Good or Bad omen for S/Land democracy; By: Prof. Abdi Ali Jama.
A once
ruling party should be number two or three when in opposition. Then, how come
such a party lacks resilience and not being able to regroup and recover from a
defeat blow of last presidential election to sustain its existence, let alone to be second or third party in
terms of popularity. This is beyond comprehension
of anyone who is not fully aware of underlying causes. Something must be wrong in the first place.
One might ask himself if Somali-land political parties are basically “one time
use” platforms for attaining power.
Dissolution
of Former ruling party, Udub, which is the eldest of all the parties, is wake
up call for all of us. Somali-land
democracy is seriously ill, in the sense that political parties themselves are
not healthy enough to survive after losing power. The main reason, in my view,
is that leaders of a political party do share nothing except the aim to grab
power for personal gain, let alone rank and file members who give their loyalty
to political figures of different parties just for being X tribe or Y tribe.
What is
worse is that the leader or presidential candidate of each party seems to be
the owner and he is alone expected to finance the party operations or campaigns
which is flagrant violation of international principles of political parties.
The party should get its finance from subscriptions of its members; if not, we’d
better name it a different name rather than a national political party. Perhaps
one’s shop or firm or farm.
As an
individual who is privy to the national parties, my prophecy is telling me that other political parties might follow suit
because they suffer from same ailment and if so, something must be done to reform the whole
democratic process by introducing new rules and regulation enacted by
parliament that would not allow, for example, someone or group of people to own a party by
financing it themselves alone. Members must subscribe; if not, the party must
cease to exist by law.
In addition
to that, having seen the inauspicious upcoming local council elections, I am
becoming increasingly convinced that Somali-land democracy process should be
reviewed and given corrective injection in order to forestall its demise in a
very early stage. I am not saying so because political parties are many; that
is not the core problem. The number of political parties can be even greater. Lack of within party democracy is actually
where the shoe pinches at the present time. The new polices for regulation of
political parties should say clearly that any party that allegedly fails to
manifest inner party democracy would lose being a national party if convicted by
the court after a certain number of its members had filed a case against it.
In the past, the biggest mistake we did was
that we shifted to democracy era all of a sudden without prior preparation. Such
radical transformation should have been done after long contemplation that
would prepare the country to enter into democracy age. We should have had
adequate time to debate on the transition issue and plan strategically for it.
However, you
can’t unring a bell as it is often said. All what we can do now is re-
introducing democracy gradually. In this reform, I would suggest to revoke
local council elections temporarily not permanently so as not to violate some
articles of the constitution. In other words, election of councilors would be held in
abeyance until we master the other two elections--- presidency and parliament. However, the upcoming election should be
conducted as planned but just for selecting the three national parties.
For the time
being, I would suggest to the president and parliament to amend electoral laws
so that it would suit the aforementioned suggestion. In this situation, councillors
would be nominated by political parties together in proportion to the respective votes that each of party gets from the society.
By: Prof.
Abdi Ali Jama
Profabdiali.blogspot.com
Salaamo Calaykum
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