Somali crisis assuming international proportions

The political crisis in Somalia has entered a new stage, assuming international dimensions, after a coalition of presidential hopefuls had asked the international community for intervention against the intransigence of President Mohamed Abdullahi Farmaajo.
The United Nations has asked Somalia's political
parties to reach a political settlement to the crisis in their country and hold
the awaited general and presidential elections.
The coalition raised a complaint against Farmaajo in a
letter to the foreign ministers of the US, Britain and Turkey along with the
EU, the Organization of Islamic Cooperation and the Arab League.
They asked these officials and organizations for help
in holding the elections, noting that there has been no legitimate government
in Somalia since the end of Farmaajo's presidential term on 8 February.
The presidential hopefuls also criticized Farmaajo's
insistence to stay in the office of president until a new president is elected.
This is the reason, they said, for delaying the
elections. The hopefuls expressed concern over Farmaajo's refusal to hand over
power and work with political stakeholders to conduct free and fair elections
in Somalia.
They said they believed Farmaajo would not hand over
power and would continue to obstruct efforts for holding the elections.
Farmaajo's actions pose threats to Somalia's
stability, the presidential hopefuls said in their letter.
He refuses to negotiate with the regional states
sincerely, they added.
The same hopefuls accused Farmaajo of restricting
freedoms and preventing citizens from demonstrating to express their opinion,
despite this being a right granted by the constitution.
The Somali army, they said, used to prevent them from
doing so.
The hopefuls went on to say that the Somali army, in
whose building the international community invested a lot, was distracted from
its main mission, namely of fighting Al-Shabaab, and was used to suppress
peaceful demonstrators.