I observed with a degree of care and deligency the trend and
tendency of Somalia’s political novelty since H.E Prof
Hassan Sheikh Ahmed was elected to the highest office in our
land. Besides rhetorical affirmation, it appears that
serious gaps need to be bridged if we want to succeed in our
efforts geared towards bringing our nation back from the
brink.
In an evolving regime of vicious circle, three key areas are
intertwined not separate (domestic revenue, security and
justice).
1) Domestic Revenue
Domestic revenues reduce dependency on foreign aid and
increase self-reliance and political independency. State
sovereignty is compromised as long as the country depends on
foreign aid and the dignity of its leaders is diminished.
Somalia is not a poor country as it appears on international
discourse. It is the only net exporter among the countries
in the Horn of Africa with a foreign currency surplus of $
1.3 billion annually while Ethiopia and Kenya have deficit $
6.4 billion and $ 7.2 billion respectively. Thanks to the
huge amount of remittance from the Somali Diaspora. The
problem though lies at the Government’s performance which,
at present, is unable to assert its authority and enforce
its laws.
Domestic revenue has been dismal in previous national
budgets during transitional period (2000-2012). In the
budget of 2013, the potential revenue that can be collected
is estimated at $137,500,000(Fartag Audit Report 2010).This
is far below the 10% benchmark of GDP of the same year.
However, the Ministry of Finance, in its present condition,
may not be able to perform properly in the absence of
competent Revenue Authority and an effective national
campaign against corruption.
2) Security
There is a security bias in the international community’s
engagement in Somalia, millions of dollars are spent on
AMISOM contingents without a clear exit strategy and with no
effective parallel effort to train and equip Somali forces.
The government needs to secure well trained 5000 police
force which should be financed from local revenue at a
salary of $ 300 per soldier. These local security forces are
aimed at restoring calm in the capital Mogadishu and enforce
revenue collection.
Among the various challenges is the Internally Displaced
People (IDP) in the capital. The IDPS pose significant
threat to human development and the security of the capital.
Government should use experts to assess the level of
security threat, the macroeconomic implications and ways to
relocate them –We need to shift the role of the IDPs from
“passive victims of displacement to active agents of
change”.
Another key challenge is related to the dubious private
security firms in different parts of Somalia. These firms
should be withdrawn and their contracts repealed.
3) Justice
Justice is intertwined with Security. There could be no
security without effective justice as injustice breeds more
conflict. Somalia’s Judiciary system needs a complete
overhaul. A mix system of justice (Shari a & Penal Code)
should take effect in parallel with developments in the
security sector. Prison reforms should be put a high
priority, and the cops should be motivated to prevent
widespread corruption in the prison system. These twin
efforts will improve the legitimacy of state in the eyes of
its people, win hearts and minds of the populace and weaken
the militant’s grassroots support.
Inventing a National Mantra
Somalia’s Post-Transitional Government needs a national
mantra to place itself as agents for change. Equally, the
broad base of the insurgency based on ideas should be
confronted with other ideas. Re-indoctrination of the Youth
should be adopted as national program for change. This
program aimed at rehabilitating the Youth that has been
duped into militancy should be led by civil society
organisations using mass participation including religious
scholars, youth organisations and traditional elders. The
Somali leadership should wage war on three major evils:
culture of impunity, clannish politics and corruption. In
short the national mantra of 2013 should be the fight
against: Corruption, Corruption, and Corruption. Indeed,
corruption spreads a culture of deception and popular
discontent. It is also substantial barrier to foreign aid.
It is high time to reverse Somalia’s tarnished image as the
most corrupt country in the world according to Transparency
International's annual Corruption Perceptions Index
published on Wednesday 05 Dec,2012..
Conclusion
Self-reliance should be taken as a national objective, as
failure is guaranteed as long as Somalia’s neighbours have
military presence in Somali soil and great deal of our
budget depends on foreign aid. Good riddance of these two
vices should remain as a national priority in order to
restore our tarnished reputation and uphold our sovereignty.
The Government should also consider of choosing lead
countries on Somalia to provide institutional support in all
areas of governance placing consultants in the ministries,
security forces and state owned agencies. Turkey may be
appropriate in rebuilding the Somali Defence Forces, Germany
to re-erect the Somali Police Force and Britain to redesign
the public administration and the burecratic management.
Turkish troops together with some other Muslim countries
should transform AMISOM into a combined UN Force for peace
enforcing rather than peace keeping. Without a Big Bush it
will difficult for Somali Republic to regain its sovereignty
and becoming once again a respected member of the UN.
Abdullahi Jama (Hon MP)
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of the writer, and it does not represent the editorial
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