Somalia leaders in standoff over new intelligence chief
President accuses prime minister of obstructing probe into possible murder of cybersecurity agent and both leaders put forward different men to head agency
08 September 2021 - 19:27
byAbdi Sheikh
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Somalia's President Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed addresses delegates in Mogadishu, Somalia, May 27 2021. Picture: REUTERS/FEISAL OMAR
Mogadishu — Somalia’s two most powerful leaders were locked in a standoff on Wednesday after they named different men to head the politically unstable Horn of Africa nation's intelligence service.
The open row between President Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed and Prime Minister Mohammed Hussein Roble, nominally over a murder investigation, marks an escalation of months of tension between them in a country already riven by militant attacks and clan rivalries.
On Monday, Roble suspended Fahad Yasin, director of the National Intelligence Service Agency (Nisa), saying he had failed to deliver a report on the case of an agent who disappeared in June.
Roble appointed another man, Bashir Mohamed Jama, as interim head of Nisa.
The president called Roble’s move unconstitutional and, late on Tuesday, named a third man, Yasin Abdullahi Mohamed, to head the agency.
The president’s appointee took over at a handover ceremony Wednesday morning, Nisa said in a tweet. Security around the agency’s headquarters was tight, local residents said.
The AU, UN and foreign donor nations including Britain and the US have urged a de-escalation of the row and called on the president and prime minister to “avoid any actions that could lead to violence”.
Roble and Mohamed had clashed in April, when the president unilaterally extended his four-year term by two years, prompting army factions loyal to each man to seize rival positions in the capital Mogadishu.
The confrontation was resolved when the president put Roble in charge of security and organising delayed legislative and presidential elections. That process was supposed to be concluded in October but several days ago was pushed back again.
In his late Tuesday statement, the president also named Yasin, the man Roble had sacked, as his personal security adviser.
Also late on Tuesday, Roble accused Mohamed of “obstructing effective investigation of Ikran Tahlil Farah’s case,” referring the agent who went missing while working in the intelligence agency’s cybersecurity department.
Her family have said publicly they believe she was murdered, and they hold the agency responsible. The agency has not responded to the family’s allegation.
On Wednesday the family filed a case in a military court asking it to issue an arrest warrant for four Nisa officials, including its sacked boss Yasin, who they hold responsible for Farah’s disappearance, legislator Mahad Mohamed Salad said.
Support our award-winning journalism. The Premium package (digital only) is R30 for the first month and thereafter you pay R129 p/m now ad-free for all subscribers.
Somalia leaders in standoff over new intelligence chief
President accuses prime minister of obstructing probe into possible murder of cybersecurity agent and both leaders put forward different men to head agency
Mogadishu — Somalia’s two most powerful leaders were locked in a standoff on Wednesday after they named different men to head the politically unstable Horn of Africa nation's intelligence service.
The open row between President Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed and Prime Minister Mohammed Hussein Roble, nominally over a murder investigation, marks an escalation of months of tension between them in a country already riven by militant attacks and clan rivalries.
On Monday, Roble suspended Fahad Yasin, director of the National Intelligence Service Agency (Nisa), saying he had failed to deliver a report on the case of an agent who disappeared in June.
Roble appointed another man, Bashir Mohamed Jama, as interim head of Nisa.
The president called Roble’s move unconstitutional and, late on Tuesday, named a third man, Yasin Abdullahi Mohamed, to head the agency.
The president’s appointee took over at a handover ceremony Wednesday morning, Nisa said in a tweet. Security around the agency’s headquarters was tight, local residents said.
The AU, UN and foreign donor nations including Britain and the US have urged a de-escalation of the row and called on the president and prime minister to “avoid any actions that could lead to violence”.
Roble and Mohamed had clashed in April, when the president unilaterally extended his four-year term by two years, prompting army factions loyal to each man to seize rival positions in the capital Mogadishu.
The confrontation was resolved when the president put Roble in charge of security and organising delayed legislative and presidential elections. That process was supposed to be concluded in October but several days ago was pushed back again.
In his late Tuesday statement, the president also named Yasin, the man Roble had sacked, as his personal security adviser.
Also late on Tuesday, Roble accused Mohamed of “obstructing effective investigation of Ikran Tahlil Farah’s case,” referring the agent who went missing while working in the intelligence agency’s cybersecurity department.
Her family have said publicly they believe she was murdered, and they hold the agency responsible. The agency has not responded to the family’s allegation.
On Wednesday the family filed a case in a military court asking it to issue an arrest warrant for four Nisa officials, including its sacked boss Yasin, who they hold responsible for Farah’s disappearance, legislator Mahad Mohamed Salad said.
Reuters
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