Miyir Posted November 13, 2013 October 30, 2013 HE Hassan Sheikh Mohamud President of Federal Republic of Somalia Mr President: It is with great sadness that I submit to you this letter to serve as my official resignation of the post of Governor of the Central Bank of Somalia. Your excellency, when I accepted this role, I did so with the interests of the Somali people in mind. Having worked at senior levels at some of the largest financial institutions in the world, I was looking forward to the opportunity to lend my skill sets to rebuild the Central Bank and improve the lives of our people, as the Central Bank is key to the development of the economy. I was encouraged and inspired by the Somalis whom I met everywhere I went, so full of hope that the nation’s recovery was near, and that they could soon partake in the rebuilding process. Undoubtedly, economic recovery is critical to this recovery from both a fiscal and security perspective. However, it has become clear to me that my ability to act in the interests of the Somali people has been undermined and will continue to be undermined by various parties within the administration. From the moment I was appointed, I have continuously been asked to sanction deals and transactions that would contradict my personal values and violate my fiduciary responsibility to the Somali people as head of the nation’s monetary authority. To use one example, as you are aware based on our multiple conversations on this matter, I vehemently refused to sanction the contract with the law firm Schulman & Rogers, regarding recovery of the Somali financial institutions assets frozen since the fall of Siad Barre’s regime. Your Excellent I have read both the Agreement and Power of Attorney which your office instructed the former governor to sign with the law firm. I don’t believe that these documents serve the interest of the Somali nation and I believe that they put the frozen assets at risk and open the door to corruption. My suggestion to let me share these documents with a Central Bank appointed legal counsel for a second opinion fell on deaf ears. The message that I have received from multiple parties is that I have to be flexible, that I don’t understand the Somali way, that I cannot go against your wishes, and that my own personal security would be at risk as a result. I am the least concerned about the security threat, but I am truly disappointed that I have not received your support and leadership on this matter so that I could objectively perform my duties. Your Excellency, I am sure you are aware, Part II, Section 3, Article 6 of the Central Bank of Somalia Act states: “Except as otherwise specified in this Act, the Bank, and the members of the Board or the staff, shall not take instructions from any other person or entity, including Government entities. The autonomy of the Bank shall be respected at all times and no person or entity shall seek to influence the members of the decision-making bodies or the staff of the Bank in the performance of their functions or to interfere in the activities of the Bank”. Unfortunately the Central Bank has not been allowed to function free of interference, and as such cannot operate as a credible institution. Your Excellency, the Central Bank is in poor condition with payroll processing the only semi-functioning unit. It will take dedicated effort, expertise, and commitment from multilateral agencies to build it into a fully functioning Central Bank. It requires a governance structure starting with the appointment of a Board of Directors. Most of all for the country’s economic recovery to start, financial system to advance, and Hawalas to remain open and continue to serve the Somali people, the Central Bank has to take its rightful place as licensor, supervisor, and monitor of the country’s financial system. In the seven weeks since my appointment as Governor, I have already made significant progress. I met with global financial leaders, including the World Bank, IMF, AfDB, Barclays and the US Government, to raise the profile of the remittance crisis facing Somalia and help drive a solution. I worked closely with the World Bank and the IMF to develop a detailed plan to rebuild the Central Bank?s functions on a large scale. The IMF has already started training our staff in Nairobi. I reached out to the money transfer companies who are now looking to the Central Bank for leadership and guidance. The staff at the Central Bank is more motivated now than they been since before the civil war. I can only imagine what could have been achieved provided I had your support to perform my duties objectively. Your excellency, while I am disappointed by this lack of support, I am more disappointed for the Somali people who would have benefited the most from these and future contributions. Sincerely, Yussur A.F. Abrar Governor Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Che -Guevara Posted November 13, 2013 A loss for the people. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
nuune Posted November 13, 2013 Your Excellency, I am sure you are aware, Part II, Section 3, Article 6 of the Central Bank of Somalia Act states: “Except as otherwise specified in this Act, the Bank, and the members of the Board or the staff, shall not take instructions from any other person or entity, including Government entities. The autonomy of the Bank shall be respected at all times and no person or entity shall seek to influence the members of the decision-making bodies or the staff of the Bank in the performance of their functions or to interfere in the activities of the Bank” I can swear that the president NEVER read this part, or any of those guys called TOPAZ, SAACID, TARZAN, FIQI, all of these and others as I mentioned before in any another thread have messengers who regularly visit the Central Bank, these messengers are well known to the staff, the staff themselves were hand-picked by the said officials to work closely with the messengers. This is tragic, this is sad, this is the end, the hope we all had with this president is all but yet gone, ninkii aan laheyn Soomaali buu isku keenayaa maadaama uu wlaigii Soomaaliya joogey, waaba dharaboow madaxweynaheena, dhuudhi lugaha dadka ka gala oo aamusan hoosna kaa jaqayaya sidii subxaanya qeyd xidhan. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
SomaliPhilosopher Posted November 13, 2013 Well this clears up some things. Those should note there is a difference between being asked to 'partake' in corruption and doing things that may 'open' the door to corruption. A much softer allegation, if an allegation at all. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Hawdian Posted November 13, 2013 Every somalilander that has gone to Xamar has been humiliated when will these people learn not to work for a foreign Gov . Ms Abrar is just the latest in a long list starting in 60 's. it wouldn't surprise me if all the defenders of nepotism corruption xaraam are already slandering ms Abrar. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Miyir Posted November 13, 2013 SomaliPhilosopher;985782 wrote: Well this clears up some things. Those should note there is a difference between being asked to 'partake' in corruption and doing things that may 'open' the door to corruption. A much softer allegation, if an allegation at all. clears what? Qoslaaye is the center of the corruption or do you want names named? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
nuune Posted November 13, 2013 SomaliPhilosopher;985782 wrote: Well this clears up some things. Those should note there is a difference between being asked to 'partake' in corruption and doing things that may 'open' the door to corruption. A much softer allegation, if an allegation at all. Never thought someone will come and declare their full support for a corruption that was taking pace and is taking place right now and in the future Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
SomaliPhilosopher Posted November 13, 2013 Though I wished she stayed, I would agree in saying she doesn't "understand the Somali way." Yes the Central Bank of Somalia Act does give the bank autonomy and it should do so in practice. But of course these 'articles' and 'clauses' for all practical purposes don't really matter. We are a country that are just transitioning from over twenty years of lawlessness, at least of formal law. What did Yussur expect? For these dusty acts and bills to be taken off the shelf and the government to act in full accordance? For the President to attend to all her inquiries with only four weeks on the job, with most of her time spent abroad? These things take time. Yussur should have understood that and work accordingly instead of provoking a full out scandal because of the potential 'opening' of doors of corruption. Yussur will be received as a hero. A strong figure who stood her ground and held strong to her 'personal values'. Though with all idealism aside, this is not a testament of strength, but rather one of weakness. Somalia does not need 'personal values'. It needs patience. It needs flexibility. It needs calm . It needs understanding. These are not values of an individual but rather one of a nation. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
YoniZ Posted November 13, 2013 It is fair to say the magnitude of this political damage is much bigger than any other challenges SFG faced in its one year rule. While the sell out was, this government is the first non 'Transitional' in two decades. The above characterize it, as not in a position, or even not willing to engage any notable nation building practice. The interesting question will be: Who on earth will accept this position after that resignation? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Miyir Posted November 13, 2013 Miyir;985773 wrote: October 30, 2013 However, it has become clear to me that my ability to act in the interests of the Somali people has been undermined and will continue to be undermined by various parties within the administration. From the moment I was appointed, I have continuously been asked to sanction deals and transactions that would contradict my personal values and violate my fiduciary responsibility to the Somali people as head of the nation’s monetary authority. To use one example, as you are aware based on our multiple conversations on this matter, I vehemently refused to sanction the contract with the law firm Schulman & Rogers, regarding recovery of the Somali financial institutions assets frozen since the fall of Siad Barre’s regime. Your Excellent I have read both the Agreement and Power of Attorney which your office instructed the former governor to sign with the law firm. I don’t believe that these documents serve the interest of the Somali nation and I believe that they put the frozen assets at risk and open the door to corruption. My suggestion to let me share these documents with a Central Bank appointed legal counsel for a second opinion fell on deaf ears. The message that I have received from multiple parties is that I have to be flexible, that I don’t understand the Somali way, that I cannot go against your wishes, and that my own personal security would be at risk as a result. I am the least concerned about the security threat, but I am truly disappointed that I have not received your support and leadership on this matter so that I could objectively perform my duties. Sincerely, Yussur A.F. Abrar Governor SP contradicting yourself in the same sentence, defending the undefendable, good luck Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
uchi Posted November 13, 2013 What a disgrace. What is more important to this president? He is flying every day asking (kissing ***) for money, and he doesn't have time to speak to the head of the Central Bank and listen to her concerns? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Miyir Posted November 13, 2013 uchi;985796 wrote: What a disgrace. What is more important to this president? He is flying every day asking (kissing ***) for money, and he doesn't have time to speak to the head of the Central Bank and listen to her concerns? read again he is the one pushing her to rob the bank. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
spartacus Posted November 13, 2013 all hassan want to steal the money through bank governor, so that she will pay the price,, hassan is a smartass Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites