
Somalia to hold long-delayed presidential election
Somalia will hold its long-awaited presidential election on Sunday, concluding months of delays, with the next leader facing significant problems such as an Islamist insurgency and a punishing drought that has caused starvation fears.
Since February 2021, when President Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed’s tenure expired without a fresh election, the fragile Horn of Africa country has been mired in political turmoil.
The 39 candidates include the incumbent, better known as Farmajo, as well as past presidents Sharif Sheikh Ahmed and Hassan Sheikh Mohamud and former prime minister Hassan Ali Kheyre.
Puntland state president Said Abdullahi Dani and former foreign minister Fawzia Yusuf Adan — the lone female contender — are also among the record number of candidates vying for the top job.
All have vowed to tackle Somalia’s myriad problems and bring relief to citizens weary of violence by Al-Shabaab jihadists, surging inflation and a worsening drought.
The vote is expected to draw a line under a political crisis that has lasted well over a year, after Farmajo attempted to extend his rule by decree, triggering violent street battles as rival factions clashed in the capital Mogadishu.
Following international pressure, he appointed Prime Minister Mohamed Hussein Roble to seek consensus on a way forward, but progress has been painfully sluggish, dogged by claims of irregularities and political interference.
The growing rift between the two men has not helped matters, while the central government has also been embroiled in disputes with certain states, further slowing down the voting process.
“This electoral process that has been so protracted offers a reset button,” said Samira Gaid, executive director of the Hiraal Institute, a Mogadishu-based security think tank.
“The country is very polarised at the moment and you expect that whoever comes in will work towards reuniting the country,” she told AFP.
Somalia has not held a one-person, one-vote election in 50 years.
Polls follow a complex indirect model, whereby state legislatures and clan delegates pick lawmakers for the national parliament, who in turn choose the president.
The winning candidate must secure the backing of two-thirds of parliament, which means a minimum of 184 votes.
With 39 people up for the presidency, the complicated process is expected to require multiple rounds of voting and stretch late into the night.
“In terms of predicting the outcome, Somalia politics is notoriously difficult to predict, especially because it is an indirect, sort of closed system with MPs voting for the president,” said Omar Mahmood, an analyst at the International Crisis Group (ICG) think tank.
“At the end of the day, I think it’s… predominantly about alliances and relationships rather than concrete ideas,” he told AFP.
Somalia’s global partners, which include the United States, the African Union and the United Nations among others, this week urged the country’s leaders “to conclude this final stage of the electoral process swiftly, peacefully and credibly so that attention can turn to domestic and state-building priorities”.
The international community has long warned Somalia’s government that political infighting and election delays have allowed the Al-Qaeda-linked Al-Shabaab to exploit the situation and carry out more frequent and large-scale attacks.
Twin suicide bombings in March killed 48 people in central Somalia, including two local lawmakers.
Last week, an attack on an African Union base killed 10 Burundian peacekeepers, according to Burundi’s army. It was the deadliest raid on AU forces in the country since 2015.
While the insurgency has dragged on for over a decade, the economy has been on life support, with over 70 percent of Somalia’s population living on less than $1.90 a day.
The country’s financial fortunes are hugely dependent on the successful completion of Sunday’s election.
A three-year $400-million (380-million-euro) aid package from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) is set to automatically expire by mid-May if a new administration is not in place by then.
The government has asked for a three-month extension until August 17, according to the IMF, which has not yet responded to the request.
Graft remains a persistent problem for Somalia, which sits near the bottom of Transparency International’s world corruption index, ranking 178 out of 180 nations.
The country’s crippling drought, which threatens to force millions into famine, will also be addressed by the incoming president, with small children being the most vulnerable.
Emergency workers fear a repetition of the horrific 2011 famine, which killed 260,000 people, half of them were children under the age of six, unless immediate action is taken, according to UN agencies.
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