Somalia sets November 30 as new date for presidential poll

Somalia President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud listens to proceedings after winning the election in Mogadishu, September 10, 2012. /REUTERS
Somalia President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud listens to proceedings after winning the election in Mogadishu, September 10, 2012. /REUTERS

Somalia’s electoral team has set new dates for parliamentary and presidential polls after failing to meet the September 24 deadline.

The parliamentary election will take place between October 23 and November 10 and the presidential poll on November 30.

Presidents of the existing and emerging federal member states will be asked to submit the names of candidates for the upper house of the federal parliament by October

5.

The chairman of the electoral commission announced the new dates saying the vote was delayed for a second time due to disputes over the selection process.

The election of the president had been slated for October 30.

The Federal Indirect Electoral Implementation Team (FIEIT) cited political challenges, security, management of the electoral budget and lack of a dispute resolution mechanism.

"Although substantial progress has been achieved on the electoral process, it seems some of the tasks cannot be completed based on the planned schedule," chairperson Omar Abdulle said in a statement on Tuesday.

"Some traditional elders have not yet completed submission of a list of delegates."

But the FIEIT announced a breakthrough on the electoral venue for the Hiiraan and Middle Shabelle regions.

This followed negotiations with traditional elders representing the two regions;

16 out of 18 elders agreed the electoral process should take place in the capital Mogadishu.

A three-day meeting between FIEIT members and chairpersons of the State Indirect Electoral Implementation Teams (SIEIT) also agreed that the election dispute resolution mechanism should be operational by October 8.

This, the meeting agreed, would ensure complaints of irregularities related to the electoral process are addressed.

The electoral oversight team also called for the speedy deployment of Amisom troops to the Galmudug capital of Cadaado to bolster security during the polls.

The international community committed to meeting 60 per cent of the budget while Somalia will clear the rest amid threats by militant group al Shabaab to disrupt the polls.

Al Shabaab has called on its followers to kill clan elders, officials and lawmakers taking part in the parliamentary election and to attack polling venues.

Somalia

has been at war since 1991 and the government said threats from the al Qaeda-linked terror group prevented it from organising a one-person-one-vote election.

About 14,000 people representing federal states across the nation will choose the new lawmakers. The outgoing parliament, elected in 2012, was picked by only 135 elders.

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