AfricanArguments.org: Perpetual Conflict: why discord between the Somali President and prime minister continues

From: Berhane Habtemariam <Berhane.Habtemariam_at_gmx.de_at_dehai.org>
Date: Sat Nov 22 14:55:18 2014

Perpetual Conflict: why discord between the Somali President and prime
minister continues - By Hassan M. Abukar


Posted on
<http://africanarguments.org/2014/11/21/perpetual-conflict-why-discord-betwe
en-the-somali-president-and-prime-minister-continues-by-hassan-m-abukar/>
November 22, 2014

The recent conflict between President Hassan S. Mohamoud and Prime Minister
Abdiweli Ahmed has caused a gridlock in the Somali government's operations.
The prime minister did a limited and pointed reshuffle, which involved only
two cabinet ministers. The problem with this new change was that it involved
two close friends and allies of the president. The president, sensing a
declaration of war by the premier, issued a decree rescinding the reshuffle.
Some politicians and the UN Special Representative to Somalia, Nicolas Kay,
have made many attempts to mediate in the conflict between the president and
the prime minister, but to no avail.

The Somali Parliament convened twice after more than 100 legislators
attempted to introduce a motion of no confidence in the prime minister.
Supporters of the PM interrupted these sessions and they were adjourned.
Interestingly, Nicholas Kay recently warned Somali legislators against
accepting bribes to vote Prime Minister Ahmed out of office, an admonishment
that enraged some parliamentarians but was well-received by others for its
frankness on the level of malfeasance in Somali politics.

Is the conflict between the president and the Prime Minister due to
ambiguities in the provisional constitution?

While the provisional constitution needs some heavy-duty amendments, it is
not the main reason why the country's two top leaders are at loggerheads.
Furthermore, the constitution states that the prime minister has the power
to "appoint and dismiss members of the Council of Ministers." The president,
in essence, has no business interfering with how the PM runs the council of
ministers (as long the premier does not violate the constitution).

This endemic conflict between the president and the prime minister is
nothing new. The last four presidents of the country (going back to 2004)
have had major problems with their prime ministers. Ironically, with the
exception of President Abdullahi Yusuf, each president had three prime
ministers in their respective single terms. President Yusuf's term was
unique because he had no control over Mogadishu for more than half of his
term - his government was initially based in Nairobi and later the Somali
towns of Jowhar and Baidoa respectively.

Of the 10 prime ministers the country has had since 2000, only two were not
dismissed (Mohamed Abdi Yusuf and Abdiweli Gaas). Oddly, these two left
office after a year because the tenure of their respective governments
ended. However, the relationship, for instance, between Gaas and President
Shaikh Sharif in the final several months of their term was marred by
dysfunction, political competition, and mistrust.

The average Somali prime minister stays in office about 1.3 years. The only
one who stayed three years in office was Mohamed Ali Ghedi, under President
Yusuf. President Yusuf's other premier, Nur Hassan Hussein "Nur Adde,"
lasted 2.3 years, a tenure so acrimonious that it led to the president's
eventual retirement.

Six prime ministers stayed in office an average of 1.1 years, and one
(Mohamed Farmajo) only about seven months. Hassan Abshir and Nur Adde were
the only ones who stayed two and 2.3 years respectively.

Interestingly, all these prime ministers universally complained about the
head of the state trampling on the constitution and, hence, acting as
imperial president. The presidents, in turn, questioned the prime ministers'
intransigence and tendency to act on their own. Many times, the sitting
parliament became a tool for the sitting president.

Somali President Hassan Mohamoud (l) and PM Abdiweli Ahmed

The conflicts between Somali presidents and their premiers cannot be
attributed simply to ambiguities in the constitution or a clash of
personalities. The causes lie deeper than that and can be partially
explained by the following:

* The Siad Barre syndrome. Every Somali president wants to be like the
late dictator who ruled Somalia for 21 years. The Somali word for president
"Madax-Weyne" (The Big-headed) semantically does not help the psychology of
the country's leader very much. Furthermore, the current system is
confusing. For instance, according to the constitution, the president, as
Head of State, appoints the prime minister, the head of the government, but
he cannot dismiss him; only the parliament can. The prime minister is in
charge of the Council of Ministers and, hence, the day-to-day operation of
the government. While the current president presumably understands his
constitutional powers and limitations, he has been accused of usurping the
prime minister's powers by acting as both the president and prime minister.
For the two years he has been in power, President Mohamoud has had two prime
ministers he himself carefully and diligently selected. Comprehending the
constitution is one thing, but abiding by it is another. Prime Minister
Abdiweli himself braced for confrontation from day one. According to a
source close to the prime minister, Abdiweli told some of his supporters
that he would "fight" the president and would never be like his predecessor,
Abdi Shirdon. At least the prime minister has kept his promise because his
working relationship with the president has been marred by discord and open
hostility.

* It is ironic that Somalia has neither an effective parliament nor
the existence of a judiciary. Since its election in 2012, the parliament has
yet to legislate a single law. In addition, according to two legislators who
talked to this writer, the going rate for buying a parliamentary vote is an
astounding $1,000, some get $2,000. The executive branch is mostly the one
that buys parliamentary votes to further its agenda. Parliament is the
authority that is supposed to check and balance the executive, but it
instead has become an appendage of the former. The biggest reason
legislators want to vote out the current prime minister is the absence of
they called "wada-shaqeyn" (working together) between the president and the
prime minister. "The prime minister must go," one parliamentarian told VOA,
"simply because he cannot work with the president."

* The power structure in the country is based on an unwritten
understanding between the bigger clans. For instance, the president and
prime minister come from the two largest clans in the country, the Hawiye
and the Darod. Being a member of these two clans is not in itself enough to
qualify to be president or prime minister; one has to come from the two
largest sub-clans of each of these two big clans (Abgaal or Habar Gidir for
the Hawiye and Marehan or Majertein for the Darod). Somali politics was
referred to, in humorous vein by one politician, as an everlasting struggle
between Tom and Jerry, the famous cartoon characters. The two clans are
constantly chasing each other and trying to outdo each other. What this
division of power creates is layers of various constituents and divided
loyalties for either the president or the premier. Many times, the interest
of one clan group may overlap the interest of the country. For the current
administration, the general elections scheduled for 2016 are creating panic
and a rush to win over new supporters among the myriad clans. It won't come
as a surprise if President Mohamoud appoints a new Majertein premier (a
sub-clan of the Darod) because his first two premiers were Marehan, another
sub-clan of the Darod.

The conflicts between Somali presidents and their prime ministers are
unlikely to end until there are viable and effective branches of the
government, such as the legislature and the judiciary which can serve as
check and balance for the executive branch. Otherwise, there is nothing much
a new prime minister can do. Last year, shortly before the selection of the
current prime minister, Professor Afyare Abdi Elmi astutely tweeted. "I do
not know who the next PM of Somalia will be, but I am not sure what he can
really do-we need to think of a long-term solution."

That is unlikely to happen before 2016.

Hassan M. Abukar is a political analyst and can be reached at
<mailto:abukar60_at_yahoo.com> abukar60_at_yahoo.com .

 
<http://africanarguments.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/SomaliParliamentaria
n.jpg> SomaliParliamentarian

The caption by Somalia's leading cartoonist, Amin Amir, reads: "The Somali
Parliamentarian."

 





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Received on Sat Nov 22 2014 - 14:55:18 EST

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