a) The Transitional Federal Government.
b) State Governments (Two or more regions federated, according to their free
will)
c) Regional Administrations
d) District Administrations"
And finally,
"SCHEDULE II
POWERS OF THE STATE GOVERNMENTS
The State Governments shall control the following functions within their
territories :–
points 14 and 15
14. Develop state constitutions their state flags; and
15. State emblem.
Valentin Poposki, 16 Sep 2010
Flag of Somaliaia
Somalia adopted a light blue flag in honour of the United Nations Organisation that had controlled
the country
until the independence. The star has 5 points - one for each branch of the Somalis: Issas of
Djibouti, Somalis of
Ethiopia, Issaks of Somaliland, Somalis of
old Italian Somalia and the Somalis of North Kenya .
Jaume Ollé 27 Jul 1999
The five points of the star on the Somali flag simply represents the previous colonial
area where the mostly Somali speaking people live and lived.
Mohamed Aden, 13 Sep 1999
National Flag. CSW/CSW 2:3
Light blue flag with white five-pointed star.
I tried to find out whether there is some legal background of this flag
available on the internet, but without success. It seems that a draft new constitution
has been tabled but I was unable to locate the text on-line. I also tried to locate previous
legislation relating to the flag, but once again in vain. The previous 1979 constitution is
de facto
not valid, and apparently no-one quotes it on the internet. The flag is older
this as it dates from 1954. I was hoping to find at least a hint on how big the star should
be "de jure".
Looking the Somalian
government site, it seems they use the same Coat of Arms, without any changes as shown
in Smith [smi82], which is the original
1956 design. The site also shows the white-star-in-blue flag
nicely.
Željko Heimer, 20 Jan 2003
The front page of the Portuguese newspaper Público today shows a photo
by Ali Musa Abdi (of Agence France Presse) showing what seems to be a home-made
light assault vehicle covered in an interesting camouflage pattern and with what
seems to be a flag painted or pasted on the driver's door as shown below from
http://jornal.publico.clix.pt/Default.asp?.
image
sent by
António Martins-Tuválkin , 06 June 2006
image by
António Martins-Tuválkin , 06 June 2006
This is a medium or light blue ~1:2 rectangular panel with four small white
five-pointed regular stars pointing up at each corner and a larger one at top
center. This design attached.
António Martins-Tuválkin , 06 June 2006
Željko Heimer complains that he has not found any
legal text on the flag of Somalia. He refers to the invalid 1979
Constitution, whose relevant articles are quoted by Pascal Vagnat & Jos
Poels in their book "Constitutions - What they tell us about national
flags and coats of arms" (SAVA, Dec 2004). The Constitution was adopted on 25 August
1979 and came into force in 1984.
Chapter I (General Principles), Section I (The Republic)
Article 2. Flag, emblem and the capital
1. The national flag shall be azure in colour, rectangular, and shall
have a white star with five equal points emblazoned in its centre.
2. The emblem of the Somali Democratic Republic shall be composed of an
azure escutcheon with a gold border and shall bear a silver
five-pointed star. The escutcheon surmounted by an embattlement with
five points in Moorish style, the two lateral points halved, shall be
borne by two leopards rampant in natural form facing each other,
resting on two lances crossing under the point of the escutcheon, with
two palm-leaves in natural form interlaced with a white ribbon.
Therefore, the scan of the coat of arms we show below is wrong
and Smith is right: the ribbon should be white and not yellow.
Ivan Sache, 26 June 2006
History of the flag
In 1949 the General Assembly of the United Nations (UN) decided that Somalia would
be under the former colonial power (Italy) as a trusteeship territory for
ten years. There were three other governments who were members of the UN Commission that were sent to Somalia as
an advisory council
of the trusteeship administration of Somalia. They were Egypt, the Philippines
and Columbia. In April, 1950 the Italian trusteeship administration took
control of Somalia and the British military administration withdrew.
During the early months of 1954, a legislative council had been formed
by the Italian trusteeship administration and the advisory council of the UN. The members of the legislative council were composed Somalis,
Italians, Arabs and Indians. They had to prepare all laws and legislation
concerning the country for the ten years of trusteeship under the United
Nations. The members were not elected, but each political party, foreign
community or any other recognized organizations were asked to select members.
Mr. Mohammed Awale Liban had been selected by the Somali labour trade
union. Then members suggested the the Somalia national flag must be adopted
by the legislative council in order that the Somali people could get to know
their National Flag before independence. When the legislative
council agenda reached the discussion on the Somali National Flag, Mr. Liban proposed that only the
Somali members should discuss the issue. According to the legislative council's constitution each new proposal
had to be voted on by all the council members. Mr Liban proposal was adopted and
the Somali members of the council chose Mr. Sheik Omar to be Chairman. The temporary new chairman
said that the issue of the national flag would be debated the next day,
following which Mr. Liban went
home and started to design the Flag. He chose the blue colour to represent peace
and the UN
and placed a white 5-pointed star in the centre. Each point of the white star
was to
represent the five Somali regions which had been divided by the colonial
powers.
The next morning the council session started around 10:30. However, once the
chairman had opened the session Mr. Liban requested a chance to speak, which was
granted by the chairman. He stood up in
front of legislative council members and stretched out on his chest the
blue flag with a white star in the centre. As he kept on stretching the flag
across his chest, the Somali members applauded and cheered while
clapping for five minutes. The temporary chairman made a short
speech in which he acknowledged the ability of Mr. Liban whose
talent had produced such a beautiful flag less then 24 hours.
Mr. Mohammed Awale Liban said the blue color stands the United Nations
who help us to reach our dream of independence; white means peace and prosperity;
and the star is the five regions of the Somali people.
Faisal H. Jama, 08 Mar 2000
Garowe Online News, 25 June 2006 reports that
"Preparations for the celebration of the first day the national flag
rose on Somali soil are currently underway in Baidoa, the temporary hub
of Somalia's interim government.
Tomorrow, Monday, June 26, 2006, marks the 46th anniversary since the
first Somali flag was raised in the city of Hargeisa, after the
ex-British Protectorate of Somaliland gained independence from
European colonialism.
Interim Somali President Abdullahi Yusuf is scheduled to give the
keynote address in Baidoa to mark the anniversary of Somalia's Flag
Day, which will attract thousands of people and government personnel.
A similar celebration is also being prepared in Mogadishu, Somalia's
national Capital. This anniversary is special because the notorious
warlords have been expelled [from] Mogadishu and a semblance of law
and
order has returned."
The Flag Day in Somalia is therefore 26 June, celebrating the first
hoisting of the flag of the independent Republic of Somalia on 26 June
1960.
As it was the case in other African countries, the flag was adopted
before the independence, during the Italian trusteeship (1950-1960).
Ivan Sache, 26 June 2006
Coat of Arms
scan by Jarig Bakker
In DK's Pocket Book of Flags (1997),
it states:
The coat of arms was adopted in 1956. The leopards which support
the shield and the white star were also found on the arms used during the
Italian administration.
And from Smith [smi80] (1980), with the same picture,
except the scroll is white instead of yellow:
The arms of Somalia of 8 June 1919 featured a shield divided
horizontally by a wavy white line. The top half of the shield was blue
with a leopard in natural colour surmounted by a white five-pointed star.
The present arms were adopted on 10 October 1956.
Ivan Sache, 13 Dec 1999
Željko Heimer complains that he has not found any
legal text on the flag of Somalia. He refers to the invalid 1979
Constitution, whose relevant articles are quoted by Pascal Vagnat & Jos
Poels in their book "Constitutions - What they tell us about national
flags and coats of arms" (SAVA, Dec 2004). The Constitution was adopted on 25 August
1979 and came into force in 1984.
Chapter I (General Principles), Section I (The Republic)
Article 2. Flag, emblem and the capital
1. The national flag shall be azure in colour, rectangular, and shall
have a white star with five equal points emblazoned in its centre.
2. The emblem of the Somali Democratic Republic shall be composed of an
azure escutcheon with a gold border and shall bear a silver
five-pointed star. The escutcheon surmounted by an embattlement with
five points in Moorish style, the two lateral points halved, shall be
borne by two leopards rampant in natural form facing each other,
resting on two lances crossing under the point of the escutcheon, with
two palm-leaves in natural form interlaced with a white ribbon.
Therefore, the scan of the coat of arms above is wrong
and Smith is right: the ribbon should be white and not yellow.
Ivan Sache, 26 June 2006
Airforce Roundel
image
by Željko Heimer, 20 Jan 2003
Album des Pavillon [pas94]
shows the Somali roundel as a blue disc with a white five-pointed star,
the points of the star nearly touching the border of the disc.
This of course does not prove that there are still aircraft showing
this roundel. Encyclopaedia Universalis Yearbook says: "Armed forces:
Tribal war since 1991."
Ivan Sache, 01 Feb 2002.
Aircraft Marking.
Roundel based on the flag - blue with white star.
Željko Heimer, 20 Jan 2003
Dayuuradaha Xoogga Dalka Somaliyeed was formed in 1961 but is
is not active since 1991. [cos98] and
[whe86] report the roundel as appears above.
[cos98] also reports a fin flash used
by some of the planes as light blue vertical oriented rectangle charged
with a star at the upper left corner and wavy dark blue bar connecting
the right top corner with the lower left.
Some photos show the roundel also as fin flash though.
Dov Gutterman, 24 Jun 2004
Police flag
The flag of the Somali Police has a blue background (darker than the national flag's) with
the police emblem in the centre - a wreath around a gazelle or cow's head and a star on top, all
in white. It is shown at Yahoo news at
<http://news.yahoo.com/nphotos/Somalia-Unrest-Mogadishu/ss/events/wl/051006somal\iaunrest/im:/071220/ids_photos_wl/r3071411433.jpg/>
and at
<http://news.yahoo.com/nphotos/Somalia-Unrest-Mogadishu/ss/events/wl/051006somal\iaunrest/im:/071220/ids_photos_wl/r586884284.jpg/>.
It is rather misidentified as the Somali national flag:
"Somali policemen display their country flag during the celebrations
of the 64th anniversary of the Somali police in Mogadishu, December
20, 2007. REUTERS/Feisal Omar (SOMALIA) "
Eugene Ipavec, 26 Dec 2007
Flag change?
Did the flag of Somalia undergo a flag change? I received 3 of these
VEX IV flag cards, and on one of these cards, it shows a flag of Somalia
which features the star in a triangle, set against a light blue background;
in addition, there are also 3 stripes consisting of green-white-orange.
Does this flag sound familiar, or is this is an older flag?
Russell Mah, 03 Nov 2003
I cannot identify the "star set in a triangle", but the green-white-orange
sounds very like the 1996 flag of the Somaliland
Republic (formerly British Somaliland and de facto independent)?
This is a vertical tricolour of green-white-red with a black star in the
centre and the Islamic statement of faith in white on the green stripe.
Christopher Southworth, 04 Nov 2003
The flag you describe sounds like that of the Somali
National Regional state flag, which is part of
Ethiopia, and not to
be confused with Somalia.
Martin Grieve, 05 Nov 2003
Flag Poem
In "Garowe Online" of 05 July 2009, Ali H. Abdulla quotes a poem written
by the Somali teacher, writer and patriot Xaaji Aadan Af-Qallooc (1914-2005)
(after the book Hal aan Tebayey X. A. Af-Qallooc by Maxamed Baashe).
Abdulla explains the poem as follows:
"1. Xaaji thanks the lord for the reality of a Somali flag being hoisted for the
first time in his life.
2. He compares the flag to the full moon which covers the world with its light.
3. He compares it to a Quranic verse or Sign revealed by the Lord.
4. He regards the flag as a sweet smelling breeze sent by the Lord from heaven.
5. He humbly acknowledges that he cannot praise the flag enough with his tongue.
6. He compares the flag to the sky on a cloudless day.
7. He describes the flag as being adorned with a flaming star that shines
brightly.
8. He describes the color of the flag as being blue. (He uses the Arabic word
Asraq instead of using the word Bluug that most Somalis use for the
blue colour).
9. He asserts that the flag was for East Africa like a rising sun that also
illuminated their way for them like the moon. (He probably alludes to the fact
that Somalia became independent in 1960 ahead of
Kenya, Uganda and
Tanzania and thus influencing these countries to also seek independence).
10. He mentions that the flag will unite the Somalis divided by the colonialists
into one country (The dream of many Somalis even in these dark times).
11. He finally thanks the Lord for Somalia being finally recognized by the
world."
(Source:
http://www.garoweonline.com/artman2/publish/Opinion_20/A_new_Club_for_Somalia_based_on_the_Vision_of_Xaaji_Aadan_Af-Qallooc.shtml)
Ivan Sache, 11 July 2009