AT THE end of the colonial era Somalia was arguably in
ethnic terms the most homogeneous country in sub-Saharan Africa. The nearest to
it was probably Botswana, which is four-fifths Tswana—and turned out to be
peaceful and prosperous, suggesting to some that countries populated and run by
a single big tribe have a better chance of stability than those with a
hotch-potch of smaller ones.
Somalia, however, became a byword for conflict, poverty
and ungovernability. Yet its ethnic homogeneity is misleading. Despite also
sharing a single language and religion, it is divided into more than 500 clans
and sub-clans, who are notoriously fractious and competitive. This, as well as
their largely nomadic way of life, has made many Somalis fiercely loth to
accept the edicts of a central government.
The last man to exert real authority from the capital,
Mogadishu, was a military dictator, Siad Barre, who was ousted in 1991. His
downfall was the cue for two decades of civil war. Can the country’s latest
president, Hassan Sheikh Mohamud, who was elected by parliament last September,
do any better, while using democratic methods?
So far, so good. An uneasy peace holds in much of
Somalia, thanks largely to a promise of federalism and decentralised power.
Under the prodding of Britain, which has been leading a foreign push to put
Somalia on its feet again, the new government accepts that the half a dozen or
so of Somalia’s fiefs that enjoy a measure of autonomy should be given their
head—and should be only gradually drawn back, if possible, into accepting
central authority. So far the mosaic of clans, with their shifting alliances, have
mainly held back from openly challenging Mr Mohamud’s government while they
wait to see how resources and authority will be shared.
But Mohamed Omar, the foreign minister of Somaliland, a
northern breakaway from the rump of Somalia, says the government in Mogadishu
has achieved little despite its international backing. Both Somaliland and
Puntland, a semi-autonomous north-eastern region, cold-shouldered a grand
international conference on Somalia in London on May 7th. “The days when
Somalia could be governed from the centre are over,” he said. “Anyone who
brings them back will not bring peace.”
A former university dean and civil-rights activist, Mr
Mohamud is well liked by foreign governments. In London they pledged $300m in
aid in return for his promise of a “new Somalia”. But at home his writ only
runs in the areas controlled by forces (mostly Ugandans, Kenyans and
Ethiopians) under the aegis of the African Union. He is being closely watched
for any signs of breaching his federal pledge.
Some worry that big tasks, such as completing a new
constitution, outlining how power will be shared and setting up commissions to
define boundaries and electoral systems, have yet to begin. Matt Bryden, a
Canadian who runs Sahan Research, a Somali-oriented think-tank in Nairobi,
notes that “none of the work has been done towards federalism,” letting critics
allege that the government is more centralist than it admits. They fret that
the new security forces and police will be dominated by Mr Mohamud’s powerful
Hawiye clan.
Abdi Aynte, the head of the Heritage Institute, a
think-tank based in Somalia, complains that too many conspiracy theories
abound. The president has no hidden agenda, he says, and “an incredibly hard
job”. Still, some of Mr Mohamud’s opponents in rival clans are still backing
the Shabab, the armed Islamists linked to al-Qaeda that previously dominated
the country, to destabilise him. In the past month, scores of people were
killed in two Shabab suicide-attacks in Mogadishu.
The United States, which has spent $1.5 billion
channelled through the African Union to bring better security, and Britain,
which promised another $280m in aid this week, are keen to take credit for
gains in Somalia. “Somalia has begun a rapid recovery in the last year,” said
Justine Greening, Britain’s development minister, at the conference. “But this
will be put at risk if the Somali government cannot manage its own public
finances properly, avoid future famines or tackle terrorism and piracy.” Quite
so.
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