Daily Dispatch

Somali president consolidat­es power ahead of elections

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Somali President Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed has picked political newcomer Mohamed Hussein Roble as prime minister, cementing power around the presidency ahead of elections due next year.

Roble studied civil engineerin­g and previously worked for the Internatio­nal Labour Organisati­on, a UN agency. He replaces Hassan Ali Khaire, who was sacked in July after a power struggle over whether to delay a national election due next year.

Somalia, a Horn of Africa nation that has been riven by civil war since 1991, is coming to a crossroads. An African Union peacekeepi­ng force set up in 2017 has clawed back control of much of the country from Islamist insurgents, giving space for fragile political institutio­ns to emerge.

Young diaspora Somalis are coming home and constructi­on in the capital is booming.

But corruption is endemic, the peacekeepe­rs have begun reducing their presence, and the Islamist Al-Shabaab insurgency still mounts deadly attacks on a near-daily basis, even within the capital.

Relations have also been rocky between the federal government and regional states as they quarrel over power and resources.

Mohamed usually referred to by his nickname of “Farmaajo ”— is likely to run for a second term as president when polls are held, competing against at least two other former presidents.

Somalia’s internatio­nal backers had hoped to hold the first one-person, one-vote election since the war began, but it is unclear whether that will be possible. Reuters

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