Somalia’s election standoff intensifies, raising risk of political violence
Somalia’s nearly year-long constitutional crisis escalated toward outright conflict Monday as the president attempted to sideline his main rival, the country’s prime minister, by suspending his powers.
Critics of the president, Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed, say he is using unconstitutional means to stay in power well past his term’s end almost a year ago.
Analysts have warned that a
protracted political crisis distracts from the growing threat of
al-Qaeda-affiliated al-Shabab, which controls most of southern Somalia’s rural
areas and launches regular attacks on Somali cities and in neighboring Kenya.
The political standoff over a disputed election process veered into violence on
the streets of Somalia’s capital, Mogadishu, earlier this year.
Mohamed’s office did not respond
to repeated requests for comment regarding the political impasse. In a
statement, Mohamed said that the prime minister, Mohamed Hussein Roble, had
acquired land fraudulently and that the purpose of suspending him was to allow for
an investigation.
Roble’s office said he would not
abide by Mohamed’s decree, calling it an “outrageous statement,” and said the
deployment of soldiers to his office was a “failed attempt to militarily take
over.”
“When the political elite are
focused on each other, attention turns away from the battle against al-Shabab,”
said Omar Mahmood, senior Somalia analyst at the International Crisis Group.
“Security forces that might otherwise be directed towards al-Shabab instead are
turning inwards, providing greater latitude for the group to operate.”
The U.S. Embassy in Mogadishu
issued a statement calling on the country’s leaders to “take immediate steps to
de-escalate tensions.” The United States is Somalia’s biggest unilateral donor
and has plowed billions of dollars into security and state-building initiatives
over the past decade.
Somalia was meant to hold
elections at the parliamentary and presidential levels starting last year, but
the process, which involves an indirect selection of candidates by elders from
the country’s clan-based social structure, has been widely decried by Mohamed’s
opposition as rigged. A coalition of candidates including former presidents has
boycotted the vote.
When Mohamed — popularly known by
his nickname “Farmajo” — won the last election, in 2017, many in the country
had hoped the former New York state bureaucrat who held dual Somali and
American citizenship would usher in a one-person, one-vote election system.
Disputes over the process, difficulty creating a biometric system to register
individual voters, and pandemic-related restrictions ended up derailing those
aspirations.
“Farmajo was seen as a reformer
who would prioritize security and building state institutions in Somalia,” said
Mahad Wasuge, director of the think tank Somali Public Agenda. Instead, the
election process this year is just as “complex and imperfect” as when Mohamed
took office, Wasuge said.
Even the indirect election may
take months more to get underway as the impasse between Mohamed and his
opponents hardens. The opposition’s claims that the process is compromised have
been bolstered by recent statements from pro-Mohamed politicians who have
openly acknowledged the politicization of the election.
In one widely shared video, the
vice president of Hirshabelle state told reporters that his administration
would bypass traditional elders and handpick the winners of the state’s
elections.
One would-be regional election
candidate and a traditional elder involved in the candidate selection process
told The Washington Post in interviews that they doubted the independence of
the country’s electoral body.
Mohamed Osman Jawari, 76, a
two-time speaker of the lower chamber of the Somali Parliament, said in an
interview that when he had approached the president of the country’s South-West
state to declare his intention to run, he was told that clan leaders would be
instructed to quash his candidacy.
When he submitted his papers at
the State Election Implementation Team, which is meant to be an independent
body organizing the elections, his application was refused.
“The chairperson of SEIT told us
that he is unable to accept my application without the approval of the regional
president,” Jawari said.
Ahmed Aden Safina, SEIT’s
spokesman, said the body remains independent and that regional presidents may
oversee the approval of candidates but not interfere with the process. He said
Jawari’s complaint is being reviewed.
Before Mohamed’s move on Monday, the U.S. State Department issued a statement reiterating that it was “deeply concerned by the continuing delays and by the procedural irregularities that have undermined the credibility of the [election] process.”