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Sheikh, Somaliland

Coordinates: 9°55′45″N 45°11′30″E / 9.92917°N 45.19167°E / 9.92917; 45.19167
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Sheikh (alqudub)
Sheekh
شَيخ
Town
Nickname: 
Fardowsa
Map
Coordinates: 9°55′45″N 45°11′30″E / 9.92917°N 45.19167°E / 9.92917; 45.19167
Country Somaliland
RegionSahil
DistrictSheekh District
Government
 • TypeMayor
 • BIsmail Hussain ali
Area
 • Total
14,000 km2 (5,000 sq mi)
 • Land14,000 km2 (5,000 sq mi)
Population
 (2023)[1]
 • Total
194,000
 • Density14,000/km2 (40,000/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+3 (EAT)
Sheikh district
75000
Area code+63

Sheikh (Somali: Sheekh, Arabic: شَيخ, also known as Shiikh or Upper Sheikh), is a city in central Somaliland (a state in the Horn of Africa that separated from Somalia in 1991 and is not internationally recognized). Sheikh is the capital of the Sheikh district in the region/province Sahil. It lies at an altitude of some 1430 m in the Golis Mountains, roughly halfway between the larger cities of Berbera (on the coast of the Gulf of Aden, at a distance of about 71 km) and Burao (further inland, around 60 km from Sheikh).
The broader Sheikh District has a total population of about 33,625 residents.[2]

Description

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The road to Sheikh through the Golis Mountains.

Sheikh lies on the tarmacked road from Berbera to Burao. This so-called Burao-Berbera Highway is one of the most scenic drives in Somaliland. Coming from hot and arid Berbera the climb into the Golis Mountains starts after some 46 km at the village of Laaleys. The landscape then quickly becomes greener and, via a series of hairpin bends, the Sheikh pass is reached at about 1490 m above sea level. This is followed by a short descent to Sheikh, which lies on a plateau at about 1430 m. Actually, therefore, the Golis Mountains are not a mountain range, but the jagged northern edge of the Somali plateau.[3]
The core of the town has a rectangular street plan. There are four hotels (MashaAllah, Daalo, the Ayaan Muniiro hotel, and the large 5-storey Hashi Baroo hotel). Furthermore, there are at least two pharmacies and several shops and eateries.[4]
Sheikh used to have an airstrip; it has now fallen into disuse but is still recognizable in the landscape.[5]

Mainstreet in Sheikh.

Several sources indicate that Sheikh is said to contain old British colonial buildings and temple ruins similar to those on the Deccan Plateau in India.[6] These reports appear to be from an article in a Scottish geographic journal from 1898, among others.[7] In practice and on the internet, there is nothing of historical buildings or ruins to be found, and modern guidebooks describe the city as humdrum: mundane, boring.[8]

Pharo Secondary School.

Just outside the city is the Pharo Secondary School. It is a large complex founded in 1958 as the "SOS Hermann Gmeiner Sheikh Secondary School" and was run by SOS Children's Villages. In 1989, the school was looted and destroyed by Siad Barre's troops. In 2003, the complex was restored by a British couple and reopened. For this they had to pay with their lives, as a few months after the school's reopening they were murdered by terrorists from Al-Itihaad al-Islamiya because the school allegedly converted pupils to Christianity. Several senior politicians were educated here, including two former Somaliland presidents, Ahmed Silanyo and Ibrahim Egal. The school has strict entry requirements; only the best students are admitted. In 2019, management of the school was taken over by The Pharo Foundation from SOS Children's Villages and the name changed. There are about 260 students (2022).[9][10][11]

Demographics

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Sheikh is primarily inhabited by people from the Isamusa ethnic group, with the clan eponyms of sub-divisions of Mohammed Isa. [12]

Administrative division

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Most maps still indicate that the Sheikh District is one of the three districts in the Togdheer region/province, cf. the old 1986 administrative division of Somalia. However, an administrative redivision took place in 2002, transferring Sheikh District to the newly created Saaxil region, which initially became composed of five districts.[13] In 2019, Saaxil's administrative divisions were reorganized and further divided, this time into eight districts. In the process, Sheikh's position as the capital of its own district was confirmed; see Art. 10.1 of the Regions and Districts Self-management Law, No. 23/2019.[14] The boundaries of the 8 districts were not spelled out in the law and so it is unclear which settlements are in Sheikh's district, apart from Sheikh itself.

Climate

[edit]

Sheikh has a warm semi-arid steppe climate (BSh in the Köppen Climate Classification), tempered by the substantial altitude at which the town is situated, with an average annual temperature of 19.1 °C. Temperature variation is limited; the coldest month is January (average 14.4 °C); the warmest June (22.5 °C). Rainfall amounts to about 466 mm annually. April - May is the first rainy season (the so-called Gu rains) and these are also the two wettest months in which about 70mm falls. From August - October, there is a second rainy season (the so-called Dayr rains). Incidentally, rainfall can vary greatly from year to year. The dry season is from November - March.[15]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Briggs, Philip Robarts (2019). Somaliland: with the overland route from Addis Ababa via eastern Ethiopia the Bradt Travel Guide (2nd ed.). Chalfont St Peter: Bradt. p. 119. ISBN 978-1-78477-605-3.
  2. ^ "Regions, districts, and their populations: Somalia 2005 (draft)" (PDF). UNDP. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 July 2017. Retrieved 21 September 2013.
  3. ^ Alfred E. Pease M.P., F.R.G.S. (1898): Some account of Somaliland: With notes on journeys through the Gadabürsi and western Ogaden countries, 1896–1897, Scottish Geographical Magazine, 14:2, 57-73, page 71.
  4. ^ Source: Google maps (July 2022).
  5. ^ The old airstrip is here (Bing Maps).
  6. ^ See eg. the Russian Wikipedia article and this travel website.
  7. ^ See: Alfred E. Pease M.P., F.R.G.S. (1898): Some account of Somaliland: With notes on journeys through the Gadabürsi and western Ogaden countries, 1896–1897, Scottish Geographical Magazine, 14:2, 57-73, blz 64.
  8. ^ See VisitHornAfrica.com, here.
  9. ^ SOS Sheikh Secondary School and Dick and Enid Eyeington.
  10. ^ See: Bandits murder two aid workers and British aid couple killed at Somali school.
  11. ^ Official website, accessed July 2022.
  12. ^ Lewis, I. M. (3 February 2017). I.M Lewis : peoples of the Horn of Africa. ISBN 9781315308173.
  13. ^ For the existence of Sheikh district, see Article 6.1 in the Regions & Districts (Self Management) Law (Law No: 23/2002) of Somaliland. The text of this law (in Somali: XEERKA ISMAAMULKA GOBOLLADA IYO DEGMOOYINKA JSL. (XEER LR. 23/2002)) is available here and here (only in Somali). See also page 225 of Ibrahim Hashi Jama: "Somaliland Electoral Laws 2009", Somaliland Law Series, here or here.
  14. ^ See here (in Somali). See also here.
  15. ^ See "Climate: Sheikh" op Climate-data.org.
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References

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  • Sheikh, Somalia
  • Regions of Somaliland - page 8.
  • The Unknown horn of africa-page 50-54.