Thursday, November 21, 2024

Somali president nominates Barre as prime minister after delayed elections

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Somalia’s president nominated on Wednesday Hamza Abdi Barre, a former chairman of the Jubbaland state election commission, as prime minister.

“I ask the parliament to approve him as soon as possible. I ask the prime minister to fulfill the work before him such as tackling insecurity, drought, climate change and good relations with all countries,” President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud said on state television.

Last month, President Mohamud won the presidency for the second time, having previously served from 2012 to 2017, after a long-delayed election that took place against a backdrop of the worst drought in 40 years and a bloody Islamist insurgency. 

“I thank God for making Somalia hold a fair election after a period of such uncertainty,” said Prime Minister Barre, a lawmaker elected in December last year for the city of Kismayo, where he co-founded a university.

“I assure you I will work day and night, and I will put together the best cabinet,” Prime Minister Barre said.

Prime Minister Barre’s nomination comes after a bitter rift between former President, Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed, who attempted to extend his presidency, and former Prime Minister, Mohamed Hussein Roble, with security forces splintering into factions supporting either of the men.

The rivalry triggered gun battles between different security organs and distracted them from the fight against al Qaeda-linked al Shabab militants, who controlled large swathes of the country and had killed tens of thousands of people in bombings.

The political crisis also diverted attention from a growing humanitarian emergency forcing more than six million Somalis to depend on food aid.

“I congratulate the new Prime Minister Hamza Abdi Barre and wish him success,” Roble said in a comment shared on the state radio’s Twitter account.

 Former Somali leader,  Hassan Sheikh Mohamud, won the presidency again in voting by parliamentarians on Sunday in an airport hangar protected by blast walls from Islamist insurgents whom he must now fight for a second time.

The 66-year-old, who ruled from 2012 to 2017, reversed the previous election to defeat incumbent President, Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed, by 214-110 votes in a third-round runoff whose result was confirmed around midnight.

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