Somalia’s president signs controversial two-year mandate extension

Somalia’s president signs controversial two-year mandate extension
President Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed of Somalia

President Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed of Somalia

MOGADISHU, April 15 (NNN-AFRICANEWS) — Somalia’s president has defiantly signed into law an extension of his mandate and that of his government as the United States and others threatened sanctions and warned of further instability in one of the world’s most fragile countries.

The president late Tuesday signed the controversial law after the lower house of parliament this week voted to effectively extend his mandate for two years while calling for direct elections during that time. Leaders of the Senate, however, called the vote illegal and Somalia’s opposition protested.

The US is “deeply disappointed,” Secretary of State Antony Blinken said in a statement overnight that threatened the possibility of sanctions, visa restrictions and a reevaluation of “our bilateral relations.” The statement called for Somalia’s federal government and regional states to urgently return to talks on the election crisis.

The European Union had warned that signing this week’s decision into law would divide Somalia and “constitute a grave threat to the peace and stability of Somalia and its neighbours,” and it threatened to consider “concrete measures” in response.

Britain said this week’s move “undermines the credibility of Somalia’s leadership” and it threatened to work with international partners to “reevaluate our relationship and the nature of our assistance to Somalia.”

In response, Somalia’s foreign ministry said it was concerned by “misleading and alarmist statements” by some international partners and accused them of “inciting the Somali people against their legitimate government.” The statement added that Somalia will “reject any attempts to use the humanitarian assistance to blackmail the country, “without giving details.

Somalia relies heavily on outside aid to feed, shelter and care for a large population displaced by insecurity and climate shocks, as well as to train and equip its security forces.

Somalia’s government has been unable for months to reach an agreement on how to carry out the election, with the regional states of Puntland and Jubbaland objecting on certain issues and the international community warning against holding a partial election. The crisis led to deadly violence against demonstrators who opposed an election delay.

Contentious issues in months of talks on the election process included the formation of the electoral management commission, the selection of commission members for the breakaway region of Somaliland.

Somalia hasn’t had a one-person-one-vote direct election in decades.

The country began to fall apart in 1991 when warlords ousted dictator Siad Barre and then turned on each other. Years of conflict and attacks by al-Shabaab, along with famine, left this Horn of Africa country of about 12 million people largely shattered.

Al-Shabaab controls large parts of southern and central Somalia and often targets the capital with suicide bombings. The extremist group has been a frequent target of US military airstrikes. — NNN-AFRICANEWS

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