The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has agreed to extend the duration of a crucial aid package to Somalia following a long-overdue presidential election last weekend.
The three-year $400-million aid package from the IMF had been set to automatically expire on May 17 if a new administration was not in place by then, with multiple election delays adding to the heavily indebted country’s turmoil.
But last week the IMF Executive Board accepted the Somali government’s request for a three-month extension until August 17, giving newly-elected President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud’s government time to examine and endorse planned reforms.
“The extension will provide the time needed to confirm policy understandings with the new government and confirm financing assurances with development partners,” Laura Jaramillo Mayor, the IMF’s mission chief for Somalia, told AFP in an email sent late Thursday.
Somalia’s international partners have welcomed the election of President Mohamud, with many hoping it will draw a line under a long-running political crisis that has distracted the government from other threats, including a violent insurgency and a devastating drought.
Under the terms of the IMF programme, Somalia’s debt could fall to $557 million as early as 2023, Jaramillo told AFP in an interview in February.
That in turn would allow Mogadishu to attract more funding from international partners and help develop its private sector.
One of the poorest countries in the world, with over 70 percent of its population living on less than $1.90 a day, Somalia is struggling to recover from decades of civil war and has also been battling the Islamist Al-Shabaab insurgency for decades.
Every month, the federal government runs short of $10 million to cover crucial expenses such as staff salaries.
Meanwhile a severe drought threatens to drive millions into famine, with UN agencies have warned of a humanitarian catastrophe unless early action is taken.
Mohamud, who served as president between 2012 and 2017 and is the first Somali leader to win a second term — has promised to transform the troubled Horn of Africa nation into “a peaceful country that is at peace with the world”.