Mindanao Times

Somalia to reform army, pay soldiers

- BY NICK PERRY

in one of the world’s most dangerous conflicts, Somali soldiers risking their lives daily against Al-Shabaab insurgents were growing weary of being paid months late and shortchang­ed by their superiors.

“We never received the complete amount,” a captain told AFP on condition of anonymity, grumbling about “middlemen” who syphon off troops’ meagre wages -- some as low as $100 a month -- and plunder budgets meant for weapons, rations and uniforms.

Then in March, his pay arrived on time, in full and straight to his bank account, in what officials say is the first step in a radical shakeup of its graft-ridden armed forces.

The government, under pressure from foreign backers, has started paying troops directly, bypassing army commanders previously tasked with disbursing their pay but diverting the money instead.

Under the new system, payments are linked to a biometric database containing soldiers’ fingerprin­ts, personal details and bank accounts, replacing patchy records kept on Excel spreadshee­ts.

Officials say about 10,000 “ghost soldiers” were expunged from the records -- roughly one in three troops according to government estimates, though analysts questioned these figures.

These fictitious troops either did not exist at all or

had long ago deserted.

By taking control of salary payments, Mogadishu is seeking to cut out powerful commanders who for decades ran the Somali National Army (SNA) “as private fiefdoms,” Fiona Blyth from the UN Assistance Mission in Somalia wrote in an April report.

The shake-up was fiercely resisted in some quarters of the army, with several soldiers deserting their barracks in March in protest.

- A game changer? But the government is pressing ahead. In July it also began registerin­g fighters from an allied militia into its security forces, and identifyin­g older or injured soldiers for retirement.

Mogadishu says the reforms are a milestone in decade-long efforts to rebuild the army into a force capable of taking over when the roughly 20,000 African Union AMISOM peacekeepe­rs leave.

“We are not there yet. A lot of things need to be done first... but ultimately I think it will be a game changer,” a government adviser told AFP.

African soldiers were deployed in 2007 to provide muscle until Somalia’s army could stand on its own. AMISOM’s withdrawal is slated for 2021.

Somalia’s donors have long complained that there is little to show for the hundreds of millions poured into rebuilding the SNA.

In 2017, after a decade of internatio­nal money and support, an internal review concluded the army was a “fragile force with extremely weak command and control and military capabiliti­es”.

Many units lacked weapons, basic medical supplies and even uniforms.

That same year, the United States suspended aid for the SNA over fraud concerns.

But recent efforts to boost accountabi­lity and profession­alism in the military have struck a chord with traditiona­l allies.

The United States announced this month it was resuming limited, nonlethal assistance to an army unit in Lower Shabelle, where SNA and AMISOM troops liberated key towns from Al-Shabaab in April and May.

“The US notes several Somali-led steps towards security sector reform over the last year, notably the biometric registrati­on”, a State Department official told AFP.

Mohamed Ali Hagaa, a cabinet minister and top defence official, told AFP this “clearly demonstrat­es increased confidence in the security sector”.

- Army in name only Analysts say the reforms, though important, gloss over a sobering reality: the SNA is nowhere near ready to secure a nation mired in civil war, clan violence and jihadists still controllin­g swathes of countrysid­e.

“It’s really an army in name only,” said Matt Bryden, director of Nairobi-based think tank Sahan.

“Just because an individual has been biometrica­lly registered and is on some payroll list, doesn’t mean that they are actually a trained soldier in a formed unit.”

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