Written statement to Parliament

Gifting of equipment to the Somaliland Police

The Foreign Secretary William Hague has updated Parliament on the gifting of equipment to the Somaliland Police.

This was published under the 2010 to 2015 Conservative and Liberal Democrat coalition government
The Rt Hon William Hague

Foreign Secretary William Hague:

The UK is committed to developing counter terrorism capability in the Horn of Africa in furtherance of the Government鈥檚 counter terrorism objectives under CONTEST. As part of this approach, the UK assists key partner nations to develop effective and sustainable counter terrorism capabilities which operate in line with agreed international human rights standards. By helping countries to undertake counter terrorism activities locally, it targets the problem at source and reduces the risk of a terrorist attack against that nation or another.

The proposal in this case is to gift a UK-built headquarters and pre-trial detention facility, office furnishings, equipment and non-military vehicles to the Somaliland Police Force. The total cost of the proposed gift is 拢643,225, which will be met by the Government鈥檚 Counter Terrorism Programme.

The breakdown of the proposed gift is:

ITEM
Build costs 拢387,909
Generators 拢43,389
Office furnishings and equipment 拢88,863
Vehicles and Vehicle Maintenance 拢85,064
Contingency 拢38,000

Alongside the gift, the UK is providing a package of training and mentoring worth 拢710,000. The training aims to enhance the Somaliland Police Force鈥檚 ability to investigate terrorist threats, recover and examine evidence from crime scenes and build cases for prosecution. The UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) will quality assure the custody officers鈥� training for the pre-trial detention centre.

The proposed gift is not subject to export controls and therefore there is no requirement to consider it against the Consolidated EU and National Arms Export Licensing Criteria. The proposed gift has been scrutinised and approved by a senior, cross-Whitehall Counter Terrorism Programme Approval Board, which has confirmed that it fits with HMG鈥檚 strategic and delivery objectives. FCO officials also assessed the project for human rights risks, using the Overseas Security and Justice Assistance guidelines announced by the Foreign Secretary in 2011.

The gifting Minute was laid before the House of Commons yesterday. If, during the period of fourteen Parliamentary sitting days beginning on the date on which the Minute was laid, a Member signifies an objection by giving notice of a Parliamentary Question or of a Motion in relation to the Minute, or by otherwise raising the matter in the House, final approval of the gift will be withheld pending an examination of the objection.

Further information

Follow the Foreign Secretary on twitter

Follow the Foreign Office on twitter

Follow the Foreign Office on and

Media enquiries

For journalists

Updates to this page

Published 19 November 2013