Somali parliament approves constitution change to extend president's term, delay election


FILE PHOTO: Somalia's President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud addresses the 80th United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) at the U.N. headquarters in New York, U.S., September 25, 2025. REUTERS/Jeenah Moon/File Photo

MOGADISHU, March 5 (Reuters) - Somalia's ⁠parliament voted to change its constitution and extend ⁠the term in office for lawmakers and the ‌president, the president and the parliament's speaker said, pushing back planned elections by a year.

Somalia has endured conflict and clan battles with no strong ​central government since the fall of ⁠autocratic ruler Mohamed Siad ⁠Barre in 1991.

While an African Union peacekeeping mission has pushed ⁠back ‌the al Qaeda-linked al Shabaab group, it still controls vast areas of the countryside and has ⁠the ability to conduct regular strikes on major ​population centres.

President Hassan ‌Sheikh Mohamud had reached a deal last August with ⁠some opposition ​leaders stipulating that, while lawmakers would be directly elected in 2026, the president would still be chosen by parliament. A ⁠2024 law restored universal suffrage ahead of ​the vote.

On Wednesday, 222 lawmakers from the parliament and senate out of a total of 329 voted by acclamation to ⁠change the law, extending their term and that of the president to five years, from four years previously.

"Today is a historic day for it is the official completion of ​the constitution which had dragged for ⁠a long period," the president told a press conference on ​Wednesday.

Opposition party leaders, including former presidents ‌and former prime ministers, rejected ​the amendment and called for elections in May as planned.

(Reporting by Abdi Sheikh; Writing by George Obulutsa)

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