http://www.panos.org.uk/newsfeatures/featuredetails.asp?id=1125

The Phones Keep Ringing In World's Poorest Country
By Harun Hassan

MOGADISHU (PANOS) Somalia is a country in ruins. With 70% of the
population living below the poverty line and international relief
largely cut-off by civil war, its a place where survival is a full-time
occupation.

Yet, in an anarchic country divided into vague fiefdoms subject to the
whims of roaming warlords and freelance militias, one thing is strangely
in order: telephone services.

Under the shadow of ruined buildings and in the middle of dusty streets,
large numbers of Somalis walk about with a mobile phone in their hand.
For a country that does not even have its own government, Somalia has an
amazingly developed telecoms industry.

Its one of the few industries that have managed to grow since the
socialist government of Siad Barre was overthrown in 1991.

Telecommunication now reaches all 83 main districts as well as 18
regional capitals in a place the UN describes as a failed state. And the
system is more advanced than in most African countries. Every week and
every month we are setting up telephone centres in a new town and
village, says Abdulkadir Diini, head of technical development for
Nationlink, one of the biggest telecommunications companies in Somalia.

How the industry has grown is a story of how one of the most
conflict-ridden lands on earth has also spawned a huge Diaspora of
nearly two million many of them financially successful who in turn have
fuelled the growth of business in their homeland.

The phones in Somalia began ringing in the early 1990s when many Somalis
started to return after years abroad, coming with valuable foreign
currency which they invested in the starving economy. The telecoms
infrastructure, which had been almost completely destroyed in the war,
was the first to benefit when returnees from Norway in partnership with
Norwegian telecoms giant TELENOR installed limited satellite-based
telecoms links. Without landlines, this was the easiest way to get the
ball rolling.

Returnees from Gulf States and America then set up an earth station
gateway a monitor and control system that is used from one remote
location to another using a second workstation with help from the
US-based Starlight Communications. Within a few years, that initiative
turned into a successful multi-million dollar business. Another
telecommunications venture, Al-Barakaat, then opened shop in partnership
with the American telecoms giant AT&T and by the beginning of 1997,
Somalis were benefiting from their first brush with market competition.

Initially, charges were high. Calls to Europe and America cost US$4 per
minute, going up to $7 per minute for the rest of the world roughly
equivalent to the cost of a sack of maize or sugar and out of reach of
most Somalis. But it didnt take long for prices to drop as more
companies arrived and telecommunications spread.

Now, telephone calls from Somalia to anywhere in the world cost no more
than $0.5 a minute reflecting a staggering 88-93% fall in less than nine
years and cheaper than many of its far richer African neighbours. The
number of telephone lines operating in the country is estimated to be
100,000 (pop. about nine million), according to Diini. Although most of
them are in the capital Mogadishu, they are still more than 10 times the
number in 1991. By comparison Ethiopia had 263,000 lines for 66 million
people and Kenya 307,000 lines for a population of nearly 31 million in
2000 (the latest year for which figures are available).

The telecoms boom has also spurred a sophisticated financial system,
allowing Somalis abroad to safely and easily send money back home
despite the chaos.

It is a good combination to have both [telephone and wire service],
attests Kamaal Hersi Mohamed who runs a phone shop and
money-transferring centre in London. When someone sends money, the
sender needs to phone the recipient to say money is on its way.
According to the UN, Somalis living outside the country repatriate an
estimated $500 million to Somalia every year, benefiting more than half
the population.

None of this would have happened without there being a strong underlying
economic reason. Apart from the Diaspora factor, telecommunications are
needed for the continuation and smooth conduct of business. Somalia is a
major exporter of livestock in cattle, camels and goats to oil-rich Gulf
countries, mainly the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia and Yemen. The
same goes for the import of food, clothes, utensils, cosmetics, fuel and
vehicles from Hong Kong, Thailand, Brazil and Italy. .

But not everyone has a relative living abroad, not everyone is in
business and not everyone has access to the telecoms boom. While urban
centres are well covered by telecoms, villages are not. The expansion
has become a regular business but that is not to say success is even
throughout the country, says Diini. Ironically, it is Mogadishu one of
the most dangerous and divided places of all in Somalia that hosts the
major telecommunications companies in the country, probably because
people there can afford it.

One of the factors hampering the expansion of telecoms is in fact the
conflict itself. Companies do not want to risk the life of staff or
invest in volatile towns such as Kismaio and Buale, says Mirey Oomar,
who runs a retail phone shop in Buale, 345 km southwest of Mogadishu.
The two towns are among the focal points of the conflict in Somalia.
These disparities hint at the underlying problem of trying to run an
industry without a formal government: since theres no one to regulate
and licence the industry or administer tax collection, abuses are
rampant. The result: rich investors prosper, while the poor remain
without access. And since theres no tax collection, almost every dollar
made by foreign telecoms companies is a dollar that leaves Somalia this
in a country that desperately needs revenue for even the most basic
development of infrastructure.

Somalis are the poorest people in the world, ranking the lowest in the
UN table of economic and social indicators used to assess human
development levels. According to the UN, more than 70% of Somalis live
below the poverty line, earning less than $1 a day. Life expectancy is
just 48 years.

Somali investors decline to say how much profit telecoms companies make:
That is not important, Diini says, saying these companies provide
thousands of jobs.

Notably, Somalias telecommunications sector grew despite the fact that
it does not have its own national telecommunications operator, as
companies merely filled in the void left by the government. But that is
not a model that wins the approval of experts: the International
Telecommunication Union (ITU), which closely works with the Somali
telecoms companies, says the lack of any regulatory body is a big worry.

According to Ebrahim Al-Haddad, ITU Coordinator for the Arab Unit, the
system if one can call it that in Somalia should not be seen as an
example to other developing countries, despite the appearance of
success. The main problem with the Somali telecoms environment is that
operators work independently and interconnection agreements are nearly
non-existent. This is not the example that ITU preaches, he said. We
preach a well organised and transparent competitive marketplace and
there are many examples of this set up in many least developed countries
where successful competition is introduced to the benefit of the country
and its people.

Diini says Somali telecommunications operators are well aware of this
problem. We know the current system is open to abuse because there are
no restrictions on it, he says. For instance, the absence of a Somali
network operator means companies have to buy lines from different
international companies, having to pay more than they would have if they
had agreed on using the same network provider.

This means domestic calls can be quite costly, according to Osman Ali, a
switchboard operator in Mogadishu. Those friends and families who have
got lines from the same company can call each other freely, Ali says.
But if you have Nationlink line and want to call your neighbour who is
with ASTel you get charged the price of an international call. There is
a more sinister side to Somalias potentially explosive mix of lack of
governance and business boom. Following the September 11 attacks, the US
government closed down the bank accounts of the biggest foreign exchange
remittance company, Al-Barakaat, as well as its international
telecommunications network, suspecting that they may have links with the
al-Qaeda terror network.

This prompted a marathon campaign by the UN Development Programme (UNDP)
operating in Somalia to avert any further closure of Somali companies by
the US. UNDP argued that the Somali money transferring companies play a
major role in setting the basis for longer-term economic and social
recovery. The agency then launched a project to help these companies
legitimise their financial services.

But on the whole Somali leaders are happy with the success of telecoms
in the country and insist they will one day have power to regulate the
industry. Tax is very important for any government to work and I dont
think Somali business people should worry too much about that, says
Alideeq Hassan Abdi, one of the presidential candidates. Problem is
Hassan Abdi isnt even in Somalia and, after months of negotiating with
other leaders at a conference in Nairobi, theres no guarantee that he or
someone like him will be setting up a government anytime soon.

In the meantime laissez faire, having found its corner on earth,
rules.

Harun Hassan is a Somali journalist-in-exile living in London. He is
sub-editor of Eastern African Magazine.

This feature is published by Panos Features and can be reproduced free
of charge. Please credit the author and Panos Features and send a copy
to MAC, Panos Institute, 9 White Lion St, London N1 9PD, UK. 
Email: media at panoslondon.org.uk



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