List of districts in the Somali Region
This is a list of the 68 woredas, or districts, in the Somali Region of Ethiopia, compiled from material on the Central Statistical Agency (CSA) website.
It is unclear how many woredas actually exist in the Somali Region, since the names and number of woredas given in the CSA's documents differ between 2005 and 2007,[1] and different maps[2][3] show a variety of names and boundaries.
The subdivisions of Somali have been changed several times, often due to local clan groups claiming their own woreda,[4] and the boundary between the Somali and Oromia Regions is disputed, leading to ambiguity over the status of border areas.
List of districts by zone
Afder Zone
- Hargelle (woreda)
- Bare (woreda)
- Cherti (woreda)
- Dolobay
- El-kere
- Goro Bekeksa
- Guradamole
- Kersa Dula
- Mirab Imi
- Raso
Jarar Zone
Nogob Zone
- Dihun
- Fiq (woreda)
- Gerbo (woreda)
- Hamero (woreda)
- Lagahida
- Mayumuluka
- Salahad
- Segeg (woreda)
- Qubi (woreda)
Shabelle Zone
- Adadle
- Danan (woreda)
- Ferfer (woreda)
- Ber'ano
- Gode (woreda)
- Imiberi
- Elweyne
- Kelafo (woreda)
- Mustahil (woreda)
Faafan Zone
- Tuli Guled
- Awbare (woreda)
- Babille
- Gursum
- Harshin (woreda)
- Jijiga (woreda)
- Kebri Beyah (woreda)
Korahe Zone
- Debeweyin
- Kebri Dahar (woreda)
- Shekosh (woreda)
- Shilavo (woreda)
- Marsin (woreda)
Liben Zone
- Dolo Odo
- Filtu (woreda) (formerly known as Liben)
- Moyale
- Udet (woreda)
- Mubarek (woreda)
Shinile Zone
- Afdem (woreda)
- Ayesha (woreda)
- Dembel (woreda)
- Erer (woreda)
- Mieso, Somali (woreda)
- Shinile (woreda)
- Hadagala
Doolo Zone
- Bokh (woreda)
- Danot (woreda)
- Geladi (woreda)
- Werder (woreda)
- Daratole
See also
References
- ↑ CSA: Summary and Statistical Report of the 2007 Population and Housing Census Results (PDF file), pp. 72-74
- ↑ Map of Somali Region at UN-OCHA (PDF file)
- ↑ Map of Somali Region at Disaster Prevention and Preparedness Agency of Ethiopia (PDF file)
- ↑ Tobias Hagmann: Beyond Clannishness and Colonialism: Understanding political disorder in Ethiopia’s Somali Region, 1991-2004. In: Journal of Modern African Studies 43(4), 2005 (PDF), p. 12
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