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In this, President Yusuf has been hinting that the Parliament had, in a controversial vote, supported the PM he had sacked earlier, against the verse of the Charter, as he and his allies interpret it. The international community, at least the neighboring countries, has threatened sanctions against him and his family, if he did not resign. The fact that the Speaker’s allies are already speculating that Adan (Madobe) to remain Acting President for the next six months, in violation of the Charter which envisages only one month for the Speaker to remain Acting, implies a brazen attempt by the Speaker to violate the Charter once again in a few weeks. At least, that’s how the supporters of the former President would interpret it. Despite this grand controversy, in a Press Release by the United Nations Political Office for Somalia, in Nairobi, the UN Special Representative for Somalia, Ahmedou Ould-Abdallah, said in response to the President’s decision that “a new page of Somalia’s history is now open”. History will tell as to the nature of this” new page” for Somalia, but if things go by my hunch, the new page may involve the end of the TFG as we knew it, if not Somalia as a State. I raise the question, because in the last 36 hours alone, most of the MPs that have represented Puntland and “Somaliland” left Baidoa—some even before the President, some with the President and some were already away from Baidoa. Others have been reported to have left for Nairobi or Mogadishu. Events in the ground indicate that there hardly are enough MPs left in Baidoa to constitute a quorum to conduct any business of Parliament. As if to confirm his supporters’ speculation that, there will be need for the Speaker to hold the Office for six months in an Acting capacity, the Speaker announced, in an interview with VOA/Somali that there may be need for more than a month to elect the next President. All in all, if the point of the pressure on President Yusuf to resign was to facilitate reconciliation and widen the support for the TFG, it seems that the opposite will be true—rather than tempting the opposition or, at least, part of them to participate, the impact of the resignation dispersed the existing members of Parliament. Thus, it is as if to further qualify the maxim: ”A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush”. I hasten to add that whatever happens in the future is the doing of His Excellency, Ould Abdallah, the UN representative to Somalia, among others, including President Ghelle of tiny, winy, sister Djibouti. The duo have helped to engineer the truce between members of the now defunct TFG, under the auspices of the now Care Taker PM, Nur Hassan Hussein, and some actors from the opposition. It is the outcome of this controversial Djibouti Accords that resulted in a settlement that has become unpalatable to President Yusuf, and which envisages the addition of 275 members to the seats of Parliament—to double the number. President Yusuf and his allies rejected to endorse the plan outright. Hence, it will be known—at a minimum—as the debacle that led to the resignation of the President, if not as the one that finished off the TFG or Somalia as we knew it. Although the US State Department, the African Union (AU) and others have welcomed the step taken by the President as courageous, it seems that the effort of the IGAD countries to pressure him to resign has been an oxymoron, at best. The Islamists have captured most of the southern regions. Clan warfare has already resumed in Mogadishu. A representative of the Al-Shabab—Al-Qaeda trained squads of the Islamists—has blamed foreign actors to have supplied weapons to their ideological rivals—ahlu-Sunnah—to fight them in four different fronts. But, some of the questions that loom high are whether there will be enough MPs to make the quorum? Whether there will be equal representation from all provinces or regions in the interest of balance between all sectors or communities of the people of Somalia? Without the constitutional requirement to ratify the Djibouti Accords will the new Parliament be assembled to include the additional 275 members? Or, will the proportion of the Parliament left in the House be constitutionally competent to elect the next President? We welcome the submission of all articles for possible publication on WardheerNews.com So please email your article today Opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of WardheerNews |