December 14, 2012
In
implementing their recently concluded regional
security cooperation agreement and reaffirming their indefinite military
occupation of Somalia, Ethiopia and Kenya have decided to takeover and perhaps
later annex Somalia under the cover of the Inter-Governmental Authority on
Development (IGAD). Since only Ethiopia exercises
uncontested power within the Organization, on December 6, 2012, IGAD Joint Committee of Ethiopia and Kenya
under the auspices of former Kenyan Minister, Mr. Kipruto Arap Kirwa, IGAD
Facilitator for Somalia Peace and Reconciliation (IFSPR), issued a statement
and Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) on Grand Stabilization plan (GSP) for
South and Central Somalia.
As
explained in the prerelease statement, the GSP covers political reconciliation,
local administration, national security, rule of law, and delivery of necessary
assistance to communities in need. In addition to Ethiopia and Kenya, a Somali team
liaised with the Office of the Prime Minister and the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs of Somalia and led by former head of the Somali National Security
Services (SNSS), General Mohamed Sheikh Hassan attended the IGAD Joint
Committee deliberations in Addis Ababa. It is not clear if the new federal
government had full knowledge of the team’s existence, working responsibilities
and accountability.
The
Office of IFSPR is independent from IGAD’s Secretariat. The IGAD Facilitator is
based in Addis Ababa, while the IGAD Secretariat is based in Djibouti. For further
background information, on April 28, 2010, a Memorandum
of Understanding on Somalia has been signed among AMISOM, UNPOS, and IGAD
Facilitator. This tripartite MoU marginalizes IGAD Executive Secretary, Inj.
Mahboub Maalim who is of a Somali-Kenyan origin from Somalia peace process.
The
new IGAD Joint Committee initiative takes place while the international
community- the donor countries, the United Nations, the Arab league, the
Organization of Islamic Countries and the African Union are reviewing their
strategic cooperation with the newly elected post transitional federal
government in the light of the decisions reached during the Mini Summit held in
New York in September 2012. Furthermore, it comes out after the first official
visit of the president of the federal government, Dr. Hassan Sheikh Mohamud to
Ethiopia and Djibouti and in the midst of his official visit to Turkey with
which the federal government has signed important economic and security
agreements.
Fortunately
with unblinking honesty, the Deputy Special Representative of the Secretary
General (DSRSG), Peter de Clercq published a brief titled “What next for the United Nations in
Somalia?” in the Tumblr blog of the United Nations Political Office for
Somalia (UNPOS) in which he highlighted the ongoing strategic review process
dictated by the new political dispensation. While reading the brief is more informative,
the DSRGS made the following critical points:
v
That the federal Government has sought UN and AU support
for rebuilding the security apparatus (national army and police force), rebuilding
a credible judiciary system, implementing a decentralization and local/regional
administrations as well as undertaking a comprehensive capacity building of
Somali Institutions;
v
That the UN has committed to align itself along the “six
pillars” plan announced by the President of Somalia and the new UN mission will
concentrate on state
and peace building. He quoted President Hassan Mohamud saying to the
UN Review Mission: “If you don’t start treating us as a viable
State, we will never become one.”
v
Finally that the ambitions of the new administration
match the challenges ahead and that the administration has asked a space to
think through and implement the new strategy laid out by the president in his “six
pillars” strategy.
It
is absolutely buoyant to see that an official of UNPOS is capable to voice such
a rightful and honest statement in opportune time so that the end of transition
would not be a farce. The DSRSG argued forcefully that “peace building is a complex business, but
not giving this important [Somali] initiative a chance brings even bigger
risks.” Time will tell if his views are embraced wholeheartedly and
implemented without delay by his leaders.
Rather
than reinforcing the message of his deputy and five days before the signing of
the MoU in Nairobi, Kenya planned for December 13, 2012, the SRGS, Dr.
Augustine Mahiga, issued a
statement in which he welcomed the
IGAD Facilitator Initiative for Somalia. The assertion that the new initiative
is a Somali-owned, led process is far from the truth.
The
content of MoU raises many questions and concerns. It consists of a preamble
and 9 articles. The preamble stresses
the threat of terrorism, threats of State, human insecurities, other emerging security concerns, commitment
of government of Somalia to work within IGAD’s framework and stabilization, and
the “required
partnership
engagement” for greater stability in Somalia. Article 5 of the MoU
overrides and restricts the constitutional, political and administrative
responsibilities, prerogative and citizens’ relationship of the Somali
Government.
First
and foremost, the MoU delegitimizes the federal government and pre-empts its
sovereign leadership role in the internal and external affairs of Somalia. It attempts
to completely abort the prospect of the international efforts geared towards
statebuilding and peacebuilding in Somalia. It is takeover, not support of
Somalia. Above all, it ignores the political arrangement created by the
adoption of the provisional constitution, the ending of the transitional period
and the rehabilitation of Somali State in accordance with the political platform
announced by the new Government.
Other
glaring shortcomings of the MoU include the exclusion of Eritrea, Sudan,
Uganda, Djibouti and Burundi, and the empowerment of IGAD Facilitator over
UN/AU Facilitators. The MoU creates multiple overlaps and weakens the centrally
guided and coordinated implementation of the approved Somali National Security
and Stabilization Plan (NSSP), which outlines in detail the establishment of complex
structures at national, regional and district levels and the legislations
required to create a secure and safer Somalia. These tasks fall under the
jurisdiction of the President, Federal Parliament and the Council of Ministers.
During
his first visit to Kenya in November 2012, Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn
of Ethiopia stated that his country views Kenya as a strategic all-weather
partner and friend in a troubled region. He also defended Kenya’s direct
control of the process for setting up administrations in Jubba and Gedo regions
in violation of Somali sovereignty, provisional constitution and UN
resolutions.
It
is interesting to see if the international community and the United Nations are
willing to go along with the Ethiopian and Kenyan takeover of Somalia in
violation of the latter’s independent self-governance and political
transformation. The Ethiopian bid to secure its regional power role at a time
of state failure, civil conflicts and undemocratic regimes in power could be
potentially a destabilizing factor rather than a stabilizing power in the
region.
As
a matter of urgency, the federal government has to streamline its strategic
dealing with the international community, develop and practice protocols and procedures
for uprooting its internal dysfunctional behavior and creating disciplined
working habit that will strengthen its decision making and execution process.
The basis of this reform must be the development of a national political
platform that will boost national loyalty to a clear domestic and foreign
policy agenda. In a nutshell, to diminish the unwarranted external influences
and interferences, the federal government must act quickly by mobilizing the
public awareness on citizenship, sense of patriotism, justice, social harmony
and common interests.
Mr.
Mohamud M Uluso
mohamuduluso@gmail.com
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