Jump to navigation

Somalia

Militias opposing President Mohamed move into the capital after weekend of clashes

Some roads to the Presidency and parliament are blocked by armed gangs

With local, regional and international officials objecting to the bid by President Mohamed Abdullah Mohamed 'Farmajo' to extend his term by two years, ostensibly to organise direct elections, the crisis is splitting the security forces.

Over the weekend, soldiers from Middle Shabelle region moved to Mogadishu to confront Farmajo's supporters.

On Sunday, the African Union's Peace and Security Council concluded that Somalia is not ready to hold elections based on universal suffrage (AC Vol 62 No 1, Voting may not bring peace). Instead, indirect elections should be held, the AU said.

AU Commission chairman Moussa Faki Mahamat will now name an envoy in the coming days, with the increasingly unlikely task of mediating a date and method of polls to be held in the coming months.

Farmajo's government appears to have shot down the mediation process before it even begins, accusing the AU, and particularly Kenya and Djibouti of interfering in its affairs, and of seeking to 'violate the political independence of the republic,' according to Foreign Affairs Minister Mohamed Abdirizak (AC Vol 61 No 25, Farmajo breaks with Nairobi).

Former president Hassan Sheikh Mohamud said on Sunday that soldiers had attacked his residence and pinned the blame on President Farmajo. Mogadishu residents have reported that clashes between pro-opposition and pro-government factions in the security forces have stepped up in recent days, with several senior military commanders, including Saney Abdule, unilaterally withdrawing forces from positions in protest as Farmajo's term extension (AC Vol 62 No 5, Battle lines in the capital).



Related Articles

Voting may not bring peace

When elections are over, oil and gas are likely to move centre-stage, and the changing geopolitical context will have deep effects

No Somali election passes without conflict. The hardening stances of the government and its opponents caused first delays in selecting new members of parliament, and then argument ...


Battle lines in the capital

President Farmajo refuses to leave office at the end of his term and the opposition has taken to the streets

If President Mohamed Abdullah Mohamed 'Farmajo' does not meet the opposition protesting his authoritarianism half-way, there are fears that splits in the security forces could lead...


Proxies, powers, and presidents

Qatar and the UAE, along with a host of bit players, fought their latest battle in Somalia over whose man got to be the new Speaker of Parliament

Months of vicious intrigue centring on the rivalry between the United Arab Emirates and its declared enemy, Qatar, ended on 30 April when Mohamed Mursal Abdirahman became the new S...


Al Shabaab’s waiting game

Regardless of the recent defeats of Al Haraka al Shabaab al Mujahideen, senior African Union Mission in Somalia commanders privately admit that the next phase of military operations is fraught with potential difficulties. Since forcing Al Shabaab out of Mogadishu in August, five years after Amisom first came to Somalia, the Ugandan People’s Defence Force’s 5,500-strong contingent is slowly moving out to assume control of new territory beyond the capital. Any bolder moves to occupy territory further afield, however, depend on leaving currently-occupied zones to Transitional Federal Government (TFG) soldiers and police, whose competence and reliability are in some doubt. Amisom commanders also worry because communications are scant and coordination absent with the Ethiopian forces to the south. Now that the Kenyan forces have been re-hatted as Amisom, links with them should improve.

Lack of trust in the TFG forces who have to take over the Ugandan and Burundian positions when Amisom moves out of Mogadishu is making Amisom tread cautiously. The TFG forces are ...