Friday, March 29, 2013

Briefing: In Somalia, relative peace belies rocky road ahead



An 18 March explosion in Mogadishu left several people dead
MOGADISHU, 26 March 2013 (IRIN) - Since the August 2011 withdrawal of Al-Shabab insurgents from the Somali capital, Mogadishu, security has improved, allowing for the gradual resumption of government functions. But sporadic suicide attacks, conflict-related population displacement and socio-economic problems persist, exemplifying some of the daunting challenges still ahead.

On 18 March, for example, a car bomb in Mogadishu left several people dead.

Somalia’s President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud responded in a statement: “We can only presume at this stage that this cowardly attack is the work of Al-Shabab. They have been severely weakened and now resort to terrorism and murder of innocent Somali citizens… Al-Shabab/Al-Qaeda forces have no place in this world, and we will not allow them to have [a] place in Somalia.”

Al-Shabab has since claimed responsibility for the attack.

Below, IRIN provides an overview of Somalia’s recent progress and the many challenges that remain.

What does relative stability look like in Somalia?

Recent gains by the African Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM) and Somali forces against the Al-Shabab insurgents have given the government some breathing space. Members of the Somali diaspora are now returning due to the increased stability.

“We are no longer scared of the heavy shelling exchanged by Al-Shabab and African Union forces,” Abdullahi, a businessman in the Bakara Market, told IRIN. The market was previously an Al-Shabab stronghold.

“More children are going to school, businesses are opening, and there been a construction boom,” added another Mogadishu resident. “There has been a really big change.”

According to the mayor of Mogadishu, Mohamed Ahmed Nur Tarsan, there has been a significant improvement in the security situation there.

“When Al-Shabab was ruling parts of Mogadishu, all government MPs [members of parliament] and politicians could not rent houses but were all caged in the presidential palace. Now, they live in various neighbourhoods of Mogadishu,” he said.

The lighting up of two arterial roads in Mogadishu has allowed businesses there to remain open after dark; children can also be seen playing in the streets. “I am playing football with my friends until late at night,” Mohamed Hassan, 12, told IRIN in the Mogadishu district of Howlwadag.

There are plans to gradually light up other major roads in Mogadishu in a bid to boost business.

What are the remaining security threats?

But “insecurity remained a key challenge throughout the country in February,” according to an update by the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), issued on 6 March.

“An explosion occurred in Mogadishu's Abdiaziz District. The vehicle-borne improvized explosive device [VBIED] attack was carried out by a suicide bomber. One person was confirmed dead and three others were injured.


"When Al-Shabab was ruling parts of Mogadishu, all government MPs and politicians could not rent houses but were all caged in the presidential palace. Now, they live in various neighbourhoods of Mogadishu"

“In Kismayo, 11 people were killed in clashes between rival pro-government and clan-based militias. The clashes may be related to the long political tension in the Juba region over the formation of a regional state,” the update said, adding that a suicide attack on 11 February in Gaalkayo had killed one person and wounded 27 others.

Dozens of households also fled areas in the Bay and Bakool regions to the town of Luuq, and others fled to Dollo Ado refugee camp in Ethiopia, fearing armed clashes in Diinsoor and the onset of the lean season, it said.

Meanwhile, an Al-Shabab blockade in Bakool has led to a rise in the cost of basic foodstuffs.

“The cost of 50kg of rice was 400,000 Somali shillings (US$24) a year ago, and it is 800,000 Somali shillings ($48) today,” Osman Ali, a father of eight, told IRIN by telephone. “I have spent all I had. Now, I am almost about to sell my houses to get food for my children.”

Mohamed Moalin, the commissioner of Bakool’s regional capital of Hudur, said that Al-Shabab is preventing food from reaching the town.

“Al-Shabab controls the main roads that lead to Hudur, and they would not allow vehicles carrying food to enter the [areas] we control, and this has resulted [in] hardships for the people.” Residents there now rely on food brought in by donkey carts.

In a 21 March press release, following the withdrawal of Ethiopian troops from Hudur, AMISOM sought to reassure residents, stating it “is working closely with the Federal Government of Somalia in their efforts to re-establish a security presence in the area.”

AMISOM Force Commander General Gutti said, “We have in place contingent measures to ensure that areas in Bay and Bakool remain stable and secure in the event of further Ethiopian troop withdrawals.”

The Somali government is also grappling with acts of criminality by its armed forces.

Several hours after the execution of three soldiers for killing civilians, the chairman of Somalia’s Supreme Military Court, Hassan Mohamed Hussein Mungab, told IRIN: “We will not tolerate killers and rapists within the armed forces. We will kill them because they denied the very people they were supposed to protect the right to life.”

Armed, uniformed men have also been accused of robbery. “I have had my mobile phone forcibly taken by two uniformed men,” Abdikafi Mohamed, a resident of Mogadishu, said.

International focus on the security sector was reflected in the March partial lifting of a UN arms embargo on Somalia, which will  allow the government to continue to train and equip its armed forces.

How have development efforts fared?

The Somalia government also struggles to ensure access to health and education.

The lack of experienced health professionals and supplies is a challenge, said Mohamud Moallim Yahye, the deputy minister for development and social services.
The Somalia government is struggling to ensure access to health
 

“Most of our doctors are junior and they do not have access to the right equipment to carry out their work. With the help of our Turkish brothers [through Turkish NGOs], we want to rebuild the country’s health institutions and gradually get free public hospitals,” Yahye told IRIN, adding that the ministry hopes to engage more with development partners.

“Donors and aid organizations used to engage with local NGO and private individuals while providing services, but now things are changing - health interventions across the country will be conducted through the Ministry of Social Services [and] Development.”

An estimated four million Somali children are also missing out on schooling, according to the social services ministry. The ministry hopes to send at least one million children to school in 2013, even as former government schools are currently housing hundreds of internally displaced persons.

A standard syllabus must also be developed. “There are various syllabuses in use in the country which impart different cultures and values among Somalis, so developing a standard curriculum is a challenge,” said Yahye.

Has peace affected the economy?

Financial issues remain paramount. The Somali shilling has been strengthening against the US dollar over the last couple of months, with adverse effects.

At present, $100 is being exchanged for 1.7 million Somali shillings, compared to 2.2 million in the recent past.

“My brother in Britain sends me $100, but it buys less shillings than before, which means I can buy less goods or services. It’s good to have our money strengthened, but it does not have increased purchasing power,” said Liban Galad, a student in Mogadishu.

“We used to eat three times a day, but we have reduced [this to] two,” Fatima Rashid, a mother of five, told IRIN.

Somalia does not have a functioning central bank to regulate the supply and demand of currencies.

“For the last two decades, no legal sufficient money has been printed, so there [are] less shillings in Somalia, and the rise in demand for the shilling has devalued the dollar,” Mohamed Sheikh Ahmed, an economics lecturer at the SIMAD University, told IRIN.

Investors and returnees have also flooded the market with dollars. “Somali investors are coming home with dollars. All salaries are paid in dollars. Tax is paid in dollars. And agencies, especially [the] Turkish, are paying in dollars - huge amount[s] of dollars,” he added.

Some business people could also be hoarding Somali shillings leading to a higher demand.

To help to stabilize the fluctuating exchange rate, Ahmed suggests printing more 1,000 shilling notes, but says longer-term measures are needed. “The most practical [solution] in the long term is the printing of new money with [a] strong central bank, which can control the demand and the supply [of currency],” he said, adding that the government should also start paying salaries and collecting taxes in Somali shillings.

amd/aw/rz

Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Somaliland Signs Lobbying and Communications Contract With GLOVER PARK GROUP

By BYRON TAU & ANNA PALMER With Tarini Parti



SOMALILAND SIGNS WITH GLOVER PARK GROUP: The Ministry of Presidential Affairs of the Republic of Somaliland has signed a lobbying and communications contract with Glover Park Group, according to a new filing with the Department of Justice. Somaliland is a self-declared, unrecognized state — officially, it is an autonomous region of Somalia. The region's quasi-independent status dates from the beginning of the Somali Civil War, when former president Siad Barre began massacring citizens of the region. Somaliland declared independence in 1991 amid the collapse of the Somali government, but it has not been recognized by any foreign states or international organizations.

Glover Park Group will work on government relations and public relations services on behalf of Somaliland — presumably on a campaign designed to gain international recognition of the region's self-asserted sovereign status. Somaliland is paying Glover Park Group $22,500 per month — a relative bargain in the international sovereign space where retaining a top-tier lobbying and PR firm can run as high as $90,000 per month.

ENERGY DRINK HIRING SPREE CONTINUES: Rockstar Inc. is the latest energy drink-maker to hire up a lobbying firm, Senate lobbying disclosures show. Podesta Group’s Tony Podesta, Nora Connors, Claudia James, Israel Klein, David Marin, Sean McLaughlin, David Morgenstern, Elizabeth Morra and Stephen Northrup will be lobbying on behalf of Rockstar on “legislation and oversight regarding energy drinks.”

Energy drink companies have been on a hiring spree this year with lawmakers showing an interest in energy drink marketing. Red Bull hired Heather Podesta + Partners and Olsson Frank Weeda Terman Matz; Monster Energy hired Covington & Burling and the Podesta Group while the makers of 5-Hour Energy hired Quinn Gillespie & Associates.

Sens. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.), Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) and Rep. Ed Markey (D-Mass.) sent letters last month to the National Collegiate Athletic Association and National Federation of State High School Associations about energy drink marketing at high school and college sporting events, saying “many of the claims made by energy drink companies lack sufficient scientific evidence.”

GOOD TUESDAY AFTERNOON, where it’s the 31st anniversary of the groundbreaking of the Vietnam War Memorial. The design of the memorial was approved on March 11, 1982, and groundbreaking occurred on March 26. The memorial wasn’t dedicated, however, until 1993. Send your lobbying and campaign finance news, gossip, tips, scoops and favorite spots on the National Mall to btau@politico.com or apalmer@politico.com. And follow us on Twitter at @ByronTau and @apalmerdc. Tarini is at tparti@politico.com or on Twitter at @tparti. And get your instant fix of breaking lobbying and campaign finance news by clicking here and following @PoliticoPI.

LIVESTRONG INCREASES LOBBYING PRESENCE: The Livestrong Foundation has registered to lobby on a number of different issues, according to Senate lobbying disclosures. Cameron Krier will be lobbying for the nonprofit on health care reform, tobacco control, sequestration, funding for cancer research, prevention and survivorship initiatives, insurance coverage and reforms, and global health funding and programs for noncommunicable diseases, including cancer.

Krier was recently appointed as director of government relations following Lance Armstrong’s resignation from the board. Armstrong, the face of the cancer charity, admitted earlier this year to systematically doping throughout his career. Podesta Group lobbied on behalf of the foundation in 2012, when it spent $160,000 on its federal lobbying efforts.

FOREST LANDOWNERS FORM SUPER PAC: Forest Landowners Association, which represents private landowners, has registered to form a super PAC, according to federal reports. Scott Jones, CEO of the group, will serve as treasurer for the super PAC. FLA already has a political action committee, which gave more than $9,000 in contributions to campaigns in 2012. The group did not spend any money on lobbying in 2012, but it spent nearly $50,000 in 2011. Washington Resource Association has previously lobbied on its behalf.

WIDMEYER HIRES JERRI ANN HENRY: Widmeyer Communications has hired Jerri Ann Henry as a digital media expert and digital account lead on the higher education and public affairs team. Henry has previously worked as digital director at JDA Frontline and Ed Gillespie Strategies. She also worked at  the Hawthorn Group. “It's a priority at Widmeyer to provide our clients with integrated communications expertise that is rooted in forward-thinking digital strategy," said Widmeyer's senior vice president Christine Messina-Boyer in a statement.

Benedict Cumberbatch, Julian Assange “in regular email contact”



PanARMENIAN.Net - Benedict Cumberbatch and Julian Assange are reportedly in regular contact via email, Digital Spy said.

Cumberbatch portrays the WikiLeaks co-founder in Bill Condon's upcoming drama The Fifth Estate, which Assange had previously slammed as "a massive propaganda attack".

However, The Sun reports that Assange now emails Cumberbatch regularly, having initially rebuffed the actor's request to meet him when he was first cast.

"Assange now thinks Benedict better understands his actions and motivations," a source said.

Daniel Brühl also stars as Assange's business associate Daniel Domscheit-Berg, whose book WikiLeaks: My Time with Julian Assange at the World's Most Dangerous Website partially formed the basis of the film's script.

Laura Linney, Anthony Mackie, David Thewlis, Peter Capaldi and Alicia Vikander feature in the film's supporting cast.

The Fifth Estate will be released in the US on November 15, with a UK release date yet to be set.

Displaced Somalis abused and raped - Human Rights Watch


Some of the worst abuse detailed in the report involves sexual violence against displaced women and girls

Internally displaced people in Somalia are suffering sexual violence and other forms of abuse, reports the Human Rights Watch (HRW) campaign group.

The abuse takes place at the hands of armed groups, including government forces, it says.

In the report, women who fled famine and conflict describe being gang-raped in camps in the capital, Mogadishu.

Managers of the camps - often allied to militias - siphon off food and other aid, the HRW report says.

HRW says that even though the new Somali government which came to power in September last year has made some impressive statements, it has done very little to change the situation on the ground.
Continue reading the main story 
“Start Quote

    The gatekeepers who control the camps are themselves very abusive”

"Our findings suggested that the people in these camps are often basically kept captive in the camps," said David Mepham, the UK director of Human Rights Watch.

"They are not really able to leave. The gatekeepers who control the camps are themselves very abusive.

"They siphon off some of the international assistance that is intended for people in the camps - people who are in many cases in serious distress, in serious need."
Lucrative

The report, Hostages of the Gatekeepers, focuses on those who have fled to the Mogadishu camps since 2011.

Running camps has become so lucrative, the group says, that managers - known as gatekeepers - refuse to let the inhabitants leave.

Some of the worst abuse involves sexual violence against displaced women and girls - which goes under-reported because women fear stigma and reprisal.

The report contains harrowing quotes from women who say they have been raped, including 23-year-old Quman. She says she was nine months pregnant when she was gang raped by three men in government army uniform.

Another woman, Safiyo, had to have her leg amputated after she was raped and shot.

Sexual violence is under-reported, the report says, because women fear stigma and reprisal.

The recent brief imprisonment of a displaced Somali woman who told the authorities she had been raped will not help matters, reports the BBC's Africa analyst Mary Harper.

HRW also cites discrimination against those who come from certain clans or ethnic groups.

It says those who complain about abuse are often beaten or even arrested.

A new government backed by the UN came to power in Somalia last September, tasked with ending more than 20 years of conflict in the country.

Monday, March 25, 2013

Somaliland: UNDP Set to Double Resources for Development


Somaliland officials met with representatives of Donor nations and UNDP /Somaliland office during a three hour meeting today in Hotel Ambassador, to review the projects of the previous year and of those future programs to be implemented in country.

The proposed plans for increment of funds for development were announced during today’s meeting in Hargeisa between Somaliland government officials, civil society representatives, donors and UNDP.  .

Somaliland Minister National Planning Dr. Sacad Ali Shire working in Somaliland to present a working plan, which covers all projects and programs intended for Somaliland by relevant UN agencies and also to review and assess previous year’s programs.

Dr. Sacad chaired the 3 hour’s meeting and gave a brief description of the agenda in which he said nh, “Our meeting today with the UNDP was very successful and we had the opportunity to evaluate in depth the progress and achievements of last year’s UNDP projects and programs.

“We discussed on at length of our success and failures of the assessment made today of all UNDP projects in Somaliland and both parties were satisfied with outcome of these consultations”, Stated Dr Sacad.

The planning minister said, “We shall continue to maintain our good working relations with the UNDP since we have a very strong commitment as partner agencies”, so as to ensure enhanced coordination and responsiveness to Somaliland’s prerequisites.

The national planning minister was flanked by minister of finance, minister of public works, minister of livestock and agriculture and Commissioner of Somaliland Police.

Goth Mohamed Goth

Somalilandpress.com

Displaced families in Somaliland receive aid

Somalia - IOM has distributed 103 non-food relief item kits including clothes, kitchen utensils, shoes, and jerry cans to some 462 internally displaced people (IDPs) in the State House Park IDP camp in Hargeisa, the largest town in the Autonomous Republic of Somaliland.

The distribution follows a fire that destroyed a section of the camp earlier this month, leaving several hundred residents without shelter and in desperate need of basic humanitarian support.

The State House Park IDP camp, one of the six major IDP camps in the country, was established some 20 years ago by Somali returnees from refugee camps in Ethiopia and Somalia, following Somaliland’s Declaration of Independence in 1991 and the end of the inter-clan strife.  It is now home to some 30,000 IDPs.

“These people have lost everything that they had,” said the Director General of Somaliland’s Ministry of Resettlement, Rehabilitation and Reconstruction, Ali Mohamed Abdalla, who attended the distribution.

The distribution was funded by Japan and implemented in close collaboration with the Norwegian Refugee Council, the Somaliland Red Crescent and Islamic Relief.

For more information, please contact

Dayib Abdirahman Askar
IOM Somalia
Tel+25224444969
Email: daskar@iom.int

SOMALIA: Gunmen Kill Female Journalist in Somalia


A media colleague says that gunmen in Somalia have shot and killed a female Somali journalist.

Abdikarim Ahmed Bulhan, the director of Abudwak radio in central Somalia, said Monday that two men armed with pistols killed 25-year-old Rahmo Abdulqadir Farah in Mogadishu on Sunday evening. Her murder brings the number of journalists killed in Somalia this year to three.

Somalia is one of the world's most dangerous places for journalist to operate. Last year 18 media workers were killed, mostly in targeted murders.

Bulhan called it an "outrageous killing" of an aspiring journalist. No group immediately claimed responsibility for the killing.

The government has promised to take action against those who kill journalists, but so far no arrests have yet been made for any of the journalist deaths in 2012.