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Mogadishu residents are showing a huge appetite for work after years of fighting. (Reuters)
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MOGADISHU — A prevailing
sense of peace and security felt in many parts
of the once lawless Somalia since the rise of
the Supreme Islamic Council of Somalia (SICS)
is increasingly attracting foreign investors
back to the Horn of African country.
"We look forward
towards conducting healthy and fruitful
business in Somalia," Magdey Bashir, an
Egyptian working for Kuwait-based Dana Group
Center, told Reuters on Monday, October 30.
Bashir, whose company is
dealing with construction, real estate, food
and information technology, is one of many
foreign investors who have arrived in the
capital Mogadishu to look into business
prospects in the African country.
"We are the first
foreign investors to land in Mogadishu,"
said his Indian fellow Mahesh Ayra.
"We are only waiting
for security assurance to come and invest
here."
Somalis have been enjoying
rare moments of peace since the emergence of
the SICS, formerly known as Islamic Courts.
The SICS has been steadily
gaining more grounds and power since seizing
Mogadishu from US-backed warlords in June.
Now, foreign investors are
able to move in the Mogadishu streets without
the help of gunmen.
The SICS has also re-opened
Mogadishu's port and airport, where a
"Let us build Somalia together" sign
hangs high. Both had been closed for over a
decade.
Since the SICS started
issuing visas, flights to and from Kenya and
Dubai have been full of curious investors and
returning refugees.
Passengers are sometimes
forced to wait for days to get a seat on the
packed planes.
Home to about 10 million
largely impoverished people, Somalia has
lacked almost all the trappings of a
functional state, such as national systems of
education, healthcare and justice, for the
past 15 years.
Another Dubai
Ayra said other Indian
investors are looking forward to channeling
investments into the African country.
"Our partners will
soon come to see for themselves ...
opportunities are abundant here," he
said.
"Road infrastructure
and the health care sector are the priority
areas that need urgent funding."
Both Bashir and Ayra have
purchased scrap metals worth millions of
dollars from a company in Mogadishu.
"We have already
purchased 27 metric tones of scrap metal worth
over $5 million," said Bashir.
"We will bring in
sugar and cement ... We have a lot of ideas
and business plans," he added.
Yang Jian Zhong also came
to Mogadishu to purchase rawhide for his shoe
factory in central China.
"We hope to get four
containers (of rawhide) ... Everything is new
here, it's good for business," said his
partner Moosa on behalf of Yang who does not
speak English.
"Somalia can develop
into another Dubai. They have good weather,
living is cheap and there are a lot of
business opportunities.
"I hope this peace
will come true for Somalia," he said,
sipping local tea.
Yang called on his
government, which has a strong presence in
Africa, to help rebuild Somalia where millions
are jobless.
"I hope the Chinese
government helps Somalia. Somalia can develop
if peace comes. People can do a lot."
Bashir said Mogadishu
residents had a huge appetite for work after
years of fighting.
He said some women and men
had begun cleaning streets and clearing roads
on their own initiative.
"It is a sign that
people are ready to work, they need money to
survive ... We are ready to provide them with
jobs they need."