Gulf Today

Somali opposition delays protest over poll delay

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MOGADISHU: Opposition presidenti­al candidates in Somalia have delayed a planned protest on Friday over the country’s election delay ater the government apologised for its actions during last week’s protest and affirmed the right to peacefully demonstrat­e.

Security forces fired on last week’s protest in the capital, Mogadishu, and fears of further violence led to talks this week between the government and an alliance of opposition leaders. Local elders and the internatio­nal community shutled between the sides.

On Thursday, ahead of the breakthrou­gh, Somali forces deployed at many strategic junctions in the capital.

Thesomalig­overnments­tatemental­soexpresse­d condolence­s to families of people killed last week.

At least five people were killed and around a dozen wounded, according to health officials.

The statement also said the government will be responsibl­e for demonstrat­ors’ safety.

In response, the opposition alliance agreed to postpone Friday’s protest for 10 days.

Pressure is growing on President Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed ater the Feb.8 election day came and went without an agreement on how to carry out the vote.

Two regional states have said they would not take part without a deal.

One former president who is now the chairman of the opposition alliance, Sharif Sheikh Ahmed, expressed his satisfacti­on with the government’s statement.

“All we needed was to secure our rights to demonstrat­e and hold free and fair elections,” he said. He added that “COVID-19 should not be used in the pretext of denying our people’s rights,” a reference to the recent government ban on public gatherings. Some critics have alleged that the ban was politicall­y motivated.

Prime Minister Mohamed Hussein Roble in a separate statement confirmed that “it’s the constituti­onal right of every citizen to elect or get elected and express freely in a peaceful manner.”

And the president on Friday in a statement commended “all sides” for reaching an agreement and called on Somalis to play their role in safe, fair and free elections.

Meanwhile, a resurgence of COVID-19 cases is hiting Somalia hard, straining one of the world’s most fragile health systems, while officials await test results to show whether a more infectious variant of the coronaviru­s is spreading.

In the lone COVID-19 isolation center in the capital, Mogadishu, 50 people have died in the past two and a half weeks, Martini hospital deputy director Sadaq Adan Hussein said during a visit. Sixty other patients admited during the period have recovered.

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