Bangkok Post

Slain spy saga casts pall over Somalian poll

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>>MOGADISHU: The killing of a senior Somali spy, who according to Western officials had knowledge of a secretive regional security accord and the formation of a new elite military unit, has cast a shadow over the war-torn nation’s long-delayed elections.

The plebiscite was originally scheduled for February, but was delayed by a dispute over voting modalities, and subsequent plans to hold it today were derailed by administra­tive glitches. A new date has yet to be set and there are fears that militant groups Al-Shabaab and the Islamic State (IS) could fill a power vacuum should the political process collapse.

Al-Shabaab, which wants to impose its version of Islamic law, has waged an insurgency in Somalia since 2006 that’s spilled over into neighbouri­ng countries and threatened regional stability. The African Union has deployed almost 20,000 troops to try and shore up the government and maintain stability, and a failure to hold credible elections will make their task substantia­lly more difficult.

President Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed, who is widely known as Farmajo, was due to face off against an array of contenders in his bid for another term. They include Hassan Sheikh Mohamud, his predecesso­r, and Abdirahman Abdishakur, the leader of the Wadajir Party and one of his most vocal critics.

Farmajo’s prospects of winning have been clouded by a dispute with his prime minister and one-time ally Hussein Roble over his handling of the killing of 24-year-old Ikran Tahlil, a cyber-security expert at Somalia’s National Intelligen­ce and Security Agency. While the agency blamed the spy’s death on Al-Shabaab, the al-Qaeda-linked Islamist group denied involvemen­t.

Mr Roble accused Farmajo of obstructin­g a probe into Tahlil’s disappeara­nce in June, and a five-member panel has been establishe­d to seek justice in the case. The US, which sees Somalia posing a major terror threat and has pushed for stability to be maintained, last month called on the two leaders to resolve their dispute “immediatel­y and peacefully”.

There is widespread belief in Somalia that the government is trying to cover up the circumstan­ces surroundin­g Tahlil’s death, according to Western officials and analysts who’ve been tracking the case. Her family have also alleged the probe into her killing is flawed because the intelligen­ce agency is participat­ing.

Tahlil possessed intimate knowledge of a security agreement forged in 2018 between Eritrea, Ethiopia and Somalia, details of which the three nations wanted to keep secret, according to United Nations and Western officials, who work in Somalia.

Somalia had long suspected Eritrea’s government of lending support to Al-Shabaab, and the accord helped ease tensions between the two nations’ security forces, the officials said. They also revealed the tie-up saw Eritrean intelligen­ce officers being stationed in Somalia and Ethiopia, giving its

President Isias Afwerki a key foothold in the region. Eritrea has been backing Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s fight against dissidents in the northern Tigray region.

Revelation­s about the substance of the accord and the reasons behind Tahlil’s death could stoke diplomatic tension in the Horn of Africa region, said Omar Mahmood, Somalia expert for the Internatio­nal Crisis Group.

Tahlil, who spent several months training in forensic cyber-security at London’s Scotland Yard in 2019, also possessed sensitive informatio­n related to about 5,000 Somali soldiers, who were sent to Eritrea last year to participat­e in military exercises. About 450 of those troops were recruited into an elite fighting unit whose whereabout­s and exact role remain unclear.

 ?? ?? CLOUDED PROSPECTS: Somalia’s President Mohamed Abdullahi Farmajo addresses lawmakers after winning the vote in Mogadishu in this 2017 file photo.
CLOUDED PROSPECTS: Somalia’s President Mohamed Abdullahi Farmajo addresses lawmakers after winning the vote in Mogadishu in this 2017 file photo.

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