There is potential for Somalia to be the next oil and gas producing country
By Duncan
Miriri in Diani, Kenya
The
Somalia Stock Exchange expects seven companies in the telecoms, financial
services and transport sectors to list their shares when the bourse is set up
in 2015, its founder said.
Somalia's
economy is slowly recovering from more than two decades of conflict, although
the government is still battling an Islamist insurgency.
Amid the chaos, some
businesses have thrived, including money transfer and mobile phone firms.
"These are
companies built by Somalis themselves and they have the potential to grow and
attract international INVESTMENT,"
Idd Mohamed, chairman of the Somalia bourse, told Reuters on Tuesday. He did
not name the firms.
"The Somali
companies are business-oriented. They have large amounts of cash and resources
and they are willing to take this road," Mohamed said on the sidelines of
a meeting of African bourse chiefs in the Kenyan coastal resort of Diani.
He said one of the
biggest challenges was hiring staff after many educated Somalis fled their
war-ravaged country at the height of the fighting.
But he said now the
bourse was recruiting some qualified Somalis who were being trained.
The bourse is working
with the Nairobi Securities Exchange in neighbouring Kenya to train STOCKBROKERS and
staff.
The Somalia Stock
Exchange has opened administrative offices in Mogadishu and other Somali
centres like Kismayu, as well as in Nairobi, to help recruitment and in other
related issues.
Somalis who fled abroad
to escape the chaos at home send back an estimated $1.3 billion to their
families every year, a lifeline to many in Somalia and helping spark a
mini-construction boom in Mogadishu.
The remittances are sent
using money transfer firms, such as Dahabshiil, which has an international
network of outlets.
Mohamed said the new
bourse was also talking to companies in the energy sector who are prospecting
for natural resources in the Horn of Africa country.
"There is potential
for Somalia to be the next oil and gas producing country," he said.
He said security was
improving with the help of African Union peacekeeping troops, helping boost
economic activity.
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