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PoliticsSomalia

Somalia: Renewed clashes dim hopes of a credible election

Mohamed Odowa
October 28, 2021

Several days of fighting between government troops and militia have heightened political uncertainty over the long-overdue national polls. In addition, there is still no agreement on the electoral procedure.

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A Somali militia fighter carrying a hand-propelled grenade.
Fighting between government troops and militia threatens to further derail the election timetableImage: Farah Abdi Warsameh/AP Photo/picture alliance

After weeks of heated disputes between the outgoing President Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed and his Prime Minister Mohamed Hussein Roble over the disappearance of a female spy, the two men have finally agreed to move on.

According to a deal signed by Roble and Mohamed, who is popularly known as Farmajo, "speeding up elections is a top priority."

Somalia currently has no legitimate national authority. The mandates of the federal institutions expired in February and cannot constitutionally be extended.

There is a political understanding that the incumbents will remain in office pending an electoral process to establish a new parliament and government.

"That understanding is now fraying because the electoral process is months behind schedule. Villa Somalia [Somalia's Presidential Palace] has been systematically frustrating the process at every turn and trying to manipulate the election model for its benefit," said Horn of Africa expert Matthew Bryden.

"If so, then there is a very real risk that some political stakeholders will lose patience and that the fragile understanding that currently maintains stability may begin to disintegrate," Bryden told DW.

Insecurity remains a significant challenge

Somalia's al-Qaida-linked al-Shabab extremist group has already vowed to disrupt the electoral process.

To make matters worse, fighting between regional forces supported by the federal army and the once allied moderate Sufi militias in the Galgaduud province of central Somalia has killed more than a 100 people. The clashes injured another 200 others.

Somali security officers view a car wreckage from a bomb blast.
Al-Shabab continously carries out bomb attacks in the capital MogadishuImage: STRINGER/AFP/Getty Images

In a statement issued on Thursday, Sufi leader Sheikh Mohamed Shakir Ali Hassan said the central government had deployed more troops from the capital Mogadishu to the town of Guri-El in Galgaduud.

The violence affected medical services in the district, causing massive destruction at two hospitals in the area. As a result, more than 100,000 people fled to neighboring villages.

"We cannot describe the level of destruction by the conflict here in Guri-El district," Anas Abdi, a district commissioner, told DW. "But we are committed to all we can to bring those affected and displaced people back to the district, get assistance and restart their livelihood." 

The fight against al-Shabab

The moderate Sufi group claimed it had taken over the area to intensify fighting al-Shabab insurgents in the region.

However, both state and central government officials believe the group's leaders were regrouping in an attempt to influence the regional administration in the upcoming elections.

Somalia's best-trained counter-terrorism forces are being used to fight another force [the Sufi moderate group] that has had great success fighting al-Shabab, according to Jay Bahadur, an independent researcher and journalist who has written a book on piracy in Somalia.

"The president of Somalia's constitutional term limit expired in February, and he has since been using foreign-trained security forces to cling to power," Bahadur said. 

"Most recently, he's turned the Danab battalion – Somalia's most elite counter-terrorism force – against a militia that has historically had the greatest success fighting against al-Shabab. This should be an issue of particular concern to the United States, which has trained and equipped the Danab battalion at great expense."

"The only party benefiting from the president's actions is al-Shabab," Bahadur told DW.

A foot tramples on a poster bearing Somalia's President Mohamed Abdullahi Farmaajo's image.
President Farmaajo's constitutional mandate expired in February but he remains in power under a deal struck in parliamentImage: Farah Abdi Warsameh/AP Photo/picture alliance

No concession on the electoral process

Very little progress has been made on the clan-based elections where five regional states choose 52 members of the senate.

The upper house consists of 54 seats in total.

Moreover, there is no meaningful agreement or deadline on critical aspects of the electoral procedures. The indecision has enormous potential for further disputes and delays about the list of 275 lower house members or house of representatives. 

The national indirect clan-based election, a highly complex system of governance that has been in place for the last 20 years, was pushed back several times due to federal and state disagreements over procedures.

Somalia lawmakers in parliament.
Somali voters don't vote directly to elect their leader, instead lawmakers from the lower and upper house decideImage: Feisal Omar/REUTERS

Initially, Somali political stakeholders had agreed that only two candidates should run for the senate seat.

The regional leaders had given the authority to identify the two persons eligible to run for a seat. Then the regional parliament for each state had to decide which candidate goes to the senate in a vote.

Unlike the senate, the lower house of parliament, which comprises 275 members, is selected by 27,775 clan delegates.

In other words, it is not a universal suffrage election or a one-person, one-vote system. But clan elders will pick — by hand — a total of 27,775 delegates to select the 275 lawmakers. Thus, there are 101 delegates for each lower house seat.