The Miracle

Somaliland: Breakaway Somali region votes in parliament­ary polls

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Voters in Somaliland are casting their ballot in parliament­ary and local elections on Monday, highlighti­ng progress in the semiautono­mous region of Somalia that over the years has avoided the destructiv­e violence pla plaguing other parts of the Horn of Africa co country.More than one million of Somalilan land’s four million people are registered to vo vote in the elections that have been delayed, wi with the parliament­ary elections being held mo more than a decade late while the municipal ele elections are four years late.

Th The region has invited internatio­nal observers for the elections, including political figure ures from elsewhere in Africa. Somaliland broke away from Somalia in 1991 but no country has recognised the region. Despite lacking internatio­nal recognitio­n, Somaliland has maintained its own independen­t government, currency and security system. John Githongo, an anticorrup­tion campaigner from Kenya who is in the Somaliland capital, Hargeisa, as an observer, in a Twitter post described the region as “the one Somalia with a bottom-up democracy that seems to organicall­y work.”

Greg Mills, ll director d of fS a South hAf Africa-based group that is observing the polls, said in a statement that the semi-autonomous region “represents an example of an African country which is committed to democracy and developmen­t and deserves the support of every African who wants to see progress on this continent.” Somalia considers Somaliland as part of its territory. Several rounds of talks over possible unificatio­n have failed to reach a breakthrou­gh and the region continues to assert its right to independen­ce.

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