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  • Simon Reeve visits 4 countries so dangerous that they don't official

    Mirror, UK
    May 4 2005

    SIMON REEVE visits four countries so dangerous that they don't
    officially exist

    Simon Reeve

    THERE are almost 200 official countries in the world. But there are
    dozens more unrecognised nations determined to become independent.
    Terrorism expert SIMON REEVE set out to visit these little-known
    countries for the BBC2 series Places That Don't Exist.

    Somaliland

    THIS tiny wannabe nation was once "British Somaliland" and today the
    locals struggle to understand why their UK friends have abandoned them.

    After independence from Britain in the 1960s Somaliland joined
    with Somalia to form one country, but then fought a bitter war for
    independence during which thousands died.

    On the way to Somaliland the film crew and I stopped in the Somali
    capital Mogadishu. With no government or police, it is probably the
    most dangerous city on earth, and we paid a dozen gunmen to keep
    us alive.

    Somalia has no government, but is recognised as a proper country.

    Somaliland, on the other hand, has a government, a president, a lively
    parliament - and functioning traffic lights - but is not recognised
    by any nation in the world.

    The capital, Hargeisa, where 50,000 died during the conflict, is
    being rebuilt with little outside help, and refugees are returning
    from camps in Ethiopia.

    But lack of recognition means the country has trouble getting
    investment or foreign aid to help with terrible drought and tens of
    thousands are at risk of starvation.

    Somaliland's president runs the country on just a few million pounds
    a year, or "whatever we can get".

    Ironically, because nobody recognises his government, it cannot get
    loans, which at least means Somaliland isn't burdened by the foreign
    debt repayments that cripple most African nations.

    Transdniestria

    SQUEEZED between Moldova and Ukraine, this strange country is stuck
    in a Soviet timewarp.

    When the Soviet Union collapsed, two-thirds of Moldova wanted closer
    ties with Romania and neighbours to the West.

    War broke out, and the east split to form Transdniestria, a country
    which remains unrecognised by the world.

    Today, ongoing tension between Moldova and Transdniestria ensures both
    countries suffer. Moldova is officially the poorest nation in Europe,
    and I visited a village where men sold their kidneys to buy cows.

    Then we crossed the border into Transdniestria - and found statues
    of Lenin still standing.

    A mysterious firm called Sheriff - headed by former Red Army officers
    - runs much of the economy. It is hard to believe many drivers of
    shiny new Mercedes in dirt-poor Transdniestria earned their money
    legitimately.

    Independence Day was being celebrated when we visited. The Soviet-era
    army goose-stepped along the main road, and small children in uniforms
    sang: "Our army is the best army," with evident pride.

    Transdniestria has a Wild West feel and is a centre for smuggling.
    Rumours suggest it is a major producer of illegal arms, and guns from
    Transdniestria have turned up in conflicts around the world.

    But there are no foreign embassies, and few international agencies
    keeping an eye on what goes on in the country.

    Even Interpol doesn't operate there.

    And yet as the EU expands, Transdniestria will soon be our neighbour
    on the eastern edge of Europe.

    South Ossetia, Ajaria, Abkhazia

    AFTER the collapse of the Soviet Union three areas of Georgia all broke
    away and declared independence: South Ossetia, Ajaria and Abkhazia.

    In the ensuing conflicts thousands died and the whole region has
    suffered ever since.

    We crossed the border from Georgia into South Ossetia, which has its
    own government and army.

    Tensions are high and the Ossetes are suspicious of foreigners, partly
    because my Ossetian government minder kept telling people I was from
    "London in America". After I explained that London was in the UK,
    young soldiers shared drunken birthday toasts.

    Ajaria, on Georgia's western Black Sea coast, was a Soviet-era holiday
    destination. It is rejoining Georgia, largely because of local anger
    at the former strongman dictator.

    His son would close the best road every night and race his Lamborghini
    up and down the sea front. This did not go down well among locals
    earning £20 a month.

    Abkhazia may also be a lovely place to visit - but we barely made it
    across the border before the Abkhaz government kicked us out.

    No Western government operates in Abkhazia, although organised crime
    gangs are thought to be based there.

    Nagorno-Karabakh

    HIGH in the mountains of Muslim Azerbaijan is Nagorno-Karabakh,
    a breakaway region that was historically mainly Armenian Christian.

    It might be 2005 in the rest of the world, but on both sides of
    the border between Karabakh and Azerbaijan young soldiers are still
    manning trenches.

    We had to sprint across open ground to avoid sniper fire to enter
    Karabakh, one of the most depressing places on earth.

    Despite mines and war, the people claim they would have the world's
    highest rate of longevity - if only they were recognised as an
    independent country.

    Although international recognition seems unlikely, wealthy Armenian
    exiles in the US still provide massive funding to encourage the
    Karabakh government's claims for independence.

    There seems no easy end to the situation. One day war may erupt again,
    causing huge problems for the supply of oil from Azerbaijan and the
    Caspian region to the outside world.

    But perhaps it's only when oil pipelines are switched off that the rest
    of the world will wake to the ongoing crisis of unrecognised nations.

    Holidays In The Danger Zone - Places That Don't Exist, BBC2, tonight,
    7.30pm.

    --Boundary_(ID_BpEHctSX6kweZv5Awj9/qg)--

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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