The Somalia presidency has announced that political parties have reached an agreement to hold a direct election next year, after 56 years, despite opposition from two states and former presidents.
The agreement was reached at the Somali National Consultative Council Meeting, which was presided over by President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud and attended by political leaders from Hirshabele, Galmudug, and South West states, as well as Mogadishu Mayor Yousuf Hussein Jim’ale, the Presidency said in a statement.
Since March 1969, Somalia has not had a direct election system – a method of selecting political officeholders in which voters cast ballots directly for the individuals or political parties they want to be elected.
The meeting agreed that local council elections would be held in June of next year, while federal parliament representatives, members of state legislatures, and presidents would be elected in September 2025, Anadolu reported.
It added that the independent national electoral and boundaries commissions are tasked with developing a comprehensive and transparent electoral timeline to g uide the upcoming election processes.
However, Said Abdullahi Deni, president of the semiautonomous Puntland region, and Ahmed Madobe, president of Jubaland state, have boycotted the meeting and rejected the decision to hold direct elections, as well as the election schedule.
Opposition leaders, including former presidents Sharif Sheikh Ahmed and Mohamed Abdullahi Farmajo, rejected the direct election in separate statements, arguing that it would lead to political divisions and jeopardize national unity.
Peoplesmind