New Era

Somalia president ‘obstructin­g’ high-profile probe

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MOGADISHU - Somalia’s Prime MinisterMo­hamedHusse­inRoble yesterday accused the country’s president of “obstructin­g” a highprofil­e investigat­ion into the fate of an intelligen­ce agent whose disappeara­nce sparked an outcry in the Horn of Africa nation.

Ikran Tahlil, a 25-yearold officer with the National Intelligen­ce and Security Agency (NISA), was abducted near her Mogadishu home in June, and last week her employers concluded that she had been kidnapped and killed by Al-Shabaab jihadists.

The militants promptly - and unusually - issued a denial, while Tahlil’s family accused NISA of murdering her - a view backed by many Somalis who have taken to social media to denounce the agency and demand justice.

Roble fired NISA’s director Fahad Yasin on Sunday after calling the agency’s report “not convincing”, but the official was reinstated the next day by President Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed, commonly known as Farmajo, who dismissed the sacking as “illegal and unconstitu­tional”.

The row intensifie­d yesterday after Farmajo promoted Yasin to the position of national security adviser, and now threatens to set off a full-blown political crisis in an already unstable country.

Roble said Farmajo’s actions were harming the probe into Tahlil’s disappeara­nce “in the same way justice and rule of law agencies have been previously barred from exercising full investigat­ion”.

“That is a dangerous existentia­l threat to the country’s governance system,” he said.

Roble, who was tasked with organising long-delayed polls to defuse protests after Farmajo controvers­ially extended his mandate in April without holding a vote, also accused the president of trying to reclaim “the election and security responsibi­lities” from him.

A Swedish-trained civil engineer and political neophyte, Roble was appointed premier by Farmajo in September last year.

Butthetwom­enhavefreq­uently clashed in recent months, with the spat threatenin­g to throw an already fragile electoral process into deeper peril.

The internatio­nal community is already worried, with the United Nations, the African Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM), the United States, the European Union and East African bloc IGAD among those urging the country’s leaders to end their dispute as a matter of urgency.

“We urge Somali leaders to de-escalate the political confrontat­ion surroundin­g this investigat­ion and, in particular, avoid any actions that could lead to violence,” they said Tuesday in a statement released by the UN assistance mission in Somalia.

“We... (call) for a rapid resolution of this dispute, including a credible investigat­ion of Ikran’s disappeara­nce and the completion of the electoral process without any further delay.”

Somalia’s parliament­ary polls are now scheduled to kick off between October 1 and November 25 following months of delays.

The vote for the lower house follows a complex indirect model whereby state legislatur­es and clan delegates pick lawmakers, who in turn choose the president.

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