The Republic of Somaliland Mission in Kenya

Peace and State building processes

On 26 January 1991, the Somali Republic President General Mohamed Siyad Barre finally fled and was ousted. His hasty flight was precipitated by armed southern fighters at the head of which was the USC, shelling him out of Villa Somalia, the seat of government. Immediately afterward, Mogadishu unilaterally built a ‘Somalia’ government putting Ali Mahdi Mohamed in the Presidency.

On 31 January 1991, Ali Mahadi announced the composition of his government, declaring that the insurgency which toppled Siyad Barre started from the ‘central regions’ totally ignoring the decade-long armed struggle of the SNM – the single, most potent factor that made the mighty military machine of the dictator eat dust. If not for the weakened condition of the military might which paved the way for the blitz to advance the USC, the SNM and others made on the capital during the closing months of 1990 would not have been possible.

The Somali National Movement (SNM) leaders had thoughts and deliberations that Somaliland and Somalia to talk about the future of their cooperation and the political system that each side engaged to pursue. But suddenly Somalia’s leaders made a unilateral decision by electing a new President; Ali Mahadi in Mogadishu in 1991. This triggered SNM which was the strongest militarily and politically functioning movement against the Siyad Barre regime to lay the foundation of the Somaliland Republic in a series of consultations of the clan elders and politicians from various regions of Somaliland.

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‘Brothers Grand Conference’. Burao, Somaliland, 1991, (copyright Boobe Yusuf Duale).

Two weeks later, clans of Somaliland came together in Berbera. The meeting resolved that within two months each clan should mend fences among its political and traditional leaders, select representatives for a grand conference to be held in Burao in mid-May, and decide on a possible outlook for a government separate from that of Mogadishu which had already shown all the go-at-it-alone hallmarks which failed the intended merger of Somaliland and Somalia in 1960. It was during this mulling period in which clans deeply discussed what the future direction of Somaliland would look like.

The clans successfully concluded their side meetings and converged in time in Burao to reach pivotal resolutions that were to become the most critical since the nation’s hasty escapade to Mogadishu which did not truly share its enthusiasm in 1960.

On 18th May 1991 at this second national meeting, the SNM Central Committee, with the support of a meeting of elders representing the major clans in the Northern Regions, declared the restoration of the Republic of Somaliland, covering the same area as that of the former British Protectorate.

The Burao conference also established a government for the Republic; an administration that inherited a war-ravaged country in which tens of thousands of people had been killed, many thousands injured, and the main cities, Hargeisa and Burao, almost entirely destroyed. The territory had been extensively mined, yet with the establishment of peace, hundreds of thousands of internally and externally displaced people were starting to return home in 1991 onwards.

It was at this meeting that the first government of the new republic was elected. President Abdirahman Ahmed Ali, the last SNM leader during whose tenure the country has finally reached its dearly-sought goal of freedom and restoration of its sovereignty, was elected to lead the new government. Hassan Essa Jama became the first Vice President of the government.

As difficult and incendiary as those first three years were, pacification among clans continued and the ground for an eventual demobilization of militias was laid. This period is characterized by the ‘establishment of security and government’.

According to the Academy for Peace and Development (APD), about 39 peace conferences and meetings took place between 1991 and 1997 which shared core values and objectives. Among these were:

  1. Restoration of relations between communities affected by the war;
  2. Establishment of a relatively stable security regime in which law and order have increasingly fallen within the ambit of a system of partially decentralized government;
  3. Establishment of local and national institutions of governance; and
  4. Creation of an environment conducive to economic growth and the beginnings of what might be considered a more broadly-defined process of development.

This first government was replaced by another grand conference held in Borama in 1993 during which Mohamed Haji Ibrahim Egal was elected President with Abdirahman Aw Ali Farah the Vice presidency. A National Charter to pave the way for a full-fledged national constitution was also adopted.

Democratization process and elections 2002-2020

The period between 1993 and February 1997, when the third grand conference was convened in Hargeisa, saw the demobilization and nationalization of clan militias, a brief flare of an internecine conflict between the government and one of the major clans of Somaliland, and the solid foundation-laying of a true institution-building that prepared the country for a democratic, multi-party system. The last conference that clans’ representatives participated in was in 1997 and this is where the democratization process took the lead in the pursuant of years in which the first democratic popular elections were held in 2002 since 1959 of the Somaliland British Protectorate.

Mohamed Haji Ibrahim Egal was, again, elected president and Dahir Rayale Kahin became the third Vice President of Somaliland in 1997. Soon after, the government set about the draft requisite instruments for the formation of political associations and the election of local councils and members of parliament. “Subsequently, the political system of Somaliland has had this transition from clans elected leaders into popular democratic elections and Somaliland succeeded to manage this transition where the citizens opted running a constitutional democracy and multiparty political system”.

In accordance with Article 9 of the Constitution passed in the year 2000, the three most successful associations turned into national political parties at the end of local council elections. The first three such parties were UDUB, Kulmiye, and UCID. At present set-up, UDUB went out of the political structure and was replaced by Waddani. The forthcoming elections of the political parties and political associations will be highly contested elections that may cause some of the current national political parties to be defeated and replaced by some new political parties.

The table below shows elections and one-person, one-vote balloting held since 2001.

No Election Timeframe
1 Constitutional referendum 2001
2 Local council and political parties elections 2002
3 Presidential elections 2003
4 House of Representatives elections 2005
5 Voter registration 2008 – 2009
6 Presidential elections 2010
7 Local council and political parties elections 2012
8 Voter registration 2016
9 Presidential elections 2017
10 Parliamentary and local council elections 2021
11 Voter registration 2023
12 Presidential and Political parties election Scheduled on November 2024

Somaliland has succeeded in establishing a multiparty competitive electoral system, where opposition and ruling parties compete freely, and where power has been peacefully and smoothly transferred from incumbent presidents to the opposition. Somaliland practices or performs most democratic fundamental and universally agreed-on principles and values that included but are not limited to freedom of speech, free press, free market, human rights, vibrant civil society, non-state actors, freely operational opposition parties, civic participation, and right to assembly and association.