Somalia adopted a UN drafted Provisional Constitution,
formed new national parliament representing the entire
population of the country and elected a national leadership
for ending 12 years of chaotic transition period and
establishing a permanent, representative and accountable
government eligible for substantial Official Development
Assistance (ODA). Majority of Somalis believed that the
international community will treat the post transition
government of Somalia as a sovereign authority primarily
representative of and accountable to its people. That belief
was encouraged by the Communiqué of the Secretary General of
the United Nations issued after the conclusion of the Mini
Summit on Somalia held in New York on 26 September 2012, in
which he said:
We reaffirmed our respect for the sovereignty, territorial
integrity, political independence and unity of Somalia and
pledged our support to a peaceful, democratic, stable and
prosperous Somalia. We recognized that Somalia had entered a
new political era and committed to forge a new partnership
for peacebuilding and statebuilding, which should be based
on principles of national ownership, mutual accountability
and transparency.
We committed to a new Somali owned and led partnership,
which will work towards a compact between the Somali
authorities and the international community inspired by the
principles outlined in the New Deal, agreed in Busan in
November 2011.
The New Deal for the International Engagement in the fragile
and conflict affected countries (the “New Deal”) is integral
part of the outcome of the international efforts on Aid
Effectiveness and Development led by the Development
Assistance Committee (DAC) of the Organization of Economic
Cooperation and Development (OECD) under the High Level
Forum (HLF) comprising developed and developing countries
plus bilateral and multilateral institutions. Those efforts
were supported by the International Dialogue for
Peacebuilding and Statebuilding (IDPS) working with fragile
and conflict affected countries called (g7+),
parliamentarians, regional organizations and civil society
representatives. After series of meetings of the HLF and
IDPS between 2003 and 2011, the 4th HLF meeting participated
by IDPS group and held in Busan, Republic of (South) Korea
between November 29-December 1, 2011, adopted the basic
document titled the Busan Partnership for Effective
Development Cooperation in which it has been endorsed the
New Deal worked out by the IDPS. Somalia is one of the 17
countries of the g7+ chosen for the implementation of the
New Deal.
As it is clear from the principles of national ownership of
development interventions, mutual accountability and
transparency mentioned in the communiqué, the New Deal
builds on the vision of peacebuilding and statebuilding
centered on the dual compacts between state and its citizens
on one side and between the state and the international
community on the other side. The compact between the state
and its citizens comes first. The leaders of the fragile
states are entrusted with the responsibility to present a
comprehensive owned plan which lays out vision and policies
that responds to the five goals of the New Deal – (1)
political legitimacy and inclusivity, (2) security, (3)
justice, (4) strong economic foundations, and (5) good
management of resource and revenue.
There are other principles agreed for good international
engagement in fragile states like (a) the consideration of
the specific context in each country, (b) avoidance of the
creation of new social divisions and worsening of corruption
and abuses, (c) the use of aid recipient management systems
(institutions) and (d) the need to act fast and to stay
engaged to give success a chance.
In the light of the above, the first gesture expected from
the international community was to allow and encourage the
newly elected leaders of Somalia to set up their cabinet
administration, and define their own national development
plan and to treat them with diplomatic deference. That
expectation faded quickly and sense of frustration is
emerging in the face of the unilateral and divisive actions
of the international community on many critical issues. The
commitments made in the New Deal and the message of the
Secretary General have not been honored and translated into
practice. The principal-agent relationship between the
International Community and Somalia is in display.
Unfortunately, the International Community reneged on the
implementation of the New Deal commitments in Somalia.
Indeed, Mark Bowden, the outgoing Humanitarian Coordinator
for Somalia said, “Skimping on aid now, particularly when
recently development institutions are new and delicate,
could put fledgling political advancement at risk and cause
a new surge of violence and upheaval.”
The job of the new Federal Government (FG) is overridden by
the activities of regional bodies or international
mechanisms that control functions and responsibilities
invested constitutionally in the Somali government. Some of
those mechanisms and bodies include Somalia Aid Coordination
Body (SACB) located in Nairobi, Kenya which controls the aid
to Somalia under the Consolidated Appeal Process (CAP),
pricewaterhousecoopers financial contract, the Joint
Financial Management Board (JFMB), the role of the United
Political Office for Somalia (UNPOS) after post transition,
2008 Djibouti Agreement, Ahlu Sunna Wal Jama (ASWJ) Addis
Ababa Agreement, UNDP Budget support project for the Somali
Government, the continuation of the US dual track policy,
the centrality of the Inter-Governmental Authority on
Development (IGAD- Ethiopia and Kenya) in the internal
politics of Somalia, the Kampala Accord, the resource
competition between the African Union Mission in Somalia
(AMISOM) and the Somali national and local security forces,
and the international aid policy based on Geopolitical and
security interests of the donors rather than on the
peacebuilding and statebuilding priorities in Somalia.
It is instructive to note that the International Crisis
Group (ICG) instead of encouraging other donors to follow
and complement Turkey widely appreciated model of assistance
in Somalia, which adheres to the New Deal, it has suggested
that Turkey should change its aid policy if it wants to play
a major and sustained role in Somalia. This attempt is
disadvantageous for Somalia. The focus on the global
Security imperatives without precedence on peacebuilding and
statebuilding in fragile states like Somalia produces
humanitarian crisis and political instability.
Without doubt, Somalia has had poor record of public
financial management throughout its history. However, its
political independence is dependent upon its independent and
accountable management of its national resources for public
interests as emphasized in the New Deal. The management of
public finance is the cornerstone for building national
authority with legitimacy and institutional capacity.
The federal parliament must open a debate on the issues
limiting the progress towards statebuilding for collective
understanding. For example, the review of the scope of the
JFMB in light of the provisional constitution and national
interests is critical. The creation of JFMB abolishes the
role of the national institutions responsible for the
management and oversight of the government operations as
detailed in the provisional constitution. It would suppress
public vigilance and criticism against government’s
mismanagement. The former Transitional Federal Government
(TFG) has resisted the acceptance of the JFMB.
It is presumable that some donor countries will threaten to
withhold their financial assistance unless their proposed
mechanisms that will limit FG’s influence on the allocation,
management and accountability of the resources provided are
accepted. The main excuse for the donor’s demand will be the
widespread corruption against former TFG leaders, despite
their complicity. Inevitably, the new FG must immediately
put in place new mechanism that will guarantee timely
reporting, investigation, accountability and confidence in
the management of public funds. It can also request experts
and auditors working within the national institutions
involved in the collection and expenditure of financial
resources.
The election of Prof. Hassan Sheikh Mohamud and Prof.
Mohamed Sheikh Osman “Jawaari” as President and Speaker
respectively and the subsequent appointment of the new Prime
Minister Dr. Abdi Farah Shirdoon “Saa’id” have registered
the public revulsion against former TFG leaders for their
incompetence and corrupt performance and raised the hope of
the Somali people for better future. The public is waiting
to know what the FG has inherited from the TFG in terms of
financial resources, assets, institutional capability,
public records, and pending commitments. The ICG’s
characterization of the legacy of the TFG as troubled
transition to tarnished transition must ring a warning bell
for the new FG leadership.
In addition to their advanced educational qualification, the
trio have in combination good track record in public
administration and politics, direct involvement in the
search for peace, national reconciliation and political
solution to the tragic situation of Somalia, good knowledge
of the causes behind the collapse of the Somali State and of
the failures of their preceding leaders as well as of the
aspirations of the Somali people. Nevertheless, the reality
is that the new FG leaders face formidable challenges that
will test their vision, sense of patriotism, personal
leadership skills, endurance and dexterity in confronting
the internal as well as the external political crisis and
traps. FG must take account of the reluctance of the
international community to embrace the New Deal commitments
and plan for such predicament. The future forebodes more
pessimism and treachery than optimism and cooperation.
The opinions contained in this article are solely those
of the writer, and it does not represent the editorial
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