Business

Somaliland moves towards new banking era

July 23, 2012   ·   8 Comments

An employee counts money at a branch of international money transfer company Dahabshiil in Somaliland.

An employee counts money at a branch of international money transfer company Dahabshiil in Somaliland (Mark Tran photo/Guardian).

Somaliland is poised to pass a banking law to help the flow of remittances and encourage much-needed foreign investment

HARGEISA — Without formal banks, Somaliland lacks cash machines or credit cardfacilities, obliging visitors to the country to bring in wads of dollars. But that is about to change as the former British protectorate is poised to pass a banking law that will, for the first time, allow companies to operate as formal banks, offering services taken for granted throughout much of the world. Somaliland paved the way for the new banking regime when itpassed a law in April formally establishing a central bank.

It has been a long time coming. Somaliland has existed – albeit without international recognition – since 1991, when it broke away from Somalia and declared itself a republic. For now, Somalilanders rely on remittance companies, notably Dahabshiil – one of Africa’s biggest money-transfer companies, for their financial needs.

Dahabshiil is run by the irrepressible Abdirashid Duale, who is busy planning the company’s next phase. From its humble beginnings in the north-western town of Burao, the company – founded by Abdirashid’s father, Mohamed Said Duale, in 1970 – has become a money-transfer powerhouse, operating in 155 countries, including all Somali-speaking regions – Somaliland, Somalia, Djibouti and parts of Ethiopia.

It already has banking licences in Djibouti and Somalia. The Dahabshiil sign with the logo – fast money transfer you can trust – is plastered all over the capital, Hargeisa. An estimated $1.6bn-2bn is remitted to Somali territories by the diaspora every year and much of it goes through Dahabshiil, which operates around the clock, seven days a week.

All of its main offices in Hargeisa are crowded. Women in hijabs, Somalilanders and foreign businessmen swarm around counters clutching pounds, dollars, Kenyan shillings and other currencies. At one office, Duale showed me a safe containing brick-size wads of $100 bills. At another office, Haider Ali, who works at a business selling fruit juices, had just sent money back home to Bangladesh. “I just sent $30,000; yesterday I sent $22,000,” he said. “We sell juices all over east Africa, South Sudan, Ethiopia and Kenya.”

Remittances have been the backbone of Dahabshiil’s business, but now Duale is positioning the company for the new banking era. The company has been training staff in preparation for its licence to operate as a formal bank, although it already offers basic accounts to customers. “The biggest change will be that we will have full banking services, offering insurance, letters of credit and interbank financial transfers,” he said. “As soon as the banking law is passed by parliament, we want to offer full banking services all over Somaliland, including rural areas.”

The infrastructure is already being put in place. Next to his cramped head office in bustling downtown Hargeisa, full of small merchants and the occasional seller of qat, a mild narcotic grown in Ethiopia, stands a new bank branch with tellers already in place, ready to spring into action. All it needs is a Dahabshiil Bank sign.

A large eight-storey office building – the country’s tallest – is nearing completion on Hargeisa’s Freedom Square, where a Soviet MiG warplane perched on a plinth symbolises Somaliland’s resistance to Siad Barre, the former Somali dictator. His planes tried to bomb Hargeisa into submission in 1988, turning it into “Africa’s Dresden”. The MiGs took off from Hargeisa airport – it was as if central London was being bombarded by aircraft taking off from Heathrow.

Somaliland has gone for such a long time without a formal banking system because it has not really needed one until now, as the money-transfer system was cheap and efficient. But it is unsuitable for commercial transactions. “As the emphasis tips away from remittances to new trading relations, you need things like letters of credit, so there are gaps in the current system,” said Mohammed Yusef, chief executive of Petrosoma, an oil exploration company based in Somaliland.

The law can be expected to introduce competition, which Duale says he welcomes. “We already compete in 155 countries,” he said. Cac, a Yemeni state-owned bank, Salaam African Bank, based in Djibouti, and Banque de Dépôt de Crédit Djibouti, a subsidiary of Swiss Financial Investments, have all expressed interest in starting operations in Somaliland, which has a population of 3 million, with 1 million people living in the capital.

Somaliland hopes that the new banking law will make it easier for money to flow into a country in desperate need of foreign investment. Money from remittances has been used to build hospitals, schools and other infrastructure. But much more is needed. While money is clearly flowing into construction, judging by Hargeisa’s building boom, roads are in dire need of resurfacing. Streets in Hargeisa are marked by potholes and ridges that slow traffic to a crawl.

In a speech at a conference in Hargeisa this month, Duale spoke of the need for the diaspora to invest in infrastructure, which is a priority in thecountry’s 2012-16 national economic plan – capital investment is proposed at $1.19bn, with 82% coming from external sources.

In other moves to encourage foreign investment, Somaliland has set up a UK-linked corporation – the Somaliland Development Corporation – to provide assurance to foreign investors that they are signing contracts with a legitimate entity. Lack of international recognition has deterred foreign companies because they cannot get insurance cover.

“Somalis have shown themselves to be capable of remarkable innovation and enterprise,” said Duale. “However, their aptitude for business and trade can only be fully realised if there is the proper infrastructure in place to harness it.”

More prosaically, once a proper banking system is in place, cash machines will appear in Hargeisa, so that visitors can use their cards instead of bringing in large amounts of cash.

By Mark Tran

The Guardian

July 23, 2012

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Readers Comments (8)

  1. Kayse says:

    I think this is a good way to get back at those who hacked Dahabshiil this week. I am happy for Dahabshiil but it must separate business and politics otherwise it is doomed to fail. It should stop using the former Burao representative of al Shabab Hersi Gaab and President Silaanyo.

    We all know Silaanyo created the fake "Minister of presidency" for Dahabshiil and Hersi Gaab, this is what angers most Somalis in Somaliland. Trust me Dahabshiil has big growing anger in Somaliland and if they are turning a blind eye, don't be surprised when it hits the floor like the Lehman Brothers.

    You just can't succeed without the public and in today's age of technology all it takes is one or two posts to make or break.

    If Dahabshiil has the backing of Somalis in Somaliland, Ethiopians, South Sudanese, Eritreans and Kenyans, it doesn't really matter what Southern Somalis think of her because I saw that most of their users are in Somaliland who send more than $130m per month via Dahabshiil.

    If you have support at home, they can always shield external threats from you, much of Dahabshiil's success is due to the loyalty from Somalis in Somaliland but the only favor Dahabshiil has so far given them is destroying their public lives. Giving them terrorist Hersi Gaab and filling the house of Morgan with one Habar.

    • mohamed cheers says:

      gibberish.
      Cheers.

  2. Gaade says:

    There has been a flow of good news from Somaliland this week. This is another wonderful development. Dahabshiil plays a very important role in Somaliland economic activities and it is time we celebrate our companies. Their success will mean more jobs and growth.

  3. Zac says:

    @Kayse

    Don't you get tired of nonsense. If you have personal issues with hers or silanyo go to Somaliland and address it with them in a manly fashion rather than crying like a baby behind the pc's invisible screen.

    You a really jealaousy of this guys successes. Seems you are a big time fagash trying to spread your fit as in this Somaliland website. Illah shaarkaga hakugu celiyo.

  4. Kayse says:

    Inaar Islaan habaar badan ba tahaye hahaha, I hope your not related to Hersi Gaab the al Shabaab.

    Mesha haku walaane share your views instead of cursing 24/7.

    Hersi Gaab, Silaanyo and Dahabo are distant to fail if they don't listen to public opinion. I know Dahabo knows exactly what I am talking about, honeymoon is over.

  5. ayaan says:

    this is actually scary, i had a dream about somaliland and banking i was actually talking in my sleep about it lol

  6. Ahmed Nur says:

    This article shows that Somaliland is progressing and will in the near future have international banks just like any other nation in Africa. This is also good news for the youth of Somaliland who will be able to shape their future with their own hard work.

    Somaliland has put all it has into Somaliland over the last 21 years and it is time for the young Somalilanders to take their future seriously. A young nation can do a lot and with today's technology Somaliland can reach for the stars.

    The SDC will help Somaliland by the looks of things with the expertise and investment support that Somaliland desperately needs especially since Somaliland is not recognised. Somaliland will move forward and the Diaspora needs to take more active role in Somaliland's economic development if Somaliland's youth are to succeed in shaping their future.

    This is good news.

  7. Danaakilinho says:

    @Kayse

    I must agree with @Zac , you really are a guy with some issues who says things just for the sake of saying. What is it with you, everything that comes out from you is negative. You have this anger towards Silanyoo and Somaliland, typical Fagash I think you grew up in Negative household as most southern somalis are.

    Anyway I won't say anything bad about you on this blessed month of Ramadan, I would just hope that Allah will guide inshallah


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