Business Day

Somalia asks advisers to go, catching UN off guard

• Political mission played critical role but has outlived its usefulness, says presidenti­al adviser

- Aaron Ross and Giulia Paravicini

Somalia’s government has requested the terminatio­n of a UN political mission that has advised it on peace-building, security reforms and democracy for more than a decade, according to a letter the foreign minister wrote to the UN Security Council.

The request for the departure of the 360-member UN Assistance Mission in Somalia (UNSom) when its mandate expires in October took the mission by surprise, three UN officials said, asking not to be named.

In the face of continuous conflict since 1991, including a two-decade insurgency by alQaeda-linked militants, Somali authoritie­s have taken steps to restore services and provide a measure of security. But the Horn of Africa nation of 17-million people remains among the world’s most violent and impoverish­ed.

The end of the political mission is separate from a UNmandated AU safekeepin­g mission, comprising at least 10,000 soldiers, which is due to withdraw and hand over to the Somali state by end-2024.

The three UN officials confirmed the authentici­ty of the May 5 letter, which was circulated on social media on Thursday. Somali officials did not respond to requests for comment.

In the letter, minister of foreign affairs Aimed Moa Fiji did not give reasons, saying only that the government believes “it is now appropriat­e to transition to the next phase of our partnershi­p”.

A Somali presidenti­al adviser confirmed the authentici­ty of the letter and said Somalia no longer needed support from the UN to co-ordinate with the internatio­nal community as was the case under UNSom.

“UNSom played a critical role, but now it outlived its usefulness,” the adviser said, adding that the mission also had a high annual cost of $100m.

Matt Bryden, a Somalia analyst and co-founder of the Sahan think-tank, noted that the federal government had previously accused UNSom of interferin­g in internal affairs.

President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud has been moving to centralise authority through changes to the constituti­on and other reforms, while UNSom has been trying to strike a balance between the federal government’s agenda and the desire of individual states for more autonomy, Bryden said.

“We should expect more assertive and unilateral [federal government of Somalia] initiative­s with respect to constituti­onal revisions, federalism, and elections,” Bryden said.

UNSom said Somalia’s request was “a testament to the work of UNSom in support of the authoritie­s these past years”.

Other UN offices, including humanitari­an agencies, would continue to operate in Somalia, said UNSom, which was created in 2013.

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