Dar es Salaam / Beijing, (Horn post) — China’s top diplomat, Foreign Minister Wang Yi, aborted a planned official visit to Mogadishu over what Beijing described as serious security concerns, instead diverting to Tanzania following his earlier engagements in Addis Ababa, in a move widely seen as a diplomatic setback for Somalia’s federal government.
In an official press statement released on January 9, China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs confirmed that the Mogadishu leg of Wang Yi’s Africa tour was not completed after a security assessment, with the delegation turning back while approaching Somali airspace as a precautionary measure.
“The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the People’s Republic of China announces that a planned official visit to Mogadishu, Federal Republic of Somalia, was not completed due to serious security concerns,” the statement said, adding that China continues to respect Somalia’s sovereignty and remains committed to peace, stability, and diplomatic engagement through appropriate channels.
The development has triggered sharp political reactions, particularly from Somaliland, where officials framed the incident as further evidence of Mogadishu’s inability to guarantee basic security, even for high-level international visitors.
Somaliland’s Minister of the Presidency, Khadar Hussein Abdi, criticized Somalia’s leadership, saying the cancellation underscored the fragile security situation in the capital. Writing on X, he stated:
“Somalia cannot even guarantee the security of its own guests. President HSM should focus on stabilizing his own city and country, instead of obsessing over the Republic of Somaliland. Somaliland is secure, democratic, and now finally recognized. We have strong friends and allies today.”
Adding to the criticism, Tibor Nagy, former U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs, said the Chinese foreign minister canceled his Mogadishu visit because the Somali government could not guarantee his security. Writing on X, Nagy argued that such an incident would not have occurred had Wang Yi traveled to Hargeisa, the capital of the Republic of Somaliland. He called on Somalia’s leadership to focus on fixing internal security and governance challenges instead of what he described as persistent political fixation on Somaliland.
The episode has also drawn commentary from U.S. foreign policy circles. Dr. Peter Pham, a veteran American diplomat and former U.S. special envoy for the Sahel and Great Lakes regions, linked the cancellation to broader governance failures in Somalia. In a widely shared post, he noted the contrast between the aborted Mogadishu visit and Israel’s foreign ministerial visit to Hargeisa, stating that Somalia’s leadership should prioritize state-building rather than external posturing.
The episode has also been referenced by other Western policy figures, who contrasted the aborted Mogadishu stop with recent high-level diplomatic visits to Hargeisa, further underscoring the sharp security and diplomatic divide within the Horn of Africa.
Wang Yi’s diverted visit is widely viewed as a diplomatic blow to Mogadishu, reinforcing international perceptions of Somalia as a high-risk destination for senior foreign officials, while highlighting Somaliland’s growing profile as a stable and accessible partner in the region.
The cancellation comes at a sensitive moment for the Horn of Africa, highlighting stark security and diplomatic contrasts between Mogadishu and other regional capitals, while reinforcing perceptions of Somalia as a high-risk destination for senior international officials.
Statement from China

Pictures:

Prepared by:
Horn post staff reporter
Hargeisa Somaliland.
Hornpost