Bowing to pressure, Somalia’s president drops bid to extend term

Somalia’s President Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed announced he will not attempt to extend his term by two years, bowing to domestic and international pressure after clashes in the capital Mogadishu split security forces along clan lines.
Hours earlier, Prime Minister
Mohamed Hussein Roble denounced the proposed term extension and called for
preparations for a new presidential election.
The president’s term expired in
February, but the country failed to hold elections as planned. Earlier this
month, the lower house of parliament voted to extend Mohamed’s four-year term
by another two years.
The Senate rejected the move,
provoking a political crisis.
Commanders in the police and the
military defected to the opposition, and rival factions of the security forces
fortified positions in central Mogadishu, raising fears of heavy fighting in
the heart of the capital, and a security vacuum in the surrounding areas that
could be exploited by al-Qaeda-linked al-Shabab fighters.
‘Foreign entities’
In a televised statement early on
Wednesday, the president said he commended the efforts of the prime minister
and other political leaders and welcomed the statements they issued calling for
elections to be held without further delay. He also called for urgent
discussions with the signatories to an agreement signed last September on the
conduct of the vote.
The opposition, which demanded the
president to resign, did not immediately respond. The president did not discuss
the opposition in his speech, but denounced unnamed “individuals and foreign
entities who have no aim other than to destabilise the country”.
The heads of two regional states
who had been staunch allies of the president also rejected on Tuesday the
proposed two-year extension of Mohamed’s term. Those leaders said in statements
immediately after the president’s speech they welcomed his announcement.
Prime Minister Roble backed that
joint statement and called on security forces to return to their barracks. He
also urged opposition leaders to stop any actions that could harm Somalia’s
stability.
Mohamed’s attempt to extend his
term also angered foreign donors who backed his government.
This week, opposition forces
abandoned positions in the countryside as they headed for a showdown in the
capital, allowing al-Shabab to take over at least one town.
Forces loyal to the opposition
hold important parts of Mogadishu and clashed with government forces over the
weekend, raising worries the country could return to an all-out war.
‘Emerging fragmentation’
Alarmed by the extraordinary
developments, the United Nations, African Union, United States, and others on
Tuesday warned against the “emerging fragmentation” of the Somali National Army
along clan lines.
Some residents fled, worried that
Somalia was again collapsing into conflict after years of trying to rebuild
from its devastating civil war.
The president said he urged “all
security agencies to maintain the stability of the capital and the safety of
innocent civilians, avoiding any actions that may lead to insecurity”.
Somalia’s election was delayed
amid disputes between the federal government and the states of Puntland and
Jubbaland along with the opposition.
The president, a former US citizen
who gave up that status while in office, tried to defend his actions on the
election standoff in a recent interview with his former local newspaper, The
Buffalo News, asserting Somalia “cannot afford a power vacuum”, and the extra
time would allow officials to organise the first one-person-one-vote direct
election in decades.
He added, “Who can lead if we
leave?”
‘Teetering on the brink’
The latest unrest is the second
bout of violence in Mogadishu over the proposed extension to Mohamed’s term.
Continued clashes could further
splinter Somali security forces along ethnic lines, said the International
Crisis Group, a think-tank.
“Somalia is teetering on the brink of a major
breakdown once again,” it said in a briefing published on Tuesday.
Somalia’s fledgeling armed forces
are drawn from clan militias that have often battled each other for power and
resources.
Mohamed is Darod, one of Somalia’s
main clans. The majority of the Somali military in the capital are Hawiye, another
large clan. Most of the opposition leaders are Hawiye.
When asked if he would peacefully
hand over power if someone else is elected, the president in his interview with
The Buffalo News replied, “Absolutely, without any hesitation.”