Somali President Hassan Sheikh Mohamoud. FILE PHOTO | NATION MEDIA GROUP
It is estimated that Somalia has as many as 110 billion barrels of oil and gas reserves — about half of what Saudi Arabia has.
So,
when British Prime Minister David Cameron convened a conference on
Somalia in London in 2012, many believed that Britain’s sudden interest
in the war-torn country was motivated by its economic interests,
particularly in the area of oil extraction.
When
United Nations monitors reported that Somalia had entered into a secret
deal with the British oil company Soma Oil & Gas in August 2013,
many observers were surprised that President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud would
within just the first year of his presidency agree to an oil
exploration deal after having earlier expressed fears that the country
was too weak to risk entering into such deals.
Watchdog
organisations warned that deals between foreign oil companies and the
fragile Somali Federal Government, especially in the absence of
regulatory frameworks and laws, could fuel divisions and entrench a
culture of corruption and that the exploration and exploitation of oil
could exacerbate an already tense political situation.
It
has now emerged that the deal with Soma Oil was hastily and secretly
drafted without the approval of the Somali Parliament. Soma Oil, on the
other hand, insists that “broad terms” of the deal have been made
public.
UN monitors have revealed that the deal would
give the company the right to apply for up to 12 oil licences, covering
60,000 square kilometres.
In May 2015, Bloomberg
Business published the contents of the draft production-sharing
agreement between Soma Oil & Gas and the Somali government that
showed that the government could end up paying up to 90 per cent of its
oil revenue to the oil company, a deal that confers abnormally high
benefits to the latter.
Barnaby Pace, a campaigner
with the watchdog Global Witness, described the agreement as a “terrible
deal for the Somali people”.
It is believed that
senior politicians and brokers could be illegally benefiting from these
contracts by selling the country’s assets for a song in exchange for
money.
There is widespread suspicion that oil looms
large in Britain’s and other countries’ dealings with the Somali
government and that these countries may be willing to overlook or even
facilitate corruption in order to preserve their oil interests.
These
suspicions were confirmed last week when the UK’s Serious Fraud Office
opened an investigation into Soma Oil’s dealings with the Somali
Government.
This investigation is not just
embarrassing for President Mohamud but also puts into question the
integrity of Soma Oil & Gas, which is chaired by the former
Conservative Party leader Michael Howard.
The company,
through its PR agency FTI Consulting, has dismissed the investigation,
claiming that its conduct with the Somali government was “lawful and
ethical”.
Interestingly, FTI is the same company which
in 2013 was given a contract by the Somali government to “unfreeze”
Somali assets abroad. Concerns over the terms of that contract led to
the resignation of Somalia’s first female Central Bank governor, Yussur
Abrar, who refused to sanction the contract.
Meanwhile,
the Somali Government has said that it would continue working with Soma
Oil & Gas until the investigations by the Serious Fraud Office are
concluded.
As the country prepares for an election in
2016, there are fears that these opaque agreements could sabotage
Somalia’s reconstruction efforts. Apart from concerns that Somalia does
not have the infrastructure to carry out a credible nationwide poll,
there are questions about how the new federal states that the
constitution envisages will be constituted.
Regional
entities, including the self-governing Somaliland and the newly formed
Jubbaland, are already claiming autonomy from the government in
Mogadishu.
If you add terrorism and oil-fuelled
conflicts to this lethal mix, you have a recipe for disaster. As is
happening in South Sudan, Somalia may explode into another conflict
before it has even had time to heal.
Talking of South
Sudan, given that Salva Kiir and Riek Machar are behaving like spoilt
bullies in a school playground, maybe Rebecca Nyadeng De Mabior, the
widow of John Garang, can take over the helm of government. She seems to
be the only voice of reason in this self-destructive oil-rich country.
rasna.warah@gmail.com
No comments :
Post a Comment