
Thursday, November 28, 2013
Bitter divisions between Somalia's top leaders threaten
internationally-backed efforts to battle Al-Qaeda-linked insurgents and
end decades of anarchy in the war-torn nation, experts warn.Prime
Minister Abdi Farah Shirdon, who has been in office for just over a
year, is facing a confidence vote in parliament this week after he
resisted President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud's demand that he resign.
The
precise cause of the power struggle is unclear, but politicians have
pointed to wrangling over alleged corruption, personal loyalties as well
as Somalia's complex clan politics, where each community expects to be
represented in the corridors of power.
"The prime minister told us
he is at loggerheads with the president over several issues including
who should be in cabinet," said MP Mohamed Yusuf.
The government,
which took power in August 2012, was the first to be given global
recognition since the collapse of the hardline regime in 1991, and
billions in foreign aid has since been poured in.
But fighting
over who gets what job appears to have become the number-one priority in
a badly fractured country desperately in need of a strong central
government and struggling to cast of its image as a failed state.
The
political squabbling follows the resignation earlier this month of
central bank governor Yussur Abrar -- the second to step down during
this government -- complaining she had been pressurised to sign off on
corrupt deals, claims the government denied.
Her predecessor,
Abdusalam Omer, resigned his post in September amid accusations by
United Nations experts the bank had become a "slush fund" for political
leaders with millions of dollars siphoned out, claims that were
dismissed by the government.
Sources close to the office of the
prime minister claimed the president had barred all central bank
signatories -- including Shirdon -- from withdrawing cash amid
widespread allegations of graft.
"International backers are still
behind the government because it is effectively the only option, and
they do provide a chance to continue the push back against Al-Shebab,"
said a Western official.
The Al-Qaeda Shebab rebels still control large swathes of rural Somalia.
The Western official said the optimism that greeted the appointment of the new government is now "being tempered with reality".
"It
is worrying, since they appear more and more to be following the
example of their TFG (Transitional Federal Government) predecessors,"
the official said.
During the TFG's eight years in power, progress
was stalled by political infighting -- with loyalties often aligned
along clan lines and development frozen by rampant corruption.
Behind the scenes diplomacy
Mogadishu's
government, selected in a UN-backed process in August 2012, was hailed
as offering the best chance for peace in a generation.
British Prime Minister David Cameron, speaking in May, said then that the steps forward had "exceeded all expectations".
But
Shebab insurgents, breakaway regions, rival clans and rampant
insecurity have conspired to ensure the Horn of Africa nation remains
saddled with its basket case image.
Sources close to Shirdon say
the latest power struggle broke out between the president and the prime
minister in September following a proposed cabinet reshuffle, with
Mohamud apparently furious after Shirdon wanted to sack three of his key
allies including the powerful interior minister.
Mohamud demanded Shirdon resign but the prime minster has refused.
"The
president won his position by election, while the prime minister was
nominated by the president," said MP Abdirahman Hosh Jibril.
"The
decision of the president did not come overnight, we have been asking
for change for a long time... the prime minister can still refuse to
resign but he should come in front of the parliament."
Behind-the-scenes
efforts by foreign diplomats to broker a deal between the two have so
far proved fruitless, and a majority of lawmakers now appear to back the
president's bid to sack the prime minster, but others fiercely oppose
it as unconstitutional.
"The president has the power to nominate
the prime minister, but does not have a constitutional right to ask for
the prime minister to submit his resignation," said Mohamed Yusuf,
another MP.
Shirdon earlier this month confirmed a "rift" with the
president, but claimed the argument was related to "constitutional
issues not political", in a statement urging citizens to have
"confidence in their leaders and lawmakers... to solve the
misunderstanding".
Parliament speaker Mohamed Osman Jawari has also tried to play down the rift.
"Lawmakers
must not exaggerate the issue of the rift between the president and the
prime minister," he told reporters. "All issues must be brought to
parliament for discussion before rushing to decisions."
But without resolution, political divisions could impact efforts to battle Shebab rebels.
The African Union force that fights alongside government troops is awaiting reinforcements to