
By M.A. Egge
The powerful Upper House of bicameral parliament, the GUURTI, has averred that the expected forthcoming general elections recently re-scheduled by nine months as to be held by December 2019 will again not have its holding in time feasible.
This was divulged to the press by non-other than that Speaker of the Guurti himself, the Suleiman Mohamoud Adan, who based his observations from the submission of the National Elections Commission (NEC) to the house yesterday.
According to the follow-up meeting held by the NEC officials at the Upper House which was closed to the media, the Speaker said that the NEC has sounded the untenable fact of not being able to hold the elections in time.

He said that the NEC officials never came with anything new other than the fact the situation on ground depicts that there was still stalemate hindering the holding of elections in time.
The Speaker further said that the NEC officials have accused the executive (thus the presidency), both Houses of our bicameral parliament (thus the Guurti and lower House of the Representatives) and the three official political parties as being the culprits behind the holding back of the electioneering process.
The Speaker underpinned the fact that the said entities were not dong their work when pressed to clarify the issue by members of the press.
He was giving the Guurti’s deductions from the outcome of the meeting they had with the NEC top officials.

On the other hand the NEC chairman Eng. Abdiqdir Iman Warsame was stated that the electioneering process was to go on as planned in a separate press conference.
He noted that they only answered to the Guurti summons hence gave them up to date facts on the situation at hand at the NEC concerning both technical and on non-technical aspects.
Given that scenario, perhaps a Guurti MP’s observation on the political aspect is what the Speaker was expounding on.

Outspoken veteran Guurti MP Hon. Mohammed Mohamud Yasin Deeg claimed that NEC officials told them what they had reported to them (Guurti) in an earlier summons was similar to the latest one that they (NEC) had lacked the goodwill of the other stake-holders in the electioneering process to aid in the dispensing of their duties.
The MP, just as his boss the Speaker, concurred to the fact that the NEC could not go about their duties while having their hands tied by political aspects.
This, in advent, means that the political parties and the presidency had to reach an accord to have the electioneering process expedited with the participation of the parliament as concerns any legal aspects outstanding thereof.
The Guurti was recently reported to have written to the NEC seeking to know what’s holding back the electoral voters registration.
