Jump to navigation

Somalia

Hassan Sheikh moves closer to winning debt relief

Hailing successes on security and promising direct elections next year, the President seeks a debt deal

President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud's government is edging towards an agreement with the international financial institutions that could slash its external debt by 90% after a completion of a review by the IMF's Executive Board.

An IMF team completed discussions with the Somali authorities in Nairobi in March and reached a staff-level agreement on the fifth review under the existing Extended Credit Facility (ECF) arrangement. A further $9.4 million will be disbursed under the ECF as a result. It is the first since Hassan Sheikh took office a year ago (AC Vol 63 No 11, Kenya and US welcome Hassan Sheikh's presidential comeback).

The Fund reckons that Somalia could reach the Highly Indebted Poor Country (HIPC) Completion Point, at which stage  it would be eligible for full debt relief under the IMF/World Bank programme later this year. That could lead to the paring down of its debt to around US $550m from $5.2 billion.

The Somali authorities have also reached debt relief agreements with most Paris Club members and the Kuwait Fund for Arab Economic Development (KFAED).

It is conditional on Somalia's financial institutions and the government moving faster on implementing laws to tackle illicit financial flows, tax transparency and increased revenue collection.

Further progress might be compromised by the bitter political dispute between the federal government and the semi-autonomous state of Puntland (AC Vol 64 No 1, Trouble ahead for Hassan Sheikh's united front). Last week, Somali Prime Minister Hamza Abdi Barre accused Puntland of jeopardizing the debt relief programme by refusing to participate in national meetings on the issue.

On 28 May, Hassan Sheikh announced the country would start preparing direct universal suffrage elections next year. This follows widespread criticism of last year's indirect vote through selected members of the national assembly.



Related Articles

Trouble ahead for Hassan Sheikh's united front

The anti-Al Shabaab offensive has the wind in its sails, but maintaining its momentum presents the President with deep problems

The humanitarian situation will remain dire in 2023. Any rains that do come cannot restore an already devastated ecosystem and emergency aid to the starving will still be hampered ...


Sheikh Hassan Dahir 'Aweys' breaks with Al Shabaab

Amid fresh fighting and political realignments, Aweys has escaped from his former allies in Al Shabaab and may now work with Mogadishu

Sheikh Hassan Dahir 'Aweys', the 78-year-old eminence grise of Somali Islamism, has broken with Harakat al Shabaab al Mujahideen (Al Shabaab) this week. Although Sheikh Aweys, who ...


Regime's grip weakens

Hassan Sheikh’s government can’t plug the leaks in public finances while Al Shabaab attacks increase in the capital. It’s a dangerous combination

Somalia is beleaguered on all fronts: terrorist attacks are on the rise, the government cannot tackle the chronic theft of public money and the international community is losing co...


Polls stall as Al Shabaab attacks surge

The Islamist militia's offensive has increased in tempo but the national army has been holding its own as it looks as though the US will become more involved

Al Shabaab launched more attacks in January and February than it had during all of last year. Most serious was its coordinated attack on 18 February in several districts of Mogadis...