Yes, thank you.
Somalia does have a number of regional states in the federal system, a few of which are pretty functional and have been for some time. Setting aside the unrecognized, secessionist state of Somaliland in the northwest—which is another conversation, but has had a pretty functional government on a variety of levels—in the rest of Somalia, the state of Puntland has been in existence now for close to 20 years and has modest, but real, governance capacities. More recently, Jubaland, a state of Somalia in the southwest, has exhibited, at least in the area of the capital, Kismayo, a pretty robust capacity to provide security and some basic government services. In the rest of the country, the sub-state authorities are pretty nascent and really aren't able, at this time, to deliver a whole lot.
At the national level, as you've pointed out, the country has had a parliament, but the parliament has been paralyzed. It does have a civil service replete with ministries of everything, including tourism, but those ministries are generally not functional. One of the most important sets of government agencies at this time, the security sector, is in complete disarray. It has been in disarray at the grassroots level, at the bottom level, because soldiers have been frequently unpaid due to massive corruption, so they defect or desert. Just in the past month and a half, we have seen either the resignation or the firing of four top members in the security sector: the minister of defence, the chief of the army, the head of the national intelligence service, and I'm forgetting the fourth one that just happened. It's in a state of disarray right now.