Despite sporadic, sometimes intense militant attacks, Somalia has been making steady political progress ahead of a planned presidential vote this year, but these tenuous gains will not be consolidated unless the focus switches to debt relief and kickstarting the economy, says the former head of the UN mission.
Nicholas Kay, a British diplomat, was the UN secretary general’s special representative to Somalia from mid-2013 until December. During his tenure, the Horn of Africa country sought to fine-tune its federal system (pdf), which is meant to take some of the sting out of the clan rivalries that have poisoned politics for more than two decades and complicated the war against al-Shabaab militants. “The political and security progress the country has made will be at risk unless there are enhanced economic opportunities and livelihoods for the massively young population,” Kay said after returning to London at the end of last year.
“The needs are enormous. The infrastructure is destroyed. There is no real functioning road system, the ports are in poor shape, there is no national electricity supply grid,” he added.
Somalia cannot qualify for debt relief under the heavily indebted poor countries initiative because it has longstanding arrears. Kay said the priority is to sign up to an International Monetary Fund-monitored programme, and start working towards achieving the governance and transparency goals needed to qualify for debt relief.
Last July, the IMF carried out its first economic consultation with Somalia since 1989. It said the economy, driven by agriculture – including livestock exports, construction and telecommunications – grew by 3.7% in 2014. The IMF forecast growth of 2.7% for last year.
As well as grappling with the economic cost of more than two decades of conflict and a 2011 famine, Somalia, like many war economies, is hamstrung by endemic corruption that will have to be tackled to unlock finance.
“I hope that political will will be there, because the crisis that Somalia was in three years ago could well return unless there is a viable economic horizon for its young people,” said Kay. Last year, President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud conceded there was no way a popular vote to choose a new president could take place yet in a country where militants still control significant territory, and where 4.9 million people still need assistance (pdf), with 1.1 million internally displaced.
In 2012, Mohamud was elected president by MPs who were in turn nominated by tribal elders. Kay said that, despite similarities, the process would be “significantly more inclusive and representative” this time, although the details are still being discussed by politicians.
“There will be representatives of civil society, women, youth. The total number of people voting for selecting the members of parliament will be in the thousands, between 5,000 and 10,000, yet to be decided. It will be … much less easy to influence through payments or whatever,” he said.
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