A money-transfer company has made a
piece of banking history in Somalia - introducing the
first-ever debit card in the breakaway region of Somaliland.
The firm, Dahabshiil, hopes eventually to roll the system
out to all Somali-speaking areas from Djibouti to Kenya.
They say large shops and hotels in areas with good
internet connection and electricity can sign up to the
service.
The card was launched in Somaliland's capital Hargeisa
because of insecurity elsewhere in the region.
'Cashless society'
Somaliland declared itself independent from Somalia in
1991, when the country's central government collapsed.
Since then, Somaliland has forged a relatively stable
state, despite its lack of international recognition.
Most of the rest of Somalia has been wracked by violence
and Islamist insurgencies while
Dahabshiil boss Abdul Rashid Mohamed Said told the BBC's
Focus on Africa programme he regretted that people overseas
hear only bad news from Somalia.
"We believe Somalis here have the same needs as people in
the UK or America and that's why the debit card will make
their lives easier," he said.
He said he hoped to create a "cashless society" by
encouraging customers to link their accounts directly to
their cards.
The BBC's Jamal Abdi says people he spoke to on the
streets of Hargeisa hope the new cards will reduce the long
queues outside money-transfer agencies.
Dahabshiil has made its name by handling cash transferred
by Somalis living overseas to their relatives back home.
Some estimates say as much as $1bn (£610m) is sent into
Somalia from the emigrants