Badhan, Sanaag


Badhan, also known as Baran is a city in the Sanaag region.

Overview

Badhan, a major city in eastern Sanaag region, is effectively governed by Puntland. For example, Puntland significantly intervened in the direct local council elections held on May 25, 2023,
This town is located at the center of the territory inhabited by the Warsangali clan.
Badhan is also the political and administrative hub of East Sanaag. It is simultaneously a center for services and education, with the Somali National University maintaining a branch campus in Badhan. Badhan also serves as a major inland transit point connecting settlements throughout Sanaag.
Badhan is situated in the disputed area between Somaliland and Puntland; however, Puntland has exercised effective control over it for many years. On the other hand, it is also a town governed by the Warsangali clan.

Demographics

According to the UrbanStats aggregation, Badhan has an estimated population of 65,500. However, this figure is not based on the population within the administrative district, but rather is derived from satellite imagery analysis.
The primary inhabitants of Badhan and its surrounding areas are the Warsangali clan.
Therefore, Badhan also serves as the venue where the Warsangali clan holds its meetings and issues declarations.
The primary industry in Badhan and its surrounding areas is livestock farming. During drought periods, the population may temporarily concentrate around water sources, causing water prices to rise.

Transport and logistics

Badhan has long served as a relay point along the corridor connecting the coastal towns of Las Khorey and Erigavo.
In recent years, road construction linking El Dahir, Badhan, and Erigavo has been progressing. El Dahir is located on a branch road leading from the Sanaag interior to the main highway connecting BosasoQardhoGarowe.

Politics

Badhan, the stronghold of the Warsangali clan, also functions as a frontline base for Puntland. The town also participated in the 2023 Puntland regional elections. However, Somaliland had effective control over the area in the past, and even now, there is a “Badhan Mayor” appointed by the Somaliland government, albeit formally. Nevertheless, movements led by the Warsangali clan aim to establish an independent region separate from Puntland and Somaliland. The Maakhir Movement is a prominent example.
Badhan has a local council, and the mayor is elected by a vote of the council. However, in September 2019, Puntland security forces arrested Somaliland's Deputy Governor of Badhan, and in January 2021, the Speaker of the Puntland Parliament dispatched troops to prevent the Somaliland government from conducting voter registration in Badhan.

Mayor

Badhan is claimed by both Somaliland and Puntland, each with its own governor who orders it. Badhan mayor and Badhan district governor mean the same thing.

Education

Somalia National University has a branch campus in Badhan. The university's construction was implemented by the Puntland authorities, with the Kuwait Fund for Arab Economic Development contributing $6 million based on an agreement with the Federal Government of Somalia.
In September 2023, the SNU-Badhan campus program and admissions were publicly announced. In November, the university collaborated with the district to host a community sports cup.

Media

Radio Daljir, Puntland State TV, SBC Somali TV, and others can be viewed. SNTV and Radio Mogadishu are also reporting on the situation

History

Until Somalia Independence

Before the colonial period, the Badhan area lay within the heartland of the Warsangali Sultanate in eastern Sanaag.
In the 1910s, during the Dervish wars, Mohammed Abdullah Hassan’s forces exerted control over parts of the interior of British Somaliland, and the Badhan area figured among the Dervish-era strongpoints, including a fort attributed to this period.
In 1933 a severe drought prompted the opening of a relief camp at Badhan that housed an estimated 2,500–3,000 people. In 1945, the protectorate administration employed poisoned bait in anti-locust campaigns; pastoralists from Zeila to Badhan protested, and unrest followed in several localities.
By the late colonial period, Badhan appears in official survey work with fixed coordinates at approximately 10°43′N, 48°20′E, reflecting its recognition as a settled inland point in eastern Sanaag prior to Somali independence in 1960.

Until Somali civil war (1960–1991)

Following Somali independence in 1960, Badhan was administered as an inland township of eastern Sanaag. In the 1970s, a series of heavy rains unleashed powerful floods across the interior; contemporaneous reporting in an environmental study notes that the Siad Barre government relocated the population of Xubeera to Badhan.
The 1974–1975 drought affected northern Somalia, triggering large-scale relief operations and population movements across Sanaag’s pastoral zones around Badhan.

Somali Civil War and Somaliland’s founding

Through the 1980s, while conflict intensified elsewhere, districts inhabited by the Warsangeli—in and around Badhan—were recorded as remaining largely free from fighting up to the collapse of the central government in 1991.
After the Republic of Somaliland’s 1991 declaration of independence, authority in the far east of the claimed territory remained uneven. Studies note that through most of the 1990s the Somaliland administration largely left the Dhulbahante and Warsangali areas of Sool and eastern Sanaag “to their own devices,” with customary leadership and local arrangements prevailing around Badhan.
Peace conferences during 1990–1997 helped stabilize much of Somaliland, but eastern Sanaag remained only partially integrated into Hargeisa’s structures.
In the wider north-east, Harti–Darod constituencies pursued a track that culminated in the founding of the Puntland State in 1998; analyses trace that formation to clan conferences and security coordination among Majeerteen, Dhulbahante and Warsangali leaders.

After Puntland’s founding (1998–2007)

Following the creation of Puntland in 1998, Badhan and the surrounding Warsangali-inhabited interior of eastern Sanaag developed links to Puntland’s administration alongside local customary authority.
Humanitarian reporting during this period highlights recurring drought stress. In November 2005, BBC Somali noted extreme water prices in Sanaag including Badhan district, reflecting depleted catchments and the cost of trucking water to inland settlements.
Analysts record that, in parallel with Puntland’s structures, Somaliland sought to project administrative claims eastwards in the early 2000s, while Puntland announced the Haylan region; on the ground, Warsangali communities around Badhan continued to manage affairs through their own councils and elders.
Amid frictions with Puntland over resources and security, Warsangali leaders declared the short-lived Maakhir State in mid-2007, naming Badhan its hub; contemporary commentary placed the announcement around early July 2007 following communal meetings in Badhan and Dhahar.

Somaliland and Puntland (2008–2017)

In February 2008, local reporting described Somaliland troops entering Badhan following a Puntland withdrawal, marking a shift in on-the-ground control in eastern Sanaag’s interior around the town.
In June 2013, Somaliland forces were reported to have taken control of Badhan district from Puntland forces. Later that year, a Puntland presidential hopeful’s visit drew protest from Somaliland-focused outlets for “violating” Somaliland’s sovereignty claims.
In March 2014, local media again noted Somaliland troops entering Badhan, after which the situation was said to have calmed.
On 19 October 2015, eight members of the Somaliland National Electoral Commission were detained by Puntland authorities in Badhan district and released shortly thereafter.
In mid-2016, Somaliland proceeded with elements of its voter-registration rollout in eastern Sanaag. On 18 July 2016, the Somaliland-appointed Badhan mayor stated registration was proceeding across the district, and on 17 July 2016 Somaliland’s defence minister visited Badhan amid reported tensions in eastern Sanaag.
In February 2017, administrative turnover on the Somaliland side was noted when the Badhan district governor died in Hargeisa.

Puntland's administrative (2018–2023)

In 2018, Puntland authorities stepped up their administrative presence in Badhan. On 20 September 2018,the Puntland cabinet convened a formal session in Badhan, and the following day the president’s delegation was publicly received in the town, underscoring Garowe’s links to local administration. In early 2018, Somalia’s federal planning minister also toured Badhan and Dhahar with Puntland officials, reflecting federal–state engagement in eastern Sanaag.
On 30 May 2019, the Somaliland-appointed “governor of Badhan” resigned and aligned himself with Puntland, and on 5 September 2019, the Badhan district council elected Ahmed Mohamed Timir as mayor in a process organized by Puntland’s Ministry of Interior. Days later, Puntland security services arrested Somaliland’s deputy governor for Badhan district, illustrating continued contestation over symbols of authority.
In January 2021, Puntland deployed forces to Badhan to block Somaliland’s attempted voter registration; a delegation led by the Speaker of the Puntland House visited the town as part of the operation. Puntland subsequently announced the deployment of trained police to Badhan on 17 June 2021, to reinforce local security. On 20 October 2021, local elders in Badhan publicly distanced the town from reported evictions in Erigavo, indicating sensitivities amid the Somaliland–Puntland dispute.
Badhan participated in Puntland’s 2023 local democratization exercise. International reporting notes that on 25 May 2023, the Transitional Puntland Electoral Commission conducted one-person-one-vote municipal elections across 30 districts, including Badhan, as part of the state’s first statewide direct local polls; subsequent summaries discuss council compositions and party shares at district level.

Recent History (2024–)

During 2024–2025, tensions between Puntland and the federal government over constitutional amendments also formed a significant backdrop, with Puntland announcing a freeze in cooperation with federal institutions in March–April 2024; local administration in Badhan continued to function under Puntland’s framework amid these statewide dynamics.
In October 2024, a brief clash was reported in Badhan between Puntland forces and troops aligned with the self-proclaimed Maakhir authorities, amid a standoff around the district; both sides were said to be entrenched outside the town and no major casualties were initially reported. In the broader Sanaag theatre, further confrontations were reported in mid-2025 around Ceelbuh, reflecting continued contention over administrative alignment in eastern Sanaag.