NAIROBI, 16 April (IRIN) - Moves to bring three regions
in the deep south of Somalia together into the state of Jubaland have turned
into a tussle with the central government, with regional powerhouses Kenya and
Ethiopia playing important roles.
After more than two decades of civil war and inter-clan
conflict, Somalia is undertaking an ambitious programme of national
reconciliation and development, with federalism is a pillar of its plan. The
national administration, in place since 2012, is called the Somali Federal
Government (SFG), and the country's basic law is the Provisional Federal
Constitution. Both embrace the principle of power-sharing between central and
regional authorities.
But the so-called "Jubaland Initiative" is
exposing stark disagreements over how federalism should be implemented and over
who should drive the process: the central government and parliament, or the
regions themselves.
Who, what, where?
The regions involved are Lower Juba, Middle Juba and
Gedo, which are adjacent to Kenya and Ethiopia.
They cover a combined area of 87,000sqkm and have a total
population of around 1.3 million. This includes numerous clans, such as the
Ogaden-Darod, Maheran-Darod, Sheekhaal, Coormale, Biimaal, Gaaljecel, Raxanweyn
, Dir, Gawaaweyn, Murile, Bejuni Boni and various Bantu groups.
"Due to its natural resources and location, Jubaland
has the potential to be one of Somalia's richest regions, but conflict has kept
it chronically unstable for over two decades," according to the Rift
Valley Institute.
The regions include some of the most remote and
marginalized areas of the country, some of which are entirely cut off during
the rainy season for months at a time.
The most important city is the port of Kismayo, a
lucrative prize for various warlords who battled for control of it following
the 1991 fall of president Mohamed Siad Barre.
Al-Shabab insurgents held Kismayo from 2006 to September
2012, when they were ousted by Kenyan troops and forces of the Ras Kamboni
militia. In that time, they earned tens of millions of dollars a year in tax
revenue, mainly from charcoal exports.
Al-Shabab still maintains a significant presence in areas
outside Kismayo. Kenyan troops, who are largely integrated into the African
Union's military mission in Somalia (AMISOM) continue to be deployed in the
three regions.
What is the humanitarian situation?
Like much of South and Central Somalia, Gedo, Middle Juba
and Lower Juba suffered extensive infrastructural damage during the civil war.
Most public buildings, such as schools and clinics, have yet to be
rehabilitated. Road networks are in equally poor shape.
Current risk factors include limited access to
humanitarian services, coupled with outbreaks of measles, acute watery
diarrhoea, malaria, water-borne diseases and conflict-related injuries.
Aid agencies are able to access Kismayo and the city of
Luuq. In January 2013, for the first time in four years, the World Food
Programme (WFP) resumed operations in Kismayo, where almost half the households
it surveyed were found to be food insecure, and almost a quarter of children
under five malnourished. WFP has initiated a nutrition programme and provides
hot meals to up to 15,000 people.
Insecurity persists, with many areas still controlled by
Al-Shabab. "Even where Al-Shabab has left, the vacuum has been filled with
local militias, competing warlords and rival clans," said Mark Yarnell of
Refugees International. Many NGOs are still forced to take AMISOM escorts, and
negotiating with militias or insurgents is sometimes unavoidable.
What would a federal state look like?
This has yet to be determined. The constitution provides
for the establishment of federal states, saying: "Based on a voluntary
decision, two or more regions may merge to form a Federal Member State."
But the constitution also holds that issues relating to
new federal states should be sorted out by the lower house of parliament and a
"national commission" that has yet to be set up.
Meanwhile, Somalia's current regional structures are
matters of great political sensitivity. Many regions exist largely as
geographical entities, with little in the way of local government or
administration. Somaliland, in the north, is a self-declared independent
republic, and Puntland, east of Somaliland, is what the UN calls a
"self-declared autonomous state" within Somalia.
What steps have been taken towards establishing Jubaland?
Current efforts to form a regional, secular
administration began in 2010, some two years before the SFG came into being.
Kenya, keen to create a buffer zone to protect its
territory form Al-Shabab incursions, played an important role in process,
hosting talks among stakeholders and backing former defence minister Mohamed
Abdi Mohamed (Gandhi) as the "president" of an entity then called
"Azania". Since the establishment of the SFG, these conversations
have continued in the form of the Jubaland Initiative.
Neighbouring Ethiopia has also been keen to see a buffer
zone in southern Somalia - so long as its leadership is not sympathetic to the
Ogaden National Liberation Front, an Ethiopian rebel group. And the
Inter-Governmental Authority on Development (IGAD), which comprises several
states in the region, has also supported the Jubaland Initiative.
After Al-Shabab was pushed out of Kismayo in September
2012, discussions moved to the port city itself. In late February 2013,
hundreds of delegates gathered for a formal Jubaland conference to push the
process forward. A flag and three-year constitution were adopted.
News of this development prompted a huge celebration in
Kenya's Dadaab refugee complex, which is home to almost half a million Somalis,
many of whom had fled southern parts of that country over the past 20 years.
The Kismayo talks were led by Ras Kamboni leader and
former Kismayo governor Sheikh Ahmed
Madobe, who is said to enjoy support from sections of both the Kenyan and
Ethiopian administrations.
The Jubaland process also enjoys significant support from
the leaders of Puntland, who favour a decentralized form of federalism.
Is there opposition to the initiative?
Yes. The SFG, while agreeing in principle that the three
regions have the right to form a federal state, says the Jubaland Initiative in
its current form violates constitutional provisions about the formation of such
states.
From Mogadishu's perspective, Jubaland is being imposed
on local inhabitants by their leaders, rather than emerging from a
"bottom-up" process in which local administrations are formed before
deciding to merge. Mogadishu officials, as well as politicians in the Juba and
Gedo regions, have expressed concern that the emerging Jubaland leadership will
not be fully representative of the various clans that live there.
Prime Minister Prime Abdi Farah Shirdon recently warned
that the Kismayo conference would "jeopardize the efforts of
reconciliation, peace-building and state-building, create tribal divisions and
also undermines the fight against extremism in the region."
Divisions have also appeared among members of the federal
parliament over whether to support the Jubaland process.
Many Somalis have long accused Kenya and Ethiopia of
having a destabilizing effect on Somalia; they see Kenyan and Ethiopian
involvement in the Jubaland process as a self-interested attempt to establish
proxies there.
Why does this dispute matter?
This row over who should be in control of setting up new
federal states threatens Somalia's internal stability and its external
relations. It places the government in Mogadishu at odds with new leaders in
Kismayo and established ones in Puntland, and potentially with Ethiopia, Kenya
and IGAD.
The Jubaland affair is an important test case for the
fledgling SFG, whose credibility depends in part on its ability to stand up to
other centres of power in the country.
"Unless these tensions are managed effectively,
Jubaland easily could unravel and eventually break up into areas that are
controlled by smaller rival factions. This is an opportunity that a group like
Al-Shabab would love to exploit," according to one recent analysis [
http://somalianewsroom.com/2013/01/10/jubaland-close-to-becoming-somalias-next-state/
].
For Andrews Atta-Asamoah of the Institute for Security
Studies, the row "has become a bone of contention capable of derailing the
progress achieved thus far" in ridding Somalia of Al-Shabab's influence [
http://allafrica.com/stories/201304100027.html?viewall=1 ].
Al-Shabab fighters quickly filled the gap left by the
recent withdrawal of Ethiopian troops from the town Huddur, just north of
Jubaland, demonstrating the group's ability "to act swiftly when it spots
weakness", Atta-Asamoah said.
Additionally, the longer political uncertainty about
Jubaland's governance continues, the harder it is for humanitarian agencies to
scale up their activities there.
What next?
There is now a "full-fledged" showdown between
Mogadishu and leaders of the Jubaland Initiative, according to Michael
Weinstein, professor of political science at Chicago's Purdue University [
http://www.garoweonline.com/artman2/publish/Somalia_27/Somalia_The_Show-Down_in_Jubaland_Begins.shtml
].
He pointed to the absence of a credible judicial system
to resolve the constitutional row and warned that lack of clarity in the
constitution itself was "an invitation to endless legal contretemps."
There are also concerns about whether Jubaland is
cohesive enough to ensure a viable state. Its constituent regions lack decent
road links or any history of shared administration. "Geddo in the north
links to Mogadishu, the south links to [the Kenyan town of] Garissa. But Middle
and Lower Jubba roads are often impassable because of rains. There is no easy
prospect of people and goods moving throughout," said Ken Menkhaus of
Davidson College.
"Whatever
solution emerges," Matt Bryden, the director of Sahan Research, told a
recent seminar in Nairobi, "Jubaland is going to have to deal with the
kinds of issues we've heard about [for years]: sharing and management of
resources and the perception among various clans that there is some kind of
equitable distribution."
jh-am/rz
[ENDS]
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