UN urges Somalia to organize elections without delay

The U.N. Security Council urged Somalia’s government on Friday to organize elections “without delay” in a resolution that stressed the pressing threat to the country’s security from al-Shabab and armed opposition groups.
The resolution, which was adopted
unanimously, authorized the African Union to maintain its nearly 20,000-strong
force in Somalia until the end of the year with a mandate to reduce the threat
from the extremist groups to enable “a stable, federal, sovereign and united
Somalia.”
The U.N.’s most powerful body said
its objective is to transfer security to Somali authorities, with the aim of
Somalia taking the lead in 2021, and achieving full responsibility by the end
of 2023.
It emphasizes the importance of
building the capacity of Somali forces and institutions so they are able to
manage current and future threats, and authorizes the AU force, known as
AMISOM, to support the transfer of its security responsibilities to the
government.
The resolution’s adoption came amid
growing pressure on Somalia’s President Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed after
scheduled elections on Feb. 8 failed to take place because of the lack of
agreement on how the vote should be carried out. Two regional states have said
they would not take part without a deal.
Critics accuse Mohamed, who is
seeking a second four-year term, of delaying the election to extend his current
mandate. The president has blamed unnamed foreign interventions.
The Security Council expressed
concern at the delays in finalizing arrangements for elections this year. It
urged the federal government and regional states “to organize free, fair,
credible and inclusive elections” in line with a Sept. 17, 2020, agreement.
Three decades of chaos, from
warlords to al-Qaida affiliate al-Shabab to the emergence of an Islamic
State-linked group, have ripped apart the country that only in the past few
years has begun to find its footing.
The Security Council welcomed
“progress achieved so far” but also stressed the immediate threat from al-Shabab
and other extremist groups. It condemned their attacks in Somalia and beyond
“in the strongest possible terms.”
Council members welcomed the
government’s commitment to conduct joint operations with AMISOM “in order to
become the primary security provide in Somalia.”
But they said “Somalia is not yet
in a position to take full responsibility for its own security and that
degrading al-Shabab and armed opposition groups and building and sustaining
peace will therefore require continued regional and international collaboration
and support.”
While the British-drafted
resolution was adopted unanimously, the council’s three African members --
Niger, Tunisia and Kenya -- and Saint Vincent and the Grenadines objected to
the way negotiations were conducted, saying they weren’t properly consulted.
Niger’s U.N. Ambassador Abdou
Abarry said “the African Union must play a leadership role in determining the
future of its mission to Somalia throughout the transition.”
“It is our sincere hope that the
implementation of this resolution will be marked by meaningful participation,
cooperation and collaboration between the council, the AU and other partners in
the common endeavor to stabilize Somalia by systematically degrading terrorist
groups to allow peace and security to the people of Somalia,” Abarry said.