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Issue 513/ 26th Nov - 4th Dec 2011

Front Page

Somaliland News

News Headlines

UDHIS Formally Established

Seminar For Journalists

Kenyan Police Hold Six Suspects Over Al Shabaab Links

Local and Regional Affairs

Somaliland: Foreign Minister Acknowledges The Need To Forge New Relationships

The EU’s New Political Strategy For The Horn Of Africa

 The 19th IGAD Extraordinary Summit On Somalia And Sudan

Ethiopia Will Further Strengthen Support To Somalia: Hailemariam

Kenyan, Somali Troops Attack Militant Bases

Reports Detail Past CIA Operations In Somalia

ESLSC Offers Multi Modal Transport To Private Sector

Editorial

The Plot Thickens In Somalia

Features & Commentary

Somaliland Development Cooperation By Jeremy Carver CBE

The Association Of Afro-Asian States Sharing Indian Ocean (AASSIO)

Somalia: What Is To Be Done?

Curse Of The TV Tapes: Pirates Of Somalia

The Eyes Tell More Than The Lips

International News

Opinion

Vocational Training Cannot Be Excluded From The Definition Of Education In Somaliland

How Puntland Gets Away With Piracy

Somaliland Plans Law Allowing Foreign Banks To Set Up Operations

By Mark Anderson

Hargeysa, Somaliland, November 26, 2011 – Somaliland will pass a banking law early in 2012 establishing a central bank and enabling foreign lenders to begin operations, the speaker of parliament said.

The Central Bank of Somaliland Act, which replaces the 1997 Central Banking Rules and Regulations Act, was presented to lawmakers today in Hargeysa, the capital, where some objections were raised, Abdirahman Mohamed Abdillahi said in an interview today in the city.

“There are few MPs that object to the Act and those who do are only concerned with individual articles,” Abdillahi said. “We are confident that the Act will be passed early next year.”

Somaliland, a former British colony, declared independence from Somalia in 1991, following the ouster of former Somali dictator Mohammed Siyad Barre. No sovereign state has formally recognized the area as independent.

Last month, Banque pour le Commerce et l’Industrie-Mer Rouge Chief Executive Officer Ould Amar Yahya held talks with the government about obtaining a license, according to Saad Moussa Djama, BCI’s representative in Somaliland. The lender, based in Djibouti, has had a representative office in Hargeysa since February 2009.

The bank “expects to obtain a full licence immediately after the Commercial Banking Act is passed,” Djama said in an interview on Nov. 21.

CAC Bank, a state-owned Yemeni lender, and Dahabshiil, the Dubai-based money-transfer service, have also contacted Somaliland’s central bank about establishing a presence in the country, Governor Abdi Dirir said in an interview on Nov. 21.

--Editors: Paul Richardson, Alastair Reed.

To contact the reporter on this story: Mark Anderson in Hargeysa via Nairobi at pmrichardson@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Paul Richardson at pmrichardson@bloomberg.net.

Source: Businessweek, Bloomberg

 



 


 




 




 



 




 


 



 



 

 


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