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The Somali Compact: promising Deal but with fatal flaws

After one year of consultations, planning sessions,  and international conferences, representatives of the International  Community (Development Partners) and High level delegation led by President  Hassan Sh. Mohamud of the Federal Republic of Somalia (FRS) met at the  headquarter of the European Union (EU) Brussels, Belgium on September  16, 2013 for a conference on a “New Deal for  Somalia”,   and jointly endorsed the Somali Compact  (SC) based on the “New Deal Strategy  for Engagement in Fragile States” adopted in Bussan, South  Korea in November 2011. On the basis of the new partnership, the Development  Partners (Donors) pledged 2.421 billion dollars to Somalia to implement  fifty eight (58) statebuilding milestones detailed in the SC over the  next three years (2014-2016). EU, UK, Norway, Denmark, Sweden, Germany,  USA, Switzerland, Ireland, Finland, Netherlands, African Development  Bank and World Bank contributed 98.72 % of the pledges. Except Turkey,  Arab and Asian countries didn’t make pledges, while Italy’s contribution  was 12.47 million dollars.

Although the new partnership is better than the former abusive  international relationship devised after the collapse of the Somali  State, it is not free from fatal flaws and booby-traps that could cancel  its promising prospect. Professor Michael Weinstein has highlighted  some of the major flaws of the SC in his analysis titled “Somalia: the political poisoning  of the FGS by Belgian Waffles” of September 21, 2013. Similarly,  Mary Harper of the BBC cautioned in her report titled “another conference  on Somalia” that “with so many challenges, it is  possible that the Brussels meeting will simply be the latest in the  long list of expensive conferences on Somalia that end with ambitious  communiqués but have little or no impact on the development of the  country.”

 

Somalia has been put on a peace and statebuilding path  designed, directed and managed by the international community in concert  with distrusted Somali Partners. Reestablishment of State institutions  and authorities at all levels, the holding of constitutional referendum  in 2015, and a political election in 2016 throughout Somalia have been  made the central mission of the Federal Government of Somalia (FGS).  It is not clear if the Development Partners, the Somali elite and people  are on the same page and commit and deploy the efforts and cooperation  needed to accomplish these ambitious but existential goals.

Shameful diplomatic ambushes

As usual, before and during the Brussels conference,  the government of Ethiopia engaged diplomatic ambushes against the sovereign  leadership of the FGS to demonstrate its supreme authority over Somalia  in collusion with Dr. Abdurahman Mohamed Farole, president of the regional  state of Puntland. Against the protocol of the conference published  in advance, the Ethiopian foreign minister arranged a publicized photo-op  between president Farole and Baroness Catherine Ashton, EU’s High  Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, co-chair of  the conference. He also lobbied to get president Farole be seated at  the front row of the conference table rather than being seated behind  the president of Somalia and to deliver a polemic speech, later expunged  from the official record for violating the spirit of the conference  and probably infuriating EU leaders. In strong disapproval, the President  of the European Commission, Jose Manuel D. Barroso said in his closing  remarks that “a country cannot  live with two presidents. A country needs rule of law, of course in  democracy, with inclusiveness, integrating all the parts in the federal  structure of your country.”

The Pillars of the SC

 

The pillars of the SC include a binding and respected  social contract among the Somali people through the Provisional Constitution,   the existence of national (federal) representative government recognized  by the international community, and the consensus that the international  relations (foreign policy) of Somalia is an exclusive realm of the national  (federal) government. Parallel or competitive local governments in international  arenas are incompatible with the New Deal for Somalia.

While the communiqué of the conference reaffirmed  the unity, territorial integrity, sovereignty and political independence  of Somalia, the SC concedes that the northern regions of Somalia (Somaliland)  enjoy advanced level of peace, democratic process, development and governance  not achieved by the rest of Somalia. However, Somaliland has agreed  to seek international development assistance as part of Somalia but  with separate implementation mechanism until national integration is  completed. Also, Puntland declared its commitment to contribute to the  peaceful, just and productive life for “the whole of Somalia.”  The South Central Somalia, the seat of the national body responsible  for the representation and protection of the unity and sovereignty of  Somalia, is under the stabilization plan authorized by the UN Security  Council.

The content of the Somali Compact

The SC focuses on three issues: Peace and statebuilding  goals in line with the five goals of the New Deal for Engagement in  Fragile States (the inclusive politics, security, justice, economic  foundations, and revenue and services); the principles of partnership  and the establishment of Somali Development and Reconstruction Facility  (SDRF); and the Architecture and Monitoring Arrangement for mutual accountability  and transparency. The SC lists nine principles of partnership for international  assistance. The principles of Somali ownership and leadership, transparent  and predictable aid, sound Public Financial Management (PFM) systems,  and support of institutional development capacity offer a promising  prospect.

Timelines and Constraints

The provisional constitution, the vision 2016, the national  stabilization plan, and the SC, all are setting timelines for the implementation  of overlapping priorities. The federal government agreed to develop  an integrated plan which meets the requirements of an Interim Poverty  Reduction Strategy (IPRS) with financial cost figures before January  2014.  It has also agreed to identify limited number of top priority  flagship programmers in December 2013. In consideration of the very  weak human resource capacity of the FGS, the preparation and implementation  of these multiple plans could take time and protracted or haphazard  negotiations that will quickly dash the expectation of the Somali people.

Other constraints to the fulfillment of these deadlines  include halted progress in fighting against Al Shabab, general insecurity,  resisted national integration, lack of domestic financial resources,  delayed aid disbursement, weak central leadership, and corruption. The  Federal Government expects to collect less than 50 million dollars per  year as revenue while it needs at least one billion dollars per year  to establish a functioning institutional structure at national, regional  and district levels.

The SC underscores the formation of core public sector  capacities as a precondition for the FGS efforts to support the functioning  authorities at all levels of government. The injection of foreign advisors  without capable and conscious Somali counterparts at all levels will  lead to public discontent and failure.

Fatal flaws in the SC

One major fatal flaw in the SC is the contradictory  positions of the Development Partners. On one hand, they emphasize the  sovereign leadership of the FGS over the Somali affairs while on the  other hand, they practically deal with FGS as a faction that must negotiate  with militias, regions, and self organized opponents, or as a faction  required executing dictated conflicting tasks without strong diplomatic  and financial backup. An urgent resolution of these contradictory positions  is critical.

A second fatal flaw could come from the misinterpretation  of claim made in the SC that the “Somaliland Special Arrangement  (SSA) represents an important element of a larger shift in approach  to development partners’ engagement” and of the claim that  “the people in Somaliland are  citizens of Somaliland” or from the use of the distinct names-Somalia  and Somaliland- without qualification. On September 16, the Foreign  Minister of Somaliland, Mohamed Behi Yonis published a carefully crafted  letter in which he supported the conference and explained Somaliland’s  absence. In the same context, the separate security arrangement of US  and UK with Somaliland without link to the overall national security  structure and strategy of Somalia could trigger new grievances.

A third fatal flaw is related to the confusion surrounding  the question of federalism and the tainted legacy of the UN led constitution  making process. The international community is fully aware that the  issue of the form of federalism in Somalia has not been settled among  the Somali people and therefore, the UN has the responsibility to dispel  immediately the false claims made on the basis of the provisional constitution  in order to avoid protracted controversies. Territory owned/controlled  in the name and spirit of clan is unconstitutional.

The Federal government must operate within the limits  of the provisional constitution and should not be used as a backdoor  to settle, without legitimate process, issues that have been left unresolved  during the constitutional negotiation between the stakeholders of the  Somali National Constituent Assembly (NCA). The legitimate scrutiny  of the FGS actions under and through the agreed conditions and institutions  is different from political manipulations and accusations under false  claims. Somalia needs a strong democratic developmental central authority  with well defined decentralized and accountable system of governance.

 

Mr. Mohamud M Uluso

mohamuduluso@gmail.com

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