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June 30, 2010

UK Minister for Africa Henry Bellingham welcomes Somaliland’s elections


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UK Foreign & Commonwealth Office

UK Minister for Africa Henry Bellingham

Henry Bellingham welcomes Somaliland’s elections

29 June 2010

UK Minister for Africa Henry Bellingham said ‘the process has so far been peaceful, and an example of the restraint that has contributed to Somaliland’s stability in recent years.’

Henry Bellingham, Minister for Africa, said:

‘I welcome the important Presidential elections held in Somaliland on Saturday 26 June. The process has so far been peaceful, and an example of the restraint that has contributed to Somaliland’s stability in recent years.

Somaliland Presidential Elections 2010

I acknowledge the professional work done by the National Electoral Commission, and commend the parties for the peaceful campaigning that preceded election day. I urge all political parties to continue to respect the process and wait for the National Electoral Commission to announce the results. The UK looks forward to continuing to work closely with Somaliland, whichever party wins.’

(Source ):-UK Foreign & commonwealth office: http://www.fco.gov.uk/en/news/latest-news/?view=News&id=22451508

June 28, 2010

Somaliland Holds Credible Presidential Election


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Somaliland Holds Credible Presidential Election

Hargeisa, Somaliland – IRI found that Somaliland’s election was peaceful, without maAmbassador Williamson visits with Sacid, who voted in Hargeisa.Ambassador Williamson visits with Sacid, who voted in Hargeisa.jor incident and generally met international standards.  Hundreds of thousands of Somalilanders turned out to vote in their fourth election, and although wanting international recognition, did not wait to continue to build their nascent democracy.  The international community should credit such democratic progress and the example it sets for others.

As stated previously, the June 26 election went smoothly; however, Election Day is only one part of a larger and longer four part process, which includes the pre-election environment, pre-election administration, Election Day voting, and vote counting and post-election adjudication resulting in acceptance of legitimate results.  IRI cautions the political parties and Somalilanders to wait for the final results to be released before conclusions are made regarding the election process.  Peace has been the hallmark of Somaliland for the past 20 years, a point IRI was reminded of by citizens, civil society, election officials and the presidential candidates prior to the election.

In casting their ballots during Saturday’s presidential election, Somalilanders showed their enthusiasm and support for democracy and their homeland.  The pre-election environment and administration were generally conducive to a credible process.  In taking their campaigns to every region of Somaliland, the candidates believed that they were able to get their message across to the population and in the independent media.  IRI did, however, hear complaints regarding the use by the ruling party of state resources, such as state television and government vehicles.

Somaliland’s National Election Commission (NEC) deserves much credit.  The establishment of a voter registry and cards in particular were a step forward for the election process.  The set-up and mechanics for Election Day were also handled well.  Polling site officials carried out their work in a conscientious manner.  For the first-time ever worldwide, IRI witnessed a commendable, systematic effort to involve trained university students as election officials.  IRI also was impressed by the presence of observers representing all three political parties at an overwhelming number of balloting sites.  This is one of the most useful methods to deter fraud.

However, this well-run election was not without some difficulties.  A significant number of polling sites did not post the needed alphabetical division of voter’s last names, which led to early confusion on where to cast votes.  IRI also witnessed sporadic irregularities including what were believed to be instances of voting by those younger than 16, the legal age of voting.  By the end of balloting, these problems had either been solved or had not reached a level sufficient to call into question the credibility of the process.  As the vote count began, Somalilanders clearly felt a great pride for exercising their democratic rights, and much hope for the future.  IRI hopes that as the counting and tabulation process continues the political parties, candidates and citizens are as respectful of the results as they were in 2003.

This election was originally to be held in 2008 and was repeatedly delayed.  In any democracy, old or new, such delays undermine the political process and elicit distrust among the citizens.  This was unfortunate since Somaliland held a constitutional referendum in 2001, and three elections (local, presidential and parliamentary) from 2002-2005; all were deemed acceptable.  The last presidential election in 2003 was decided by a mere 80 votes and the defeated candidates accepted the result, and 2005 parliamentary elections resulted in an opposition-dominated legislature.  Many other countries and politicians can learn from Somaliland’s example, but only if elections continue to be held regularly and in a timely fashion.

IRI’s 19-member delegation was co-led by IRI board members Richard S. Williamson, former United Nations Ambassador and Presidential Special Envoy for Sudan; and Constance Berry Newman, former Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs and former U. S. Agency for International Development (USAID) Assistant Administrator for Africa.  The delegation also included representatives from the Czech Republic, Kenya, Nigeria, Norway, Sierra Leone, Serbia, Spain and the United States.  The group observed voting and ballot counting at more than 70 polling stations in four cities – Berbera, Borama, Burao and Hargeisa.

IRI also partnered with the local nongovernmental organization Social Research and Development Institute to train and deploy six domestic observer teams that gave IRI a broader coverage in areas where international observers could not monitor.  The domestic teams monitored voting and ballot counting at more than 70 polling stations in Ainaba, Baligubadle, Las Anod, Lug-haya, Odweine, Salaxley and Zeila.

Other IRI delegates were:

  • Rune Aale-Hansen, Chief Information Officer of Norway’s Høyre Party;
  • The Honorable Sophia Abdi Noor, member of the Kenyan Parliament;
  • The Honorable Aminu Bello Masari, former Speaker of the Nigerian House of Representatives;
  • Ambassador Ramón Gil-Casares Satrústegui, former Spanish Ambassador to South Africa and former Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs;
  • Dr. J. Peter Pham, Senior Fellow and Director of the Africa Project at the National Committee on American Foreign Policy, and non‐resident Senior Fellow for Africa Policy Studies at the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies;
  • Ambassador Lange Schermerhorn, former U.S. Ambassador to Djibouti;
  • Petr Sokol, Secretary of the Czech Republic’s Civic Democratic Party Group at the European Parliament; and
  • Dr. Christiana Thorpe, Chairwoman of Sierra Leone’s National Electoral Commission.
IRI staff also served as observers and assisted in the mission.  IRI staff were led by Lorne W. Craner, IRI President and former Assistant Secretary of State for Democracy Human Rights and Labor; Paul Fagan, IRI’s Regional Director for Africa programs; Scott Pool, Resident Country Director for Kenya and Somaliland; and Lara Petricevic, Somaliland Resident Program Officer.

Delegates traveled to Nairobi, Kenya where they were briefed by representatives from the U.S. Embassy and USAID.  After arriving in Hargeisa, delegates were briefed by representatives of the NEC, European Commission, presidential candidates, human rights groups and civil society organizations.  They also were briefed on the rights and responsibilities of international observers and Somaliland election law.

Delegates then deployed throughout Somaliland where they met with local election officials, political party representatives and civil society organizations.  On Election Day, delegates monitored polling stations and identified and evaluated the strengths and weaknesses in the election system, including campaign regulations, the balloting process, vote tabulation and reporting.

IRI has monitored more than 135 elections in more than 40 countries.  In September 2005, an IRI delegation traveled to Somaliland to assess the country’s parliamentaryelctions. 

Since 2002, IRI has worked with civil society groups, political parties and the national parliament in Somaliland.  Through funding from USAID, IRI provided support to Somaliland’s political parties, parliament, marginalized groups and was able to conduct this election observation mission.

The International Republican Institute Advancing Democracy Worldwide: IRI

http://www.iri.org/

June 26, 2010

Somaliland Election 2010: All Three Somaliland presidential candidates casted their vote today:Photos


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Somaliland Election 2010: All Three Somaliland presidential candidates casted their vote today:Photos


VIDEO:Gobolka Saaxill, Daawo Qaabkii Codaynta Doorashada Madaxtooyada 26th June 2010 Somaliland Election

Filed under: NEWS,SOMALILAND ELECTION — somaliland247 @ 6:26 pm
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video:Gobolka Saaxill, Daawo Qaabkii Codaynta Doorashada Madaxtooyada:

Somaliland Election: People queuing to vote this Morning

Filed under: NEWS,SOMALILAND ELECTION — somaliland247 @ 6:07 am
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Photos:


June 25, 2010

Analysis: Somaliland poll fuels recognition hopes


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HARGEISA, 25 June 2010 (IRIN) – As voters in Somaliland prepared to finally cast their ballots in a tight, oft-delayed presidential election on 26 June, there was one outcome for which almost everybody in the territory, regardless of political or clan affiliation, was rooting.

Peaceful and well-conducted polls “will lead to international recognition of Somaliland”, Mohamedrashid Sheikh Hassan, who is running for vice-president on the opposition Justice and Welfare Party (UCID) ticket, told IRIN.

“The first task” of whoever wins “is getting international recognition. Everything else follows from there. Without it you cannot have development,” said Said Ahmed Hassan, the president of Gollis University in Hargeisa.

“It is difficult to do business without recognition, so the new government must strive for recognition so as to set up proper financial institutions which will ease a lot of transactions,” said trader Khadar Ahmed.

“My best hope is for a free, fair and transparent poll as the world is watching to see how Somaliland will hold its elections,” said Mohamed-Rashid Muhumed Farah, a veteran journalist and chairman of the Saxafi Media Network.

“If the poll is successful, this will inevitably lead to Somaliland’s recognition by the international community,” he added.

Somaliland unilaterally declared its independence in 1991, but, despite its relative stability and the establishment of democratic institutions, it is still considered by the outside world to be part of Somalia.

There is a degree of foundation for Somalilanders’ optimism, according to E.J. Hogendorn, an analyst with the International Crisis Group, who noted that regional powerhouse Ethiopia recently upgraded the status of its consulate in Hargeisa to a “trade office”.

Recognition “is discussed at high levels in European circles, in [the UK’s] House of Lords and the European Parliament, for example.”

“But there is a consensus that, if recognition were to occur, an African country would have to take the lead. If a major African state were to recognize Somaliland, pressure on others to do so would be significant, and could lead to a cascading effect,” he said

Recognition reluctance

The first international organization to extend recognition would have to be the African Union (AU). But the AU, noted Hogendorn, “is extremely nervous about setting a precedent of recognition for secession”.

Such recognition reluctance exists not only within the AU, but also elsewhere in Somalia, where many regard Somaliland as an integral part of the country.

This is especially true of the militant Islamist group al-Shabaab, which has publicly called on Somalilanders to stay away from the polls. (The group is suspected of planning attacks designed to either disrupt the ballot or distract media attention from the election.)

One close observer of the country’s political scene said the assumption that a well-run election would boost chances of recognition were “fair” but that any development would likely be “an incremental process, rather than a one-off”.

One reason why these aspirations are unlikely to be satisfied in the immediate future is a fear that recognition would complicate efforts to put an end to the conflict ravaging south and central Somalia.

One close observer of the country’s political scene said the assumption that a well-run election would boost chances of recognition were “fair” but that any development would likely be “an incremental process, rather than a one-off”.

One reason why these aspirations are unlikely to be satisfied in the immediate future is a fear that recognition would complicate efforts to put an end to the conflict ravaging south and central Somalia.

A peaceful poll?

This election was originally scheduled for April 2008. After numerous postponements, a bitter disagreement over the registration process almost degenerated into violence in 2009.

A number of donor-funded measures, coupled with a sense that chaos would do the recognition cause no good, have helped to reduce the risk of unrest.

There is a new election commission in place that enjoys the trust of all stakeholders. Political parties campaigned on alternating days so as to minimize confrontation. There has been a huge voter education campaign, involving religious leaders, elders, and NGOs. On election day itself, only polling officials and observers are permitted to travel by vehicle.

“We are confident everything will go as planned,” Commission spokesman Ahmed Hirsi told IRIN on 20 June.

UCID’s Hassan said: “I don’t think anyone will try to rig it, but if that happens there are enough observers both local and international to call the culprits to account.”

There is widespread agreement that whoever wins, a clear margin and a graceful concession by the losers would help maintain calm.

Riyale, who won a 2003 presidential election by a mere 80 votes at the head of the United People’s Democratic Party (UDUB), appears ready to go quietly should things not go his way.

“If UDUB loses, I am 100 percent sure we’ll hand over power,” his spokesman, Ali Mohamed Yusuf, told IRIN, insisting however that this outcome was unlikely.

This election will resonate well beyond Somaliland itself, since democratic transitions of power are very rare in the Horn of Africa.

“The election is carrying a huge burden of hope of Somali people [also in the Horn and the diaspora] for an alternative governance system, to show that another way is possible,” said the political observer.

“The stakes are very high,” warned ICG’s Hogendorn. “The election is quite likely to be very close and thus vote count will be very much contested. Close elections can prove to be very divisive, problematic and tense.”

Source: IRIN

Somaliland elections on course for Saturday

Filed under: NEWS,SOMALILAND ELECTION — somaliland247 @ 4:23 pm
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Somaliland election: International observers for presidential poll dispatch teams across the country ahead of Saturday’s crucial vote

The international mission to observe Somaliland’s long-delayed presidential elections on 26 June 2010, led by UK based development agency Progressio, the Development Planning Unit at University College London and Somaliland Focus (UK) notes that good progress is being made towards holding the scheduled vote this Saturday. The first teams of observers left the mission’s base in Hargeisa for Somaliland’s regions on 24 and 25 June. Country-wide, all teams are expected to commence observation of the vote on the morning of 26 June.

The three organisations were invited in January 2009 by Somaliland’s National Electoral Commission (NEC) to act as coordinators of the international observation mission for presidential elections in the internationally-unrecognised Republic of Somaliland.

Given past difficulties, recent months have seen rapid progress towards a free and fair election, a clear indication of the effectiveness of the new NEC which was put in place after the parties agreed to a revised timetable for elections in late 2009.

In the week since the team assembled in Hargeisa (comprising 59 individuals from 16 countries, including diaspora Somalilanders) much work has been done. The teams have met the incumbent president and the two opposition candidates to hear points of view on the progress towards polling day where all three candidates pledged to accept the result of the poll.

However, the team has noted various complaints from the political parties about each others’ actions and of media bias. Fears about gaps in the voter registration process and the potential for attempted fraud have also been raised. Nevertheless, the observers mission agrees that the campaign has generally been peaceful and good-natured; that campaign ‘rules’ have on the whole worked well, and that the people of Somaliland are still enthusiastic about the election, despite the many delays. Indeed, a carnival atmosphere has prevailed in Hargeisa in recent days.

The potential for unrest does however remain high, the mission notes, and security threats around the election cannot be underestimated (ensuring the security of observers themselves, especially those in the regions, has been of paramount importance to the mission’s leaders). Nonetheless, the mission’s co-ordinators are hopeful that no major disruption will take place on polling day or in the immediate aftermath

The team are looking forward to a free and fair voting process and the smooth collation of the results in the coming days. Michael Walls, joint co-ordinator of the observation team, said: “we are heartened at the good spirit in which campaigning has taken place and are optimistic that the vigilance of Somalilanders and their evident commitment to a peaceful election will ensure that the small minority who wish to disrupt the process will be prevented from doing so.”

Dr Steve Kibble, also of the observation team, said: “We look forward to a peaceful election process that will express the will of the Somaliland people clearly and decisively. We are greatly encouraged by the willingness of the three party candidates to respect the result of the election.”
A post-poll press release will be issued by the election observation coordinators on June 28 2010, with a press conference at 11am at the Hotel Mansoor, Hargeisa. All interested media are invited to attend.

Notes

1. For further information or to arrange an interview with a member of the coordination team, contact Conrad Heine in Somaliland, tel +252 2 409 5464 or by email at conradheine@gmail.com

2. Somaliland’s Presidential elections have been repeatedly delayed. The poll has previously been scheduled for March/April 2008, December 2008, March 2009 and September 2009.

3. Somaliland is situated in Somalia’s northwest. It declared unilateral independence from the failed Somali state in 1991 and has since been a haven of relative peace whilst violence and instability has characterised Somalia, its capital Mogadishu and more recently the Gulf of Aden.

4. Progressio’s involvement in the mission follows its leadership of the international monitoring team for Somaliland’s inaugural parliamentary elections in 2005, judged by observers as “basically free and fair.”

5. Progressio is an international charity with Catholic roots that enables poor communities to solve their own problems through support from skilled workers. And we lobby decision-makers to change policies that keep people poor. For further information see: http://www.progressio.org.uk

VIDEO:AljazeeraEnglish Inside Story Debate:Somaliland vs Somalia


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ALJAZEERA ENGLISH – INSIDE STORY

Debate: Somaliland vs Somalia


Amid the chaos that has afflicted Somalia in recent decades, there is an oasis of relative calm that is ignored by the rest of the world.

It is now set to hold its second democratic presidential elections in eight years.

Somaliland, which is situated in Somalia’s northwest, is a haven of relative peace while violence and instability has characterised Somalia, its capital Mogadishu and more recently the Gulf of Aden.

So why has Somaliland succeeded in creating effective governance and a viable economy while mainland Somalia tops the list of failed states with rampant lawlessness and piracy?

Joining the programme are Mohammed Abdillahi Omar, an analyst and commentator on political issues in the Horn of Africa, Abdi Samatar, a  professor of geography and global studies at the University of Minnesota, and Afyare Elmi, a lecturer in international politics at Qatar University.

This episode of Inside Story aired First Wednesday, June 23, 2010.

June 24, 2010

VIDEO:New AljazeeraEnglish report on Somaliland Election 24th June


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Somaliland set to decide

Somaliland is heading to the polls for its second election in eight years, with the current president facing a strong challenge.

Al Jazeera’s Mohammed Adow reports from the capital, Hargeysa, in the lead-up to Saturday’s ballot.

June 23, 2010

VIDEO:AljazeeraEnglish report on Somaliland Election

Filed under: NEWS,SOMALILAND ELECTION — somaliland247 @ 11:18 pm
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VIDEO:AljazeeraEnglish report on Somaliland Election

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