International partners draw red line on Somalia’s one-sided path to elections

MOGADISHU (Somaliguardian) – Diplomats representing Somalia’s international partners met opposition figures from the Future Council inside Mogadishu’s heavily fortified Halane base on Monday in a renewed attempt to rescue stalled negotiations and steer Somalia’s feuding political actors back toward dialogue after U.S.- and U.K.-backed election talks collapsed only days earlier. The gathering brought together some […]

International partners draw red line on Somalia’s one-sided path to elections

MOGADISHU (Somaliguardian) – Diplomats representing Somalia’s international partners met opposition figures from the Future Council inside Mogadishu’s heavily fortified Halane base on Monday in a renewed attempt to rescue stalled negotiations and steer Somalia’s feuding political actors back toward dialogue after U.S.- and U.K.-backed election talks collapsed only days earlier.

The gathering brought together some of the country’s most influential opposition figures, including former Prime Minister Hassan Ali Khaire and Wadajir party leader Abdirahman Abdishakur Warsame, while the presidents of Puntland and Jubaland joined virtually.

According to sources familiar with the discussions, foreign envoys conveyed to the opposition that the international community now recognizes two defining political realities shaping the crisis. The first is that Somalia has entered a transitional phase following the expiry of the president’s mandate. The second is that any electoral framework must emerge through broad-based consensus, with no party able to dictate the process unilaterally.

The diplomats also pressed opposition leaders to avoid actions that could trigger a rapid deterioration in the security climate, warning that escalating tensions in the capital risked pushing the country toward a deeper constitutional confrontation. They encouraged all sides to preserve channels of communication while international mediators continue efforts to forge a final political settlement over the transition and the structure of the next election.

The Halane meeting unfolded against the backdrop of mounting uncertainty after President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud publicly insisted that his mandate remained valid until May 2027 and reaffirmed plans to pursue a one-person, one-vote election. Those positions have become the central fault lines in Somalia’s intensifying political impasse, with opposition figures and several regional administrations rejecting any extension of federal authority or electoral framework imposed without consensus.

The collapse of the previous negotiations, mediated by American and British diplomats, has deepened fears among political stakeholders that Somalia could drift into a prolonged legitimacy crisis at a moment when the country is already confronting fragile security conditions, persistent militant threats and growing international unease over the stability of its institutions.

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