Sign in to follow this  
Jacaylbaro

Final Report on Somaliland′s 2010 Election , , Praises Women for Their Role in Building Democracy

Recommended Posts

Released today, the final report by the international election observation team on Somaliland′s 2010 election concludes that women and young people are playing a key role in building a democratic society in the internationally-unrecognised Republic of Somaliland.

 

The report, ′Somaliland: Change and Continuity′, which is published by international development agency Progressio, credits the women of Somaliland with having been a ″key element in the fight to further and deepen democratisation″.

 

Sucaad Odowa-Nielsen, a member of the Somaliland diaspora in the UK who participated as an election observer in 2010, described the contribution of women to campaigning as ″well-organised, resourceful and articulate in conveying party policy, not only in the country itself, but also in Somaliland enclaves throughout the world.″

 

Dr Steve Kibble, co-author of the report said, ″the notable presence of women as campaigners and voters has highlighted the need for the new government to promote women′s rights and participation.″

 

Women of all ages turned out in huge numbers to vote in the elections in June last year and this has had a lasting impact on the newly elected government who have committed to ensuring that 20% of their administration are women.

 

Progressio, the Development Planning Unit (DPU) of University College London and Somaliland Focus (UK) were invited in January 2009 by Somaliland′s National Electoral Commission (NEC) to act as coordinators of the international observation mission for the second-ever presidential election in the internationally-unrecognised republic. After visiting polling stations in all six regions of Somaliland, the 59-strong mission declared the poll, which saw the incumbent Dahir Riyale Kahin defeated by Ahmed Silanyo followed by a peaceful transition of power, a ″peaceful expression of the popular will″ of the Somaliland electorate.

 

This final and in-depth report, authored by Dr Steve Kibble and Dr Michael Walls of DPU, joint co-ordinators of the mission, goes into detail on the conduct of the mission and the presidential poll, and makes recommendations for the conduct of future polls in Somaliland. It details the huge role played in the mission by members of the Somaliland diaspora, and the wide support the mission had from locally-based organisations in Somaliland.

 

The report retains the generally upbeat tone of the initial findings, describing the massive enthusiasm from the great majority of Somaliland′s electorate, particularly from female voters, and the high turnout despite threats from Islamist militant groups to disrupt the process, which thankfully came to nothing.

 

However, it is not uniformly positive. A key part of the report details irregularities observed in the Borama district, including underage voting and open distribution ofvoter ID cards by unauthorised agents. While these did not take place at a scale able to influence the result, these are concerns that require attention for future polls.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Restore formatting

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Sign in to follow this